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 EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Features
* * * * * * 3 ns A-B switching 300 MHz bandwidth Power down mode TTL/CMOS compatible controls Fixed gain of 1 400V/s slew rate
General Description
The EL4331C is a triple, very high speed, 2:1 Multiplexing Amplifier. It is intended primarily for component video multiplexing, and is especially suited for pixel switching. The amplifiers have their gain set to 1, internally. All three amplifiers are switched simultaneously from their A to B inputs by the TTL/CMOS compatible, common A/B control pin. The EL4331C has a power down mode, in which the total supply current drops to less than 1 mA. In this mode, each output will appear as a high impedance. The EL4331C runs from standard 5V supplies, and is available in the narrow 16-pin small outline package.
Applications
* * * * * * RGB multiplexing Picture-in-picture Cable driving HDTV processing Switched gain amplifiers ADC input multiplexer
Ordering Information
Part No. EL4331CS Temp. Range -45C to +85C Package 16-Lead SOIC Outline# MDP0027
Connection Diagrams
October 6, 1999
(c) 1995 Elantec, Inc.
EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Absolute Maximum Ratings (T
VCC to VEE VCC to Any GND VEE to Any GND Continuous Output Current Any Input (except PD) PD Input
A
= 25 C)
14V 12V 12V 45 mA VEE-0.3V to VCC+0.3V VCC-7V to VCC+0.3V
Input Current, Any Input Power Dissipation Operating Temperature Leading Temperature during Soldering Junction Temperature Storage Temperature
5 mA See curves -45C to +85C 300C 170C -60C to +150C
Important Note: All parameters having Min/Max specifications are guaranteed. The Test Level column indicates the specific device testing actually performed during production and Quality inspection. Elantec performs most electrical tests using modern high-speed automatic test equipment, specifically the LTX77 Series system. Unless otherwise noted, all tests are pulsed tests, therefor TJ = TC = TA. Test Level I II III IV V Test Procedure 100% production tested and QA sample tested per QA test plan QCX0002. 100% production tested at TA = 25C and QA sample tested at TA = 25C, TMAX and TMIN per QA test plan QCX0002. QA sample tested per QA test plan QCX0002. Parameter is guaranteed (but not tested) by Design and Characterization Data. Parameter is typical value at TA = 25C for information purposes only.
DC Electrical Characteristics
VCC = +5V, VEE = -5V, Ambient Temperature =25C, RL = 500, PD = 5V Parameter VOS dVOS IB dIB AVOL PSRR VOUT_500 VOUT_150 IOUT XTALK VIH VIL IIL_AB IIH_AB IIL_PD IIH_PD IS IS(PD) Description Input Referred Offset Voltage Input A to Input B Offset Voltage [1] Input Bias Current Input A to Input B Bias Current [1] Open Loop Gain (from Gain Error Calculation) Power Supply Rejection Ratio Output Voltage Swing into 500 Load Output Voltage Swing into 150 Load Current Output, Measured with 75 load [2] Crosstalk from Non-Selected Input (at DC) Input Logic High Level (A/B and PD) Input Logic Low Level (A/B and PD) Logic Low Input Current (VIN = 0.8V), A/B Pin Logic High Input Current (VIN = 2.0V), A/B Pin Logic Low Input Current (VIN = 0.8V), PD Pin Logic High Input Current (VIN = 5.0V), PD Pin Total Supply Current Powered Down Supply Current -1 -5 -10 0.5 38 -20 0 0 1.0 48 0.01 30 -70 2.0 0.8 -100 5 10 1.6 60 1.0 60 2.7 Min Typ -12 1 -7 0.5 54 70 3.2 +3/-2.7 40 -85 Max 30 8 -30 4.0 Test Level II II II II V II II V II II II II II II II II II II Units mV mV A A dB dB V V mA dB V V A A A mA mA mA
1. Any channel's A-input to its B-input. 2. There is no short circuit protection on any output.
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
AC Electrical Characteristics
VCC = +5V, VEE = -0.5V, Ambient Temperature = 25C, RL = 150 and CL = 5 pF Parameter BW SR TS TAB OS ISO-AB-10M ISO-AB-100M ISO-CH-10M ISO-CH-CH-100M Pkg TON_PD TOFF_PD Description -3 dB Bandwidth -3 dB BW with 250 and 10 pF Load Slew Rate (4V Square Wave, Measured 25%-75%) Settling Time to 0.1% of Final Value Time to Switch Inputs Overshoot, VOUT = 4Vpk-pk Input to Input Isolation at 10 MHz Input to Input Isolation at 100 MHz Channel to Channel Isolation at 10 MHz Channel to Channel Isolation at 100 MHz Peaking with Nominal Load Power Down Turn-On Time Power Down Turn-Off Time Min Typ 300 400 400 13 3 8 53 33 56 33 0 150 1 Max Test Level V V V V V V V V V V V V V Units MHz MHz V/s ns ns % dB dB dB dB dB ns s
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Typical Performance Curves
3 dB Bandwidth Small Signal Transmit Response Large Signal Transient Response
Switching from Ground to An Uncorrelated Sine Wave and Back
Switching a Family of DC Levels to Ground and Back
Switching Glitch, 0V to 0V with 2 ns AB edges
Switching Glitch, 0V to 0V with 10 ns AB Edges
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Switching a Family of DC Levels to a Sine Wave and BackV
Output Response In and Out of Power Down with a Family of DC Inputs
Output Power Down Turn-Off Response
Output Power Down Turn-On Response
Frequency Response with 150 and 5 pF Load
Frequency Response with 240 and 5 pF Load
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Frequency Response with 150 and Various Values of Capacitive Load
Frequency Response with 240 and Various Values of Capacitive Load
A-Input to B-Input Isolation
Channel to Channel Isolation
Supply Current vs Power Down Voltage
-3 dB BW vs Supply Voltage
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Slew Rate vs Supply Voltage
Slew Rate vs Temperature
Total Harmonic Distortion
Voltage Noise Spectral Density
Output Voltage Swing vs Supply Voltage
Maximum Power Dissipation
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Applications Information Pin Descriptions
A1, A2, A3 B1, B2, B3 GND1, GND2, GND3 OUT1, OUT2, OUT3 VCC VEE A/B "A" inputs to amplifiers 1, 2 and 3 respectively "B" inputs to amplifiers 1, 2 and 3 respectively These are the individual ground pins for each channel. Amplifier outputs. Note there is no short circuit protection. Positive power supply. Typically +5V. Negative power supply, typically -5V. Common input select pin, a logic high selects the "A" inputs, logic low selects the "B" inputs. If left to float, this pin will float high and the "A" channels will be selected. A logic low puts the part into its power down mode. Note that when this pin is at a logic high (+5V), it will sink typically 1 mA. When pulled low, it will source a few A, typically < 25 A. This pin should not be left floating.
The supplies do not have to be symmetrical around ground, but the logic inputs are referred to the ground pins, and the logic swing must not exceed the +V supply. Due to the fact that all three channels share common control pins, the three grounds have to be at the same potential. One third of the 1 mA that PD will sink (at 5V) will be seen at each ground pin. Also, the individual grounds are internally connected to their channel compensation capacitor in an effort to keep crosstalk low.
A/B Switching
Referring to the photographs showing the 0V-0V switching glitches, it will be noted that slower edges on the A/B control pin result in switching glitches of somewhat less total energy. The switching action is a makebefore-break, so the two inputs essentially get mixed at the output for a few nanoseconds. Note that the two inputs are buffered, so there is no component of one input injected into the other input. The input impedance does not depend on whether an input has been selected.
PD
Circuit Operation
Each multiplexing amplifier has two input stages. The multiplexing amplifiers switch from their "A" inputs to their "B" inputs under control of the common A/B select pin. The switching has a make before break action. Each amplifier is internally connected for unity gain, allowing larger switching matrixes to be built up. Note however, that each amplifier likes to see a load of 250 or less; load resistances higher than this, can lead to excessive peaking. Load capacitance should be kept down below 40 pF, and 40 pF requires a load resistance of 150 to keep the output from excessive peaking. Higher capacitive loads can best be driven using a series resistor to isolate the amplifier from the reactive load. The ground pins are used as a reference for the logic controls. Both A/B and PD are referenced to ground.
Power Down
Referring to the photographs of the power down function and Figure 4, it will be noted that there is a considerable glitch in the output as the part powers down. It will also be noted that the power down time is considerably longer than power up, 1 s compared to 150 ns. In power down mode, the whole amplifier, its reference and bias lines are all powered down. At the same time, the output stage has been configured so that the powered down output appears as a high impedance. This allows circuits such as the multiplexer shown in application #4 to be realized, although the price is the
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
significant output disturbance as one part turns on before the other has fully turned off.
Figure 1. Two RGB Sources Multiplexed to One RGB Output Single Supply Operation
Due to the fact that video signals often have negative sync levels and invariably require ground to be within the signal swing, running the EL4331 on a single supply rail compromises many aspects of its performance. It is difficult to generate a solid, clean, pseudo ground a few volts away from ground without using more power, and components than simply providing a negative power rail. A signal ground has to be capable of handling all the return currents from all the inputs, as well as the outputs, from DC to frequencies in excess of 400 MHz. While this is by no means impossible, a negative rail can be generated from a standard +5V rail for a couple of dollars and a square inch, or less, of board space. However, a pseudo ground can be derived with for example an LM336, to give an "AC ground" 2.5V above 0V. The logic inputs will need some form of level shifting to ensure that the logic "1" and "0" specifications can be met. The pseudo ground must be well bypassed to the real ground; note that the pseudo ground will have to sink/source all the current that flows in the internal compensation capacitors during slewing. This can easily be several milliamps in a few nanoseconds. If the pseudo ground "moves" because one channel is forcing current into the derived ground, cross-talk into the other two channels will become very significant.
Application Circuit #1
Figure 1 shows a very high speed RGB (or YUV) multiplexer. Two video sources can be displayed on one monitor with the only stipulation that the video sources have to be synchronous. An example is a picture-in-picture, or "window" is generated with one video source (e.g. RGB TV) in a window, and a computer application around it. Multiplexing synchronous RGB signals has the advantage that the video signals do not have to be digitized, and an image stored in RAM prior to being displayed. When the monitor is switched off, or goes into its power-saving blanked mode, the EL4331 can be powered down to further save power. The input impedance does not change appreciably between powered up and down modes, although the bias current does drop to near zero.
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
A demonstration board with this circuit on it is available from Elantec.
Figure 2. A Bandwidth-Selectable Filter Application Circuit #2
Figure 2 shows a circuit that has either a very wide bandwidth, or an 11 MHz low pass response. The EL4331's "A" inputs are connected to the one frequency determining set of components, while the "B" inputs are connected directly. The A/B select pin therefore selects the desired bandwidth. This would allow appropriate filtering to clean up noisy low bandwidth video signals when displaying them on a high quality wide bandwidth monitor. amplifier output is loaded, to keep the amplifier outputs damped. Photograph A1 shows a staircase generated by having all the inputs (sig0 through sig7) connected to a resistive divider chain, and the select bits were driven by a binary counter. Photograph A2 shows the glitch between steps 4 and 5; this is the worst glitch since all three banks of EL4331s are switching together. The magnitude of this glitch is affected by the timing skew of the select lines, the physical length of the traces, and the difference in amplitude of the two signals. This particular circuit was bread-boarded using EL4331s on their adapter boards (available from Elantec for those who can not breadboard with SOICs), and the binary counter was an 'LS163.
Application Circuit #3
Figure 3 shows one of the three channels of a component video, 8:1 multiplexer. The A/B select pins naturally allow binary coded addressing--allowing simple microprocessor or state machine control. Note that each
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
Applications Information
High Speed 8-to-1 Multiplexer Note: No supply bypass capacitors shown and only one of three channels shown. Channel Selection Table BIT2BIT1BIT0OUTPUT 000SIG0 001SIG1 010SIG2 011SIG3 100SIG4 101SIG5 110SIG6 111SIG7 Figure 3. A High Speed, 8:1 Component Video Multiplexer Photograph A3 shows the same circuit, with the counter running at 25 MHz. This turns out to be close to the limit of the TTL counter used in the breadboard, rather than the limit of the EL4331. Here the different glitches are easily recognizable--a small glitch for one of the 4 input EL4331s A/B switching, somewhat larger glitches when two banks switch together, and the biggest glitch when all three banks switch. Photograph A4 shows the big glitch in detail. A good PCB and equal length and matched traces would clean up these glitches. 433129 A1 433130 A2 433131 A3 433132 A4 8-to-1 Multiplexer using Power Down Note: No supply bypass capacitors shown. Only one of three channels shown.
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Channel Selection Table BIT2BIT1BIT0OUTPUT 000SIG0 001SIG1 010SIG2 011SIG3 100SIG4 101SIG5 110SIG6 111SIG7 Figure 4. A Simple 8:1 Component Video Multiplexer Figure 4 shows one of the three channels of a component video, 8:1 multiplexer. In this example, the power down capability is used to save on EL4331s, but as can be seen, the control part does become more complicated. Using the power down mode for multiplexing does, of course, slow down the speed with which one can select a given input channel. However, if input channel selection can be done during a blanking period, the couple of microseconds that it takes to power down one chip may be no problem. Note that some external logic is needed in this application, both to select the appropriate amplifier, and also to force a break-before-make action by pulling the T_OFF line low. All this logic would best be incorporated inside a PAL or gate array, and is shown in gate form just to illustrate the idea. Note that the BIT0 line would have the 3 ns response time, since it is switching the muxamps directly. Photograph B1 shows a staircase generated by having all the inputs (sig0 through sig7) connected to a resistive divider chain, and then the select bits and the PD pins were driven by a binary counter and a 2-line to 1 of 4 decoder. Photograph B2 shows the glitch between steps 4 and 5; this glitch is caused by the fact that the amplifier that has just been powered up momentarily fights the amplifier that has been powered down, but is not yet off. As seen in the photograph, this causes a glitch of about 200 ns duration. However, when the A/B select pin changes inputs, the glitches are much smaller, as shown in photograph B3. Photograph B4 shows the +2.5V to
EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
-2.5V transition. This is another PD caused glitch, similar to the step 4 to step 5 glitch, but with a much increased magnitude--which causes significantly more fighting between the output stages. Despite the glitches, if the PD switching can be done during signal blanking, and only A/B switching is used during the picture, this simple multiplexer has significant parts savings and power savings when compared to the high performance multiplexer in the previous application note.
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EL4331C
EL4331C
Triple 2:1 Mux-Amp AV = 1
General Disclaimer
Specifications contained in this data sheet are in effect as of the publication date shown. Elantec, Inc. reserves the right to make changes in the circuitry or specifications contained herein at any time without notice. Elantec, Inc. assumes no responsibility for the use of any circuits described herein and makes no representations that they are free from patent infringement.
WARNING - Life Support Policy
Elantec, Inc. products are not authorized for and should not be used within Life Support Systems without the specific written consent of Elantec, Inc. Life Support systems are equipment intended to support or sustain life and whose failure to perform when properly used in accordance with instructions provided can be reasonably expected to result in significant personal injury or death. Users contemplating application of Elantec, Inc. Products in Life Support Systems are requested to contact Elantec, Inc. factory headquarters to establish suitable terms & conditions for these applications. Elantec, Inc.'s warranty is limited to replacement of defective components and does not cover injury to persons or property or other consequential damages.
Printed in U.S.A.
October 6, 1999
Elantec, Inc.
1996 Tarob Court Milpitas, CA 95035 Telephone: (408) 945-1323 (800) 333-6314 Fax: (408) 945-9305 European Office: 44-71-482-4596
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