Circuit Note
CN-0336
Devices Connected/Referenced
Circuits from the Lab® reference designs are engineered and
tested for quick and easy system integration to help solve today’s
analog, mixed-signal, and RF design challenges. For more
information and/or support, visit www.analog.com/CN0336.
AD8606
Precision, Low Noise, CMOS, Rail-to-Rail
Input/Output Op Amp
AD7091R
1 MSPS, Ultralow Power, 12-Bit ADC
ADuM5401
4-Channel, 2.5 kV Isolators with
Integrated DC-to-DC Converter
12-Bit, 300 kSPS, Single-Supply, Fully Isolated, Data Acquisition System for 4-20 mA
Inputs
EVALUATION AND DESIGN SUPPORT
The system processes 4 mA to 20 mA input signals using a single
3.3 V supply. The total error after room temperature calibration
is ±0.06% FSR over a ±10°C temperature change, making it ideal
for a wide variety of industrial measurements
Circuit Evaluation Boards
CN0336 Circuit Evaluation Board (EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ)
SDP/PMD Interposer Board (SDP-PMD-IB1Z)
System Demonstration Platform (EVAL-SDP-CB1Z)
Design and Integration Files
Schematics, Layout Files, Bill of Materials
The small footprint of the circuit makes this combination an
industry-leading solution for 4 mA to 20 mA data acquisition
systems where the accuracy, speed, cost, and size play a critical
role. Both data and power are isolated, thereby making the
circuit robust to high voltages and also ground-loop interference
often encountered in harsh industrial environments.
CIRCUIT FUNCTION AND BENEFITS
The circuit shown in Figure 1 is a completely isolated 12-bit,
300 kSPS data acquisition system utilizing only three active devices.
U1B
1/2 AD8606
VREF
2.5V
U2
ADuM5401
(C-GRADE)
J2
IIN
D1
1N4148
R1
INPUT
4mA TO 20mA
TP1
0.1V TO 2.4V
U1A
1/2 AD8606
R2
51Ω
C11
4.7nF
REFOUT
VIN
VDD
U3
AD7091R
VOA
VIA
SS
VOB
VIB
SCK
CONVST
VOC
VIC
VID
VOD
GND_ISO
GND_ISO
+3.3V
VSEL
GNDISO
C8
1µF
GND_ISO
+3.3V_IN
GND
CS
SDO
R5
1kΩ
VDD1
GND1
SCLK
GND REGCAP VDRIVE
GND_ISO
R6
124kΩ
VISO
GNDISO
C10
R3
120Ω GND_ISO
+3.3V
GND_ISO
CONVST
MISO
RCOUT
GND1
GND
PMOD CON
12-PIN
J1
GND_ISO
11650-001
+3.3V
+3.3V
R4
5.11kΩ
Figure 1. 4 mA to 20 mA Single Supply Analog to Digital Conversion with Isolation (All Connections and Decoupling Not Shown)
Rev. A
Circuits from the Lab® reference designs from Analog Devices have been designed and built by Analog
Devices engineers. Standard engineering practices have been employed in the design and
construction of each circuit, and their function and performance have been tested and verified in a lab
environment at room temperature. However, you are solely responsible for testing the circuit and
determining its suitability and applicability for your use and application. Accordingly, in no event shall
Analog Devices be liable for direct, indirect, special, incidental, consequential or punitive damages due
toanycausewhatsoeverconnectedtotheuseofanyCircuitsfromtheLabcircuits. (Continuedonlastpage)
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.
Tel: 781.329.4700
www.analog.com
Fax: 781.461.3113
©2014 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
CN-0336
Circuit Note
CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION
The circuit consists of an input current-to-voltage converter, a
level shifting circuit, an ADC stage, and an output isolation
stage. The 4 mA to 20 mA input signal is converted to a voltage
by resistor R3. For R3 = 120Ω and an input current of 4 mA to
20 mA, the input voltage to the level shifting circuit is: 0.48 V to
2.4 V. The diode D1 is used for protection against an accidental
reverse connection of the input current source.
The voltage across R3 is level shifted and attenuated by the
U1A op amp that is one-half of the dual AD8606. The output of
the op amp is 0.1 V to 2.4 V which matches the input range of
the ADC (0 V to 2.5 V) with 100 mV headroom to maintain
linearity. The buffered voltage reference (VREF = 2.5 V) from the
AD7091R ADC is used to generate the required offset. Resistor
values can be modified to accommodate other popular input
ranges as described later in this circuit note.
The circuit design allows single-supply operation. The
minimum output voltage specification of the AD8606 is 50 mV
for a 2.7 V power supply and 290 mV for 5 V power supply with
10 mA load current, over the temperature range of -40°C to
+125°C. A minimum output voltage of 45 mV to 60 mV is a
conservative estimate for a 3.3 V power supply, a load current
less than 1 mA, and a narrower temperature range.
Considering the tolerances of the parts, the minimum output
voltage (low limit of the range) is set to 100 mV to allow for a
safety margin. The upper limit of the output range is set to 2.4 V
in order to give 100 mV headroom for the positive swing at the
ADC input. Therefore, the nominal output voltage range of the
input op amp is 0.1 V to 2.4 V.
The second half of the AD8606 (U1B) is used to buffer the
internal 2.5 V voltage reference of the AD7091R (U3) ADC.
The AD8606 is chosen for this application because of its low
offset voltage (65 μV maximum), low bias current (1 pA
maximum) and low noise (12 nV/√Hz maximum). Power
dissipation is only 9.2 mW on a 3.3 V supply.
The total power dissipation of the circuit (excluding the
ADuM5401 isolator) is approximately 10.4 mW when
operating on a 3.3 V supply.
Galvanic isolation is provided by the ADuM5401 (C-Grade)
quad channel digital isolator. In addition to the isolated output
data, the ADuM5401 also provides isolated +3.3 V for the
circuit. The ADuM5401 is not required for normal circuit
operation unless isolation is needed. The ADuM5401 quadchannel, 2.5 kV isolators with integrated dc-to-dc converter, is
available in a small 16-lead SOIC. Power dissipation of the
ADuM5401 with a 7 MHz clock is approximately 140 mW.
The AD7091R requires a 50 MHz serial clock (SCLK) to achieve
a 1 MSPS sampling rate. However, the ADuM5401 (C-grade)
isolator has a maximum data rate of 25 Mbps that corresponds
to a maximum serial clock frequency of 12.5 MHz. In addition,
the SPI port requires that the trailing edge of the SCLK clock
the output data into the processor, therefore the total round-trip
propagation delay through the ADuM5401 (120 ns maximum)
limits the upper clock frequency to 1/120 ns = 8.3 MHz.
Even though the AD7091R is a 12-bit ADC, the serial data is
formatted into a 16-bit word to be compatible with the processor
serial port requirements. The sampling period, TS, therefore
consists of the AD7091R 650 ns conversion time plus 58 ns
(extra time required from data sheet, t1 delay + tQUIET delay) plus
16 clock cycles for the SPI interface data transfer.
TS = 650 ns + 58 ns + 16 × 120 ns = 2628 ns
fS = 1/TS = 1/2628 ns = 380 kSPS
In order to provide a safety margin, a maximum SCLK of 7 MHz
and a maximum sampling rate of 300 kSPS is recommended.
The digital SPI interface can be connected to the microprocessor
evaluation board using the 12-pin, Pmod-compatible connector
(Digilent Pmod Specifications).
Circuit Design
The AD7091R 12-bit 1 MSPS SAR ADC is chosen because of its
ultralow power 349 μA at 3.3 V (1.2 mW) which is significantly
lower than any competitive ADC currently available in the market.
The AD7091R also contains an internal 2.5 V reference with
±4.5 ppm/oC typical drift. The input bandwidth is 7.5 MHz,
and the high speed serial interface is SPI compatible. The
AD7091R is available in a small footprint 10-lead MSOP.
Rev. A | Page 2 of 7
+3.3V
IIN
U1A
1/2 AD8606
INPUT
4mA TO 20mA
GND_ISO
R3
120Ω
0.1%
VREF
2.5V
R6
124kΩ
1%
R4
5.11kΩ
1%
OUTPUT
0.1V TO 2.4V
GND
R5
1kΩ
1%
Figure 2. Current-to-Voltage Converter and Level Shifting Circuit
11650-002
A single-pole RC filter (R2/C11) follows the op amp output
stage to reduce the out-of-band noise. The cutoff frequency of
the RC filter is set to 664 kHz. An optional filter (R1/C10) can
be added to reduce the filter cutoff frequency even further in
case of low frequency industrial noise. In such case, the
sampling rate of the AD7091R can be reduced because of the
lower signal bandwidth.
The circuit shown in Figure 2 provides the proper gain and level
shifting to shift the 0.48 V to 2.4 V signal to the ADC input
range of 0.1 V to 2.4 V.
Circuit Note
CN-0336
The transfer function is obtained from the superposition principle.
R5
R5
− V REF
=
V OUT = I IN R3 1 +
R4
R4||R6
R5
R5
+ 4 mA × R3 1 +
I * IN R3 1 +
R4||R6
R4||R6
R5
−V
REF
R4
(1)
where:
If these values are chosen carefully, the overall error due to
substituting standard value resistors can be made less than a few
percent. However, Equation 1 should be used to re-calculate the
U1A op amp output for 4 mA and 20 mA input currents to
ensure that the required headroom is preserved.
The absolute accuracy in this type of circuit is primarily
determined by the resistors, and therefore gain and offset
calibration is required to remove the error due to standard value
substitution and resistor tolerances.
*
I IN = I IN
+ 4 mA
(2)
Effect of Resistor Temperature Coefficients on Overall Error
*
I IN
= 0 mA to 16 mA
(3)
and R4 R6 = R4R6
R4 + R6
(4)
Equation 1 shows that the output voltage is a function of four
resistors: R3, R4, R5, and R6. The sensitivity of the full-scale
output voltage at TP1 to small changes in each of the four
resistors was calculated using a simulation program. The input
current to the circuit was 20 mA. The individual sensitivities
calculated were SR3 = 1.2, SR4 = 0.01, SR5 = 0.00, SR6 = 0.01.
Assuming the individual temperature coefficients combine in a
root-sum-square (rss) manner, then the overall full-scale drift
using a 25 ppm/°C resistor for R3 and 100 ppm/°C resistors for
R4, R5, and R6 is approximately:
Calculation of the Gain and the Resistor Values
The gain of the circuit is:
GAIN =
∆V OUT
∆I IN
=
R5
= R3 1 +
R4||R6
( 2.4 − 0.1 ) V
(I
*
IN
) MAX
=
V
= 143.75
16 mA
mA (5)
2.3 V
Full scale drift
= 100 ppm/°C√[(0.25 × SR3)2 + SR42 + SR52 + SR62)]
In case of an input range from 0 mA to 20 mA, the circuit does
not need level shifting, and the op amp operates as follower. Then,
the voltage drop on R3 must not exceed the upper limit (2.4 V)
of the output range, and can be calculated from the equation:
R3 × ( I IN ) MAX = R3 × 20 mA ≤ 2.4 V
(6)
If R3 = 120 Ω, the ratio R5/(R4||R6) can be calculated from
Equation 5:
R5
GAIN
143.75
=
−1 =
− 1 = 0.198
R 4 R6
R3
120
(7)
The output offset of the circuit can be derived from Equation 1
for IIN = 4 mA:
OFFSET =
V OUT ( I IN = 4 mA) = 0.1 V
R5
= 4 mA × R3 1 +
R4 R6
(8)
R5
−V
REF
R4
Substituting Equation 7 into Equation 8 and solving for R5/R4:
R5
R4
=
R5
1
4 mA × R3 1 +
V REF
R4 R6
− 0.1 V = 0.19
(9)
Resistors R4, R5, and R6 can now be calculated from Equations
7 and 9, if a value to one of them is given. For example if R5 =
1000 Ω, then R4 = 5,263 Ω, and R6 = 125,310 Ω.
In the actual circuit the nearest available standard resistor
values were chosen for R4 and R6. The values selected were R4
= 5.11kΩ and R6 = 124 kΩ.
= 100 ppm/°C√[(0.25 × 1.2)2 + 0.012 + 0.002 + 0.012)]
= 30 ppm/°C
The full-scale drift of 30 ppm/°C corresponds to 0.003%FSR/°C.
Effect of Active Component Temperature Coefficients on
Overall Error
The dc offsets of the AD8606 op amps and the AD7091R ADC
are eliminated by the calibration procedure.
The offset drift of the ADC AD7091R internal reference is
4.5 ppm/°C typical and 25 ppm/°C maximum.
The offset drift of the AD8606 op amp is 1 μV/°C typical and
4.5 μV/°C maximum.
The error due to the input offset of the U1A AD8606 is
referenced to the input voltage range of 2.4 V – 0.48 V = 1.92 V,
and is therefore 2.3 ppm/°C. The error due to the U1B reference
buffer is referenced to 2.5 V and is also approximately 2 ppm/°C.
The total drift error is summarized in Table 1. These errors do
not include the ±1 LSB integral nonlinearity error of the AD7091R.
Table 1. Error Due to Temperature Drift
Error Source
Resistors (1%, 100 ppm/°C)
AD7091R (∆VVREF/∆T = 25 ppm/°C)
AD8606, U1A (∆VOS/∆T = 4.5 μV/°C), 2 ppm/°C,
Referenced to 1.92 V
AD8606, U1B (∆VOS/∆T = 4.5 μV/°C), 2 ppm/°C,
Referenced to 2.5 V
Total FSR Error Temperature Coefficient
Total %FSR Error for ∆T = ±10°C
Rev. A | Page 3 of 7
Total Error
±0.0030 %FSR/°C
±0.0025 %FSR/°C
±0.0002 %FSR/°C
±0.0002 %FSR/°C
±0.0059 %FSR/°C
±0.059 %FSR
CN-0336
Circuit Note
Test Data Before and After Two-Point Calibration
To perform the two-point calibration, 4 mA is first applied to
the input, and the ADC output code is recorded as Code_1.
Then 20 mA is applied to the input, and the ADC output code
is recorded as Code_2. The gain factor is calculated by
GF =
16 mA
.
(10)
Code_2 − Code_1
The input current can now be calculated corresponding to any
output code, Code_x, using the equation:
I IN = 4 mA + GF ( Code_x − Code_1) .
(11)
The error before calibration is obtained by comparing the ideal
transfer function calculated using the nominal values of the
components, and real circuit transfer function without calibration.
The tested circuits have been built with resistors having ±1%
tolerance. The test results do not include temperature changes.
The graph in Figure 3 shows test results for percent error (FSR)
before and after calibration at ambient temperature. As it is
shown, the maximum error before calibration is about 0.25%
FSR. After calibration, the error decreases to ±0.02% FSR,
which approximately corresponds to 1 LSB error of the ADC.
0.30
0.25
ERROR BEFORE CALIBRATION
To suppress noise and reduce ripple, a parallel combination of at
least two capacitors is required. The recommended capacitor
values are 0.1 μF and 10 μF for VDD1 and VISO. The smaller
capacitor must have a low ESR; for example, use of a ceramic
capacitor is advised. The total lead length between the ends of
the low ESR capacitor and the input power supply pin must not
exceed 2 mm. Installing the bypass capacitor with traces more
than 2 mm in length may result in data corruption. Consider
bypassing between Pin 1 and Pin 8 and between Pin 9 and Pin
16 unless both common ground pins are connected together
close to the package. For more information, see the ADuM5401
data sheet.
A complete documentation package including schematics,
board layout, and bill of materials (BOM) can be found at
www.analog.com/CN0336-DesignSupport.
High Voltage Capability
0.20
ERROR (% FSR)
capacitors to properly suppress noise and reduce ripple. Place the
capacitors as close to the device as possible with the low ESR value,
0.1 μF capacitor. Ceramic capacitors are advised for all high
frequency decoupling. Power supply lines must have as large trace
width as possible to provide low impedance path and reduce glitch
effects on the supply line. The ADuM5401 isoPower integrated
dc-to-dc converter requires power supply bypassing at the input
and output supply pins. Note that low ESR bypass capacitors are
required between Pin 1 and Pin 2 and between Pin 15 and Pin
16, as close to the chip pads as possible.
This PCB is designed in adherence with 2500 V basic insulation
practices. High voltage testing beyond 2500 V is not recommended.
Appropriate care must be taken when using this evaluation
board at high voltages, and the PCB should not be relied on for
safety functions because it has not been high potential tested
(also known as hipot tested or dielectric withstanding voltage
tested) or certified for safety.
0.15
0.10
0.05
ERROR AFTER CALIBRATION
11650-003
0
–0.05
0
5
10
INPUT CURRENT (mA)
15
COMMON VARIATIONS
20
Figure 3. Circuit Test Error Before and After Room Temperature Calibration
PCB Layout Considerations
In any circuit where accuracy is crucial, it is important to consider
the power supply and ground return layout on the board. The
PCB should isolate the digital and analog sections as much as
possible. The PCB for this system was constructed in a simple
2-layer stack up, but 4-layer stack up gives better EMS. See the
MT-031 Tutorial for information on layout and grounding and the
MT-101 Tutorial for information on decoupling techniques.
Decouple the power supply to the AD8606 with 10 μF and 0.1 μF
The circuit is proven to work with good stability and accuracy
with component values shown. Other precision op-amps and
other ADCs can be used in this configuration to convert the
4 mA-to-20 mA input to a digital output and for other various
applications for this circuit.
The circuit in Figure 1 can be recalculated for other than 4 mAto-20 mA input current range, following the recommendations,
given in the Circuit Design section. In these cases, when the low
limit of the range is zero (0 mA to 20 mA, 0 mA to10 mA, 0 mA
to 5 mA), the conversion does not require level shifting, and the
input circuit can be simplified, as is shown in Figure 4.
Rev. A | Page 4 of 7
Circuit Note
CN-0336
U2
ADuM5401
(C-GRADE)
+3.3V
J2
IIN
D1
1N4148
INPUT
0mA TO 20mA
R2
51Ω
R3
120Ω
REFOUT
VIN
C11
4.7nF
+3.3V
VISO
GNDISO
TP1
0.1V TO 2.4V
VDD
U3
AD7091R
GND
VOA
VIA
SS
SCLK
VOB
VIB
SCK
CONVST
VOC
VIC
CONVST
VID
VOD
GND REGCAP VDRIVE
+3.3V
VSEL
GNDISO
C8
1µF
RCOUT
GND1
MISO
GND
PMOD CON
12-PIN
J1
11650-004
GND_ISO
GND_ISO
+3.3V_IN
CS
SDO
GND_ISO
VDD1
GND1
GND_ISO
Figure 4. 0 mA-to-20 mA Single Supply Analog to Digital Conversion with Isolation (All Connections and Decoupling Not Shown)
The AD7091 is similar to the AD7091R, but without the voltage
reference output, and the input range is equal to the power
supply voltage. The AD7091 can be used with a 2.5 V ADR391
reference. The ADR391 does not require buffering, therefore a
single AD8605 can be used in the circuit.
The ADR391 is a precision 2.5 V band gap voltage reference,
featuring low power and high precision (9 ppm/°C of temperature
drift) in a tiny TSOT package.
The AD8608 is a quad version of the AD8605 and can be used
as a substitute for the AD8606, if additional precision op-amps
are needed.
The AD8601, AD8602, and AD8604 are single, dual, and quad
rail-to-rail, input and output, single-supply amplifiers featuring
very low offset voltage and wide signal bandwidth, that can be
used in place of AD8605, AD8606, and AD8608.
The AD7457 is a 12-bit, 100 kSPS, low power, SAR ADC, and
can be used in combination with the ADR391 voltage reference
in place of AD7091R, when a 300 kSPS throughput rate is not
needed.
CIRCUIT EVALUATION AND TEST
This circuit uses the EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ circuit board, the
SDP-PMD-IB1Z, and the EVAL-SDP-CB1Z system demonstration
platform (SDP) evaluation board. The interposer board SDPPMD-IB1Z and the SDP board EVAL-SDP-CB1Z have 120-pin
mating connectors. The interposer board and the EVALCN0336-PMDZ board have 12-pin Pmod matching connectors,
allowing quick setup and evaluation of the circuit’s performance.
The EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ board contains the circuit to be
evaluated, as described in this note and the SDP evaluation
board is used with the CN0336 evaluation software to capture
the data from the EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ circuit board.
Equipment Needed
•
•
•
•
•
PC with a USB port Windows® XP or Windows Vista® (32bit), or Windows® 7/8 (64- or 32-bit)
EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ circuit evaluation board
EVAL-SDP-CB1Z SDP evaluation board
SDP-PMD-IB1Z interposer board
CN0336 evaluation software
•
Current calibrator (4 mA to 20mA current source)
Getting Started
Load the evaluation software by placing the CN0336 evaluation
software disc in the CD drive of the PC. You also can download
the most up to date copy of the evaluation software from
CN0336 evaluation software. Using My Computer, locate the
drive that contains the evaluation software disc and open the
Readme file. Follow the instructions in the readme file for
installing and using the evaluation software.
Functional Block Diagram
Figure 5 shows a functional block diagram of the test setup.
Setup
•
•
•
•
•
Connect the EVAL-CFTL-6V-PWRZ (+6 V dc power
supply) to SDP-PMD-IB1Z Interposer Board via the dc
barrel jack.
Connect the SDP-PMD-IB1Z (interposer board) to EVALSDP-CB1Z SDP board via the 120-pin Con A connector.
Connect the EVAL-SDP-CB1Z (SDP board) to the PC via
the USB cable.
Connect the EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ evaluation board to
the SDP-PMD-IB1Z Interposer Board via the 12-pin
header Pmod connector.
Connect the 4 mA to 20 mA current source (current
calibrator) to the EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ evaluation board
via the terminal block J2.
Test
Launch the evaluation software. The software can communicate
to the SDP board if the Analog Devices System Development
Platform drivers are listed in the Device Manager. Once USB
communications are established, the SDP board can be used to
send, receive, and capture serial data from the EVAL-CN0336PMDZ board. Data can be saved in the computer for various
values of input current.Information and details regarding how
to use the evaluation software for data capturing can be found
in the CN0336 Software User Guide. Information and details
on the SDP board can be found in the SDP User Guide.
A photo of the EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ evaluation board is
shown in Figure 6.
Rev. A | Page 5 of 7
CN-0336
Circuit Note
EVAL-CFTL-6V-PWRZ
6V WALL WART
EVAL-SDP-CB1Z
SDP-B BOARD
J1
EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ
J1
PMOD
J3
PMOD
120-PIN
J4
SDP-PMD-IB1Z
INTERPOSER BOARD
CON A
USB
11650-005
J2
PC
Figure 5. Test Setup Functional Block Diagram
11650-006
4mA TO 20mA
CURRENT
SOURCE
Figure 6. Photo of EVAL-CN0336-PMDZ Board
Rev. A | Page 6 of 7
Circuit Note
CN-0336
LEARN MORE
Data Sheets and Evaluation Boards
CN0336 Design Support Package:
http://www.analog.com/CN0336-DesignSupport
AD8606 Data Sheet
Chen, Baoxing, John Wynne, and Ronn Kliger. High Speed
Digital Isolators Using Microscale On-Chip Transformers,
Analog Devices, 2003
ADuM5401 Data Sheet
AD7091R Data Sheet
REVISION HISTORY
Chen, Baoxing. iCoupler® Products with isoPower™ Technology:
Signal and Power Transfer Across Isolation Barrier Using
Microtransformers, Analog Devices, 2006
3/14—Rev. 0 to Rev. A
Change to Circuit Function and Benefits Section ........................ 1
2/14—Revision 0: Initial Version
Ghiorse, Rich. Application Note AN-825, Power Supply
Considerations in iCoupler® Isolation Products, Analog
Devices
Krakauer, David. “Digital Isolation Offers Compact, Low-Cost
Solutions to Challenging Design Problems.”Analog Dialogue.
Volume 40, December 2006.
MT-031 Tutorial, Grounding Data Converters and Solving the
Mystery of "AGND" and "DGND," Analog Devices
MT-101 Tutorial, Decoupling Techniques, Analog Devices
Wayne, Scott. “iCoupler® Digital Isolators Protect RS-232, RS485, and CAN Buses in Industrial, Instrumentation, and
Computer Apps, Analog Dialogue, Volume 39, Number 4,
2005.
(Continued from first page) Circuits from the Lab reference designs are intended only for use with Analog Devices products and are the intellectual property of Analog Devices or its licensors.
While you may use the Circuits from the Lab reference designs in the design of your product, no other license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patents or other intellectual
property by application or use of the Circuits from the Lab reference designs. Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, Circuits from the
Lab reference designs are supplied "as is" and without warranties of any kind, express, implied, or statutory including, but not limited to, any implied warranty of merchantability,
noninfringement or fitness for a particular purpose and no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for their use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties
that may result from their use. Analog Devices reserves the right to change any Circuits from the Lab reference designs at any time without notice but is under no obligation to do so.
©2014 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
CN11650-0-3/14(A)
Rev. A | Page 7 of 7