REV. B
AD9883A
–9–
DESIGN GUIDE
General Description
The AD9883A is a fully integrated solution for capturing analog
RGB signals and digitizing them for display on flat panel monitors
or projectors. The circuit is ideal for providing a computer interface
for HDTV monitors or as the front end to high performance video
scan converters. Implemented in a high performance CMOS
process, the interface can capture signals with pixel rates up
to 110 MHz.
The AD9883A includes all necessary input buffering, signal dc
restoration (clamping), offset and gain (brightness and contrast)
adjustment, pixel clock generation, sampling phase control, and
output data formatting. All controls are programmable via a 2-wire
serial interface. Full integration of these sensitive analog functions
makes system design straightforward and less sensitive to the
physical and electrical environment.
With a typical power dissipation of only 500 mW and an operating
temperature range of 0°C to 70°C, the device requires no special
environmental considerations.
Digital Inputs
All digital inputs on the AD9883A operate to 3.3 V CMOS levels.
However, all digital inputs are 5 V tolerant. Applying 5 V to
them will not cause any damage.
Input Signal Handling
The AD9883A has three high impedance analog input pins
for the Red, Green, and Blue channels. They will accommodate
signals ranging from 0.5 V to 1.0 V p-p.
Signals are typically brought onto the interface board via a
DVI-I connector, a 15-pin D connector, or via BNC connectors.
The AD9883A should be located as close as practical to the input
connector. Signals should be routed via matched-impedance
traces (normally 75 ) to the IC input pins.
PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS (continued)
Pin Name Function
CLAMP External Clamp Input
This logic input may be used to define the time during which the input signal is clamped to ground. It should be exer-
cised when the reference dc level is known to be present on the analog input channels, typically during the back porch of
the graphics signal. The CLAMP pin is enabled by setting control bit Clamp Function to 1, (register 0FH, Bit 7, default is 0).
When disabled, this pin is ignored and the clamp timing is determined internally by counting a delay and duration from
the trailing edge of the Hsync input. The logic sense of this pin is controlled by Clamp Polarity register 0FH, Bit 6. When not
used, this pin must be grounded and Clamp Function programmed to 0.
COAST Clock Generator Coast Input (Optional)
This input may be used to cause the pixel clock generator to stop synchronizing with Hsync and continue producing a clock at
its current frequency and phase. This is useful when processing signals from sources that fail to produce horizontal sync
pulses during the vertical interval. The COAST signal is generally not required for PC-generated signals. The logic sense
of this pin is controlled by Coast Polarity (register 0FH, Bit 3). When not used, this pin may be grounded and Coast
Polarity programmed to 1, or tied HIGH (to V
D
through a 10 k resistor) and Coast Polarity programmed to 0. Coast
Polarity defaults to 1 at power-up.
REF BYPASS Internal Reference BYPASS
Bypass for the internal 1.25 V band gap reference. It should be connected to ground through a 0.1 µF capacitor. The
absolute accuracy of this reference is ± 4%, and the temperature coefficient is ± 50 ppm, which is adequate for most AD9883A
applications. If higher accuracy is required, an external reference may be employed instead.
MIDSCV Midscale Voltage Reference BYPASS
Bypass for the internal midscale voltage reference. It should be connected to ground through a 0.1 µF capacitor. The
exact voltage varies with the gain setting of the Blue channel.
FILT External Filter Connection
For proper operation, the pixel clock generator PLL requires an external filter. Connect the filter shown in Figure 6 to
this pin. For optimal performance, minimize noise and parasitics on this node.
POWER SUPPLY
V
D
Main Power Supply
These pins supply power to the main elements of the circuit. They should be filtered and as quiet as possible.
V
DD
Digital Output Power Supply
A large number of output pins (up to 25) switching at high speed (up to 110 MHz) generates a lot of power supply transients
(noise). These supply pins are identified separately from the V
D
pins so special care can be taken to minimize output
noise transferred into the sensitive analog circuitry. If the AD9883A is interfacing with lower voltage logic, V
DD
may be
connected to a lower supply voltage (as low as 2.5 V) for compatibility.
PV
D
Clock Generator Power Supply
The most sensitive portion of the AD9883A is the clock generation circuitry. These pins provide power to the clock PLL and
help the user design for optimal performance. The designer should provide quiet, noise-free power to these pins.
GND Ground
The ground return for all circuitry on-chip. It is recommended that the AD9883A be assembled on a single solid ground
plane, with careful attention given to ground current paths.
REV. B
AD9883A
–10–
At that point the signal should be resistively terminated (75
to the signal ground return) and capacitively coupled to the
AD9883A inputs through 47 nF capacitors. These capacitors
form part of the dc restoration circuit.
In an ideal world of perfectly matched impedances, the best perfor-
mance can be obtained with the widest possible signal bandwidth.
The ultrawide bandwidth inputs of the AD9883A (300 MHz)
can track the input signal continuously as it moves from one pixel
level to the next, and digitize the pixel during a long, flat pixel
time. In many systems, however, there are mismatches, reflections,
and noise, which can result in excessive ringing and distortion of
the input waveform. This makes it more difficult to establish a
sampling phase that provides good image quality. It has been
shown that a small inductor in series with the input is effective in
rolling off the input bandwidth slightly and providing a high
quality signal over a wider range of conditions. Using a Fair-
Rite #2508051217Z0 High Speed Signal Chip Bead inductor
in the circuit of Figure 1 gives good results in most applications.
RGB
INPUT
R
AIN
G
AIN
B
AIN
47nF
75
Figure 1. Analog Input Interface Circuit
Hsync, Vsync Inputs
The interface also takes a horizontal sync signal, which is used
to generate the pixel clock and clamp timing. This can be either
a sync signal directly from the graphics source, or a preprocessed
TTL or CMOS level signal.
The Hsync input includes a Schmitt trigger buffer for immunity
to noise and signals with long rise times. In typical PC based
graphic systems, the sync signals are simply TTL-level drivers
feeding unshielded wires in the monitor cable. As such, no ter-
mination is required.
Serial Control Port
The serial control port is designed for 3.3 V logic. If there are 5 V
drivers on the bus, these pins should be protected with 150 series
resistors placed between the pull-up resistors and the input pins.
Output Signal Handling
The digital outputs are designed and specified to operate from a
3.3 V power supply (V
DD
). They can also work with a V
DD
as
low as 2.5 V for compatibility with other 2.5 V logic.
Clamping
RGB Clamping
To properly digitize the incoming signal, the dc offset of the input
must be adjusted to fit the range of the on-board A/D converters.
Most graphics systems produce RGB signals with black at ground
and white at approximately 0.75 V. However, if sync signals
are embedded in the graphics, the sync tip is often at ground
and black is at 300 mV. Then white is at approximately 1.0 V.
Some common RGB line amplifier boxes use emitter-follower
buffers to split signals and increase drive capability. This intro-
duces a 700 mV dc offset to the signal, which must be removed
for proper capture by the AD9883A.
The key to clamping is to identify a portion (time) of the signal
when the graphic system is known to be producing black. An
offset is then introduced which results in the A/D converters
producing a black output (code 00h) when the known black
input is present. The offset then remains in place when other
signal levels are processed, and the entire signal is shifted to elimi-
nate offset errors.
In most PC graphics systems, black is transmitted between
active video lines. With CRT displays, when the electron beam
has completed writing a horizontal line on the screen (at the
right side), the beam is deflected quickly to the left side of the
screen (called horizontal retrace) and a black signal is provided
to prevent the beam from disturbing the image.
In systems with embedded sync, a blacker-than-black signal
(Hsync) is produced briefly to signal the CRT that it is time to
begin a retrace. For obvious reasons, it is important to avoid
clamping on the tip of Hsync. Fortunately, there is virtually
always a period following Hsync, called the back porch, where a
good black reference is provided. This is the time when clamp-
ing should be done.
The clamp timing can be established by simply exercising the
CLAMP pin at the appropriate time (with External Clamp = 1).
The polarity of this signal is set by the Clamp Polarity bit.
A simpler method of clamp timing employs the AD9883A internal
clamp timing generator. The Clamp Placement register is pro-
grammed with the number of pixel times that should pass after
the trailing edge of HSYNC before clamping starts. A second
register (Clamp Duration) sets the duration of the clamp. These
are both 8-bit values, providing considerable flexibility in clamp
generation. The clamp timing is referenced to the trailing edge
of Hsync because, though Hsync duration can vary widely, the
back porch (black reference) always follows Hsync. A good
starting point for establishing clamping is to set the clamp place-
ment to 09H (providing 9 pixel periods for the graphics signal to
stabilize after sync) and set the clamp duration to 14H (giving
the clamp 20 pixel periods to reestablish the black reference).
Clamping is accomplished by placing an appropriate charge on
the external input coupling capacitor. The value of this capaci-
tor affects the performance of the clamp. If it is too small, there
will be a significant amplitude change during a horizontal line
time (between clamping intervals). If the capacitor is too large,
then it will take excessively long for the clamp to recover from a
large change in incoming signal offset. The recommended value
(47 nF) results in recovering from a step error of 100 mV to
within 1/2 LSB in 10 lines with a clamp duration of 20 pixel
periods on a 60 Hz SXGA signal.
YUV Clamping
YUV graphic signals are slightly different from RGB signals in
that the dc reference level (black level in RGB signals) can be at
the midpoint of the graphics signal rather than at the bottom.
For these signals, it can be necessary to clamp to the midscale
range of the A/D converter range (80H) rather than at the bottom
of the A/D converter range (00H).
Clamping to midscale rather than to ground can be accomplished
by setting the clamp select bits in the serial bus register. Each of
the three converters has its own selection bit so that they can be
clamped to either midscale or ground independently. These
bits are located in register 10H and are Bits 0–2. The midscale
reference voltage that each A/D converter clamps to is provided
on the MIDSCV pin, (Pin 37). This pin should be bypassed to
ground with a 0.1 µF capacitor, (even if midscale clamping is not
required).
REV. B
AD9883A
–11–
GAIN
1.0
0.
0
00H FFH
INPUT RANGE – V
0.5
OFFSET = 00H
OFFSET = 3FH
OFFSET = 7FH
OFFSET = 00H
OFFSET = 7FH
OFFSET = 3FH
Figure 2. Gain and Offset Control
Gain and Offset Control
The AD9883A can accommodate input signals with inputs
ranging from 0.5 V to 1.0 V full scale. The full-scale range is set
in three 8-bit registers (Red Gain, Green Gain, and Blue Gain).
Note that increasing the gain setting results in an image with
less contrast.
The offset control shifts the entire input range, resulting in a
change in image brightness. Three 7-bit registers (Red Offset,
Green Offset, Blue Offset) provide independent settings for
each channel. The offset controls provide a ± 63 LSB adjust-
ment range. This range is connected with the full-scale range, so
if the input range is doubled (from 0.5 V to 1.0 V) then the offset
step size is also doubled (from 2 mV per step to 4 mV per step).
Figure 2 illustrates the interaction of gain and offset controls.
The magnitude of an LSB in offset adjustment is proportional
to the full-scale range, so changing the full-scale range also
changes the offset. The change is minimal if the offset setting is
near midscale. When changing the offset, the full-scale range is
not affected, but the full-scale level is shifted by the same amount
as the zero scale level.
Sync-on-Green
The Sync-on-Green input operates in two steps. First, it sets a
baseline clamp level off of the incoming video signal with a
negative peak detector. Second, it sets the sync trigger level to a
programmable level (typically 150 mV) above the negative peak.
The Sync-on-Green input must be ac-coupled to the Green
analog input through its own capacitor, as shown in Figure 3.
The value of the capacitor must be 1 nF ± 20%. If Sync-on-Green
is not used, this connection is not required. Note that the Sync-
on-Green signal is always negative polarity.
R
AIN
B
AIN
G
AIN
SOG
47nF
47nF
47nF
1nF
Figure 3. Typical Clamp Configuration
Clock Generation
A phase locked loop (PLL) is employed to generate the pixel
clock. In this PLL, the Hsync input provides a reference fre-
quency. A voltage controlled oscillator (VCO) generates a much
higher pixel clock frequency. This pixel clock is divided by the
PLL divide value (registers 01H and 02H) and phase compared
with the Hsync input. Any error is used to shift the VCO fre-
quency and maintain lock between the two signals.
The stability of this clock is a very important element in provid-
ing the clearest and most stable image. During each pixel time,
there is a period during which the signal is slewing from the old
pixel amplitude and settling at its new value. Then there is a
time when the input voltage is stable, before the signal must
slew to a new value (Figure 4). The ratio of the slewing time to
the stable time is a function of the bandwidth of the graphics
DAC and the bandwidth of the transmission system (cable and
termination). It is also a function of the overall pixel rate. Clearly,
if the dynamic characteristics of the system remain fixed, the
slewing and settling time is likewise fixed. This time must be
subtracted from the total pixel period, leaving the stable period.
At higher pixel frequencies, the total cycle time is shorter, and the
stable pixel time becomes shorter as well.
PIXEL CLOCK INVALID SAMPLE TIMES
Figure 4. Pixel Sampling Times
Any jitter in the clock reduces the precision with which the
sampling time can be determined, and must also be subtracted
from the stable pixel time.
Considerable care has been taken in the design of the AD9883A’s
clock generation circuit to minimize jitter. As indicated in
Figure 5, the clock jitter of the AD9883A is less than 5% of the
total pixel time in all operating modes, making the reduction in
the valid sampling time due to jitter negligible.
FREQUENCY – MHz
14
12
0
0
PIXEL CLOCK JITTER (p-p) – %
10
8
6
4
2
31.5 36.0 36.0 50.0 56.25 75.0 85.5 110.0
Figure 5. Pixel Clock Jitter vs. Frequency

AD9883AKSTZ-RL110

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Analog Devices Inc.
Description:
IC INTERFACE FLAT 110MHZ 80LQFP
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
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