Circuit Note
CN-0158
Devices Connected/Referenced
Circuits from the Lab™ tested circuit designs address
common design challenges and are engineered for
quick and easy system integration. For more information
and/or support, visit www.analog.com/CN0158.
ADuM4160
Full/Low Speed USB Isolator
ADP3339
High Accuracy, 1.5 A LDO, 5 V Option
ADP3330
High Accuracy, 200 mA LDO, 3.3 V Option
Universal Serial Bus (USB) Hub Isolator Circuit
EVALUATION AND DESIGN SUPPORT
Circuit Evaluation Boards
CN-0158 Circuit Evaluation Board
Design and Integration Files
Schematics, Layout Files, Bill of Materials
CIRCUIT FUNCTION AND BENEFITS
The universal serial bus (USB) is rapidly becoming the standard
interface for most PC peripherals. It is displacing RS-232 and
the parallel printer port because of superior speed, flexibility,
and support of device hot swap. There has been a strong desire
on the part of industrial and medical equipment manufacturers
to use the bus as well, but adoption has been slow because there
has not been a good way to provide the isolation required for
connections to machines that control dangerous voltages or low
leakage defibrillation proof connections in medical applications.
The ADuM4160 is designed primarily as an isolation element
for a peripheral USB device. However, there are occasions when
it is useful to isolate a host device. Several issues must be
addressed to use the ADuM4160 for this application. Whereas
the buffers on the upstream and downstream sides of the
ADuM4160 are the same and capable of driving a USB cable,
the downstream buffers must be capable of adjusting speed to a
full or low speed peripheral that is connected to it.
Unlike the case of building a dedicated peripheral interface
where the speed is known and not changed, host applications
must adapt. The ADuM4160 is intended to be hardwired to a
single speed via pins; therefore, it works when the peripheral
plugged into its downstream side is the correct speed, but it fails
when the wrong speed peripheral is attached. The best way to
address this is to combine the ADuM4160 with a hub controller.
ports is handled by the hub controller. The hub controller
converts peripherals of different speeds to match the upstream
port speed. The circuit shown in Figure 1 shows how a two-port
hub chip can be used to isolate two downstream host ports
in a design that can be made fully compliant with the USB
specification.
The ADuM4160 provides an inexpensive and easy to implement
isolation buffer for medical and industrial peripherals. The
challenge that must be met is to use this to create a fully compliant host port by pairing the ADuM4160 with a hub chip.
As with isolating any peripheral device, the services that the
ADuM4160 and hub provide are as follows:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Directly isolates, in the upstream, the USB D+ and D−
lines of a hub chip, allowing the hub to manage the
downstream host port activity.
Implements an automatic scheme for data flow of control
that does not require external control lines.
Provides medical grade isolation.
Allows creation of one or more host ports that meet the
USB-IF certification standards.
Supports full speed signaling rates.
Supports flexible power configurations.
The goal of the application circuit is to isolate a hub as if it
were a full speed peripheral device. The hub or host function
requires that 2.5 W of power be available to each downstream
port. Power to run the downstream side of the isolator and
power the hub and ports is provided as part of the solution. The
application circuit is typical of many medical and industrial
applications.
The upstream side of a hub controller can be thought of as a
standard fixed speed peripheral port that can be easily isolated
with the ADuM4160, whereas the speed of the downstream
Rev. A
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CN-0158
Circuit Note
09047-001
Figure 1. Isolated USB Hub Circuit
Rev. A | Page 2 of 5
Circuit Note
CN-0158
CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION
Power for the upstream USB connector is derived from the 5 V
VBUS voltage available on the USB cable. The hub chip must
provide all of the signals and pull-up or pull-down resistors that
would be required if the ADuM4160 were not present. The hub
chip chosen is an SMSC USB2512 two-port USB hub controller.
This part was chosen because of its low cost and small footprint.
In addition, a 4-channel version is available in the same footprint.
The design is full featured, supporting channel by channel current
limiting through a MIC2026 power distribution switch and
sufficient offline regulated power to provide 2.5 W to each
downstream channel. Power on the downstream side is
provided by a wall wart and an ADP3339 LDO regulator (5 V
option). This component provides very low dropout voltage,
reducing the regulation requirements on the wall wart.
Its small size and 1.5 A current capability are ideal for this
general-purpose circuit where the peripherals downstream may
require full cable power to operate.
The ADuM4160 has several options for power speed and
protection that must be determined. Peripheral devices run at
one of three speeds, low (1.5 Mbps), full (12 Mbps), and high
(480 Mbps). The ADuM4160 does not support high speed
operation and blocks handshaking signals that are used to
negotiate that speed. The hub chip chosen supports high speed
operation, but this mode is not allowed by the normal operation
of the ADuM4160. The ADuM4160 must be set to operate at
full speed via the state of the SPU and SPD pins. In the current
schematic, the SPU and SPD pins are tied to the regulated 3.3 V
power supplies, VDD1 and VDD2, setting the part for full
speed operation.
Power can be provided as 5 V through the VBUSx pins. The
3.3 V signaling voltage is created by an internal 3.3 V regulator
at the VDDx pin. Another option is to supply 3.3 V directly to
both VBUSx and VDDx. The part senses this configuration
and disables the internal regulator using the 3.3 V supply
directly. For illustrative purposes, the downstream side of the
ADuM4160 is configured to accept a 3.3 V external supply,
bypassing the internal regulator. The VBUS2 and VDD2 pins
are shorted together and supplied with an external 3.3 V
generated by an ADP3330 LDO regulator.
EOS/ESD protection devices are represented in this circuit.
These were chosen from manufacturers that have a wide variety
of components available; the particular components were
chosen to allow them to be replaced by 0 Ω shorts, removing
them from the circuit. The choice of protection should be
reviewed by the designer and can range anywhere from not
needing external protection to needing a full complement of
transient suppressors and filter elements. The circuit elements
included in this application are typical of what can be used.
When the circuit is functioning, packets are detected and data is
shuttled from one side of the isolation barrier to the other. Data
shown in Figure 2 and Figure 3 demonstrates a typical full speed
transaction both as time domain data and as an eye diagram.
Features to note in the real-time data are the passive idle state at
the start of the packet, which transitions to a driven J and then
the end of packet at the end of the transaction showing as a
single-ended zero state followed by an idle J. It is the automatic
flow of control and the handling of these special logic states
that make the ADuM4160 chip possible and unique in the
marketplace.
This hub design is fully isolated from the upstream data connection for transients up to 5 kV. The downstream ports are
powered through an offline power source to support full power
applications. Low, full, and high speed peripherals can be
connected to the downstream ports in any combination; the
hub controller properly negotiates speed based on the USB
standard. The design also includes current switching and
limiting as well as positions for other output protection devices
that can be installed as the designer chooses.
The following are applicable test references:
•
•
•
The ADuM4160 has an option to delay application of the
upstream pull-up under control of the peripheral. This function
is controlled by the PIN input. In this application, the PIN input
is shorted high so that the upstream pull-up is applied as soon
as power is applied to the hub chip. In some applications, it can
be connected to a GPIO pin of a controller, a fixed delay circuit
can be applied, or it can be connected as in this circuit. It is the
designer’s choice how to use this functionality.
Rev. A | Page 3 of 5
Upstream full speed signal quality test reference—USB 2.0
Specification, Section 7.1.11., Section 7.1.2.1.
Upstream full speed rise time test reference—USB 2.0
Specification, Section 7.1.11., Section 7.1.2.2.
Upstream full speed fall time test reference—USB 2.0
Specification, Section 7.1.11., Section 7.1.2.2.
CN-0158
Circuit Note
violates the keep out zone. This type of artifact is acceptable
to qualification in this test. Similar data is taken for low speed
evaluation as well. A photograph of the board is shown in
Figure 4.
A complete design support package for this circuit note can be
found at http://www.analog.com/CN0158-DesignSupport.
COMMON VARIATIONS
Other linear regulators can be substituted, depending on system
requirements. Refer to the ADIsimPower™ design tool for
details.
09047-002
CIRCUIT EVALUATION AND TEST
Figure 2. Full Speed Test Packet Traffic Driven by the
Upstream ADuM4160 Port
The ADuM4160 isolated USB hub evaluation board is specifically developed to evaluate and test the circuit described in this
Circuit Note. A detailed schematic and picture of the circuit
board are shown in Figure 1 and Figure 4.
Equipment Needed
The following equipment is needed: a USB port hub connection,
with an upstream-downstream data path, the ADuM4160
isolated USB hub, the ADuM4160 evaluation board, three USB
cables, and a high speed digital oscilloscope.
09047-003
Getting Started
Figure 3. Full Speed Eye Diagram Showing the
Exclusion Zone
In addition to the circuit, circuit schematic, and block diagram
of the test setup described in this Circuit Note, details regarding
the ADuM4160 isolated USB hub evaluation board, Gerber’s,
bill of materials, layout, and assembly information are contained
in the CN-0158 design support package. Information regarding
the components used in the isolator circuit is available in the
ADuM4160, ADP3330, and ADP3339 data sheets and the
ADuM4160 evaluation board user guide, UG-43.
Functional Block Diagram
See Figure 1 for the schematic of the described test setup.
Figure 3 is a full speed eye diagram showing that the ADuM4160
provides an adequate open eye, staying well out of the keep
out region. There is an exception for a single transition that
Rev. A | Page 4 of 5
CN-0158
09047-004
Circuit Note
Figure 4. ADuM4160 Isolated USB Hub Evaluation Board
MT-101 Tutorial, Decoupling Techniques, Analog Devices.
LEARN MORE
USB 2.0 Specifications, USB Implementers Forum, Inc.
CN0158 Design Support Package:
http://www.analog.com/CN0158-DesignSupport
ADIsimPower™ Design Tool, Analog Devices.
Cantrell, Mark. Application Note AN-0971, Recommendations
for Control of Radiated Emissions with isoPower Devices.
Analog Devices.
Chen, Baoxing, John Wynne, and Ronn Kliger. High Speed
Digital Isolators Using Microscale On-Chip Transformers,
Analog Devices, 2003.
Data Sheets and Evaluation Boards
ADuM4160 Data Sheet
ADP3339 Data Sheet
ADP3330 Data Sheet
Chen, Baoxing. iCoupler® Products with isoPower™ Technology:
Signal and Power Transfer Across Isolation Barrier Using
Microtransformers, Analog Devices, 2006
Chen, Baoxing. “Microtransformer Isolation Benefits Digital
Control.” Power Electronics Technology. October 2008.
Wayne, Scott. “iCoupler® Digital Isolators Protect RS-232,
RS-485, and CAN Buses in Industrial, Instrumentation,
and Computer Applications.” Analog Dialogue. Volume 39,
October 2005.
ADuM4160 Evaluation Board
REVISION HISTORY
11/10—Rev. 0 to Rev. A
Krakauer, David. “Digital Isolation Offers Compact,
Low-Cost Solutions to Challenging Design Problems.”
Analog Dialogue. Volume 40, December 2006.
Added Evaluation and Design Support Section ............................ 1
Added Circuit Evaluation and Test Section ................................... 3
Changes to Learn More Section ...................................................... 4
MT-031 Tutorial, Grounding Data Converters and Solving the
Mystery of "AGND" and "DGND," Analog Devices.
7/10—Revision 0: Initial Version
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CN09047-0-11/10(A)
Rev. A | Page 5 of 5