AD7680
Rev. A | Page 9 of 24
TERMINOLOGY
Integral Nonlinearity
This is the maximum deviation from a straight line passing
through the endpoints of the ADC transfer function. The
endpoints of the transfer function are zero scale, a point
1/2 LSB below the first code transition, and full scale, a point
1/2 LSB above the last code transition.
Differential Nonlinearity
This is the difference between the measured and the ideal 1 LSB
change between any two adjacent codes in the ADC.
Offset Error
This is the deviation of the first code transition (00 . . . 000) to
(00 . . . 001) from the ideal, i.e., AGND + 1 LSB.
Gain Error
This is the deviation of the last code transition (111 . . . 110) to
(111 . . . 111) from the ideal (i.e., V
REF
− 1 LSB) after the offset
error has been adjusted out.
Track-and-Hold Acquisition Time
The track-and-hold amplifier returns to track mode at the end
of conversion. The track-and-hold acquisition time is the time
required for the output of the track-and-hold amplifier to reach
its final value, within ±1 LSB, after the end of the conversion.
See the Serial Interface section for more details.
Signal-to-(Noise + Distortion) Ratio
This is the measured ratio of signal-to-(noise + distortion) at
the output of the ADC. The signal is the rms amplitude of the
fundamental. Noise is the sum of all nonfundamental signals up
to half the sampling frequency (f
S
/2, excluding dc). The ratio
depends on the number of quantization levels in the digitization
process; the more levels, the smaller the quantization noise. The
theoretical signal-to-(noise + distortion) ratio for an ideal N-bit
converter with a sine wave input is given by
Signal-to-(Noise + Distortion) = (6.02 N + 1.76) dB
Thus, for a 16-bit converter, this is 98 dB.
Total Harmonic Distortion (THD)
THD is the ratio of the rms sum of harmonics to the
fundamental. For the AD7680, it is defined as
1
2
6
2
5
2
4
2
3
2
2
V
VVVVV
dBTHD
++++
= log20)(
where V
1
is the rms amplitude of the fundamental and V
2
, V
3
,
V
4
, V
5
, and V
6
are the rms amplitudes of the second through the
sixth harmonics.
Peak Harmonic or Spurious Noise
Peak harmonic or spurious noise is defined as the ratio of the
rms value of the next largest component in the ADC output
spectrum (up to f
S
/2, excluding dc) to the rms value of the
fundamental. Normally, the value of this specification is
determined by the largest harmonic in the spectrum, but for
ADCs where the harmonics are buried in the noise floor, it is a
noise peak.
Intermodulation Distortion
With inputs consisting of sine waves at two frequencies, fa and fb,
any active device with nonlinearities creates distortion products
at the sum and difference frequencies of mfa ± nfb where m, n =
0, 1, 2, 3. Intermodulation distortion terms are those for which
neither m nor n are equal to zero. For example, the second-order
terms include (fa + fb) and (fa − fb), while the third-order terms
include (2fa + fb), (2fa − fb), (fa + 2fb), and (fa −2fb).
The AD7680 is tested using the CCIF standard where two input
frequencies near the top end of the input bandwidth are used.
In this case, the second-order terms are usually distanced in
frequency from the original sine waves, while the third-order
terms are usually at a frequency close to the input frequencies.
As a result, the second- and third-order terms are specified
separately. The calculation of the intermodulation distortion is
as per the THD specification where it is the ratio of the rms
sum of the individual distortion products to the rms amplitude
of the sum of the fundamentals expressed in dBs.
AD7680
Rev. A | Page 10 of 24
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
Figure 5 shows a typical FFT plot for the AD7680 at 100 kSPS
sample rate and 10 kHz input frequency. Figure 6 shows the
signal-to-(noise + distortion) ratio performance versus the
input frequency for various supply voltages while sampling at
100 kSPS with an SCLK of 2.5 MHz.
Figure 7 shows a graph of the total harmonic distortion versus
the analog input frequency for various supply voltages, while
Figure 8 shows a graph of the total harmonic distortion versus
the analog input frequency for various source impedances (see
the Analog Input section). Figure 9 and Figure 10 show the
typical INL and DNL plots for the AD7680.
03643-0-021
dB
–140
–120
–100
–80
–60
–40
–20
–160
0 10k 20k 30k 40k
FREQUENCY (kHz)
50k
0
V
DD
= 5V
F
SAMPLE
= 100kSPS
F
IN
= 10kHz
SNR = 88.28dB
SINAD = 87.82dB
THD = –97.76dB
SFDR = –98.25dB
Figure 5. AD7680 Dynamic Performance at 100 kSPS
03643-0-016
SINAD (dB)
80
10
INPUT FREQUENCY (kHz)
100
85
90
95
V
DD
= 2.5V
V
DD
= 5.25V
V
DD
= 4.75V
V
DD
= 4.3V
V
DD
= 3.6V
V
DD
= 3.0V
V
DD
= 2.7V
F
SAMPLE
= 100kSPS
T
A
= 25°C
Figure 6. AD7680 SINAD vs. Analog Input Frequency
for Various Supply Voltages at 100 kSPS
03643-0-017
THD (dB)
90
10
INPUT FREQUENCY (kHz)
100
100
95
105
110
V
DD
= 4.75V
V
DD
= 4.3V
V
DD
= 3.6V
V
DD
= 3.0V
V
DD
= 2.7V
V
DD
= 2.5V
V
DD
= 5.25V
F
SAMPLE
= 100kSPS
T
A
= 25°C
Figure 7. AD7680 THD vs. Analog Input Frequency
for Various Supply Voltages at 100 kSPS
03643-0-018
THD (dB)
75
10
INPUT FREQUENCY (kHz)
100
95
100
80
90
85
105
110
F
SAMPLE
= 100kSPS
T
A
= 25°C
V
DD
= 4.75V
R
IN
= 10Ω
R
IN
= 50Ω
R
IN
= 100Ω
R
IN
= 1000Ω
Figure 8. AD7680 THD vs. Analog Input Frequency
for Various Source Impedances
AD7680
Rev. A | Page 11 of 24
03643-0-019
INL ERROR (LSB)
–1.0
0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000
CODE
70000
1.0
1.5
–0.5
0.5
0
2.0
2.5
V
DD
= 3.0V
TEMP = 25
°
C
Figure 9. AD7680 Typical INL
03643-0-020
DNL ERROR (LSB)
–1.0
–1.5
0 10000 20000 30000 40000 50000 60000
CODE
70000
1.0
–0.5
0.5
0
1.5
V
DD
= 3.0V
TEMP = 25
°
C
Figure 10. AD7680 Typical DNL

AD7680ARMZ

Mfr. #:
Manufacturer:
Analog Devices Inc.
Description:
Analog to Digital Converters - ADC 3mW 100kSPS 16-Bit
Lifecycle:
New from this manufacturer.
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