Part Number Hot Search : 
P5663DSA SCXXX PM516D GR32N60 PZ3032 00031 28512 PM537D
Product Description
Full Text Search
 

To Download AD670 Datasheet File

  If you can't view the Datasheet, Please click here to try to view without PDF Reader .  
 
 


  Datasheet File OCR Text:
  functional block diagram rev. a information furnished by analog devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. however, no responsibility is assumed by analog devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. no license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of analog devices. a low cost signal conditioning 8-bit adc AD670 features complete 8-bit signal conditioning a/d converter including instrumentation amp and reference microprocessor bus interface 10 m s conversion speed flexible input stage: instrumentation amp front end provides differential inputs and high common-mode rejection no user trims required no missing codes over temperature single +5 v supply operation convenient input ranges 20-pin dip or surface-mount package low cost monolithic construction mil-std-883b compliant versions available general description the AD670 is a complete 8-bit signal conditioning analog- to-digital converter. it consists of an instrumentation amplifier front end along with a dac, comparator, successive approxima- tion register (sar), precision voltage reference, and a three- state output buffer on a single monolithic chip. no external components or user trims are required to interface, with full accuracy, an analog system to an 8-bit data bus. the AD670 will operate on the +5 v system supply. the input stage pro- vides differential inputs with excellent common-mode rejection and allows direct interface to a variety of transducers. the device is configured with input scaling resistors to permit two input ranges: 0 mv to 255 mv (1 mv/lsb) and 0 to 2.55 v (10 mv/lsb). the AD670 can be configured for both unipolar and bipolar inputs over these ranges. the differential inputs and common-mode rejection of this front end are useful in applica- tions such as conversion of transducer signals superimposed on common-mode voltages. the AD670 incorporates advanced circuit design and proven processing technology. the successive approximation function is implemented with i 2 l (integrated injection logic). thin-film sicr resistors provide the stability required to prevent missing codes over the entire operating temperature range while laser wafer trimming of the resistor ladder permits calibration of the device to within 1 lsb. thus, no user trims for gain or offset are required. conversion time of the device is 10 m s. the AD670 is available in four package types and five grades. the j and k grades are specified over 0 c to +70 c and come in 20-pin plastic dip packages or 20-terminal plcc packages. the a and b grades (C40 c to +85 c) and the s grade (C55 c to +125 c) come in 20-pin ceramic dip packages. one technology way, p.o. box 9106, norwood, ma 02062-9106, u.s.a. tel: 617/329-4700 fax: 617/326-8703 the s grade is also available with optional processing to mil-std-883 in 20-pin ceramic dip or 20-terminal lcc packages. the analog devices military products databook should be consulted for detailed specifications. product highlights 1. the AD670 is a complete 8-bit a/d including three-state outputs and microprocessor control for direct connection to 8-bit data buses. no external components are required to perform a conversion. 2. the flexible input stage features a differential instrumenta- tion amp input with excellent common-mode rejection. this allows direct interface to a variety of transducers without preamplification. 3. no user trims are required for 8-bit accurate performance. 4. operation from a single +5 v supply allows the AD670 to run off of the microprocessors supply. 5. four convenient input ranges (two unipolar and two bipolar) are available through internal scaling resistors: 0 mv to 255 mv (1 mv/lsb) and 0 v to 2.55 v (10 mv/lsb). 6. software control of the output mode is provided. the user can easily select unipolar or bipolar inputs and binary or 2s complement output codes.
model AD670j AD670k min typ max min typ max units operating temperature range 0 +70 0 +70 c resolution 8 8 bit conversion time 10 10 m s relative accuracy 6 1/2 6 1/4 lsb t min to t max 6 l/2 6 1/2 lsb differential linearity error 1 t min to t max guaranteed no missing codes all grades gain accuracy @ +25 c 6 1.5 6 0.75 lsb t min to t max 6 2.0 6 1.0 lsb unipolar zero error @ +25 c 6 1.5 6 0.75 lsb t min to t max 6 2.0 6 1.0 lsb bipolar zero error @ +25 c 6 1.5 6 0.75 lsb t min to t max 6 2.0 6 1.0 lsb analog input ranges differential (Cv in to +v in ) low range 0 to +255 0 to +255 mv C128 to +127 C128 to +127 mv high range 0 to +2.55 0 to +2.55 v C1.28 to +1.27 C1.28 to +1.27 v absolute (inputs to power gnd) low range t min to t max C0.150 v cc C 3.4 C0.150 v cc C 3.4 v high range t min to t max C1.50 v cc C1.50 v cc v bias current (255 mv range) t min to t max 200 500 200 500 na offset current (255 mv range) t min to t max 40 200 40 200 na 2.55 v range input resistance 8.0 12.0 8.0 12.0 k w 2.55 v range full-scale match + and C input 1/2 1/2 lsb common-mode rejection ratio (255 mv range) 11 lsb common-mode rejection ratio (2.55 v range) 1 1 lsb power supply operating range 4.5 5.5 4.5 5.5 v current i cc 30 45 30 45 ma rejection ratio t min to t max 0.015 0.015 % of fs/% digital outputs sink current (v out = 0.4 v) t min to t max 1.6 1.6 ma source current (v out = 2.4 v) t min to t max 0.5 0.5 ma three-state leakage current 6 40 6 40 m a output capacitance 5 5 pf digital input voltage v inl 0.8 0.8 v v inh 2.0 2.0 v digital input current (0 v in +5 v) i inl C100 C100 m a i inh +100 +100 m a input capacitance 10 10 pf notes 1 tested at v cc = 4 5 v, 5.0 v and 5.5 v. specifications shown in boldface are tested on all production units at final electrical test. results from those tests are used to calculate outgoing quality levels. all min and max specifications are guaranteed although only those shown in boldface are tested on all production units. specifications subject to change without notice. AD670Cspecifications (@ v cc = +5 v and +25 8 c, unless otherwise noted) rev. a C2C
model AD670a AD670b AD670s min typ max min typ max min typ max units operating temperature range C40 +85 C40 +85 C55 +125 c resolution 8 8 8 bit conversion time 10 10 10 m s relative accuracy 6 1/2 6 1/4 6 1/2 lsb t min to t max 6 1/2 6 1/2 6 1 lsb differential linearity error 1 t min to t max guaranteed no missing codes all grades gain accuracy @ +25 c 6 1.5 6 0.75 6 1.5 lsb t min to t max 6 2.5 6 1.5 6 2.5 lsb unipolar zero error @ +25 c 6 1.0 6 0.5 6 1.0 lsb t min to t max 6 2.0 6 1.0 6 2.0 lsb bipolar zero error @ +25 c 6 1.0 6 0.5 6 1.0 lsb t min to t max 6 2.0 6 1.0 6 2.0 lsb analog input ranges differential ( Cv in to +v in ) low range 0 to +255 0 to +255 0 to +255 mv C128 to +127 C128 to +127 C128 to +127 mv high range 0 to +2.55 0 to +2.55 0 to +2.55 v C1.28 to +1.27 C1.28 to +1.27 C1.28 to +1.27 v absolute (inputs to power gnd) low range t min to t max C0.150 v cc C 3.5 C0.150 v cc C 3.5 C0.150 v cc C 3.5 v high range t min to t max C1.50 v cc C1.50 v cc C1.50 v cc v bias current (255 mv range) t min to t max 200 500 200 500 200 750 na offset current (255 mv range) t min to t max 40 200 40 200 40 200 na 2.55 v range input resistance 8.0 12.0 8.0 12.0 8.0 12.0 k w 2.55 v range full-scale match + and C input 1/2 1/2 1/2 lsb common-mode rejection ratio (255 mv range) 111 lsb common-mode rejection ratio (2.55 v range) 1 1 1 lsb power supply operating range 4.5 5.5 4.5 5.5 4.75 5.5 v current i cc 30 45 30 45 30 45 ma rejection ratio t min to t max 0.015 0.015 0.015 % of fs/% digital outputs sink current (v out = 0.4 v) t min to t max 1.6 1.6 1.6 ma source current (v out = 2.4 v) t min to t max 0.5 0.5 0.5 ma three-state leakage current 6 40 6 40 6 40 m a output capacitance 5 5 5 pf digital input voltage v inl 0.8 0.8 0.7 v v inh 2.0 2.0 2.0 v digital input current (0 v in +5 v) i inl C100 C100 C100 m a i inh +100 +100 + 100 m a input capacitance 10 10 10 pf notes 1 tested at v cc = 4.5 v, 5.0 v and 5.5 v for a, b grades; 4.75 v, 5.0 v and 5.5 v for s grade. specifications shown in boldface are tested on all production units at final electrical test. results from those tests are used to calculate outgoing quality levels. all min and max specifications are guaranteed, although only those shown in boldface are tested on all production units. specifications subject to change without notice. AD670 rev. a C3C
AD670 rev. a C4C ordering guide temperature relative accuracy gain accuracy model 1 range @ +25 8 c @ +25 8 c package option 2 AD670jn 0 c to +70 c 1/2 lsb 1.5 lsb plastic dip (n-20) AD670jp 0 c to +70 c 1/2 lsb 1.5 lsb plcc (p-20a) AD670kn 0 c to +70 c 1/4 lsb 0.75 lsb plastic dip (n-20) AD670kp 0 c to +70 c 1/4 lsb 0.75 lsb plcc (p-20a) AD670ad C40 c to +85 c 1/2 lsb 1.5 lsb ceramic dip (d-20) AD670bd C40 c to +85 c 1/4 lsb 0.75 lsb ceramic dip (d-20) AD670sd C55 c to +125 c 1/2 lsb 1.5 lsb ceramic dip (d-20) notes 1 for details on grade and package offerings screened in accordance with mil-std-883 refer to the analog devices military products databook. 2 d = ceramic dip; n = plastic dip; p = plastic leaded chip carrier. figure 1. AD670 block diagram and terminal configuration (aii packages) absolute maximum ratings * v cc to ground . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 v to +7.5 v digital inputs (pins 11C15) . . . . . . . . . . . C0.5 v to v cc +0.5 v digital outputs (pins 1C9) . momentary short to v cc or ground analog inputs (pins 16C19) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . C30 v to +30 v power dissipation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 450 mw storage temperature range . . . . . . . . . . . . . C65 c to +150 c lead temperature (soldering, 10 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . +300 c *stresses above those listed under absolute maximum ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. this is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at them or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. circuit operation/functional description the AD670 is a functionally complete 8-bit signal conditioning a/d converter with microprocessor compatibility. the input section uses an instrumentation amplifier to accomplish the voltage to current conversion. this front end provides a high impedance, low bias current differential amplifier. the com- mon-mode range allows the user to directly interface the device to a variety of transducers. the aid conversions are controlled by r/ w , cs , and ce . the r/ w line directs the converter to read or start a conversion. a minimum write/start pulse of 300 ns is required on either ce or cs . the status line goes high, indicating that a conversion is in process. the conversion thus begun, the internal 8-bit dac is sequenced from msb to lsb using a novel successive ap- proximation technique. in conventional designs, the dac is stepped through the bits by a clock. this can be thought of as a static design since the speed at which the dac is sequenced is determined solely by the clock. no clock is used in the AD670. instead, a dynamic sar is created consisting of a string of in- verters with taps along the delay line. sections of the delay line between taps act as one shots. the pulses are used to set and re- set the dacs bits and strobe the comparator. when strobed, the comparator then determines whether the addition of each successively weighted bit current causes the dac current sum to be greater or less than the input current. if the sum is less, the bit is turned off. after all bits are tested, the sar holds an 8-bit code representing the input signal to within 1/2 lsb accuracy. ease of implementation and reduced dependence on process related variables make this an attractive approach to a successive approximation design. the sar provides an end-of-conversion signal to the control logic which then brings the status line low. data outputs re- main in a high impedance state until r/ w is brought high with ce and cs low and allows the converter to be read. bringing ce or cs high during the valid data period ends the read cycle. the output buffers cannot be enabled during a conversion. any convert start commands will be ignored until the conversion cycle is completed; once a conversion cycle has been started it cannot be stopped or restarted. the AD670 provides the user with a great deal of flexibility by offering two input spans and formats and a choice of output codes. input format and input range can each be selected. the bpo/ upo pin controls a switch which injects a bipolar offset current of a value equal to the msb less 1/2 lsb into the sum- ming node of the comparator to offset the dac output. two precision 10 to 1 attenuators are included on board to provide input range selection of 0 v to 2.55 v or 0 mv to 255 mv. ad- ditional ranges of C1.28 v to 1.27 v and C128 mv to 127 mv are possible if the bpo/ upo switch is high when the conversion is started. finally, output coding can be chosen using the for- mat pin when the conversion is started. in the bipolar mode and with a logic 1 on format, the output is in twos comple- ment; with a logic 0, the output is offset binary.
AD670 rev. a C5C connecting the AD670 the AD670 has been designed for ease of use. all active com- ponents required to perform a complete a/d conversion are on board and are connected internally. in addition, all calibration trims are performed at the factory, assuring specified accuracy without user trims. there are, however, a number of options and connections that should be considered to obtain maximum flexibility from the part. input connections standard connections are shown in the figures that follow. an input range of 0 v to 2.55 v may be configured as shown in fig- ure 2a. this will provide a one lsb change for each 10 mv of input change. the input range of 0 mv to 255 mv is configured as shown in figure 2b. in this case, each lsb represents 1 mv of input change. when unipolar input signals are used, pin 11, bpo/ upo , should be grounded. pin 11 selects the input format for either unipolar or bipolar signals. figures 3a and 3b show the input connections for bipolar signals. pin 11 should be tied to +v cc for bipolar inputs. although the instrumentation amplifier has a differential input, there must be a return path to ground for the bias currents. if it is not provided, these currents will charge stray capacitances and cause internal circuit nodes to drift uncontrollably causing the digital output to change. such a return path is provided in figures 2a and 3a (larger input ranges) since the 1k resistor leg is tied to ground. this is not the case for figures 2b and 3b (the lower input ranges). when connecting the AD670 inputs to floating sources, such as transformers and ac-coupled sources, there must still be a dc path from each input to common. this can be accomplished by connecting a 10 k w resistor from each input to ground. 2a. 0 v to 2.55 v (10 mv/lsb) 2b. 0 mv to 255 mv (1 mv/lsb) note: pin 11, bpo/ upo should be low when conversion is started. figure 2. unipolar input connections 3a. 1.28 v range 3b. 128 mv range note: pin 11, bpo/ upo should be high when conversion is started. figure 3. bipolar input connections bipolar operation through special design of the instrumentation amplifier, the AD670 accommodates input signal excursions below ground, even though it operates from a single 5 v supply. to the user, this means that true bipolar input signals can be used without the need for any additional external components. bipolar signals can be applied differentially across both inputs, or one of the in- puts can be grounded and a bipolar signal applied to the other. common-mode performance the AD670 is designed to reject dc and ac common-mode volt- ages. in some applications it is useful to apply a differential in- put signal v in in the presence of a dc common-mode voltage v cm . the user must observe the absolute input signal limits listed in the specifications, which represent the maximum volt- age v in + v cm that can be applied to either input without affect- ing proper operation. exceeding these limits (within the range of absolute maximum ratings), however, will not cause permanent damage. the excellent common-mode rejection of the AD670 is due to the instrumentation amplifier front end, which maintains the differential signal until it reaches the output of the comparator. in contrast to a standard operational amplifier, the instrumenta- tion amplifier front end provides significantly improved cmrr over a wide frequency range (figure 4a).
AD670 rev. a C6C table i. AD670 input selection/output format truth table input range/ bpo/ upo format output format 0 0 unipolar/straight binary 1 0 bipolar/offset binary 0 1 unipolar/2s complement 1 1 bipolar/2s complement diff straight binary +v in Cv in v in (format = 0, bpo/ upo = 0) 0 0 0 0000 0000 128 mv 0 128 mv 1000 0000 255 mv 0 255 mv 1111 1111 255 mv 255 mv 0 0000 0000 128 mv 127 mv 1 mv 0000 0001 128 mv C127 mv 255 mv 1111 1111 figure 5a. unipolar output codes (low range) offset binary 2s complement diff (format = 0, (format = 1, +v in Cv in v in bpo/ upo = 1) bpo/ upo = 1) 0 0 0 1000 0000 0000 0000 127 mv 0 127 mv 1111 1111 0111 1111 1.127 v 1.000 v 127 mv 1111 1111 0111 1111 255 mv 255 mv 0 1000 0000 0000 0000 128 mv 127 mv 1 mv 1000 0001 0000 0001 127 mv 128 mv C1 mv 0111 1111 1111 1111 127 mv 255 mv C128 mv 0000 0000 1000 0000 C128 mv 0 C128 mv 0000 0000 1000 0000 figure 5b. bipolar output codes (low range) calibration because of its precise factory calibration, the AD670 is intended to be operated without user trims for gun and offset; therefore, no provisions have been made for such user trims. figures 6a, 6b, and 6c show the transfer curves at zero and full scale for the unipolar and bipolar modes. the code transitions are positioned so that the desired value is centered at that code. the first lsb transition for the unipolar mode occurs for an input of + 1/2 lsb (5 mv or 0.5 mv). similarly, the msb transition for the bipolar mode is set at C1/2 lsb (C5 mv or C0.5 mv). the full scale transition is located at the full scale value C1 1/2 lsb. these values are 2.545 v and 254.5 mv. 6a. unipolar transfer curve figure 4a. cmrr over frequency figure 4b. AD670 input rejects common-mode ground noise good common-mode performance is useful in a number of situ- ations. in bridge-type transducer applications, such performance facilitates the recovery of differential analog signals in the pres- ence of a dc common-mode or a noisy electrical environment. high frequency cmrr also becomes important when the ana- log signal is referred to a noisy, remote digital ground. in each case, the cmrr specification of the AD670 allows the integrity of the input signal to be preserved. the AD670s common-mode voltage tolerance allows great flexibility in circuit layout. most other a/d converters require the establishment of one point as the analog reference point. this is necessary in order to minimize the effects of parasitic voltages. the AD670, however, eliminates the need to make the analog ground reference point and a/d analog ground one and the same. instead, a system such as that shown in figure 4b is possible as a result of the AD670s common-mode performance. the resistors and inductors in the ground return represent un- avoidable system parasitic impedances. input/output options data output coding (2s complement vs. straight binary) is selected using pin 12, the format pin. the selection of input format (bipolar vs. unipolar) is controlled using pin 11, bpo/ upo . prior to a write/convert, the state of format and bpo/ upo should be available to the converter. these lines may be tied to the data bus and may be changed with each conver- sion if desired. the configurations are shown in table i. output coding for representative signals in each of these configurations is shown in figure 5. an output signal, status, indicates the status of the conver- sion. status goes high at the beginning of the conversion and returns low when the conversion cycle has been completed.
AD670 rev. a C7C table iii. AD670 timing specifications @ +25 8 c symbol parameter min typ max units write/convert start mode t w write/start pulse width 300 ns t ds input data setup time 200 ns t dh input data hold 10 ns t rwc read/write setup before control 0 ns t dc delay to convert start 700 ns t c conversion time 10 m s read mode t r read time 250 ns t sd delay from status low to data read 250 ns t td bus access time 200 250 ns t dh data hold time 25 ns t dt output float delay 150 ns t rt r/ w before ce or cs low 0 ns boldface indicates parameters tested 100% unless otherwise noted. see specifications page for explanation. 6b. bipolar 6c. full scale (unipolar) figure 6. transfer curves control and timing of the AD670 control logic the AD670 contains on-chip logic to provide conversion and data read operations from signals commonly available in micro- processor systems. figure 7 shows the internal logic circuitry of the AD670. the control signals, ce , cs , and r/ w control the operation of the converter. the read or write function is deter- mined by r/ w when both cs and ce are low as shown in table ii. if all three control inputs are held low longer than the conversion time, the device will continuously convert until one input, ce , cs , or r/ w is brought high. the relative timing of these signals is discussed later in this section. figure 7. control logic block diagram table ii. AD670 control signal truth table r/ w cs ce operation 0 0 0 write/convert 1 0 0 read x x 1 none x 1 x none timing the AD670 is easily interfaced to a variety of microprocessors and other digital systems. the following discussion of the timing requirements of the AD670 control signals will provide the de- signer with useful insight into the operation of the device. write/convert start cycle figure 8 shows a complete timing diagram for the write/convert start cycle. cs (chip select) and ce (chip enable) are active low and are interchangeable signals. both cs and ce must be low for the converter to read or start a conversion. the minimum pulse width, t w , on either cs or ce is 300 ns to start a conversion.
AD670 rev. a C8C figure 8. write/convert start timing the r/ w line is used to direct the converter to start a conver- sion (r/ w low) or read data (r/ w high). the relative sequenc- ing of the three control signals (r/ w , ce , cs ) is unimportant. however, when all three signals remain low for at least 300 ns (t w ), status will go high to signal that a conversion is taking place. once a conversion is started and the status line goes high, convert start commands will be ignored until the conversion cycle is complete. the output data buffer cannot be enabled during a conversion. read cycle figure 9 shows the timing for the data read operation. the data outputs are in a high impedance state until a read cycle is initi- ated. to begin the read cycle, r/ w is brought high. during a read cycle, the minimum pulse length for ce and cs is a func- tion of the length of time required for the output data to be valid. the data becomes valid and is available to the data bus in a maximum of 250 ns. this delay between the high impedance state and valid data is the maximum bus access time or t td . bringing ce or cs high during valid data ends the read cycle. the outputs remain valid for a minimum of 25 ns (t dh ) and re- turn to the high impedance state after a delay, t dt , of 150 ns maximum. figure 9. read cycle timing stand-alone operation the AD670 can be used in a stand-alone mode, which is use- ful in systems with dedicated input ports available. two typical conditions are described and illustrated by the timing diagrams which follow. single conversion, single read when the AD670 is used in a stand-alone mode, cs and ce should be tied together. conversion will be initiated by bringing r/ w low. within 700 ns, a conversion will begin. the r/ w pulse should be brought high again once the conversion has started so that the data will be valid upon completion of the conversion. data will remain valid until ce and cs are brought high to indicate the end of the read cycle or r/ w goes low. the timing diagram is shown in figure 10. figure 10. stand-alone mode single conversion/ single read continuous conversion, single read a variety of applications may call for the a/d to be read after several conversions. in process control systems, this is often the case since a reading from a sensor may only need to be updated every few conversions. figure 11 shows the timing relationships. once again, ce and cs should be tied together. conversion will begin when the r/ w signal is brought low. the device will convert repeatedly as indicated by the status line. a final con- version will take place once the r/ w line has been brought high. the rising edge of r/ w must occur while status is high. r/ w should not return high while status is low since the circuit is in a reset state prior to the next conversion. since the rising edge of r/ w must occur while status is high, r/ w s length must be a minimum of 10.25 m s (t c + t td ). data becomes valid upon completion of the conversion and will remain so until the ce and cs lines are brought high indicating the end of the read cycle or r/ w goes low initiating a new series of conversions. figure 11. stand-alone mode continuous conversion/ single read
AD670 rev. a C9C applying the AD670 the AD670 has been designed for ease of use, system compat- ibility, and minimization of external components. transducer interfaces generally require signal conditioning and preampli- fication before the signal can be converted. the AD670 will reduce and even eliminate this excess circuitry in many cases. to illustrate the flexibility and superior solution that the AD670 can bring to a transducer interface problem, the following dis- cussions are offered. temperature measurements temperature transducers are one of the most common sources of analog signals in data acquisition systems. these sensors re- quire circuitry for excitation and preamplification/buffering. the instrumentation amplifier input of the AD670 eliminates the need for this signal conditioning. the output signals from tem- perature transducers are generally sufficiency slow that a sample/hold amplifier is not required. figure 12 shows tile ad590 ic temperature transducer interfaced to the AD670. the ad580 voltage reference is used to offset the input for 0 c calibration. the current output of the ad590 is converted into a voltage by r1. the high impedance unbuffered voltage is ap- plied directly to the AD670 configured in the C128 mv to 127 mv bipolar range. the digital output will have a resolution of 1 c. figure 12. AD670 temperature transducer lnterface platinum rtds are also a popular, temperature transducer. typical rtds have a resistance of 100 w at 0 c and change re- sistance 0.4 w per c. if a consent excitation current is caused to flow in the rtd, the change in voltage drop will be a mea- sure of the change in temperature. figure 13 shows such a method and the required connections to the AD670. the ad580 2.5 v reference provides the accurate voltage for the ex- citation current and range offsetting for the rtd. the op amp is configured to force a constant 2.5 ma current through the rtd. the differential inputs of the AD670 measure the differ- ence between a fixed offset voltage and the temperature depen- dent output of the op amp which varies with the resistance of the rtd. the rtd change of approximately 0.4 w / c results in a 1 mv/ c voltage change. with the AD670 in the 1 mv/lsb range, temperatures from 0 c to 255 c can be measured. figure 13. low cost rtd interface differential temperature measurements can be made using an ad590 connected to each of the inputs as shown in figure 14. this configuration will allow the user to measure the relative temperature difference between two points with a 1 c resolu- tion. although the internal 1k and 9k resistors on the inputs have 20% tolerance, trimming the ad590 is unnecessary as most differential temperature applications are concerned with the relative differences between the two. however, the user may see up to a 20% scale factor error in the differential temperature to digital output transfer curve. this scale factor error can be eliminated through a software cor- rection. offset corrections can be made by adjusting for any dif- ference that results when both sensors are held at the same temperature. a span adjustment can then be made by immers- ing one ad590 in an ice bath and one in boiling water and eliminating any deviation from 100 c. for a low cost version of this setup, the plastic ad592 can be substituted for the ad590. figure 14. differential temperature measurement using the ad590 ?
AD670 rev. a C10C strain gage measurements many semiconductor-type strain gages, pressure transducers, and load cells may also be connected directly to the AD670. these types of transducers typically produce 30 mv full-scale per volt of excitation. in the circuit shown in figure 15, the AD670 is connected directly to a data instruments model jp-20 load cell. the ad584 programmable voltage reference is used along with an ad741 op amp to provide the 2.5 v excitation for the load cell. the output of the transducer will be 150 mv for a force of 20 pounds. the AD670 is configured for the 128 millivolt range. the resolution is then approximately 2.1 ounces per lsb over a range of 17 pounds. scaling to exactly 2 ounces per lsb can be accomplished by trimming the refer- ence voltage which excites the load cell. figure 15. AD670 load cell interface multiplexed inputs most data acquisition systems require the measurement of sev- eral analog signals. multiple a/d converters are often used to digitize these inputs, requiring additional preamplification and buffer stages per channel. since these signals vary slowly, a dif- ferential mux can multiplex inputs from several transducers into a single AD670. and since the AD670s signal-conditioning capability is preserved, the cost of several adcs, differential amplifiers, and other support components can be reduced to that of a single AD670, a mux, and a few digital logic gates. an ad7502 dual 4-channel mux appears in figure 16 multi- plexing four differential signals to the AD670. the ad7502s decoded address is gated with the microprocessors write signal to provide a latching strobe at the flip-flops. a write cycle to the ad7502s address then latches the two lsbs of the data word thereby selecting the input channel for subsequent conversions. figure 16. multiplexed analog inputs to AD670 sampled inputs for those applications where the input signal is capable of slew- ing more than 1/2 lsb during the AD670s 10 m s conversion cycle, the input should be held constant for the cycles duration. the circuit shown in figure 17 uses a cmos switch and two capacitors to sample/hold the input. the AD670s status output, once inverted, supplies the sample/hold (s/ h ) signal. a convert command applied on the ce , cs or r/ w lines will initiate the conversion. the AD670s status output, once in- verted, supplies the sample/hold signal to the cd4066. the cd4066 cmos switch shown in figure 17 was chosen for its fast transition times, low on-resistance and low cost. the con- trol inputs propagation delay for switch-closed to switch-open should remain less than 150 ns to ensure that the sample-to- hold transition occurs before the first bit decision in the AD670.
AD670 rev. a C11C figure 17. low cost sample-and-hold circuit for AD670 since settling to 1/2 lsb at 8-bits of resolution requires 6.2 rc time constants, the 500 pf hold capacitors and cd4066s 300 w on-resistance yield an acquisition time of under 1 m s, assuming a low impedance source. this sample/hold approach makes use of the differential capa- bilities of the AD670. because 500 pf hold capacitors are used on both v in + and v in C inputs, the droop rate depends only on the offset current of the AD670, typically 20 na. with the matched 500 pf capacitors, the droop rate is 40 m v/ m s. the in- put will then droop only 0.4 mv (0.4 lsb) during the AD670s 10 m s conversion time. the differential approach also minimizes pedestal error since only the difference in charge injection be- tween the two switches results in errors at the a/d. the fast conversion time and differential and common-mode ca- pabilities of the AD670 permit this simple sample-hold design to perform well with low sample-to-hold offset, droop rate of about 40 m v/ m s and acquisition time under 1 m s. the effective aperture time of the AD670 is reduced by about 2 orders of magnitude with this circuit, allowing frequencies to be con- verted up to several kilohertz. while no input anti-aliasing filter is shown, filtering will be nec- essary to prevent output errors if higher frequencies are present in the input signal. many practical variations are possible with this circuit, including input mux control, for digitizing a num- ber of ac channels. ibm pc interface the AD670 appears in figure 18 interfaced to the ibm pc. since the device resides in i/o space, its address is decoded from only the lower ten address lines and must be gated with aen (active low) to mask out internal (dma) cycles which use the same i/o address space. this active low signal is applied to cs . ao, meanwhile, is reserved for the r/ w input. this places the AD670 in two adjacent addresses; one for starting the con- version and the other for reading the result. the ior and iow signals are then gated and applied to ce , while the lower two data lines are applied to format and bpo/ upo inputs to provide software programmable input formats and output coding. in basic, a simple out addr, word command initiates a conversion. while the upper six bits of the data word are meaningless, the lower two bits define the analog input format and digital output coding according to table iv. the data is available ten microseconds later (which is negligible in basic ) and can be read using inp (addr + 1). the 3-line subroutine in figure 19, used in conjunction with the interface of figure 18, converts an analog input within a bipolar range to an offset binary coded digital word. figure 18. ibm pc lnterface to AD670 note: due to the large number of options that may be in- stalled in the pc, the i/o bus loading should be limited to one schottky ttl load. therefore, a buffer/driver should be used when interfacing more than two AD670s to the i/o bus. table iv. data input format output coding 0 unipolar straight binary 1 bipolar offset binary 2 unipolar 2s complement 3 bipolar 2s complement 10 out & h310,1 initiate conversion 20 analogin = inp (&h311) read analog input 30 return figure 19. conversion subroutine
AD670 rev. a C12C outline dimensions dimensions shown in inches and (mm). 20-pin plastic dip (n-20) 20-pin ceramic dip (d-20) 20-terminal plcc package(p-20a) pin 1 identifier bottom view (pins up) 0.020 (0.50) r 0.021 (0.53) 0.013 (0.33) 0.330 (8.38) 0.290 (7.37) 0.032 (0.81) 0.026 (0.66) 0.180 (4.57) 0.165 (4.19) 0.040 (1.01) 0.025 (0.64) 0.056 (1.42) 0.042 (1.07) 0.025 (0.63) 0.015 (0.38) 0.110 (2.79) 0.085 (2.16) 3 pin 1 identifier 4 19 18 8 9 14 13 top view (pins down) 0.395 (10.02) 0.385 (9.78) sq 0.356 (9.04) 0.350 (8.89) sq 0.048 (1.21) 0.042 (1.07) 0.048 (1.21) 0.042 (1.07) 0.020 (0.50) r 0.050 (1.27) bsc c864cC2C4/89 printed in u.s.a.


▲Up To Search▲   

 
Price & Availability of AD670

All Rights Reserved © IC-ON-LINE 2003 - 2022  

[Add Bookmark] [Contact Us] [Link exchange] [Privacy policy]
Mirror Sites :  [www.datasheet.hk]   [www.maxim4u.com]  [www.ic-on-line.cn] [www.ic-on-line.com] [www.ic-on-line.net] [www.alldatasheet.com.cn] [www.gdcy.com]  [www.gdcy.net]


 . . . . .
  We use cookies to deliver the best possible web experience and assist with our advertising efforts. By continuing to use this site, you consent to the use of cookies. For more information on cookies, please take a look at our Privacy Policy. X