ADC08351
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ADC08351 8-Bit, 42 MSPS, 40 mW A/D Converter
Check for Samples: ADC08351
1FEATURES DESCRIPTION
The ADC08351 is an easy to use low power, low
2 Low Input Capacitance cost, small size, 42 MSPS analog-to-digital converter
Internal Sample-and-Hold Function that digitizes signals to 8 bits. The ADC08351 uses
Single +3V Operation an unique architecture that achieves 7.2 Effective Bits
with a 4.4 MHz input and 42 MHz clock frequency
Power Down Feature and 6.8 Effective Bits with a 21 MHz input and 42
TRI-STATE Outputs MHz clock frequency. Output formatting is straight
binary coding.
KEY SPECIFICATIONS To minimize system cost and power consumption, the
Resolution: 8 Bits ADC08351 requires minimal external components
Maximum Sampling Frequency: 42MSPS (min) and includes input biasing to allow optional a.c. input
signal coupling. The user need only provide a +3V
ENOB @ fCLK = 42 MHz, supply and a clock. Many applications require no
fIN = 4.4 MHz: 7.2 Bits (typ) separate reference or driver components.
Ensured No Missing Codes The excellent dc and ac characteristics of this device,
Power Consumption: 40 mW (typ); 48 mW together with its low power consumption and +3V
(max) (Excluding Reference Current) single supply operation, make it ideally suited for
many video and imaging applications, including use in
APPLICATIONS portable equipment. Total power consumption is
reduced to less than 7 mW in the power-down mode.
Video Digitization Furthermore, the ADC08351 is resistant to latch-up
Digital Still Cameras and the outputs are short-circuit proof.
Set Top Boxes Fabricated on a 0.35 micron CMOS process, the
Digital Camcorders ADC08351 is offered in TSSOP and WQFN (a
Communications molded lead frame-based chip-scale package), and is
designed to operate over the industrial temperature
Medical Imaging range of 40°C to +85°C.
Personal Computer Video
CCD Imaging
Electro-Optics
1Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of
Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet.
2All trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Copyright © 2000–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas
Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not
necessarily include testing of all parameters.
ADC08351
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ADC08351 Block Diagram
Pin Configuration
Figure 1. 20-Pin TSSOP - Top View Figure 2. 24-Pin WQFN (CSP) - Bottom View
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PIN DESCRIPTIONS AND EQUIVALENT CIRCUITS(1)
Pin Symbol Equivalent Circuit Description
No.
17 VIN Analog signal input. Conversion range is 0.5 VP-P to 0.68 VA.
(17)
Positive reference voltage input. Operating range of this
14 voltage is 0.75V to VA. This pin should be bypassed with a 10
VREF
(14) µF tantalum or aluminum electrolytic capacitor and a 0.1 µF
ceramic chip capacitor.
CMOS/TTL compatible digital input that, when low, enables
1OE the digital outputs of the ADC08351. When high, the outputs
(22) are in a high impedance state.
12 CMOS/TTL compatible digital clock input. VIN is sampled on
CLK
(11) the falling edge of CLK input.
CMOS/TTL compatible digital input that, when high, puts the
ADC08351 into the power down mode, where it consumes
minimal power. When this pin is low, the ADC08351 is in the
15 PD normal operating mode.
(15)
3 thru Conversion data digital output pins. D0 is the LSB, D7 is the
10 D0–D7 MSB. Valid data is output just after the rising edge of the CLK
(1 thru input. These pins are enabled by bringing the OE pin low.
8)
Positive digital supply pin. Connect to a clean, quiet voltage
source of +3V. VAand VDshould have a common supply and
11, 13 VDbe separately bypassed with a 10 µF tantalum or aluminum
(10, 12) electrolytic capacitor and a 0.1 µF ceramic chip capacitor.
See Layout and Grounding for more information.
2, 20 The ground return for the digital supply. AGND and DGND
DGND
(21, 23) should be connected together close to the ADC08351.
Positive analog supply pin. Connected to a clean, quiet
voltage source of +3V. VAand VDshould have a common
16 VAsupply and be separately bypassed with a 10 µF tantalum or
(16) aluminum electrolytic capacitor and a 0.1 µF ceramic chip
capacitor. See Layout and Grounding for more information.
The ground return for the analog supply. AGND and DGND
18, 19 AGND should be connected together close to the ADC08351
(18, 19) package.
(1) WQFN pins in parentheses
These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam
during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates.
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Absolute Maximum Ratings(1)(2)(3)
Supply Voltage (VA, VD) 4.2V
Voltage on Any Input or Output Pin 0.3V to 4.2V
Ground Difference (AGND–DGND) ±100 mV
CLK, OE Voltage Range 0.5 to (VA+ 0.5V)
Digital Output Voltage (VOH, VOL) VDto DGND
Input Current at Any Pin(4) ±25 mA
Package Input Current(4) ±50 mA
Package Dissipation at TA= 25°C See(5)
ESD Susceptibility(6) Human Body Model 4000V
Machine Model 200V
Soldering Temp., Infrared, 10 sec.(7) 235°C
Storage Temperature 65°C to +150°C
(1) All voltages are measured with respect to GND = AGND = DGND = 0V, unless otherwise specified.
(2) Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for
which the device is functional, but do not ensure specific performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see the
Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may
degrade when the device is not operated under the listed test conditions.
(3) If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, please contact the TI Sales Office/ Distributors for availability and specifications.
(4) When the input voltage at any pin exceeds the power supplies (that is, less than AGND or DGND, or greater than VAor VD), the current
at that pin should be limited to 25 mA. The 50 mA maximum package input current rating limits the number of pins that can safely
exceed the power supplies with an input current of 25 mA to two.
(5) The absolute maximum junction temperature (TJmax) for this device is 150°C. The maximum allowable power dissipation is dictated by
TJmax, the junction-to-ambient thermal resistance (θJA), and the ambient temperature (TA), and can be calculated using the formula
PDMAX = (TJmax - TA)/θJA. For the 20-pin TSSOP, θJA is 135°C/W, so PDMAX = 926 mW at 25°C and 481 mW at the maximum
operating ambient temperature of 85°C. Note that the power dissipation of this device under normal operation will typically be about 68
mW (40 mW quiescent power + 23 mW reference ladder power + 5 mW due to 1 TTL loan on each digital output). The values for
maximum power dissipation listed above will be reached only when the ADC08351 is operated in a severe fault condition (e.g., when
input or output pins are driven beyond the power supply voltages, or the power supply polarity is reversed). Obviously, such conditions
should always be avoided.
(6) Human body model is 100 pF capacitor discharged through a 1.5 kΩresistor. Machine model is 220 pF discharged through ZERO
Ohms.
(7) See AN-450, “Surface Mounting Methods and Their Effect on Product Reliability”, or the section entitled “Surface Mount” found in any
post 1986 Texas Instruments Linear Data Book, for other methods of soldering surface mount devices.
Operating Ratings(1)(2)
Operating Temperature Range 40°C TA+85°C
Supply Voltage (VA, VD) +2.7V to +3.6V
Ground Difference |DGND–AGND| 0V to 100 mV
VIN Voltage Range (VP-P) 0.5V to 0.68 VA
(1) Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for
which the device is functional, but do not ensure specific performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see the
Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may
degrade when the device is not operated under the listed test conditions.
(2) All voltages are measured with respect to GND = AGND = DGND = 0V, unless otherwise specified.
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Converter Electrical Characteristics
The following specifications apply for VA= VD= +3.0 VDC, VREF = 2.4V, VIN = 1.63 VP-P, OE = 0V, CL= 20 pF, fCLK = 42 MHz,
50% duty cycle, unless otherwise specified.
Boldface limits apply for TA= TMIN to TMAX:all other limits TA= 25°C(1)(2)
Units
Symbol Parameter Conditions Typical(3) Limits(3) (Limits)
DC Accuracy
INL Integral Non Linearity Error ±0.7 ±1.4 LSB (max)
DNL Differential Non Linearity +1.3 LSB (max)
±0.6 1.0 LSB (min)
Missing Codes 0(max)
EZZero Scale Offset Error 17 mV
EFS Full Scale Offset Error 7 mV
Video Accuracy
DP Differential Phase Error fCLK = 20 MHz, Video Ramp Input 1.0 Degree
DG Differential Gain Error fCLK = 20 MHz, Video Ramp Input 1.5 %
Analog Input and Reference Characteristics
(CLK LOW) 4 pF
CIN VIN Input Capacitance VIN = 1.5V + 0.7 Vrms (CLK HIGH) 11 pF
RIN RIN Input Resistance 7.2 kΩ
FPBW Full-Power Bandwidth 120 MHz
0.735 V
VREF Reference Input Voltage At pin 14 VAV
IREF Reference Input Current 7.7 mA
Power Supply Characteristics
PD = Low 10.5 mA
IAAnalog Supply Current PD = High 1 mA
PD = Low, No Digital Output Load 2.9 mA
IDDigital Supply Current PD = High 0.5 mA
Total Operating Current Excluding Reference Current, VIN = 0 VDC 13.4 16 mA (max)
Power Consumption (active) PD = Low (excluding reference current) 40.2 48 mW (max)
Power Consumption (power down) PD = High (excluding reference current) <7 mW
(1) All inputs are protected as shown below. Input voltage magnitudes up to 500 mV above the supply voltage or 500 mV below GND will
not damage this device. However, errors in the A/D conversion can occur if the input goes above VAor below AGND by more than 300
mV. As an example, if VAis 3.0 VDC, the full-scale input voltage must be 3.3 VDC to ensure accurate conversions.
(2) To ensure accuracy, it is required that VAand VDbe well bypassed. Each VAand VDpin must be decoupled with separate bypass
capacitors.
(3) Typical figures are at TJ= 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are ensured to TI's AOQL (Average Outgoing
Quality Level).
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Converter Electrical Characteristics (continued)
The following specifications apply for VA= VD= +3.0 VDC, VREF = 2.4V, VIN = 1.63 VP-P, OE = 0V, CL= 20 pF, fCLK = 42 MHz,
50% duty cycle, unless otherwise specified.
Boldface limits apply for TA= TMIN to TMAX:all other limits TA= 25°C(1)(2)
Units
Symbol Parameter Conditions Typical(3) Limits(3) (Limits)
CLK, OE Digital Input Characteristics
VIH Logical High Input Voltage VD= VA= 3V 2.0 V (min)
VIL Logical Low Input Voltage VD= VA= 3V 1.0 V (max)
IIH Logical High Input Current VIH = VD= VA= 3.3V 10 µA
IIL Logic Low Input Current VIL = 0V, VD= VA= 3.3V 10 µA
CIN Logic Input Capacitance 10 pF
Digital Output Characteristics
IOH High Level Output Current VD= 2.7V, VOH = VD0.5V 1.1 mA (min)
IOL Low Level Output Current VD= 2.7V, OE = DGND, VOL = 0.4V 1.8 mA (min)
VOH High Level Output Voltage VD= 2.7V, IOH =360 µA 2.65 V
VOL Low Level Output Voltage VD= 2.7V, IOL = 1.6 mA 0.2 V
IOZH,TRI-STATE Output Current OE = VD= 3.3V, VOH = 3.3V or VOL = 0V ±10 µA
IOZL
AC Electrical Characteristics
fC1 Maximum Conversion Rate 42 MHz (min)
fC2 Minimum Conversion Rate 2 MHz
tOD Output Delay CLK High to Data Valid 14 19 ns (max)
Pipline Delay (Latency) 2.5 Clock Cycles
tDS Sampling (Aperture) Delay CLK Low to Acquisition of Data 2 ns
tOH Output Hold Time CLK High to Data Invalid 9 ns
tEN OE Low to Data Valid Loaded as in Figure 20 14 ns
tDIS OE High to High Z State Loaded as in Figure 20 10 ns
fCLK = 30 MHz, fIN = 1 MHz 7.2 Bits
ENOB Effective Number of Bits fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 4.4 MHz 7.2 Bits
fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 21 MHz 6.8 6.1 Bits (min)
fCLK = 30 MHz, fIN = 1 MHz 45 dB
SINAD Signal-to-Noise & Distortion fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 4.4 MHz 45 dB
fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 21 MHz 43 38.5 dB (min)
fCLK = 30 MHz, fIN = 1 MHz 44 dB
SNR Signal-to-Noise Ratio fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 4.4 MHz 45 dB
fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 21 MHz 44 41 dB (min)
fCLK = 30 MHz, fIN = 1 MHz 57 dB
THD Total Harmonic Distortion fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 4.4 MHz 51 dB
fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 21 MHz 46 41 dB (min)
fCLK = 30 MHz, fIN = 1 MHz 57 dB
SFDR Spurious Free Dynamic Range fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 4.4 MHz 54 dB
fCLK = 42 MHz, fIN = 21 MHz 49 41 dB (min)
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Typical Performance Characteristics
VA= VD= VDI/O = 3V, fCLK = 42 MHz, unless otherwise specified
DNL @ 42 MSPS DNL vs Sample Rate
Figure 3. Figure 4.
DNL vs VADNL vs Temperature
Figure 5. Figure 6.
INL @ 42 MSPS INL vs Sample Rate
Figure 7. Figure 8.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA= VD= VDI/O = 3V, fCLK = 42 MHz, unless otherwise specified
INL vs VAINL vs Temperature
Figure 9. Figure 10.
SINAD and ENOB vs fIN SINAD and ENOB vs fCLK
Figure 11. Figure 12.
SINAD and ENOB vs
Clock Duty Cycle SNR vs fIN
Figure 13. Figure 14.
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Typical Performance Characteristics (continued)
VA= VD= VDI/O = 3V, fCLK = 42 MHz, unless otherwise specified
THD vs fIN (ID) + (IA) vs fCLK
Figure 15. Figure 16.
tOD vs VDSpectral Response @ 42 MSPS
Figure 17. Figure 18.
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Specification Definitions
ANALOG INPUT BANDWIDTH is a measure of the frequency at which the reconstructed output fundamental
drops 3 dB below its low frequency value for a full scale input. The test is performed with fIN equal to 100 kHz
plus integer multiples of fCLK. The input frequency at which the output is 3 dB relative to the low frequency input
signal is the full power bandwidth.
DIFFERENTIAL GAIN ERROR is the percentage difference between the output amplitudes of a high frequency
reconstructed sine wave at two different dc input levels.
DIFFERENTIAL NON-LINEARITY (DNL) is the measure of the maximum deviation from the ideal step size of 1
LSB.
DIFFERENTIAL PHASE ERROR is the difference in the output phase of a reconstructed small signal sine wave
at two different dc input levels.
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 says that the converter is
equivalent to a perfect ADC of this (ENOB) number of bits.
FULL POWER BANDWIDTH is a measure of the frequency at which the reconstructed output fundamental
drops 3 dB below its low frequency value for a full scale input. The test is performed with fIN equal to 100KHz
plus integer multiples of fCLK The input frequency at which the output is —3 dB relative to the low frequency input
signal is the full power bandwidth.
FULL SCALE OFFSET ERROR is the difference between the analog input voltage that just causes the output
code to transition to the full scale code (all 1's in the case of the ADC08351) and the ideal value of LSB
below the value of VREF.
INTEGRAL NON-LINEARITY (INL) is a measure of the deviation of each individual code from a line drawn from
zero scale LSB below the first code transition) through positive full scale LSB above the last code
transition). The deviation of any given code from this straight line is measured from the center of that code value.
The end point test method is used.
OUTPUT DELAY is the time delay after the rising edge of the input clock before the data update is present at the
output pins.
OUTPUT HOLD TIME is the length of time that the output data is valid after the rise of the input clock.
PIPELINE DELAY (LATENCY) is the number of clock cycles between initiation of conversion and the availability
of that conversion result at the output. New data is available at every clock cycle, but the data lags the
conversion by the pipeline delay.
SAMPLING (APERTURE) DELAY is that time required after the fall of the clock input for the sampling switch to
open. The sample is effectively taken this amount of time after the fall of the clock input.
SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO (SNR) is the ratio of the rms value of the input signal to the rms value of the 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 of the rms value of the input signal to
the rms value of all of the other spectral components below half the 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 and the peak spurious signal, where a spurious signal is any signal present in the output spectrum
that is not present at the input.
TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD) is the ratio of the rms total of the first six harmonic components to the
rms value of the input signal.
ZERO SCALE OFFSET ERROR is the difference between the analog input voltage that just causes the output
code to transition to the first code and the ideal value of ½ LSB for that transition.
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Timing Diagram
Figure 19. ADC08351 Timing Diagram
Figure 20. tEN, tDIS Test Circuit
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The ADC08351 achieves 6.8 effective bits at 21 MHz input frequency with 42 MHz clock frequency digitizing to
eight bits the analog signal at VIN that is within the nominal voltage range of 0.5 VP-P to 0.68 VA.
Input voltages below 0.0665 times the reference voltage will cause the output word to consist of all zeroes, while
input voltages above ¾ of the reference voltage will cause the output word to consist of all ones. For example,
with a VREF of 2.4V, input voltages below 160 mV will result in an output word of all zeroes, while input voltages
above 1.79V will result in an output word of all ones.
The output word rate is the same as the clock frequency. Data is acquired at the falling edge of the clock and the
digital equivalent of that data is available at the digital outputs 2.5 clock cycles plus tOD later. The ADC08351 will
convert as long as the clock signal is present at the CLK pin, but the data will not appear at the outputs unless
the OE pin is low. The digital outputs are in the high impedance state when the OE pin or when the PD pin is
high.
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APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
(All schematic pin numbers refer to the TSSOP.)
THE ADC REFERENCE AND THE ANALOG INPUT
The capacitance seen at the input changes with the clock level, appearing as 4 pF when the clock is low, and 11
pF when the clock is high. Since a dynamic capacitance is more difficult to drive than is a fixed capacitance,
choose an amplifier that can drive this type of load. The CLC409, CLC440, LM6152, LM6154, LM6181 and
LM6182 are good devices for driving analog input of the ADC08351. Do not drive the input beyond the supply
rails.
The maximum peak-to-peak input level without clipping of the reconstructed output is determined by the values
of the resistor string between VREF and AGND. The bottom of the reference ladder has a voltage of 0.0665 times
VREF, while the top of the reference ladder has a voltage of 0.7468 times VREF. The maximum peak-to-peak input
level works out to be about 68% of the value of VREF. The relationship between the input peak-to-peak voltage
and VREF is
(1)
We do not recommend opertaing with input levels below 1 VP-P because the signal-to-noise ratio will degrade
considerably due to the quantization noise. However, the ADC08351 will give adequate results in many
applications with signal levels down to about 0.5 VP-P (VREF = 0.735V). Very good performance can be obtained
with reference voltages up to the supply voltage (VA= VREF = 3V, 2.04 VP-P).
As with all sampling ADCs, the opening and closing of the switches associated with the sampling causes an
output of energy from the analog input, VIN. The reference ladder also has switches associated with it, so the
reference source must be able to supply sufficient current to hold VREF steady.
The analog input of the ADC08351 is self-biased with an 18 kpull-up resistor to VREF and a 12 kpull-down
resistor to AGND. This allows for either a.c. or d.c. coupling of the input signal. These two resistors provide a
convenient way to ensure a signal that is less than full scale will be centered within the input common mode
range of the converter. However, the high values of these resistors and the energy coming from this input means
that performance will be improved with d.c. coupling.
The driving circuit at the signal input must be able to sink and source sufficient current at the signal frequency to
prevent distortion from being introduced at the input.
POWER SUPPLY CONSIDERATIONS
A tantalum or aluminum electrolytic capacitor of 5 µF to 10 µF should be placed within a centimeter of each of
the A/D power pins, with a 0.1 µF ceramic chip capacitor placed within ½ centimeter of each of the power pins.
Leadless chip capacitors are preferred because they provide lower lead inductance than do their leaded
counterparts.
While a single voltage source should be used for the analog and digital supplies of the ADC08351, these supply
pins should be decoupled from each other to prevent any digital noise from being coupled to the analog power
pins. A ferrite bead between the analog and digital supply pins would help to isolate the two supplies.
The converter digital supply should not be the supply that is used for other digital circuitry on the board. It should
be the same supply used for the A/D analog supply, decoupled from the A/D analog supply pin, as described
above. A common analog supply should be used for both VAand VD, and each of these pins should be
separately bypassed with a 0.1 µF ceramic capacitor and with low ESR a 10 µF capacitor.
As is the case with all high speed converters, the ADC08351 is sensitive to power supply noise. Accordingly, the
noise on the analog supply pin should be minimized, keeping it below 200 mVP-P at 100 kHz. Of course, higher
frequency noise on the power supply should be even more severely limited.
No pin should ever have a voltage on it that is in excess of the supply voltages. This can be a problem upon
application of power to a circuit. Be sure that the supplies to circuits driving the CLK, OE, analog input and
reference pins do not come up any faster than does the voltage at the ADC08351 power pins.
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LAYOUT AND GROUNDING
Proper grounding and proper routing of all signals is essential to ensure accurate conversion. Separate analog
and digital ground planes that are connected beneath the ADC08351 are required to meet data sheet limits. The
analog and digital grounds may be in the same layer, but should be separated from each other and should never
overlap each other.
Capacitive coupling between the typically noisy digital ground plane and the sensitive analog circuitry can lead to
poor performance that may seem impossible to isolate and remedy. The solution is to keep the analog circuitry
well separated from the digital circuitry and from the digital ground plane.
The back of the WQFN package has a large metal area inside the area bounded by the pins. This metal area is
connected to the die substrate (ground). This pad may be left floating if desired. If it is connected to anything, it
should be to ground near the connection between analog and digital ground planes. Soldering this metal pad to
ground will help keep the die cooler and could yield improved performance because of the lower impedance
between die and board grounds. However, a poor layout could compromise performance.
Figure 21. Layout examples showing separate analog and digital ground planes connected below the
ADC08351.
Generally, analog and digital lines should cross each other at 90 degrees to avoid getting digital noise into the
analog path. To maximize accuracy in video (high frequency) systems, however, avoid crossing analog and
digital lines altogether. Furthermore, it is important to keep any clock lines isolated from ALL other lines, including
other digital lines. Even the generally accepted 90 degree crossing should be avoided as even a little coupling
can cause problems at high frequencies.
Best performance at high frequencies and at high resolution is obtained with a straight signal path. That is, the
signal path through all components should form a straight line wherever possible.
Be especially careful with the layout of inductors. Mutual inductance can change the characteristics of the circuit
in which they are used. Inductors should not be placed side by side, even with just a small part of their bodies
beside each other.
The analog input should be isolated from noisy signal traces to avoid coupling of spurious signals into the input.
Any external component (e.g., a filter capacitor) connected between the converter's input and ground should be
connected to a very clean point in the analog ground plane.
Figure 21 gives an example of a suitable layout. All analog circuitry (input amplifiers, filters, reference
components, etc.) should be placed on or over the analog ground plane. All digital circuitry and I/O lines should
be placed over the digital ground plane.
All ground connections should have a low inductance path to ground.
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
The ADC08351 is ac tested and its dynamic performance is ensured. To meet the published specifications, the
clock source driving the CLK input must be free of jitter. For best ac performance, isolating the ADC clock from
any digital circuitry should be done with adequate buffers, as with a clock tree. See Figure 22.
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It is good practice to keep the ADC clock line as short as possible and to keep it well away from any other
signals. Other signals can introduce jitter into the clock signal. Even lines with 90° crossings have capacitive
coupling, so try to avoid even these 90° crossings of the clock line.
Figure 22. Isolating the ADC Clock from Digital Circuitry
Digital circuits create substantial supply and ground current transients. The logic noise thus generated could
have significant impact upon system noise performance. The best logic family to use in systems with A/D
converters is one which employs non-saturating transistor designs, or has low noise characteristics, such as the
74HC(T) and 74AC(T)Q families. The worst noise generators are logic families that draw the largest supply
current transients during clock or signal edges, like the 74F and the 74AC(T) families. In general, slower logic
families, such as 74LS and 74HC(T) will produce less high frequency noise than do high speed logic families,
such as the 74F and 74AC(T) families.
Since digital switching transients are composed largely of high frequency components, total ground plane copper
weight will have little effect upon the logic-generated noise. This is because of the skin effect. Total surface area
is more important than is total ground plane volume.
An effective way to control ground noise is by connecting the analog and digital ground planes together beneath
the ADC with a copper trace that is narrow compared with the rest of the ground plane. This narrowing beneath
the converter provides a fairly high impedance to the high frequency components of the digital switching currents,
directing them away from the analog pins. The relatively lower frequency analog ground currents do not create a
significant variation across the impedance of this relatively narrow ground connection.
TYPICAL APPLICATION CIRCUITS
Figure 23 shows a simple interface for a low impedance source located close to the converter. As discussed in
The ADC Reference and The Analog Input, the series capacitor is optional. Notice the isolation of the ADC clock
signal from the clock signals going elsewhere in the system. The reference input of this circuit is shown
connected to the 3V supply.
Video ADCs tend to have input current transients that can upset a driving source, causing distortion of the driving
signal. The resistor at the ADC08351 input isolates the amplifier's output from the current transients at the input
to the converter.
When the signal source is not located close to the converter, the signal should be buffered. Figure 24 shows an
example of an appropriate buffer. The amplifier provides a gain of two to compensate for transmission losses.
Operational amplifiers have better linearity when they operate with gain, so the input is attenuated with the 68
and 30resistors at the non-inverting input. The 330resistor in parallel with these two resistors provides for a
75cable termination. Replacing this 330resistor with one of 100will provide a 50termination.
The circuit shown has a nominal gain of two. You can provide a gain adjustment by changing the 110feedback
resistor to a 100resistor in series with a 20potentiometer.
The offset adjustment is used to bring the input signal within the common mode range of the converter. If a fixed
offset is desired, the potentiometer and the 3.3k resistor may be replaced with a single resistor of 3k to 4k to the
appropriate supply. The resistor value and the supply polarity used will depend upon the amount and polarity of
offset needed.
The CLC409 shown in Figure 24 was chosen for a low cost solution with good overall performance.
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Figure 25 shows an inverting DC coupled circuit. The above comments regarding Figure 24 generally apply to
this circuit as well.
Figure 23. AC Coupled Circuit for a Low Impedance Source Located Near the Converter
Figure 24. Non-inverting Input Circuit for Remote Signal Source
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Figure 25. Inverting Circuit with Bias Adjust
ACCURATELY EVALUATING THE ADC
If a signal that is spectrally impure is presented to the ADC, the output from the ADC cannot be pure. Nearly all
signal generators in use today produce signals that are not spectrally pure enough to adequately evaluate
present-day ADCs. This is especially true at higher frequencies and at high resolutions.
To ensure that the signal you are presenting to the ADC being evaluated is spectrally pure, use a bandpass filter
between the signal generator and the ADC input. One such possible filter is the elliptic filter shown in Figure 26.
This elliptic filter has a cutoff frequency of about 11MHz and is suitable for input frequencies of 5MHz to 10MHz. It
should be driven by a generator of 75source impedance and teminated with 75. This termination may be provided
by the ADC evaluation circuit.
Figure 26. Elliptic Filter
In addition to being used to eliminate undesired frequencies from a desired signal, this filter can be used to filter
a square wave, reducing 3rd and higher harmonics to negligible levels.
When evaluating dynamic performance of an ADC, repeatability of measurements could be a problem unless
coherent sampling is used.
and ADC08351 evaluation system is available that can simplify evaluation of this product.
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COMMON APPLICATION PITFALLS
Driving the inputs (analog or digital) beyond the power supply rails. For proper operation, all inputs should
not go more than 300 mV beyond the supply rails. That is, more than 300 mV below the ground pins or 300 mV
above the supply pins. Exceeding these limits on even a transient basis may cause faulty or erratic operation. It
is not uncommon for high speed digital circuits (e.g., 74F and 74AC devices) to exhibit undershoot that goes
more than a volt below ground or above the power supply. Since these conditions are of very short duration with
very fast rise and fall times, they can inject noise into the system and may be difficult to detect with an
oscilloscope. A resistor of about 50Ωto 100Ωin series with the offending digital input will usually eliminate the
problem.
Care should be taken not to overdrive the inputs of the ADC08351 (or any device) with a device that is powered
from supplies outside the range of the ADC08351 supply. Such practice may lead to conversion inaccuracies and
even to device damage.
Attempting to drive a high capacitance digital data bus. The more capacitance the output drivers have to
charge for each conversion, the more instantaneous digital current is required from VDand DGND. These large
charging current spikes can couple into the analog section, degrading dynamic performance. While adequate
bypassing and maintaining separate analog and digital ground planes will reduce this problem on the board, this
coupling can still occur on the ADC08351 die. Buffering the digital data outputs (with a 74ACQ541, for example)
may be necessary if the data bus to be driven is heavily loaded.
Dynamic performance can also be improved by adding series resistors at each digital output, reducing the
energy coupled back into the converter output pins by limiting the output slew rate. A reasonable value for these
resistors is about 47Ω.
Using an inadequate amplifier to drive the analog input. As explained in Power Supply Considerations, the
capacitance seen at the input alternates between 4 pF and 11 pF with the clock. This dynamic capacitance is
more difficult to drive than a fixed capacitance, so care should be taken in choosing a driving device. The
CLC409, CLC440, LM6152, LM6154, LM6181 and LM6182 are good devices for driving the ADC08351. Also, an
amplifier with insufficient gain-bandwidth may limit the overall frequency response of the overall circuit.
Using an operational amplifier in an insufficient gain configuration to drive the analog input. Operational
amplifiers, while some may be unity gain stable, generally exhibit more distortion at low in-circuit gains than at
higher gains.
Using a clock source with excessive jitter, using excessively long clock signal trace, or having other
signals coupled to the clock signal trace. This will cause the sampling interval to vary, causing excessive
output noise and a reduction in SNR performance. Simple gates with RC timing is generally inadequate.
Not considering the timing relationships, especially tOD.Timing is always important and gets more critical
with higher speeds. If the output data is latched or looked at when that data is in transition, you may see
excessive noise and distortion of the output signal.
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REVISION HISTORY
Changes from Revision D (March 2013) to Revision E Page
Changed layout of National Data Sheet to TI format .......................................................................................................... 17
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PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com 10-Dec-2020
Addendum-Page 1
PACKAGING INFORMATION
Orderable Device Status
(1)
Package Type Package
Drawing Pins Package
Qty Eco Plan
(2)
Lead finish/
Ball material
(6)
MSL Peak Temp
(3)
Op Temp (°C) Device Marking
(4/5)
Samples
ADC08351CILQX/NOPB ACTIVE WQFN NHW 24 4500 RoHS & Green SN Level-3-260C-168 HR -40 to 85 08351
ADC08351CIMTCX/NOPB ACTIVE TSSOP PW 20 2500 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 85 ADC08351
CIMTC
(1) The marketing status values are defined as follows:
ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs.
LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect.
NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design.
PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available.
OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device.
(2) RoHS: TI defines "RoHS" to mean semiconductor products that are compliant with the current EU RoHS requirements for all 10 RoHS substances, including the requirement that RoHS substance
do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, "RoHS" products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. TI may
reference these types of products as "Pb-Free".
RoHS Exempt: TI defines "RoHS Exempt" to mean products that contain lead but are compliant with EU RoHS pursuant to a specific EU RoHS exemption.
Green: TI defines "Green" to mean the content of Chlorine (Cl) and Bromine (Br) based flame retardants meet JS709B low halogen requirements of <=1000ppm threshold. Antimony trioxide based
flame retardants must also meet the <=1000ppm threshold requirement.
(3) MSL, Peak Temp. - The Moisture Sensitivity Level rating according to the JEDEC industry standard classifications, and peak solder temperature.
(4) There may be additional marking, which relates to the logo, the lot trace code information, or the environmental category on the device.
(5) Multiple Device Markings will be inside parentheses. Only one Device Marking contained in parentheses and separated by a "~" will appear on a device. If a line is indented then it is a continuation
of the previous line and the two combined represent the entire Device Marking for that device.
(6) Lead finish/Ball material - Orderable Devices may have multiple material finish options. Finish options are separated by a vertical ruled line. Lead finish/Ball material values may wrap to two
lines if the finish value exceeds the maximum column width.
Important Information and Disclaimer:The information provided on this page represents TI's knowledge and belief as of the date that it is provided. TI bases its knowledge and belief on information
provided by third parties, and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of such information. Efforts are underway to better integrate information from third parties. TI has taken and
continues to take reasonable steps to provide representative and accurate information but may not have conducted destructive testing or chemical analysis on incoming materials and chemicals.
TI and TI suppliers consider certain information to be proprietary, and thus CAS numbers and other limited information may not be available for release.
In no event shall TI's liability arising out of such information exceed the total purchase price of the TI part(s) at issue in this document sold by TI to Customer on an annual basis.
PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM
www.ti.com 10-Dec-2020
Addendum-Page 2
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION
*All dimensions are nominal
Device Package
Type Package
Drawing Pins SPQ Reel
Diameter
(mm)
Reel
Width
W1 (mm)
A0
(mm) B0
(mm) K0
(mm) P1
(mm) W
(mm) Pin1
Quadrant
ADC08351CILQX/NOPB WQFN NHW 24 4500 330.0 12.4 4.3 5.3 1.3 8.0 12.0 Q1
ADC08351CIMTCX/NOPB TSSOP PW 20 2500 330.0 16.4 6.95 7.1 1.6 8.0 16.0 Q1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com 23-Sep-2013
Pack Materials-Page 1
*All dimensions are nominal
Device Package Type Package Drawing Pins SPQ Length (mm) Width (mm) Height (mm)
ADC08351CILQX/NOPB WQFN NHW 24 4500 367.0 367.0 35.0
ADC08351CIMTCX/NOPB TSSOP PW 20 2500 367.0 367.0 35.0
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com 23-Sep-2013
Pack Materials-Page 2
MECHANICAL DATA
NHW0024B
www.ti.com
LQA24A (Rev B)
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