Chapter 1: Data Converter History ........................................................................................3 Section 1-1: Early History .............................................................................................................5 The Early Years: Telegraph to Telephone .......................................................................................... 6 The Invention of PCM ....................................................................................................................... 8 The Mathematical Foundations of PCM ........................................................................................... 9 The PCM Patents of Alec Harley Reeves ........................................................................................ 10 PCM and the Bell System: World War II through 1948 .................................................................. 11 Op Amps and Regenerative Repeaters: Vacuum Tubes to Solid-State ............................................ 13 Section 1-2: Data Converters of the 1950s and 1960s ...................................................................19 Commercial Data Converters: 1950s ............................................................................................... 19 Commercial Data Converter History: 1960s ................................................................................... 20 Data Converter Architectures .......................................................................................................... 23 Section 1-3: Data Converters of the 1970s ...................................................................................27 Monolithic Data Converters of the 1970s ........................................................................................28 Bipolar Process IC DACs of the 1970s ...........................................................................................28 CMOS IC DACs of the 1970s ......................................................................................................... 29 Monolithic ADCs of the 1970s ........................................................................................................ 31 Hybrid Data Converters of the 1970s .............................................................................................. 32 Modular Data Converters of the 1970s ............................................................................................ 35 Section 1-4: Data Converters of the 1980s ...................................................................................39 Monolithic DACs of the 1980s ........................................................................................................ 40 Monolithic ADCs of the 1980s ........................................................................................................ 41 Monolithic Flash ADCs of the 1980s .............................................................................................. 42 Hybrid and Modular DACs and ADCs of the 1980s ....................................................................... 42 Section 1-5: Data Converters of the 1990s ...................................................................................45 Monolithic DACs of the 1990s ........................................................................................................ 46 Monolithic ADCs of the 1990s ........................................................................................................ 48 Hybrid and Modular DACs and ADCs of the 1990s ....................................................................... 52 Section 1-6: Data Converters of the 2000s ...................................................................................53 Chapter 2: Fundamentals of Sampled Data Systems ...............................................................57 Section 2-1: Coding and Quantizing .............................................................................................57 Unipolar Codes ................................................................................................................................ 59 Gray Code ........................................................................................................................................ 61 Bipolar Codes .................................................................................................................................. 62 TLFeBOOKvi Contents Complementary Codes .................................................................................................................... 65 DAC and ADC Static Transfer Functions and DC Errors ............................................................... 66 Section 2-2: Sampling Theory ......................................................................................................73 The Need for a Sample-and-Hold Amplifi er (SHA) Function ........................................................ 74 The Nyquist Criteria ........................................................................................................................ 76 Baseband Antialiasing Filters .......................................................................................................... 78 Undersampling (Harmonic Sampling, Bandpass Sampling, IF Sampling, Direct IF-to-Digital Conversion) ................................................................................................. 80 Antialiasing Filters in Undersampling Applications ....................................................................... 81 Section 2-3: Data Converter AC Errors ........................................................................................83 Theoretical Quantization Noise of an Ideal N-Bit Converter .......................................................... 83 Noise in Practical ADCs .................................................................................................................. 88 Equivalent Input Referred Noise .................................................................................................... 89 Noise-Free (Flicker-Free) Code Resolution ................................................................................... 89 Dynamic Performance of Data Converters ...................................................................................... 90 Integral and Differential Nonlinearity Distortion Effects ................................................................ 90 Harmonic Distortion, Worst Harmonic, Total Harmonic Distortion (THD), Total Harmonic Distortion Plus Noise (THD + N) ...................................................................... 91 Signal-to-Noise-and-Distortion Ratio (SINAD), Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), and Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) ....................................................................................... 91 Analog Bandwidth ........................................................................................................................... 92 Spurious Free Dynamic Range (SFDR) .......................................................................................... 93 Two-Tone Intermodulation Distortion (IMD) ................................................................................. 94 Second- and Third-Order Intercept Points, 1 dB Compression Point ............................................. 95 Multitone Spurious Free Dynamic Range ....................................................................................... 96 Wideband CDMA (WCDMA) Adjacent Channel Power Ratio (ACPR) and Adjacent Channel Leakage Ratio (ADLR) ................................................................................................. 97 Noise Power Ratio (NPR) ................................................................................................................ 98 Noise Factor (F) and Noise Figure (NF) ....................................................................................... 100 Aperture Time, Aperture Delay Time, and Aperture Jitter ........................................................... 106 A Simple Equation for the Total SNR of an ADC ........................................................................ 108 ADC Transient Response and Overvoltage Recovery ................................................................... 109 ADC Sparkle Codes, Metastable States, and Bit Error Rate (BER) ............................................. 111 DAC Dynamic Performance ......................................................................................................... 115 DAC Settling Time ................................................................................................................. 115 Glitch Impulse Area ............................................................................................................... 116 DAC SFDR and SNR ............................................................................................................. 117 Measuring DAC SNR with an Analog Spectrum Analyzer .................................................... 118 DAC Output Spectrum and sin (x)/x Frequency Roll-off ....................................................... 119 Oversampling Interpolating DACs ......................................................................................... 120 Section 2-4: General Data Converter Specifi cations ......................................................................123 Overall Considerations .................................................................................................................. 123 Logic Interface Issues .................................................................................................................... 124 Data Converter Logic: Timing and other Issues ............................................................................ 125 Section 2-5: Defi ning the Specifi cations .......................................................................................127 TLFeBOOKvii Contents Chapter 3: Data Converter Architectures ............................................................................147 Section 3-1: DAC Architectures .................................................................................................147 DAC Output Considerations .......................................................................................................... 148 Basic DAC Structures .................................................................................................................... 149 The Kelvin Divider (String DAC) .......................................................................................... 149 Thermometer (Fully-Decoded) DACs .................................................................................... 151 Binary-Weighted DACs .......................................................................................................... 153 R-2R DACs ............................................................................................................................. 155 Segmented DACs .................................................................................................................... 159 Oversampling Interpolating DACs ................................................................................................ 163 Multiplying DACs ......................................................................................................................... 164 Intentionally Nonlinear DACs ....................................................................................................... 164 Counting, Pulsewidth-Modulated (PWM) DACs .......................................................................... 167 Cyclic Serial DACs ........................................................................................................................ 167 Other Low Distortion Architectures .............................................................................................. 169 DAC Logic Considerations ............................................................................................................ 170 Section 3-2: ADC Architectures .................................................................................................175 The Comparator: A 1-Bit ADC ...................................................................................................... 178 High Speed ADC Architectures ..................................................................................................... 180 Flash Converters ..................................................................................................................... 180 Successive Approximation ADCs ........................................................................................... 185 Subranging, Error Corrected, and Pipelined ADCs ............................................................... 190 Serial Bit-Per-Stage Binary and Gray Coded (Folding) ADCs ............................................. 203 Counting and Integrating ADC Architectures ............................................................................... 211 A. H. Reeves’ 5-Bit Counting ADC ....................................................................................... 211 Charge Run-Down ADC ......................................................................................................... 212 Ramp Run-Up ADC ............................................................................................................... 212 Tracking ADC ........................................................................................................................ 213 Voltage-to-Frequency Converters (VFCs) .............................................................................. 214 Dual Slope/Multislope ADCs ................................................................................................. 218 Optical Converters ......................................................................................................................... 220 Resolver-to-Digital Converters (RDCs) and Synchros .................................................................. 221 Section 3-3: Sigma-Delta Converters ..........................................................................................231 Historical Perspective .................................................................................................................... 231 Sigma-Delta (Σ-∆) or Delta-Sigma (∆-Σ)? ................................................................................... 234 Basics of Sigma-Delta ADCs ........................................................................................................ 235 Idle Tone Considerations ............................................................................................................... 240 Higher Order Loop Considerations ............................................................................................... 241 Multibit Sigma-Delta Converters .................................................................................................. 242 Digital Filter Implications ............................................................................................................. 243 Multistage Noise Shaping (MASH) Sigma-Delta Converters ....................................................... 244 High Resolution Measurement Sigma-Delta ADCs ...................................................................... 245 Sigma-Delta DACs ........................................................................................................................ 249 Chapter 4: Data Converter Process Technology ....................................................................257 Section 4-1: Early Processes ......................................................................................................257 Vacuum Tube Data Converters ...................................................................................................... 257 TLFeBOOKviii Contents Solid State, Modular, and Hybrid Data Converters ....................................................................... 259 Calibration Processes ..................................................................................................................... 262 Section 4-2: Modern Processes ...................................................................................................265 Bipolar Processes ........................................................................................................................... 265 Thin Film Resistor Processes ........................................................................................................ 265 Complementary Bipolar (CB) Processes ....................................................................................... 266 CMOS Processes ........................................................................................................................... 266 Data Converter Processes and Architectures ................................................................................. 268 Section 4-3: Smart Partitioning .................................................................................................273 When Complete Integration Isn’t the Optimal Solution ................................................................ 273 Why Smart Partitioning is Necessary ........................................................................................... 276 What’s Changing? ......................................................................................................................... 277 Chapter 5: Testing Data Converters ...................................................................................283 Section 5-1: Testing DACs ........................................................................................................283 Static DAC Testing ........................................................................................................................ 283 End-Point Errors ..................................................................................................................... 284 Linearity Errors ...................................................................................................................... 286 Superposition and DAC Errors ............................................................................................... 286 Measuring DAC DNL and INL Using Superposition ............................................................ 287 Measuring DAC INL and DNL Where Superposition Does Not Hold .................................. 290 Testing DACs for Dynamic Performance ...................................................................................... 292 Settling Time .......................................................................................................................... 292 Glitch Impulse Area ............................................................................................................... 293 Oscilloscope Measurement of Settling Time and Glitch Impulse Area ................................ 294 Distortion Measurements ....................................................................................................... 295 Section 5-2: Testing ADCs ........................................................................................................303 A Brief Historical Overview of Data Converter Specifi cations and Testing ................................. 303 Static ADC Testing ........................................................................................................................ 304 Back-to-Back Static ADC Testing .......................................................................................... 306 Crossplot Measurements of ADC Linearity ........................................................................... 309 Servo-Loop Code Transition Test ........................................................................................... 310 Computer-Based Servo-Loop ADC Tester ............................................................................. 311 Histogram (Code Density) Test with Linear Ramp Input ...................................................... 312 Dynamic ADC Testing ................................................................................................................... 317 Manual “Back-to-Back” Dynamic ADC Testing ................................................................... 317 Measuring Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) Using Sinewave Curve Fitting ...................... 320 FFT Basics .............................................................................................................................. 322 FFT Test Setup Confi guration and Measurements ................................................................. 329 Verifying the FFT Accuracy ................................................................................................... 335 Generating Low Distortion Sinewave Inputs ......................................................................... 335 Noise Power Ratio (NPR) Testing .......................................................................................... 337 Measuring ADC Aperture Jitter Using the Locked-Histogram Test Method ......................... 338 Measuring Aperture Delay Time ............................................................................................ 340 Measuring ADC Aperture Jitter Using FFTs .......................................................................... 340 Measuring ADC Analog Bandwidth Using FFTs .................................................................. 342 Settling Time .......................................................................................................................... 343 TLFeBOOKix Contents Overvoltage Recovery Time ................................................................................................... 344 Video Testing, Differential Gain and Differential Phase ........................................................ 344 Bit Error Rate (BER) Tests ..................................................................................................... 348 Chapter 6: Interfacing to Data Converters ...........................................................................359 Section 6-1: Driving ADC Analog Inputs .....................................................................................359 Amplifer DC and AC Performance Considerations ...................................................................... 361 Rail-Rail Input Stages .................................................................................................................... 362 Output Stages ................................................................................................................................. 365 Gain and Level-Shifting Circuits Using Op Amps ........................................................................ 367 Op Amp AC Specifi cations and Data Converter Requirements .................................................... 369 Driving High Resolution Σ-∆ Measurement ADCs ....................................................................... 371 Driving Single-Ended Input Single-Supply 1.6 V to 3.6 V Successive Approximation ADCs ..... 372 Driving Single-Supply ADCs with Scaled Inputs ......................................................................... 373 Driving Differential Input CMOS Switched Capacitor ADCs ...................................................... 374 Single-Ended Drive Circuits for Differential Input CMOS ADCs ................................................ 376 Differential Input ADC Drivers ..................................................................................................... 378 Driving ADCs with Differential Amplifi ers .................................................................................. 382 Dual Op Amp Drivers .................................................................................................................... 383 Fully Integrated Differential Amplifi er Drivers ............................................................................. 384 Driving Differential Input ADCs with Integrated Differential Drivers ......................................... 387 Section 6-2: ADC and DAC Digital Interfaces(and Related Issues) ................................................397 Power-On Initialization of Data Converters ................................................................................. 397 Initialization of Data Converter Internal Control Registers ........................................................... 398 Low Power, Sleep, and Standby Modes ....................................................................................... 398 Single-Shot Mode, Burst Mode, and Minimum Sampling Frequency .......................................... 399 ADC Digital Output Interfaces ...................................................................................................... 400 ADC Serial Output Interfaces ....................................................................................................... 400 ADC Serial Interface to DSPs ...................................................................................................... 403 ADC Parallel Output Interfaces ..................................................................................................... 405 DAC Digital Input Interfaces ......................................................................................................... 408 DAC Serial Input Interfaces to DSPs ............................................................................................ 410 DAC Parallel Input Interfaces to DSPs .......................................................................................... 411 Section 6-3: Buffering DAC Analog Outputs ...............................................................................415 Differential to Single-Ended Conversion Techniques ................................................................... 416 Single-Ended Current-to-Voltage Conversion ............................................................................... 418 Differential Current-to-Differential Voltage Conversion ............................................................... 420 An Active Low-Pass Filter for Audio DAC .................................................................................. 420 Section 6-4: Data Converter Voltage References ..........................................................................423 Section 6-5: Sampling Clock Generation .....................................................................................427 Oscillator Phase Noise and Jitter ................................................................................................... 430 “Hybrid” Clock Generators ........................................................................................................... 437 Driving Differential Sampling Clock Inputs ................................................................................. 438 Sampling Clock Summary ............................................................................................................. 439 Chapter 7: Data Converter Support Circuits ........................................................................443 Section 7-1: Voltage References .................................................................................................443 Precision Voltage References ........................................................................................................ 443 TLFeBOOKx Contents Types of Voltage References .......................................................................................................... 444 Bandgap References ............................................................................................................... 446 Buried Zener References ........................................................................................................ 451 XFET References ................................................................................................................... 452 Voltage Reference Specifi cations .................................................................................................. 455 Tolerance ................................................................................................................................ 455 Drift ........................................................................................................................................ 455 Supply Range ......................................................................................................................... 456 Load Sensitivity ...................................................................................................................... 456 Line Sensitivity ....................................................................................................................... 457 Noise ....................................................................................................................................... 457 Scaled References .......................................................................................................................... 459 Voltage Reference Pulse Current Response ................................................................................... 460 Low Noise References for High Resolution Converters ............................................................... 462 Section 7-2: Low Dropout Linear Regulators ...............................................................................465 Linear Voltage Regulator Basics .................................................................................................... 465 Pass Devices and their Associated Trade Offs ............................................................................... 468 Low Dropout Regulator Architectures .......................................................................................... 472 The anyCAP Low Dropout Regulator Family ............................................................................... 475 Design Features Related to DC Performance ......................................................................... 475 Design Features Related to AC Performance ......................................................................... 476 A Basic Pole-Splitting Topology ............................................................................................ 477 The anyCAP Pole-Splitting Topology .................................................................................... 477 The anyCAP LDO series devices ........................................................................................... 478 Functional Diagram and Basic 50 mA LDO Regulator ......................................................... 479 LDO Regulator Thermal Considerations ............................................................................... 481 LDO Regulator Controllers ........................................................................................................... 485 Regulator Controller Differences ........................................................................................... 485 A Basic 5 V/1 A LDO Regulator Controller .......................................................................... 486 Selecting the Pass Device ....................................................................................................... 487 Thermal Design ...................................................................................................................... 488 Sensing Resistors for LDO Controllers .................................................................................. 489 PCB Layout Issues ................................................................................................................. 490 A 2.8 V/8 A LDO Regulator Controller ................................................................................. 491 Section 7-3: Analog Switches and Multiplexers ............................................................................493 CMOS Switch Basics .................................................................................................................... 494 Error Sources in the CMOS Switch ............................................................................................... 496 Applying the Analog Switch ........................................................................................................ 504 1 GHz CMOS Switches ................................................................................................................. 508 Video Switches and Multiplexers .................................................................................................. 508 Video Crosspoint Switches ............................................................................................................ 511 Digital Crosspoint Switches .......................................................................................................... 512 Switch and Multiplexer Families from Analog Devices ................................................................ 512 Parasitic Latchup in CMOS Switches and Muxes ......................................................................... 512 Section 7-4: Sample-and-Hold Circuits ........................................................................................519 Introduction and Historical Perspective ........................................................................................ 519 TLFeBOOKxi Contents Basic SHA Operation .................................................................................................................... 521 Track Mode Specifi cations ............................................................................................................ 522 Track-to-Hold Mode Specifi cations .............................................................................................. 522 Hold Mode Specifi cations ............................................................................................................. 526 Hold-to-Track Transition Specifi cations ....................................................................................... 528 SHA Architectures ......................................................................................................................... 529 Internal SHA Circuits for IC ADCs ............................................................................................... 531 SHA Applications .......................................................................................................................... 533 Chapter 8: Data Converter Applications .............................................................................539 Section 8-1: Precision Measurement and Sensor Conditioning ........................................................539 Applications of Precision Measurement Σ-∆ ADCs ...................................................................... 540 Weigh Scale Design Analysis Using the AD7730 ADC ................................................................ 544 Thermocouple Conditioning Using the AD7793 ........................................................................... 549 Direct Digital Temperature Measurements .................................................................................... 551 Microprocessor Substrate Temperature Sensors ............................................................................ 555 Applications of ADCs in Power Meters ........................................................................................ 558 Section 8-2: Multichannel Data Acquisition Systems .....................................................................563 Data Acquisition System Confi gurations ....................................................................................... 563 Multiplexing .................................................................................................................................. 564 Filtering Considerations in Data Acquisition Systems .................................................................. 567 Complete Data Acquisition Systems on a Chip ............................................................................. 568 Multiplexing Inputs to Σ-∆ ADCs ................................................................................................. 570 Simultaneous Sampling Systems ................................................................................................... 572 Data Distribution Systems ............................................................................................................ 574 Data Distribution Using an Infi nite Sample-and-Hold .................................................................. 578 Section 8-3: Digital Potentiometers ............................................................................................581 Modern Digital Potentiometers in Tiny Packages ......................................................................... 582 Digital Potentiometers with Nonvolatile Memory ........................................................................ 584 One-Time Programmable (OTP) Digital Potentiometers .............................................................. 585 Digital Potentiometer AC Considerations ..................................................................................... 586 Application Examples ................................................................................................................... 587 Section 8-4: Digital Audio .........................................................................................................591 Sampling Rate and THD + N Requirements for Digital Audio ..................................................... 592 Overall Trends in Digital Audio ADCs and DACs ........................................................................ 595 Voiceband Codecs .......................................................................................................................... 596 High Performance Audio ADCs and DACs in Separate Packages ................................................ 597 High Performance Multichannel Audio Codecs and DACs .......................................................... 600 Sample Rate Converters ................................................................................................................ 602 Section 8-5: Digital Video and Display Electronics .......................................................................607 Digital Video .................................................................................................................................. 607 Digital Video Formats ............................................................................................................ 608 Serial Data Interfaces ............................................................................................................. 612 Digital Video ADCs and DACs: Decoders, and Encoders ..................................................... 612 Specifi cations for Video Decoders and Encoders ................................................................... 614 Display Electronics ........................................................................................................................ 615 Flat Panel Display Electronics ............................................................................................... 619 TLFeBOOKxii Contents CCD Imaging Electronics ...................................................................................................... 622 Touchscreen Digitizers ........................................................................................................... 627 Section 8-6: Software Radio and IF Sampling ..............................................................................633 Evolution of Software Radio ......................................................................................................... 634 A Receiver Using Digital Processing at Baseband ........................................................................ 635 Narrowband IF-Sampling Digital Receivers ................................................................................. 636 Wideband IF-Sampling Digital Receivers ..................................................................................... 639 Increasing ADC Dynamic Range Using Dither ............................................................................. 649 Wideband Radio Transmitter Considerations ................................................................................ 655 Cellular Telephone Handsets ......................................................................................................... 659 The Role of ADCs and DACs in Cellular Telephone Handsets ..................................................... 661 SoftFone® and Othello Radio Chipsets from Analog Devices ..................................................... 662 Time-Interleaved IF Sampling ADCs with Digital Post-Processors ............................................. 667 Advanced Digital Post Processing ................................................................................................. 671 Advanced Filter Bank (AFB) ........................................................................................................ 672 AFB Design Example: The AD12400 12-Bit, 400 MSPS ADC ................................................... 673 Section 8-7: Direct Digital Synthesis (DDS) ................................................................................677 Introduction to DDS ...................................................................................................................... 677 Aliasing in DDS Systems .............................................................................................................. 681 Frequency Planning in DDS Systems ............................................................................................ 682 Modern Integrated DDS Systems .................................................................................................. 684 Section 8-8: Precision Analog Microcontrollers ............................................................................693 Characteristics of the MicroConverter Product Family ................................................................. 694 Some Σ-∆ MicroConverter Applications ....................................................................................... 700 ADuC7xxx MicroConverter Products Based on the ARM7 Processor Core ................................ 702 Chapter 9: Hardware Design Techniques .............................................................................709 Section 9-1: Passive Components ...............................................................................................711 Capacitors ...................................................................................................................................... 711 Dielectric Absorption ............................................................................................................. 712 Capacitor Parasitics and Dissipation Factor ........................................................................... 714 Tolerance, Temperature, and Other Effects ............................................................................ 715 Assemble Critical Components Last ...................................................................................... 715 Resistors and Potentiometers ......................................................................................................... 718 Resistor Parasitics ................................................................................................................... 720 Thermoelectric Effects ........................................................................................................... 720 Voltage Sensitivity, Failure Mechanisms, and Aging ............................................................. 722 Resistor Excess Noise ............................................................................................................ 723 Potentiometers ........................................................................................................................ 723 Inductance ...................................................................................................................................... 725 Stray Inductance ..................................................................................................................... 725 Mutual Inductance .................................................................................................................. 725 Ringing ................................................................................................................................... 728 Parasitic Effects in Inductors .................................................................................................. 728 Q or “Quality Factor” ............................................................................................................. 729 Don’t Overlook Anything .............................................................................................................. 729 TLFeBOOKxiii Contents Section 9-2: PC Board Design Issues ..........................................................................................733 Resistance of Conductors .............................................................................................................. 733 Voltage Drop in Signal Leads—“Kelvin” Feedback ..................................................................... 735 Signal Return Currents .................................................................................................................. 736 Grounding in Mixed Analog/Digital Systems ............................................................................... 737 Ground and Power Planes ...................................................................................................... 738 Double-Sided versus Multilayer Printed Circuit Boards ........................................................ 739 Multicard Mixed-Signal Systems ........................................................................................... 740 Separating Analog and Digital Grounds ................................................................................. 740 Grounding and Decoupling Mixed-Signal ICs with Low Digital Currents ........................... 742 Treat the ADC Digital Outputs with Care .............................................................................. 743 Sampling Clock Considerations ............................................................................................. 744 The Origins of the Confusion about Mixed-Signal Grounding: Applying Single-Card Grounding Concepts to Multicard Systems ...................................................................... 746 Summary: Grounding Mixed-Signal Devices with Low Digital Currents in a Multicard System ............................................................................................................... 747 Summary: Grounding Mixed-Signal Devices with High Digital Currents in a Multicard System ............................................................................................................... 748 Grounding DSPs with Internal Phase-Locked Loops ............................................................. 748 Grounding Summary .............................................................................................................. 749 Some General PC Board Layout Guidelines for Mixed-Signal Systems ...................................... 750 Skin Effect .............................................................................................................................. 751 Transmission Lines ................................................................................................................. 753 Be Careful With Ground Plane Breaks ................................................................................... 753 Ground Isolation Techniques .................................................................................................. 754 Static PCB Effects .................................................................................................................. 756 Sample MINIDIP and SOIC Op Amp PCB Guard Layouts .................................................. 758 Dynamic PCB Effects ............................................................................................................ 760 Stray Capacitance ................................................................................................................... 761 Capacitive Noise and Faraday Shields ................................................................................... 762 The Floating Shield Problem .................................................................................................. 762 Buffering ADCs Against Logic Noise ................................................................................... 763 Section 9-3: Analog Power Supply Systems ..................................................................................767 Linear IC Regulation ..................................................................................................................... 768 Some Linear Voltage Regulator Basics .................................................................................. 768 Pass Devices .......................................................................................................................... 770 ±15 V Regulator Using Adjustable Voltage ICs ..................................................................... 770 Low Dropout Regulator Architectures ................................................................................... 771 Fixed-Voltage, 50/100/200/500/1000/1500 mA LDO Regulators ......................................... 772 Adjustable Voltage, 200 mA LDO Regulator ......................................................................... 774 Charge-Pump Voltage Converters ................................................................................................. 775 Regulated Output Charge-Pump Voltage Converters .................................................................... 776 Linear Post Regulator for Switching Supplies .............................................................................. 778 Grounding Linear and Switching Regulators ................................................................................ 779 Power Supply Noise Reduction and Filtering ............................................................................... 782 Capacitors ............................................................................................................................... 782 TLFeBOOKxiv Contents Ferrites .................................................................................................................................... 786 Card Entry Filter ..................................................................................................................... 787 Rail Bypass/Distribution Filter ............................................................................................... 788 Local High Frequency Bypass/Decoupling ............................................................................ 789 Section 9-4: Overvoltage Protection ...........................................................................................793 In-Circuit Overvoltage Protection ................................................................................................. 793 General Input Common Mode Limitations ................................................................................... 793 Clamping Diode Leakage .............................................................................................................. 795 A Flexible Voltage Follower Protection Circuit ........................................................................... 796 Common-Mode Overvoltage Protection Using CMOS Channel Protectors ................................. 797 CM Overvoltage Protection Using High CM Voltage In Amp ...................................................... 798 Inverting Mode Op Amp Protection Schemes ............................................................................... 800 Amplifi er Output Voltage Phase-Reversal ..................................................................................... 800 An Output Phase-Reversal Do-it-Yourself Test ...................................................................... 802 Fixes for Output Phase–Reversal ........................................................................................... 802 Input Differential Protection ......................................................................................................... 803 Protecting In Amps Against Overvoltage ...................................................................................... 804 Overvoltage Protection Using CMOS Channel Protectors ............................................................ 808 Digital Isolators ............................................................................................................................. 810 Out-of-Circuit Overvoltage Protection .......................................................................................... 813 ESD Models and Testing ............................................................................................................... 817 Section 9-5: Thermal Management .............................................................................................823 Thermal Basics .............................................................................................................................. 823 Heat Sinking .................................................................................................................................. 825 Data Converter Thermal Considerations ....................................................................................... 829 Section 9-6: EMI/RFI Considerations .........................................................................................833 EMI/RFI Mechanisms ................................................................................................................... 834 EMI Noise Sources ........................................................................................................................ 834 EMI Coupling Paths ...................................................................................................................... 834 Noise Coupling Mechanisms ......................................................................................................... 834 Reducing Common-Impedance Noise ........................................................................................... 835 Noise Induced by Near-Field Interference .................................................................................... 836 Reducing Capacitance-Coupled Noise .......................................................................................... 836 Reducing Magnetically-Coupled Noise ........................................................................................ 837 Passive Components: Your Arsenal Against EMI .......................................................................... 838 Reducing System Susceptibility to EMI ........................................................................................ 839 A Review of Shielding Concepts ................................................................................................... 839 General Points on Cables and Shields ........................................................................................... 842 Input-Stage RFI Rectifi cation Sensitivity ...................................................................................... 846 Background: Op Amp and In Amp RFI Rectifi cation Sensitivity Tests ................................. 846 An Analytical Approach: BJT RFI Rectifi cation .................................................................... 847 An Analytical Approach: FET RFI Rectifi cation .................................................................. 848 Reducing RFI Rectifi cation Within Op amp and In Amp Circuits ......................................... 849 Op Amp Inputs ............................................................................................................................. 849 In Amp Inputs ................................................................................................................................ 850 Amplifi er Outputs and EMI/RFI ................................................................................................... 852 TLFeBOOKxv Contents Printed Circuit Board Design for EMI/RFI Protection .................................................................. 852 Choose Logic Devices Carefully .................................................................................................. 853 Design PCBs Thoughtfully ............................................................................................................ 853 Designing Controlled Impedances Traces on PCBs ..................................................................... 854 Microstrip PCB Transmission Lines ............................................................................................. 855 Some Microstrip Guidelines .......................................................................................................... 855 Symmetric Stripline PCB Transmission Lines .............................................................................. 856 Some Pros and Cons of Embedding Traces ................................................................................... 857 Dealing with High-Speed Logic .................................................................................................... 858 Section 9-7: Low Voltage Logic Interfacing ..................................................................................867 Voltage Tolerance and Voltage Compliance .................................................................................. 870 Interfacing 5 V Systems to 3.3 V Systems using NMOS FET “Bus Switches” ............................ 871 3.3 V/2.5 V Interfaces .................................................................................................................... 873 3.3 V/2.5 V, 3.3 V/1.8 V, 2.5 V/1.8 V Interfaces ............................................................................ 874 Hot Swap and Hot Plug Applications of Bus Switches ................................................................. 878 Internally Created Voltage Tolerance / Compliance ...................................................................... 879 Section 9-8: Breadboarding and Prototyping ...............................................................................881 “Deadbug” Prototyping ................................................................................................................. 882 Solder-Mount Prototyping ............................................................................................................. 884 Milled PCB Prototyping ................................................................................................................ 885 Beware of Sockets ......................................................................................................................... 886 Some Additional Prototyping Points ............................................................................................. 887 Evaluation Boards .......................................................................................................................... 887 General-Purpose Op Amp Evaluation Board from the Mid-1990s ........................................ 888 Dedicated Op Amp Evaluation Boards .................................................................................. 888 Data Converter Evaluation Boards ......................................................................................... 890 Index ...............................................................................................................................895
2023-10-17 17:20:29 21.99MB electric
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包含发动机正常、高负荷、损坏三种状态.wav声音片段,每种状态包含几百个片段,每个片段时长3S,可用于声纹类型识别,包含数据集介绍文档。
2023-10-08 17:19:31 566.89MB 工业 声纹识别 发动机故障
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EPLAN Electric P8 Reference Handbook 国外经典教材,比国内能找到的所谓EPLAN高级教程强N倍,此书在亚马逊卖604元。非扫描版,非常清晰。注意:此书为英文版
2023-07-16 19:53:31 24.2MB EPLAN Handbook
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希腊电力负荷预测IPTO 此存储库包含我研究生论文的代码,该论文涉及短期负荷预测,使用希腊独立电力公司提供的每日负荷数据集,在R,RStudio,R-markdown和R-Shiny中开发了预测希腊每小时的电力负荷需求传输运营商(IPTO)-(希腊的AΔΜHΕ) 可以在亚里斯多德大学的论文库中找到我的论文的文档: : ln= ,请原谅我文档中的错误,如果发现任何错误,请通知我 :) 库-依赖关系 数据预处理库 xlsx软件包:install.packages('xlsx') JSONLite :install.packages(“ jsonlite”) lubridate :install.packages('lubridate') 标题:install.packages(“标题”) 功能选择,库:install.package(“ Boruta”) 机器学习图书馆 SV
2023-07-14 12:21:55 14.47MB machine-learning r r-markdown r-shiny
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Preface................................................................................................ vii Part I: RF Circutis: wide band, Front-Ends, DAC’s Introduction ........................................................................................ 1 Ultrawideband Transceivers John R. Long ...................................................................................... 3 High Data Rate Transmission over Wireless Local Area Networks Katelijn Vleugels................................................................................ 15 Low Power Bluetooth Single-Chip Design Marc Borremans, Paul Goetschalckx ................................................. 25 RF DAC’s: output impedance and distortion Jurgen Deveugele, Michiel Steyaert................................................... 45 High-Speed Bandpass ADCs R. Schreier .......................................................................................... 65 High-Speed Digital to Analog Converters Konstantinos Doris, Arthur van Roermund........................................ 91 Part II: Design Methodology and Verification for RF and Mixed-Signal Systems Introduction ........................................................................................ 111 Design Methodology and Model Generation for Complex Analog Blocks Georges Gielen................................................................................... 113 Automated Macromodelling for Simulation of Signals and Noise in Mixed-Signal/RF Systems Jaijeet Roychowdhury ........................................................................ 143 A New Methodology for System Verification of RFIC Circuit Blocks Dave Morris........................................................................................ 169 Platform-Based RF-System Design Peter Baltus ........................................................................................ 195 Practical Test and BIST Solutions for High Performance Data Converters Degang Chen ...................................................................................... 215 Simulation of Functional Mixed Signal Test Damien Walsh, Aine Joyce, Dave Patrick ......................................... 243 Part III: Low Power and Low Voltage Introduction ........................................................................................ 249 The Effect of Technology Scaling on Power Dissipation in Analog Circuits Klaas Bult ........................................................................................... 251 Low-Voltage, Low-Power Basic Circuits Andrea Baschirotto, Stefano D’Amico, Piero Malcovati ................... 291 0.5 V Analog Integrated Circuits Limits on ADC Power Dissipation Ultra Low-Power Low-Voltage Analog Integrated Filter Design Wireless Inductive Transfer of Power and Data Robert Puers, Koenraad Van Schuylenbergh, Michael Catrysse, Bart Peter Kinget, Shouri Chatterjee, and Yannis Tsividis........................ 329 Boris Murmann .................................................................................. 351 Wouter A. Serdijn, Sandro A. P. Haddad, Jader A. De Lima ............ 369 Hermans ............................................................................................. 395
2023-06-24 18:58:51 32.17MB electric
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国外教材,适合drive方向学习。基础教材。
2023-04-18 14:20:19 17.39MB drives
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国外电机控制类教材,晶体管、控制策略、交直流调速系统等等的介绍
2023-03-15 08:45:27 58.54MB motor contro 电机控制
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Principles of Electric Circuits
2023-02-25 15:21:10 20.5MB Principles of Electric Circuits
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An international edition is a textbook that has been published outside the U.S. International editions are often cheaper than the U.S. version. Customers located in the U.S. can now purchase international edition textbooks. However, the publishers of international editions generally do not authorize the sale and distribution of international editions in Canada, and such sale or distribution may violate the copyrights and trademarks of the publishers of such works. Electric Circuits, Tenth Edition, is designed for use in a one or two-semester Introductory Circuit Analysis or Circuit Theory Course taught in Electrical or Computer Engineering Departments. This title is also suitable for readers seeking an introduction to electric circuits. Electric Circuits is the most widely used introductory circuits textbook of the past 25 years. As this book has evolved to meet the changing learning styles of students, the underlying teaching approaches and philosophies remain unchanged. MasteringEngineering for Electric Circuits is a total learning package that is designed to improve results through personalized learning. This innovative online program emulates the instructor’s office–hour environment, guiding students through engineering concepts from Electric Circuits with self-paced individualized coaching. Teaching and Learning Experience This program will provide a better teaching and learning experience—for you and your students. Personalize Learning with Individualized Coaching: MasteringEngineering provides students with wrong-answer specific feedback and hints as they work through tutorial homework problems. Emphasize the Relationship between Conceptual Understanding and Problem Solving Approaches: Chapter Problems and Practical Perspectives illustrate how the generalized techniques presented in a first-year circuit analysis course relate to problems faced by practicing engineers. Build an Understanding of Concepts and Ideas Explicitly in Terms of Previous Learning: Assessment Problems and Fundamental Equations and Concepts help students focus on the key principles in electric circuits. Provide Students with a Strong Foundation of Engineering Practices: Computer tools, examples, and supplementary workbooks assist students in the learning process.
2023-02-25 15:19:04 6.67MB electricity txtbook
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FUJI ELECTRIC富士电机IGBT模块应用手册中文版 FUJI ELECTRIC富士电机发挥创业以来积累的“自由操控电力”的电力电子技术优势,成为“环境,能源”领域举足轻重的国际企业. FUJI ELECTRIC富士电机研发制造高品质电力电子功率半导体IGBT/IPM,为太阳能发电,风力发电,智能电网,工业自动化变频伺服,铁路机车,电动汽车等提供核心功率器件,为高效化和节能做贡献!
2023-01-10 14:42:36 2.87MB FUJI ELECTRIC 富士电机IGBT 模块应用
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