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Rainbow Electronics MAX117 User Manual

Page 11

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If the analog input exceeds 50mV beyond the sup-
plies, limit the input current to no more than two
milliamperes, as excessive current will degrade the
conversion accuracy of the on channel.

Track/Hold

The track/hold enters hold mode when a conversion
starts (

RD low or WR low). INT goes low at the end of

the conversion, at which point the track/hold enters
track mode. The next conversion can start after the
minimum acquisition time, t

ACQ

.

Transfer Function

Figure 10 shows the MAX113/MAX117’s nominal trans-
fer function. Code transitions occur halfway between
successive-integer LSB values. Output coding is binary
with 1LSB = (V

REF+

- V

REF-

) / 256.

Conversion Rate

The maximum sampling rate (f

MAX

) for the MAX113/

MAX117 is achieved in write-read mode (t

RD

< t

INTL

)

and is calculated as follows:

where t

WR

= the write pulse width, t

RD

= the delay

between write and read pulses, t

RI

=

RD to INT delay,

and t

ACQ

= minimum acquisition time.

Signal-to-Noise Ratio and

Effective Number of Bits

Signal-to-noise plus distortion (SINAD) is the ratio of the
fundamental input frequency’s RMS amplitude to all
other ADC output signals. The output spectrum is limit-
ed to frequencies above DC and below one-half the
ADC sample rate.

The theoretical minimum analog-to-digital noise is
caused by quantization error, and results directly from
the ADC’s resolution: SNR = (6.02N + 1.76)dB, where
N is the number of bits of resolution. Therefore, a per-
fect 8-bit ADC can do no better than 50dB.

The FFT Plot (see

Typical Operating Characteristics

)

shows the result of sampling a pure 30.27kHz sinusoid
at a 400kHz rate. This FFT plot of the output shows the
output level in various spectral bands.

The effective resolution (or “effective number of bits”)
the ADC provides can be measured by transposing the
equation that converts resolution to SNR: N = (SINAD -
1.76) / 6.02 (see

Typical Operating Characteristics

).

Total Harmonic Distortion

Total harmonic distortion (THD) is the ratio of the RMS
sum of all harmonics of the input signal (in the frequen-
cy band above DC and below one-half the sample rate)
to the fundamental itself. This is expressed as:

where V

1

is the fundamental RMS amplitude, and V

2

through V

N

are the amplitudes of the 2nd through Nth

harmonics.

Spurious-Free Dynamic Range

Spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR) is the ratio of the
fundamental RMS amplitude to the amplitude of the
next largest spectral component (in the frequency band
above DC and below one-half the sample rate). Usually
the next largest spectral component occurs at some
harmonic of the input frequency. However, if the ADC is
exceptionally linear, it may occur only at a random
peak in the ADC’s noise floor. See the Signal-to-Noise
Ratio graph in

Typical Operating Characteristics

.

THD = 20log

V

V

V

...V

V

2

2

3

2

4

2

N

2

1

+

+

+

f

=

1

t

+ t

+ t + t

f

1

600ns 800ns

300ns 450ns

f

465kHz

MAX

WR

RD

RI

ACQ

MAX

MAX

=

+

+

+

=

MAX113/MAX117

+3V, 400ksps, 4/8-Channel,

8-Bit ADCs with 1µA Power-Down

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