Datasheet

ADS7813
15
SBAS043C
www.ti.com
LAYOUT
The ADS7813 should be treated as a precision analog
component and should reside completely on the analog
portion of the printed circuit board. Ideally, a ground plane
should extend underneath the ADS7813 and under all other
analog components. This plane should be separate from the
digital ground until they are joined at the power supply
connection. This will help prevent dynamic digital ground
currents from modulating the analog ground through a
common impedance to power ground.
The +5V power should be clean, well-regulated, and sepa-
rate from the +5V power for the digital portion of the design.
One possibility is to derive the +5V supply from a linear
regulator located near the ADS7813. If derived from the
digital +5V power, a 5 to 10 resistor should be placed in
series with the power connection from the digital supply. It
may also be necessary to increase the bypass capacitance
near the V
S
pin (an additional 100µF or greater capacitor in
parallel with the 10µF and 0.1µF capacitors). For designs
with a large number of digital components or very high
speed digital logic, this simple power supply filtering scheme
may not be adequate.
SENSITIVITY TO EXTERNAL
DIGITAL SIGNALS
All successive approximation register-based A/D converters
are sensitive to external sources of noise. The reason for this
will be explained in the following paragraphs. For the
ADS7813 and similar A/D converters, this noise most often
originates due to the transition of external digital signals.
While digital signals that run near the converter can be the
source of the noise, the biggest problem occurs with the
digital inputs to the converter itself.
In many cases, the system designer may not be aware that
there is a problem or a potential for a problem. For a 12-bit
system, these problems typically occur at the least significant
bits and only at certain places in the converter’s transfer
function. For a 16-bit converter, the problem can be much
easier to spot.
For example, the timing diagram in Figure 2 shows that the
CONV signal should return HIGH sometime during time t
2
.
In fact, the CONV signal can return HIGH at any time
during the conversion. However, after time t
2
, the transition
of the CONV signal has the potential of creating a good deal
of noise on the ADS7813 die. If this transition occurs at just
precisely the wrong time, the conversion results could be
affected. In a similar manner, transitions on the DATACLK
input could affect the conversion result.
For the ADS7813, there are 16 separate bit decisions which
are made during the conversion. The most significant bit
decision is made first, proceeding to the least significant bit
at the end of the conversion. Each bit decision involves the
assumption that the bit being tested should be set. This is
combined with the result that has been achieved so far. The
converter compares this combined result with the actual
input voltage. If the combined result is too high, the bit is
cleared. If the result is equal to or lower than the actual input
voltage, the bit remains HIGH. This is why the basic
architecture is referred to as successive approximation
register (SAR).
If the result so far is getting very close to the actual input
voltage, then the comparison involves two voltages which are
very close together. The ADS7813 has been designed so that
the internal noise sources are at a minimum just prior to the
comparator result being latched. However, if an external
digital signal transitions at this time, a great deal of noise will
be coupled into the sensitive analog section of the ADS7813.
Even if this noise produces a difference between the two
voltages of only 2mV, the conversion result will be off by 52
counts or least significant bits (LSBs). (The internal LSB size
of the ADS7813 is 38µV regardless of the input range.)
Once a digital transition has caused the comparator to make
a wrong bit decision, the decision cannot be corrected
(unless some type of error correction is employed). All
subsequent bit decisions will then be wrong. Figure 13
shows a successive approximation process that has gone
wrong. The dashed line represents what the correct bit
decisions should have been. The solid line represents the
actual result of the conversion.
FIGURE 13. SAR Operation When External Noise Affects the Conversion.
1
t
Converters
Full-Scale
Input Voltage
Range
0000
Conversion Clock
Incorrect Result
Correct Result
Actual Input
Voltage
Internal DAC
Voltage
Wrong Bit Decision Made Here
Proper SAR Operation
SAR Operation after
Wrong Bit Decision
1
(1 1)0110
External Noise
Conversion Start
(Hold Mode)