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LTC1064-7
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Power Supply Pins (4, 12)
The V
+
(Pin 4) and the V
(Pin 12) should be bypassed with
a 0.1µF capacitor to an adequate analog ground. The
filter’s power supplies should be isolated from other
digital or high voltage analog supplies. A low noise linear
supply is recommended. Using a switching power supply
will lower the signal-to-noise ratio of the filter. The supply
during power-up should have a slew rate less than 1V/µs.
When V
+
is applied before V
and V
is allowed to go
above ground, a signal diode should clamp V
to prevent
latch-up. Figures 2 and 3 show typical connections for
dual and single supply operation.
Figure 2. Dual Supply Operation for an f
CLK
/f
CUTOFF
= 50:1
Figure 3. Single Supply Operation for an f
CLK
/f
CUTOFF
= 50:1
Clock Input Pin (11)
Any TTL or CMOS clock source with a square-wave output
and 50% duty cycle (±10%) is an adequate clock source
for the device. The power supply for the clock source
should not be the filter’s power supply. The analog ground
for the filter should be connected to clock’s ground at a
single point only. Table 7 shows the clock’s low and high
level threshold values for a dual or single supply operation.
A pulse generator can be used as a clock source provided
the high level ON time is greater than 0.1µs. Sine waves are
not recommended for clock input frequencies less than
100kHz, since excessively slow clock rise or fall times
generate internal clock jitter (maximum clock rise or fall
time 1µs). The clock signal should be routed from the
right side of the IC package and perpendicular to it to avoid
coupling to any input or output analog signal path. A 200
resistor between clock source and pin 11 will slow down
the rise and fall times of the clock to further reduce charge
coupling (Figures 2 and 3).
Table 7. Clock Source High and Low Threshold Levels
POWER SUPPLY HIGH LEVEL LOW LEVEL
Dual Supply = ±7.5V 2.18V 0.5V
Dual Supply = ±5V 1.45V 0.5V
Dual Supply = ± 2.5V 0.73V 2.0V
Single Supply = 12V 7.80V 6.5V
Single Suppl = 5V 1.45V 0.5V
Analog Ground Pins (3, 5)
The filter performance depends on the quality of the
analog signal ground. For either dual or single supply
operation, an analog ground plane surrounding the pack-
age is recommended. The analog ground plane should be
connected to any digital ground at a single point. For dual
supply operation, Pin 3 should be connected to the analog
ground plane. For single supply operation pin 3 should be
biased at 1/2 supply and should be bypassed to the analog
ground plane with at least a 1µF capacitor (Figure 3). For
single 5V operation at the highest f
CLK
of 2MHz, Pin 3
should be biased at 2V. This minimizes passband gain and
phase variations.
Ratio Input Pin (10)
The DC level at this pin determines the ratio of the clock
frequency to the cutoff frequency of the filter. Pin 10 at V
+
gives a 50:1 ratio and Pin 10 at V
gives a 100:1 ratio. For
single supply operation the ratio is 50:1 when Pin 10 is at
V
+
and 100:1 when Pin 10 is at ground. When Pin 10 is not
tied to ground, it should be bypassed to analog ground
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
V
IN
V
+
200
V
V
OUT
LTC1064-7
DIGITAL SUPPLY
+
GND
CLOCK SOURCE
1064-7 F02
0.1µF
0.1µF
V
+
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
14
13
12
11
10
9
8
V
IN
V
+
200
V
OUT
DIGITAL SUPPLY
+
GND
CLOCK SOURCE
1064-7 F03
+
LTC1064-7
0.1µF
1µF
10k
10k
V
+
11
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External Connection Pins (7, 14)
Pins 7 and 14 should be connected together. In a printed
circuit board the connection should be done under the IC
package through a short trace surrounded by the analog
ground plane.
NC Pins (1, 5, 8, 13)
Pins 1, 5, 8 and 13 are not connected to any internal circuit
point on the device and should preferably be tied to analog
ground.
Figure 4. Buffer for Filter Output
with a 0.1µF capacitor. If the DC level at Pin 10 is switched
mechanically or electrically at slew rates greater than
1V/µs while the device is operating, a 10k resistor should
be connected between Pin 10 and the DC source.
Filter Input Pin (2)
The input pin is connected internally through a 40k resis-
tor tied to the inverting input of an op amp.
Filter Output Pins (9, 6)
Pin 9 is the specified output of the filter; it can typically
source 3mA and sink 1mA. Driving coaxial cables or
resistive loads less than 20k will degrade the total har-
monic distortion of the filter. When evaluating the device’s
distortion an output buffer is required. A noninverting
buffer, Figure 4, can be used provided that its input
common mode range is well within the filter’s output
swing. Pin 6 is an intermediate filter output providing an
unspecified 6th order lowpass filter. Pin 6 should not be
loaded.
Clock Feedthrough
Clock feedthrough is defined as the RMS value of the clock
frequency and its harmonics that are present at the filter’s
output pin (9). The clock feedthrough is tested with the
input pin (2) grounded and it depends on PC board layout
and on the value of the power supplies. With proper layout
techniques the values of the clock feedthrough are shown
in Table 8.
Table 8. Clock Feedthrough
V
S
50:1 100:1
Single 5V 90µV
RMS
100µV
RMS
±5V 100µV
RMS
300µV
RMS
±7.5V 120µV
RMS
650µV
RMS
Note: The clock feedthrough at single 5V is imbedded in the
wideband noise of the filter. Clock waveform is a square wave.
amplitude strongly depends on scope probing techniques
as well as grounding and power supply bypassing. The
clock feedthrough, if bothersome, can be greatly reduced
by adding a simple R/C lowpass network at the output of
the filter pin (9). This R/C will completely eliminate any
switching transients.
Wideband Noise
The wideband noise of the filter is the total RMS value of
the device’s noise spectral density and it is used to
determine the operating signal-to-noise ratio. Most of its
frequency contents lie within the filter passband and it
cannot be reduced with post filtering. For instance, the
LTC1064-7 wideband noise at ±5V supply is 105µV
RMS
,
95µV
RMS
of which have frequency contents from DC up to
the filter’s cutoff frequency. The total wideband noise
(µV
RMS
) is nearly independent of the value of the clock.
The clock feedthrough specifications are not part of the
wideband noise.
Any parasitic switching transients during the rise and fall
edges of the incoming clock are not part of the clock
feedthrough specifications. Switching transients have fre-
quency contents much higher than the applied clock; their
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LTC1064-7
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Speed Limitations
To avoid op amp slew rate limiting at maximum clock
frequencies, the signal amplitude should be kept below a
specified level as shown in Table 9.
Table 9. Maximum V
IN
vs V
S
and Clock
POWER SUPPLY MAXIMUM f
CLK
MAXIMUM V
IN
±7.5V 5.0MHz 1.8V
RMS
(f
IN
> 80kHz)
4.5MHz 2.3V
RMS
(f
IN
> 80kHz)
4.0MHz 2.7V
RMS
(f
IN
> 80kHz)
3.5MHz 1.4V
RMS
(f
IN
> 500kHz)
±5V 3.5MHz 1.6V
RMS
(f
IN
> 80kHz)
3.0MHz 0.7V
RMS
(f
IN
> 400kHz)
Single 5V 2.0MHz 0.5V
RMS
(f
IN
> 250kHz)
Table 10. Transient Response of LTC Lowpass Filters
DELAY RISE SETTLING OVER-
TIME* TIME** TIME*** SHOOT
LOWPASS FILTER (SEC) (SEC) (SEC) (%)
LTC1064-3 Bessel 0.50/f
C
0.34/f
C
0.80/f
C
0.5
LTC1164-5 Bessel 0.43/f
C
0.34/f
C
0.85/f
C
0
LTC1164-6 Bessel 0.43/f
C
0.34/f
C
1.15/f
C
1
LTC1264-7 Linear Phase 1.15/f
C
0.36/f
C
2.05/f
C
5
LTC1164-7 Linear Phase 1.20/f
C
0.39/f
C
2.2/f
C
5
LTC1064-7 Linear Phase 1.20/f
C
0.39/f
C
2.2/f
C
5
LTC1164-5 Butterworth 0.80/f
C
0.48/f
C
2.4/f
C
11
LTC1164-6 Elliptic 0.85/f
C
0.54/f
C
4.3/f
C
18
LTC1064-4 Elliptic 0.90/f
C
0.54/f
C
4.5/f
C
20
LTC1064-1 Elliptic 0.85/f
C
0.54/f
C
6.5/f
C
20
* To 50% ±5%, ** 10% to 90% ±5%, *** To 1% ±0.5%
Table 11. Aliasing (f
CLK
= 100kHz)
INPUT FREQUENCY OUTPUT LEVEL OUTPUT FREQUENCY
(V
IN
= 1V
RMS
, (Relative to Input, (Aliased Frequency
f
IN
= f
CLK
± f
OUT
) 0dB = 1V
RMS
)f
OUT
= ABS [f
CLK
± f
IN
])
(kHz) (dB) (kHz)
50:1, f
CUTOFF
= 2kHz
190 (or 210) 76.1 10.0
195 (or 205) 51.9 5.0
196 (or 204) 36.3 4.0
197 (or 203) 18.4 3.0
198 (or 202) 3.0 2.0
199.5 (or 200.5) 0.2 0.5
100:1, f
CUTOFF
= 1kHz
97 (or 103) –74.2 3.0
97.5 (or 102.5) 53.2 2.5
98 (or 102) 36.9 2.0
98.5 (or 101.5) 19.6 1.5
99 (or 101) 5.2 1.0
99.5 (or 100.5) 0.7 0.5
Transient Response
2V/DIV
50µs/DIV
1064-7 F05
V
S
= ± 7.5V, f
IN
= 2kHz ± 3V
f
CLK
= 1MHz, RATIO = 50:1
Figure 6.
INPUT
90%
50%
10%
OUTPUT
t
r
t
d
t
s
1064-7 F06
RISE TIME (t
r
) = ±5%
0.39
f
CUTOFF
SETTLING TIME (t
s
) = ±5%
(TO 1% of OUTPUT)
2.2
f
CUTOFF
DELAY TIME (t
d
) = GROUP DELAY
(TO 50% OF OUTPUT)
1.2
f
CUTOFF
Figure 5.
Aliasing
Aliasing is an inherent phenomenon of sampled data
systems and it occurs when input frequencies close to the
sampling frequency are applied. For the LTC1064-7 case
at 100:1, an input signal whose frequency is in the range
of f
CLK
±3%, will be aliased back into the filter’s passband.
If, for instance, an LTC1064-7 operating with a 100kHz
clock and 1kHz cutoff frequency receives a 98kHz, 10mV
input signal, a 2kHz, 143µV
RMS
alias signal will appear at
its output. When the LTC1064-7 operates with a clock-to-
cutoff frequency of 50:1, aliasing occurs at twice the clock
frequency. Table 11 shows details.

LTC1064-7CSW#PBF

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Analog Devices Inc.
Description:
Active Filter 100kHz Phase Corrected Lowpass Filter
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
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