AD724
REV. B
–9–
The filtered chrominance signal is then summed with the fil-
tered luminance signal to create the composite video signal. The
separate luminance, chrominance and composite video voltages
are amplified by two in order to drive 75 reverse-terminated
lines. The separate luminance and chrominance outputs to-
gether are known as S-video. The composite and S-video out-
puts are simultaneously available.
The two sync inputs HSYNC and VSYNC drive an XNOR gate
to create a CSYNC signal for the AD724. If the user produces a
true composite sync signal, it can be input to the HSYNC pin
while the VSYNC pin is held high. In either case the CSYNC
signal that is present after the XNOR gate is used to generate
the sync and burst signals that are injected into the analog signal
chain. The unclocked CSYNC signal is sent to a reference cell
on the chip which, when CSYNC is low, allows a reference
voltage to be injected into the luminance chain. The width of the
injected sync is the same as the width of the supplied sync signal.
The CSYNC signal (after the XNOR gate) is also routed to the
digital section of the AD724 where it is clocked in by a 2FSC
clock. The digital circuitry then measures the width of the
CSYNC pulses to separate horizontal pulses from equalization
and serration pulses. A burst flag is generated only after valid
horizontal sync pulses, and drives a reference cell to inject the
proper voltages into the U and V low-pass filters. This burst flag
is timed from the falling edge of the clocked-in CSYNC signal.
In synchronous systems (systems in which the subcarrier clock,
sync signals, and RGB signals are all synchronous) this will give
a fixed burst position relative to the falling edge of the output
sync. However, in asynchronous systems the sync to burst posi-
tion can change line to line by as much as 140 ns (the period of
a 2FSC clock cycle) due to the fact that the burst flag is generated
from a clocked CSYNC while the sync is injected unclocked. This
phenomenon may or may not create visual artifacts in some high-
end video systems.
APPLYING THE AD724
Inputs
RIN, BIN, GIN are analog inputs that should be terminated to
ground with 75 in close proximity to the IC. When properly
terminated the peak-to-peak voltage for a maximum input level
should be 714 mV p-p. The horizontal blanking interval should
be the most negative part of each signal.
The inputs should be held at the input signal’s black level dur-
ing the horizontal blanking interval. The internal dc clamps will
clamp this level during color burst to a reference that is used
internally as the black level. Any noise present on the RIN,
GIN, BIN or AGND pins during this interval will be sampled
onto the input capacitors. This can result in varying dc levels
from line to line in all outputs or, if imbalanced, subcarrier
feedthrough in the COMP and CRMA outputs.
For increased noise rejection, larger input capacitors are desired.
A capacitor of 0.1 µF is usually adequate.
Similarly, the U and V clamps balance the modulators during an
interval shortly after the falling CSYNC input. Noise present
during this interval will be sampled in the modulators, resulting
in residual subcarrier in the COMP and CRMA outputs.
HSYNC and VSYNC are two logic level inputs that are combined
internally to produce a composite sync signal. If a composite
sync signal is to be used, it can be input to HSYNC while
VSYNC is pulled to logic HI (> +2 V).
The form of the input sync signal(s) will determine the form of
the composite sync on the composite video (COMP) and lumi-
nance (LUMA) outputs. If no equalization or serration pulses
are included in the HSYNC input there won’t be any in the
outputs. Although sync signals without equalization and serra-
tion pulses do not technically meet the video standards’ specifi-
cations, many monitors do not require these pulses in order to
display good pictures. The decision whether to include these
signals is a system tradeoff between cost and complexity and
adhering strictly to the video standards.
The HSYNC and VSYNC logic inputs have a small amount of
built-in hysteresis to avoid interpreting noisy input edges as
multiple sync edges. This is critical to proper device operation, as
the sync pulses are timed for vertical blanking interval detection.
The HSYNC and VSYNC inputs have been designed for
VIL > 1.0 V and VIH < 2.0 V for the entire temperature and
supply range of operation. The remaining logic inputs do not
have hysteresis, and their switching points are centered around
1.4 V. This allows the AD724 to directly interface to TTL or
3 V CMOS compatible outputs, as well as 5 V CMOS outputs
where VOL is less than 1.0 V.
The SELECT input is a CMOS logic level that programs the
AD724 to use a subcarrier at a 1FSC (LO) frequency or a
4FSC (HI) frequency for the appropriate standard being used.
A 4FSC clock is used directly, while a 1FSC input is multiplied
up to 4FSC by an internal phase locked loop.
The FIN input can be a logic level clock at either FSC or 4FSC
frequency or can be a parallel resonant crystal at 1FSC fre-
quency. An on-chip oscillator will drive the crystal. Most crys-
tals will require a shunt capacitance of between 10 pF and
30 pF for reliable start up and proper frequency of operation.
The NTSC specification calls for a frequency accuracy of ±10 Hz
from the nominal subcarrier frequency of 3.579545 MHz. While
maintaining this accuracy in a broadcast studio might not be a
severe hardship, it can be quite expensive in a low cost con-
sumer application.
The AD724 will operate with subcarrier frequencies that deviate
quite far from those specified by the TV standards. However,
the monitor will in general not be quite so forgiving. Most moni-
tors can tolerate a subcarrier frequency that deviates several hun-
dred Hz from the nominal standard without any degradation in
picture quality. These conditions imply that the subcarrier fre-
quency accuracy is a system specification and not a specification
of the AD724 itself.
The STND pin is used to select between NTSC and PAL opera-
tion. Various blocks inside the AD724 use this input to program
their operation. Most of the more common variants of NTSC and
PAL are supported. There are, however, two known specific stan-
dards not supported. These are NTSC 4.43 and M-PAL.
Basically these two standards use most of the features of the
standard that their names imply, but use the subcarrier that is
equal to, or approximately equal to, the frequency of the other
standard. Because of the automatic programming of the filters in
the chrominance path and other timing considerations, it is not
possible to support these standards.
Layout Considerations
The AD724 is an all CMOS mixed signal part. It has separate
pins for the analog and digital +5 V and ground power supplies.
REV. B
–10–
AD724
220mF
75V
75V
75V
–5V
FIN
OSC
0.1mF
+5V
**
CRYSTAL
0.1mF
+5V (V
AA
)
*
AGND
DGND
AD724
ENCD
RIN
GIN
BIN
HSYNC
VSYNC
SELECT
STND
CRMA
LUMA
CMPS
APOS
DPOS
10–30pF
0.1mF
10mF
0.1mF
10mF
75V75V
JMP
*
PARALLEL–RESONANT
CRYSTAL; 3.579545MHz (NTSC)
OR 4.433620MHz (PAL)
CAPACITOR VALUE DEPENDS ON
CRYSTAL CHOSEN
75V
COMPOSITE
VIDEO
75V
220mF
75V
220mF
Y
C
S-VIDEO
(Y/C VIDEO)
75V
75V
75V
B
G
R
RGB MONITOR
VSYNC
HSYNC
FROM VGA PORT
+5V
+5V
10kV
+5V
10kV
SELECT
75V
JMP
+5V
VGA OUTPUT
CONNECTOR
***
***
0.1mF CAPACITORS RECOMMENDED
649V649V
649V649V
649V649V
**
FSC OR 4FSC CLOCK; 3.579545MHz,
14.31818MHz (NTSC) OR 4.433620MHz,
17.734480MHz(PAL)
1/3
AD8013
1/3
AD8013
1/3
AD8013
0.1mF
0.1mF
0.1mF
Figure 15. Interfacing the AD724 to the (Interlaced) VGA Port of a PC
transmitted. Each output requires a 220 µF series capacitor to
work with the 75 resistance to pass these low frequencies. The
CRMA signal has information mostly up at the chroma fre-
quency and can use a smaller capacitor if desired, but 220 µF
can be used to minimize the number of different components
used in the design.
Displaying VGA Output on a TV
The AD724 can be used to convert the analog RGB output from a
personal computer’s VGA card to the NTSC or PAL television
standards. To accomplish this it is important to understand that
the AD724 requires interlaced RGB video and clock rates that
are consistent with those required by the television standards. In
most computers the default output is a noninterlaced RGB
signal at a frame rate higher than used by either NTSC or PAL.
Most VGA controllers support a wide variety of output modes
that are controlled by altering the contents of internal registers.
It is best to consult with the VGA controller manufacturer to
determine the exact configuration required to provide an inter-
laced output at 60 Hz (50 Hz for PAL).
Both the analog and digital ground pins should be tied to the
ground plane by a short, low inductance path. Each power
supply pin should be bypassed to ground by a low inductance
0.1 µF capacitor and a larger tantalum capacitor of about 10 µF.
The three analog inputs (RIN, GIN, BIN) should be terminated
with 75 to ground close to the respective pins. However, as
these are high impedance inputs, they can be in a loop-through
configuration. This technique is used to drive two or more
devices with high frequency signals that are separated by some
distance. A connection is made to the AD724 with no local
termination, and the signals are run to another distant device
where the termination for these signals is provided.
The output amplitudes of the AD724 are double that required
by the devices that it drives. This compensates for the halving of
the signal levels by the required terminations. A 75 series
resistor is required close to each AD724 output, while 75 to
ground should terminate the far end of each line.
The outputs have a dc bias and must be ac coupled for proper
operation. The COMP and LUMA outputs have information
down to 30 Hz for NTSC (25 MHz for PAL) that must be
AD724
REV. B
–11–
video from an MPEG decoder and creating both analog RGB
video and composite video.
The 24-bit wide RGB video is converted to analog RGB by
the ADV7120 (Triple 8-bit video DAC—available in 48-lead
LQFP). The analog current outputs from the DAC are termi-
nated to ground at both ends with 75 as called for in the data
sheet. These signals are ac coupled to the analog inputs of the
AD724. The HSYNC and VSYNC signals from the MPEG
Controller are directly applied to the AD724.
If the set of termination resistors closest to the AD724 are re-
moved, an RGB monitor can be connected to these signals and
will provide the required second termination. This is acceptable
as long as the RGB monitor is always present and connected. If
it is to be removed on occasion, another termination scheme is
required.
The AD8013 or AD8073 triple video op amp can provide buff-
ering for such applications. Each channel is set for a gain of two
while the outputs are back terminated with a series 75 resis-
tor. This provides the proper signal levels at the monitor, which
terminates the lines with 75 .
AD724 APPLICATION DISCUSSION—NTSC/PAL
CRYSTAL SELECT CIRCUIT
For systems that support both NTSC and PAL, and will use a
crystal for the subcarrier, a low cost crystal selection circuit can
be made that, in addition to the two crystals, requires two low
cost diodes, two resistors and a logic inverter gate. The circuit
selection can be driven by the STND signal that already drives
Pin 1 to select between NTSC and PAL operation for the AD724.
A schematic for such a circuit is shown in Figure 17. Each crys-
tal ties directly to FIN (Pin 3) with one terminal and has the
other terminal connected via a series diode to ground. Each
diode serves as a switch, depending on whether it is forward
biased or has no bias.
FIN
AGND
DGND
HSYNC
VSYNC
HSYNC
VSYNC
COMP
75V
220mF
COMPOSITE
VIDEO
CRMA
LUMA
75V
220mF
75V
220mF
S-VIDEO
10kV
AD724
ENCD
SELECT
STND
APOS DPOS
0.1mF 0.01mF
10–30pF
L1 (FERRITE BEAD)
+5V (V
AA
)
10mF 33mF
+5V (V
CC
)
GND
ADV7120
SYNC
CLOCK
BLANK
GND
24
DATA IN
HSYNC
VSYNC
+5V (V
AA
)
10kV
+5V
10kV
0.1mF
0.01mF
R
SET
550V
0.1mF
+5VV
AA
V
REF
FS
ADJ
COMP
0.1mF
+5V (V
AA
)
RIN
GIN
BIN
75V75V
75V
IOG
IOR
IOB
+5V
10kV
AD589
(1.2V REF)
+5V
0.1mF
+5V
CRYSTAL
*
PARALLEL–RESONANT CRYSTAL; 3.579545MHz (NTSC)
OR 4.433620MHz (PAL) CAPACITOR VALUE DEPENDS
ON CRYSTAL CHOSEN
**
*
75V75V
75V
***
***
0.1mF CAPACITORS RECOMMENDED
**
FSC OR 4FSC CLOCK; 3.579545MHz, 14.31818MHz (NTSC)
OR 4.433620MHz, 17.734480MHz(PAL)
OSC
MPEG
DECODER
0.1mF
0.1mF
0.1mF
Figure 16. AD724 and ADV7120/ADV7122 Providing MPEG Video Solution
Figure 15 shows a circuit for connection to the VGA port of a
PC. The RGB outputs are ac coupled to the respective inputs of
the AD724. These signals should each be terminated to ground
with 75 .
The standard 15-pin VGA connector has HSYNC on Pin 13
and VSYNC on Pin 14. These signals also connect directly to
the same name signals on the AD724. The FIN signal can be
provided by any of the means described elsewhere in the data
sheet. For a synchronous NTSC system, the internal 4FSC
(14.31818 MHz) clock that drives the VGA controller can be
used for FIN on the AD724. This signal is not directly accessible
from outside the computer, but it does appear on the VGA card.
If a separate RGB monitor is also to be used, it is not possible to
simply connect it to the R, G and B signals. The monitor pro-
vides a termination that would double terminate these signals.
The R, G and B signals should be buffered by three amplifiers
with high input impedances. These should be configured for a
gain of two, which is normalized by the divide-by-two termina-
tion scheme used for the RGB monitor.
The AD8013 is a triple video amplifier that can provide the
necessary buffering in a single package. It also provides a disable
pin for each amplifier, which can be used to disable the drive to
the RGB monitor when interlaced video is used (SELECT = LO).
When the RGB signals are noninterlaced, setting SELECT HI will
enable the AD8013 to drive the RGB monitor and disable the
encoding function of the AD724 via Pin 5. HSYNC and VSYNC
are logic level signals that can drive both the AD724 and RGB
monitor in parallel. If the disable feature is not required, the
AD8073 triple video op amp can provide a lower cost solution.
AD724 Used with an MPEG Decoder
MPEG decoding of compressed video signals is becoming a
more prevalent feature in many PC systems. To display images
on the computer monitor, video in RGB format is required.
However, to display the images on a TV monitor, or to record
the images on a VCR, video in composite format is required.
Figure 16 shows a schematic for taking the 24-bit wide RGB

AD724JRZ-RL

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Analog Devices Inc.
Description:
Video ICs RGB-NTSC/PAL ENCODER
Lifecycle:
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