LTC1403/LTC1403A
14
1403fc
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applications inFormation
intervening rising edges at SCK, put the LTC1403/
LTC1403A in Sleep mode and the power drain drops from
16mW to 10µW. One or more rising edges at SCK wake up
the LTC1403/LTC1403A for operation. The internal refer
-
ence (V
REF
) takes 2ms to slew and settle with a 10µF load.
Note that, using sleep mode more frequently than every
2ms, compromises the settled accuracy of the internal
reference. Note that, for slower conversion rates, the Nap
and Sleep modes can be used for substantial reductions
in power consumption.
DIGITAL INTERFACE
The LTC1403/LTC1403A has a 3-wire SPI (Serial Protocol
Interface) interface. The SCK and CONV inputs and SDO
output implement this interface. The SCK and CONV inputs
accept swings from 3V logic and are TTL compatible, if the
logic swing does not exceed V
DD
. A detailed description
of the three serial port signals follows:
Conversion Start Input (CONV)
The rising edge of CONV starts a conversion, but subse
-
quent rising edges at CONV are ignored by the LTC1403/
LTC1403
A until the following 16 SCK rising edges have
occurred and track mode starts again. It is also neces
-
sary to have a minimum of 17 rising edges of the clock
input SCK between rising edges of CONV for SDO to go
to the Hi-Z state and to prepare the internal ADC logic for
the next conversion. But to obtain maximum conversion
speed, it is necessary to allow one more clock period
between conversions to allow 39ns of acquisition time
for the internal ADC sample-and-hold circuit. With 17
clock periods per conversion, the maximum conversion
rate is limited to 2.8Msps to allow 39ns for acquisition
time. In either case, the output data stream comes out
within the first 16 clock periods to ensure compatibility
with processor serial ports. The duty cycle of CONV can
be arbitrarily chosen to be used as a frame sync signal for
the processor serial port. A simple approach to generate
CONV is to create a pulse that is one SCK wide to drive
the LTC1403/LTC1403A and then buffer this signal with
the appropriate number of inverters to ensure the correct
delay driving the frame sync input of the processor serial
port. It is good practice to drive the LTC1403/LTC1403A
CONV input first to avoid digital noise interference during
the sample-to-hold transition triggered by CONV at the start
of conversion. It is also good practice to keep the width
of the low portion of the CONV signal greater than 15ns
to avoid introducing glitches in the front end of the ADC
just before the sample-and-hold goes into hold mode at
the rising edge of CONV.
Minimizing Jitter on the CONV Input
In high speed applications where high amplitude sinewaves
above 100kHz are sampled, the CONV signal must have
as little jitter as possible (10ps or less). The square wave
output of a common crystal clock module usually meets
this requirement easily. The challenge is to generate a CONV
signal from this crystal clock without jitter corruption from
other digital circuits in the system. A clock divider and
any gates in the signal path from the crystal clock to the
CONV input should not share the same integrated circuit
with other parts of the system. As shown in the interface
circuit examples, the SCK and CONV inputs should be
driven first, with digital buffers used to drive the serial port
interface. Also note that the master clock in the DSP may
already be corrupted with jitter, even if it comes directly
from the DSP crystal. Another problem with high speed
processor clocks is that they often use a low cost, low
speed crystal (i.e., 10MHz) to generate a fast, but jittery,
phase-locked-loop system clock (i.e., 40MHz). The jitter
in these PLL-generated high speed clocks can be several
nanoseconds. Note that if you choose to use the frame
sync signal generated by the DSP port, this signal will
have the same jitter of the DSP’s master clock.
Serial Clock Input (SCK)
The rising edge of SCK advances the conversion process
and also updates each bit in the SDO data stream. After
CONV rises, the third rising edge of SCK starts clocking out
the 12/14 data bits with the MSB sent first. A simple ap
-
proach is to generate SCK to drive the LTC1403/LTC1403A