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ADC081C021CIMMX/NOPB

ADC081C021CIMMX/NOPB

  • 厂商:

    BURR-BROWN(德州仪器)

  • 封装:

    TSSOP8

  • 描述:

    IC ADC 8BIT SAR 8VSSOP

  • 数据手册
  • 价格&库存
ADC081C021CIMMX/NOPB 数据手册
ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 ADC081C021/ADC081C027 I2C-Compatible, 8-Bit Analog-to-Digital Converter with Alert Function Check for Samples: ADC081C021, ADC081C027 FEATURES 1 • 23 • • • • • • 2 I C-Compatible 2-Wire Interface Which Supports Standard (100kHz), Fast (400kHz), and High Speed (3.4MHz) Modes Extended Power Supply Range (+2.7V to +5.5V) Up to Nine Pin-Selectable Chip Addresses (VSSOP-8 only) Out-of-Range Alert Function Automatic Power-Down Mode While Not Converting Very Small SOT-6 and VSSOP-8 Packages ±8kV HBM ESD Protection (SDA, SCL) APPLICATIONS • • • • • System Monitoring Peak Detection Portable Instruments Medical Instruments Test Equipment KEY SPECIFICATIONS • • • • • Resolution: 8 bits; No Missing Codes Conversion Time 1 µs (Typ) INL & DNL: ±0.2 LSB (Max) Throughput Rate: 188.9 ksps (Max) Power Consumption (at 22ksps): – 3V Supply: 0.26 mW (Typ) – 5V Supply: 0.78 mW (Typ) DESCRIPTION The ADC081C021 is a low-power, monolithic, 8-bit, analog-to-digital converter (ADC) that operates from a +2.7 to 5.5V supply. The converter is based on a successive approximation register architecture with an internal track-and-hold circuit that can handle input frequencies up to 11MHz. The ADC081C021 operates from a single supply which also serves as the reference. The device features an I2C-compatible serial interface that operates in all three speed modes, including high speed mode (3.4MHz). The ADC's Alert feature provides an interrupt that is activated when the analog input violates a programmable upper or lower limit value. The device features an automatic conversion mode, which frees up the controller and I2C interface. In this mode, the ADC continuously monitors the analog input for an "out-of-range" condition and provides an interrupt if the measured voltage goes out-of-range. The ADC081C021 comes in two packages: a small SOT-6 package with an alert output, and an VSSOP8 package with an alert output and two address selection inputs. The ADC081C027 comes in a small SOT-6 package with an address selection input. The ADC081C027 provides three pin-selectable addresses while the VSSOP-8 version of the ADC081C021 provides nine pin-selectable addresses. Pin-compatible alternatives to the SOT-6 options are available with additional address options. Normal power consumption using a +3V or +5V supply is 0.26mW or 0.78mW, respectively. The automatic power-down feature reduces the power consumption to less than 1µW while not converting. Operation over the industrial temperature range of −40°C to +105°C is ensured. Their low power consumption and small packages make this family of ADCs an excellent choice for use in battery operated equipment. The ADC081C021 and ADC081C027 are part of a family of pin-compatible ADCs that also provide 10and 12-bit resolution. For 10-bit ADCs see the ADC101C021 and ADC101C027. For 12-bit ADCs see the ADC121C021 and ADC121C027. 1 2 3 Please be aware that an important notice concerning availability, standard warranty, and use in critical applications of Texas Instruments semiconductor products and disclaimers thereto appears at the end of this data sheet. I2C is a registered trademark of Phillips Corporation.. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. PRODUCTION DATA information is current as of publication date. Products conform to specifications per the terms of the Texas Instruments standard warranty. Production processing does not necessarily include testing of all parameters. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Table 1. Pin-Compatible AlternativesAll devices are fully pin and function compatible. Resolution SOT-6 (Alert only) and VSSOP-8 SOT-6 (Addr only) 12-bit ADC121C021 ADC121C027 10-bit ADC101C021 ADC101C027 8-bit ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Connection Diagrams VA 1 GND 2 VIN 3 6 SOT 5 4 SDA SCL ALERT ADC081C021 Figure 1. SOT (Alert Only) – See Package Number DDC 2 Submit Documentation Feedback VA GND VIN 1 2 3 6 SOT 5 4 SDA SCL 1 8 SDA ALERT 2 7 GND ADR0 3 6 ADR1 VIN 4 5 VA VSSOP SCL ADDR ADC081C027 ADC081C021 Figure 2. SOT (Addr Only) – See Package Number DDC Figure 3. VSSOP – See Package Number DGK Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Block Diagram VA VIN ADC081C021/ ADC081C027 REF Oscillator 8-Bit Successive Approximation ADC T/H Conversion Result Highest Conversion Lowest Conversion Pointer Register and Decode Logic Configuration Alert Status Hysteresis High Limit Alert Set-Point Comparator ALERT* Low Limit SDA 2 ADDR* I C Serial Interface SCL GND * Note: The ADC081C021 has the ALERT pin but no ADDR pin. The ADC081C027 has the ADDR pin but no ALERT pin. PIN DESCRIPTIONS Symbol VA Type Equivalent Circuit Supply GND Ground VIN Analog Input Description Power and unbufferred reference voltage. VA must be free of noise and decoupled to GND. Ground for all on-chip circuitry. See Figure 22 Analog input. This signal can range from GND to VA. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 3 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com PIN DESCRIPTIONS (continued) Symbol ALERT SCL Type Equivalent Circuit Description Digital Output Alert output. Can be configured as active high or active low. This is an open drain data line that must be pulled to the supply (VA) with an external pull-up resistor. Digital Input Serial Clock Input. SCL is used together with SDA to control the transfer of data in and out of the device. This is an open drain data line that must be pulled to the supply (VA) with an external pull-up resistor. This pin's extended ESD tolerance( 8kV HBM) allows extension of the I2C bus across multiple boards without extra ESD protection. PIN Snap Back D1 Serial Data bi-directional connection. Data is clocked into or out of the internal 16-bit register with SCL. This is an open drain data line that must be pulled to the supply (VA) with an external pull-up resistor. This pin's extended ESD tolerance( 8kV HBM) allows extension of the I2C bus across multiple boards without extra ESD protection. GND SDA Digital Input/Output ADDR0 ADDR1 Tri-level Address Selection Input. Sets Bits A0 & A1 of the 7-bit slave address. (see Table 2) V+ PIN Digital Input, three levels Snap Back D1 2.1k 41.5k Tri-level Address Selection Input. Sets Bits A2 & A3 of the 7-bit slave address. (see Table 2) 41.5k GND Package Pinouts VA GND VIN ALERT SCL SDA ADR0 ADR1 ADC081C021 (SOT-6) 1 2 3 4 5 6 N/A N/A ADC081C027 (SOT-6) 1 2 3 N/A 5 6 4 N/A ADC081C021 (VSSOP-8) 5 7 4 2 1 8 3 6 These devices have limited built-in ESD protection. The leads should be shorted together or the device placed in conductive foam during storage or handling to prevent electrostatic damage to the MOS gates. 4 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Absolute Maximum Ratings (1) (2) (3) Supply Voltage, VA (4) -0.3V to +6.5V −0.3V to (VA +0.3V) Voltage on any Analog Input Pin to GND −0.3V to 6.5V Voltage on any Digital Input Pin to GND Input Current at Any Pin (5) Package Input Current ±15 mA (5) ±20 mA See (6) Power Dissipation at TA = 25°C Human Body Model VA, GND, VIN, ALERT, ADR pins ESD Susceptibility (7) SDA, SCL pins 2500V Machine Model 250V Charged Device Model (CDM) 1250V Human Body Model 8000V Machine Model 400V Junction Temperature +150°C Storage Temperature −65°C to +150°C (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (6) (7) Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not ensure specific performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed test conditions. Operation of the device beyond the maximum Operating Ratings is not recommended. All voltages are measured with respect to GND = 0V, unless otherwise specified. If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, please contact the Texas Instruments Sales Office/Distributors for availability and specifications. To ensure accuracy, it is required that VA be well bypassed and free of noise. When the input voltage at any pin exceeds 5.5V or is less than GND, the current at that pin should be limited per the Absolute Maximum Ratings. The maximum package input current rating limits the number of pins that can safely exceed the power supplies. The absolute maximum junction temperature (TJmax) for this device is 150°C. The maximum allowable power dissipation is dictated by TJmax, the junction-to-ambient thermal resistance (θJA), and the ambient temperature (TA), and can be calculated using the formula PDMAX = (TJmax − TA) / θJA. The values for maximum power dissipation will be reached only when the device is operated in a severe fault condition (e.g., when input or output pins are driven beyond the operating ratings, or the power supply polarity is reversed). Human body model is a 100 pF capacitor discharged through a 1.5 kΩ resistor. Machine model is a 220 pF capacitor discharged through 0 Ω. Charged device model simulates a pin slowly acquiring charge (such as from a device sliding down the feeder in an automated assembler) then rapidly being discharged. Operating Ratings (1) (2) −40°C ≤ TA ≤ +105°C Operating Temperature Range Supply Voltage, VA +2.7V to 5.5V Analog Input Voltage, VIN Digital Input Voltage 0V to VA (3) 0V to 5.5V Sample Rate (1) (2) (3) up to 188.9 ksps Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is functional, but do not ensure specific performance limits. For ensured specifications and test conditions, see the Electrical Characteristics. The ensured specifications apply only for the test conditions listed. Some performance characteristics may degrade when the device is not operated under the listed test conditions. Operation of the device beyond the maximum Operating Ratings is not recommended. All voltages are measured with respect to GND = 0V, unless otherwise specified. The inputs are protected as shown below. Input voltage magnitudes up to 5.5V, regardless of VA, will not cause errors in the conversion result. For example, if VA is 3V, the digital input pins can be driven with a 5V logic device. I/O TO INTERNAL CIRCUITRY GND Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 5 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Package Thermal Resistances (1) (2) (1) (2) Package θJA 6-Lead SOT 250°C/W 8-Lead VSSOP 200°C/W Soldering process must comply with Reflow Temperature Profile specifications. Refer to www.ti.com/packaging. Reflow temperature profiles are different for lead-free packages. Electrical Characteristics The following specifications apply for VA = +2.7V to +5.5V, GND = 0V, fSCL up to 3.4MHz, fIN = 1kHz for fSCL up to 400kHz, fIN = 10kHz for fSCL = 3.4MHz unless otherwise noted. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX: all other limits TA = 25°C unless otherwise noted. Symbol Parameter Typical (1) Conditions Limits (1) Units (Limits) 8 Bits STATIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS Resolution with No Missing Codes Integral Non-Linearity (End Point Method) INL DNL Differential Non-Linearity VOFF Offset Error GE Gain Error VA = +2.7V to +3.6V ±0.04 ±0.2 LSB (max) VA = +2.7V to +5.5V. fSCL up to 400kHz (2) ±0.1 ±0.25 LSB (max) VA = +2.7V to +3.6V +0.04 ±0.2 LSB (max) VA = +2.7V to +5.5V. fSCL up to 400kHz (2) ±0.08 ±0.25 LSB (max) VA = +2.7V to +3.6V +0.26 ±0.5 LSB (max) VA = +2.7V to +5.5V. fSCL up to 400kHz (2) +0.25 ±0.5 LSB (max) -0.01 ±0.4 LSB (max) DYNAMIC CONVERTER CHARACTERISTICS ENOB Effective Number of Bits 7.98 7.8 Bits (min) SNR Signal-to-Noise Ratio 49.8 49 dB (min) THD Total Harmonic Distortion −70.6 −64 dB (max) SINAD Signal-to-Noise Plus Distortion Ratio 49.8 49 dB (min) SFDR Spurious-Free Dynamic Range -68.8 65 dB (min) IMD FPBW Intermodulation Distortion, Second Order Terms (IMD2) VA = +3.0V, fa = 1.035 kHz, fb = 1.135 kHz −75.5 dB Intermodulation Distortion, Third Order Terms (IMD3) VA = +3.0V, fa = 1.035 kHz, fb = 1.135 kHz −71.8 dB VA = +3.0V 8 MHz VA = +5.0V 11 MHz Full Power Bandwidth (−3dB) ANALOG INPUT CHARACTERISTICS VIN Input Range IDCL DC Leakage Current (3) CINA Input Capacitance 0 to VA V ±1 µA (max) Track Mode 30 pF Hold Mode 3 pF SERIAL INTERFACE INPUT CHARACTERISTICS (SCL, SDA) VIH Input High Voltage 0.7 x VA V (min) VIL Input Low Voltage 0.3 x VA V (max) IIN Input Current (3) ±1 µA (max) CIN Input Pin Capacitance 0.1 x VA V (min) VHYST 3 Input Hysteresis pF ADDRESS SELECTION INPUT CHARACTERISTICS (ADDR) (1) (2) (3) 6 VIH Input High Voltage VA - 0.5V V (min) VIL Input Low Voltage 0.5 V (max) Typical figures are at TJ = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are specified to AOQL (Average Outgoing Quality Level). The ADC will meet Minimum/Maximum specifications for fSCL up to 3.4MHz and VA = 2.7V to 3.6V when operating in the QUIET INTERFACE MODE. This parameter is specified by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Electrical Characteristics (continued) The following specifications apply for VA = +2.7V to +5.5V, GND = 0V, fSCL up to 3.4MHz, fIN = 1kHz for fSCL up to 400kHz, fIN = 10kHz for fSCL = 3.4MHz unless otherwise noted. Boldface limits apply for TA = TMIN to TMAX: all other limits TA = 25°C unless otherwise noted. Symbol IIN Limits (1) Units (Limits) ±1 µA (max) ISINK = 3 mA 0.4 V (max) ISINK = 6 mA 0.6 V (max) ±1 µA (max) Parameter Input Current Conditions Typical (1) (3) LOGIC OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS, OPEN-DRAIN (SDA, ALERT) VOL Output Low Voltage IOZ High-Impedence Output Leakage Current (3) Output Coding Straight (Natural) Binary POWER REQUIREMENTS VA Supply Voltage Minimum 2.7 V (min) Supply Voltage Maximum 5.5 V (max) Continuous Operation Mode -- 2-wire interface active. fSCL=400kHz IN Supply Current fSCL=3.4MHz fSCL=400kHz PN Power Consumption fSCL=3.4MHz VA = 2.7V to 3.6V 0.08 0.14 mA (max) VA = 4.5V to 5.5V 0.16 0.30 mA (max) VA = 2.7V to 3.6V 0.37 0.55 mA (max) VA = 4.5V to 5.5V 0.74 0.99 mA (max) VA = 3.0V 0.26 mW VA = 5.0V 0.78 mW VA = 3.0V 1.22 mW VA = 5.0V 3.67 mW Automatic Conversion Mode -- 2-wire interface stopped and quiet (SCL = SDA = VA). fSAMPLE = TCONVERT * 32 IA Supply Current PA Power Consumption VA = 2.7V to 3.6V 0.41 0.59 mA (max) VA = 4.5V to 5.5V 0.78 1.2 mA (max) VA = 3.0V 1.35 mW VA = 5.0V 3.91 mW Power Down Mode (PD1) -- 2-wire interface stopped and quiet. (SCL = SDA = VA). (4) IPD1 Supply Current 0.1 0.2 µA (max) PPD1 Power Consumption 0.5 0.9 µW (max) 45 µA (max) Power Down Mode (PD2) -- 2-wire interface active. Master communicating with a different device on the bus. fSCL=400kHz IPD2 Supply Current fSCL=3.4MHz fSCL=400kHz PPD2 Power Consumption fSCL=3.4MHz (4) VA = 2.7V to 3.6V 13 VA = 4.5V to 5.5V 27 80 µA (max) VA = 2.7V to 3.6V 89 150 µA (max) VA = 4.5V to 5.5V 168 250 µA (max) VA = 3.0V 0.04 mW VA = 5.0V 0.14 mW VA = 3.0V 0.29 mW VA = 5.0V 0.84 mW This parameter is specified by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 7 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com A.C. and Timing Characteristics The following specifications apply for VA = +2.7V to +5.5V. Boldface limits apply for TMIN ≤ TA ≤ TMAX and all other limits are at TA = 25°C, unless otherwise specified. Symbol Conditions (1) Parameter Typical (2) Limits (1) (2) Units (Limits) CONVERSION RATE Conversion Time fCONV Conversion Rate 1 µs fSCL = 100kHz 5.56 ksps fSCL = 400kHz 22.2 ksps fSCL = 1.7MHz 94.4 ksps fSCL = 3.4MHz 188.9 ksps DIGITAL TIMING SPECS (SCL, SDA) fSCL Serial Clock Frequency Standard Mode Fast Mode High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 100 400 3.4 1.7 tLOW SCL Low Time Standard Mode Fast Mode High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 4.7 1.3 160 320 us us ns ns (min) (min) (min) (min) tHIGH SCL High Time Standard Mode Fast Mode High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 4.0 0.6 60 120 us us ns ns (min) (min) (min) (min) tSU;DAT Data Setup Time Standard Mode Fast Mode High Speed Mode 250 100 10 ns (min) ns (min) ns (min) Standard Mode (3) 0 3.45 us (min) us (max) Fast Mode (3) 0 0.9 us (min) us (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF 0 70 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 0 150 ns (min) ns (max) tHD;DAT Data Hold Time kHz (max) kHz (max) MHz (max) MHz (max) tSU;STA Setup time for a start or a repeated start condition Standard Mode Fast Mode High Speed Mode 4.7 0.6 160 us (min) us (min) ns (min) tHD;STA Hold time for a start or a repeated start condition Standard Mode Fast Mode High Speed Mode 4.0 0.6 160 us (min) us (min) ns (min) tBUF Bus free time between a stop and start condition Standard Mode Fast Mode 4.7 1.3 us (min) us (min) tSU;STO Setup time for a stop condition Standard Mode Fast Mode High Speed Mode 4.0 0.6 160 us (min) us (min) ns (min) Standard Mode 1000 ns (max) 20+0.1Cb 300 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF 10 80 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 20 160 ns (min) ns (max) Fast Mode trDA (1) (2) (3) 8 Rise time of SDA signal Cb refers to the capacitance of one bus line. Cb is expressed in pF units. Typical figures are at TJ = 25°C, and represent most likely parametric norms. Test limits are specified to AOQL (Average Outgoing Quality Level). The ADC081C021 will provide a minimum data hold time of 300ns to comply with the I2C Specification. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 A.C. and Timing Characteristics (continued) The following specifications apply for VA = +2.7V to +5.5V. Boldface limits apply for TMIN ≤ TA ≤ TMAX and all other limits are at TA = 25°C, unless otherwise specified. Symbol Conditions (1) Parameter Typical (2) Standard Mode Fall time of SDA signal 250 ns (max) ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF 10 80 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 20 160 ns (min) ns (max) Standard Mode 1000 ns (max) 20+0.1Cb 300 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF 10 40 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 20 80 ns (min) ns (max) 1000 ns (max) 20+0.1Cb 300 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF 10 80 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 20 160 ns (min) ns (max) Standard Mode 300 ns (max) 20+0.1Cb 300 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 100pF 10 40 ns (min) ns (max) High Speed Mode, Cb = 400pF 20 80 ns (min) ns (max) 400 pF (max) 50 10 ns (max) ns (max) Fast Mode trCL Rise time of SCL signal Standard Mode trCL1 Fast Mode Rise time of SCL signal after a repeated start condition and after an acknowledge bit. Fast Mode tfCL Fall time of a SCL signal Cb Capacitive load for each bus line (SCL and SDA) tSP Pulse Width of spike suppressed (4) (4) Units (Limits) 20+0.1Cb 250 Fast Mode tfDA Limits (1) (2) Fast Mode High Speed Mode Spike suppression filtering on SCL and SDA will suppress spikes that are less than 50ns for standard and fast modes, and less than 10ns for hs-mode. Timing Diagrams SDA tLOW tf tHD;STA tr tf tr tBUF tSP SCL tSU;STA tHD;STA tHIGH tHD;DAT START tSU;STO tSU;DAT REPEATED START STOP START Figure 4. Serial Timing Diagram Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 9 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Specification Definitions ACQUISITION TIME is the time required for the ADC to acquire the input voltage. During this time, the hold capacitor is charged by the input voltage. APERTURE DELAY is the time between the start of a conversion and the time when the input signal is internally acquired or held for conversion. CONVERSION TIME is the time required, after the input voltage is acquired, for the ADC to convert the input voltage to a digital word. DIFFERENTIAL NON-LINEARITY (DNL) is the measure of the maximum deviation from the ideal step size of 1 LSB. EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF BITS (ENOB, or EFFECTIVE BITS) is another method of specifying Signal-to-Noise and Distortion or SINAD. ENOB is defined as (SINAD - 1.76) / 6.02 and says that the converter is equivalent to a perfect ADC of this (ENOB) number of bits. FULL POWER BANDWIDTH is a measure of the frequency at which the reconstructed output fundamental drops 3 dB below its low frequency value for a full scale input. GAIN ERROR is the deviation of the last code transition (111...110) to (111...111) from the ideal (VREF - 1.5 LSB), after adjusting for offset error. INTEGRAL NON-LINEARITY (INL) is a measure of the deviation of each individual code from a line drawn from negative full scale (½ LSB below the first code transition) through positive full scale (½ LSB above the last code transition). The deviation of any given code from this straight line is measured from the center of that code value. INTERMODULATION DISTORTION (IMD) is the creation of additional spectral components as a result of two sinusoidal frequencies being applied to an individual ADC input at the same time. It is defined as the ratio of the power in both the second and third order intermodulation products to the power in one of the original frequencies. Second order products are fa ± fb, where fa and fb are the two sine wave input frequencies. Third order products are (2fa ± fb ) and (fa ± 2fb). IMD is usually expressed in dB. MISSING CODES are those output codes that will never appear at the ADC output. The ADC081C021 is ensured not to have any missing codes. OFFSET ERROR is the deviation of the first code transition (000...000) to (000...001) from the ideal (i.e. GND + 0.5 LSB). SIGNAL TO NOISE RATIO (SNR) is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the rms value of the input signal to the rms value of the sum of all other spectral components below one-half the sampling frequency, not including harmonics or d.c. SIGNAL TO NOISE PLUS DISTORTION (S/N+D or SINAD) Is the ratio, expressed in dB, of the rms value of the input signal to the rms value of all of the other spectral components below half the clock frequency, including harmonics but excluding d.c. SPURIOUS FREE DYNAMIC RANGE (SFDR) is the difference, expressed in dB, between the desired signal amplitude to the amplitude of the peak spurious spectral component, where a spurious spectral component is any signal present in the output spectrum that is not present at the input and may or may not be a harmonic. TOTAL HARMONIC DISTORTION (THD) is the ratio, expressed in dBc, of the rms total of the first n harmonic components at the output to the rms level of the input signal frequency as seen at the output. THD is calculated as THD = 20 x log 10 A f22 + / + A Fn 2 A f12 (1) where Af1 is the RMS power of the input frequency at the output and Af2 through Afn are the RMS power in the first n harmonic frequencies. THROUGHPUT TIME is the minimum time required between the start of two successive conversions. It is the acquisition time plus the conversion time. LEAST SIGNIFICANT BIT (LSB) is the bit that has the smallest value or weight of all bits in a word. This value is LSB = VA / 2n 10 Submit Documentation Feedback (2) Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 where VA is the supply voltage for this product, and "n" is the resolution in bits, which is 8 for the ADC081C021. MOST SIGNIFICANT BIT (MSB) is the bit that has the largest value or weight of all bits in a word. Its value is 1/2 of VA. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 11 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Typical Performance Characteristics fSCL = 400kHz, fSAMPLE = 22ksps, fIN = 1kHz, VA = 5.0V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise stated. 12 INL vs. Code - VA=3V DNL vs. Code - VA=3V Figure 5. Figure 6. INL vs. Code - VA=5V DNL vs. Code - VA=5V Figure 7. Figure 8. INL vs. Supply DNL vs. Supply Figure 9. Figure 10. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Typical Performance Characteristics (continued) fSCL = 400kHz, fSAMPLE = 22ksps, fIN = 1kHz, VA = 5.0V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise stated. ENOB vs. Supply SINAD vs. Supply Figure 11. Figure 12. FFT Plot - VA=3V FFT Plot - VA=3V Figure 13. Figure 14. Offset Error vs. Temperature Gain Error vs. Temperature Figure 15. Figure 16. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 13 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Typical Performance Characteristics (continued) fSCL = 400kHz, fSAMPLE = 22ksps, fIN = 1kHz, VA = 5.0V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise stated. Continuous Operation Supply Current vs. VA Automatic Conversion Supply Current vs. VA Figure 17. Figure 18. Power Down (PD1) Supply Current vs. VA Figure 19. 14 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Functional Description The ADC081C021 and the ADC081C027 are successive-approximation analog-to-digital converters designed around a charge-redistribution digital-to-analog converter. Unless otherwise stated, references to the ADC081C021 in this section will apply to both the ADC081C021 and the ADC081C027. CONVERTER OPERATION Simplified schematics of the ADC081C021 in both track and hold operation are shown in Figure 20 and Figure 21 respectively. In Figure 20, the ADC081C021 is in track mode. SW1 connects the sampling capacitor to the analog input channel and SW2 equalizes the comparator inputs. The ADC is in this state for approximately 0.4µs at the beginning of every conversion cycle, which begins at the ACK fall of SDA. Conversions occur when the conversion result register is read and when the ADC is in automatic conversion mode. (see AUTOMATIC CONVERSION MODE). Figure 21 shows the ADC081C021 in hold mode. SW1 connects the sampling capacitor to ground and SW2 unbalances the comparator. The control logic then instructs the charge-redistribution DAC to add or subtract fixed amounts of charge to or from the sampling capacitor until the comparator is balanced. When the comparator is balanced, the digital word supplied to the DAC is also the digital representation of the analog input voltage. This digital word is stored in the conversion result register and read via the 2-wire interface. In the Normal (non-Automatic) Conversion mode, a new conversion is started after the previous conversion result is read. In the Automatic Mode, conversions are started at set intervals, as determined by bits D7 through D5 of the Configuration Register. The intent of the Automatic mode is to provide a "watchdog" function to ensure that the input voltage remains within the limits set in the Alert Limit Registers. The minimum and maximum conversion results can then be read from the Lowest Conversion Register and the Highest Conversion Register, as described in INTERNAL REGISTERS. CHARGE REDISTRIBUTION DAC VIN CHARGE REDISTRIBUTION DAC VIN SAMPLING CAPACITOR SAMPLING CAPACITOR SW1 SW2 + - CONTROL LOGIC AGND SW1 SW2 + - CONTROL LOGIC AGND VA/2 VA/2 Figure 20. ADC081C021 in Track Mode Figure 21. ADC081C021 in Hold Mode ANALOG INPUT An equivalent circuit for the input of the ADC081C021 is shown in Figure 22. The diodes provide ESD protection for the analog input. The operating range for the analog input is 0 V to VA. Going beyond this range will cause the ESD diodes to conduct and result in erratic operation. For this reason, these diodes should NOT be used to clamp the input signal. The capacitor C1 in Figure 22 has a typical value of 3 pF and is mainly the package pin capacitance. Resistor R1 is the on resistance (RON) of the multiplexer and track / hold switch and is typically 500Ω. Capacitor C2 is the ADC081C021 sampling capacitor, and is typically 30 pF. The ADC081C021 will deliver best performance when driven by a low-impedance source (less than 100Ω). This is especially important when using the ADC081C021 to sample dynamic signals. A buffer amplifier may be necessary to limit source impedance. Use a precision op-amp to maximize circuit performance. Also important when sampling dynamic signals is a band-pass or low-pass filter to reduce noise at the input. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 15 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com VA D1 R1 C2 30 pF VIN C1 3 pF D2 Conversion Phase - Switch Open Track Phase - Switch Closed Figure 22. Equivalent Input Circuit The analog input is sampled for eight internal clock cycles, or for typically 400 ns, after the fall of SDA for acknowledgement. This time could be as long as about 530 ns. The sampling switch opens and the conversion begins this time after the fall of ACK. This time are typical at room temperature and may vary with temperature. ADC TRANSFER FUNCTION The output format of the ADC081C021 is straight binary. Code transitions occur midway between successive integer LSB values. The LSB width for the ADC081C021 is VA / 256. The ideal transfer characteristic is shown in Figure 23. The transition from an output code of 0000 0000 0000 to a code of 0000 0000 0001 is at 1/2 LSB, or a voltage of VA / 512. Other code transitions occur at intervals of 1 LSB. 111...111 111...000 | | ADC CODE 111...110 1 LSB = VA/256 011...111 000...010 | 000...001 000...000 0V 0.5 LSB ANALOG INPUT +VA - 1.5 LSB Figure 23. Ideal Transfer Characteristic REFERENCE VOLTAGE The ADC081C021 uses the supply (VA) as the reference, so VA must be treated as a reference. The analog-todigital conversion will only be as precise as the reference (VA), so the supply voltage should be free of noise. The reference should be driven by a low output impedance voltage source. The Applications section provides recommended ways to provide the supply voltage appropriately. Refer to TYPICAL APPLICATION CIRCUIT for details. 16 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 POWER-ON RESET An internal power-on reset (POR) occurs when the supply voltage transitions above the power-on reset threshold. Each of the registers contains a defined value upon POR and this data remains there until any of the following occurs: • The first conversion is completed, causing the Conversion Result and Status registers to be updated. • A different data word is written to a writeable register. • The ADC is powered down. The internal registers will lose their contents if the supply voltage goes below 2.4V. Should this happen, it is important that the VA supply be lowered to a maximum of 200mV before the supply is raised again to properly reset the device and ensure that the ADC performs as specified. INTERNAL REGISTERS The ADC081C021 has 8 internal data registers and one address pointer. The registers provide additional ADC functions such as storing minimum and maximum conversion results, setting alert threshold levels, and storing data to configure the operation of the device. Figure 24 shows all of the registers and their corresponding address pointer values. All of the registers are read/write capable except the conversion result register which is read-only. Conversion Result Pointer = 00000000 Alert Status Pointer = 00000001 Configuration Pointer = 00000010 Pointer Register Low Limit (selects register to read from or write to) Pointer = 00000011 High Limit Pointer = 00000100 Hysteresis Pointer Address Pointer = 00000101 Lowest Conversion Pointer = 00000110 Data Highest Conversion Pointer = 00000111 2 SDA I C Serial Interface SCL Figure 24. Register Structure Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 17 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Address Pointer Register The address pointer determines which of the data registers is accessed by the I2C interface. The first data byte of every write operation is stored in the address pointer register. This value selects the register that the following data bytes will be written to or read from. Only the three LSBs of this register are variable. The other bits must always be written to as zeros. After a power-on reset, the pointer register defaults to all zeros (conversion result register). Default Value: 00h P7 P6 P5 P4 P3 0 0 0 0 0 P2 P1 P2 P1 P0 REGISTER 0 0 0 Conversion Result (read only) 0 0 1 Alert Status (read/write) 0 1 0 Configuration (read/write) 0 1 1 Low Limit (read/write) 1 0 0 High Limit (read/write) 1 0 1 Hysteresis (read/write) 1 1 0 Lowest Conversion (read/write) 1 1 1 Highest Conversion (read/write) P0 Register Select Conversion Result Register This register holds the result of the most recent conversion. In the normal mode, a new conversion is started whenever this register is read. The conversion result data is in straight binary format with the MSB at D11. Pointer Address 00h (Read Only) Default Value: 0000h D15 D14 Alert Flag D7 D13 D12 D11 Reserved D6 D5 D10 D9 D8 Conversion Result [7:4] D4 D3 D2 Conversion Result [3:0] D1 D0 Reserved Bits Name Description 15 Alert Flag This bit indicates when an alert condition has occurred. When the Alert Bit Enable is set in the Configuration Register, this bit will be high if either alert flag is set in the Alert Status Register. Otherwise, this bit is a zero. The I2C controller will typically read the Alert Status register and other data registers to determine the source of the alert. 14:12 Reserved Always reads zeros. 11:4 Conversion Result The Analog-to-Digital conversion result. The Conversion result data is a 8-bit data word in straight binary format. The MSB is D11. 3:0 Reserved Always reads zeros. 18 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Alert Status Register This register indicates if a high or a low threshold has been violated. The bits of this register are active high. That is, a high indicates that the respective limit has been violated. Pointer Address 01h (Read/Write) Default Value: 00h D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 Reserved D1 D0 Over Range Alert Under Range Alert Bits Name Description 7:2 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. 1 Over Range Alert Flag Bit is set to 1 when the measured voltage exceeds the VHIGH limit stored in the programmable VHIGH limit register. Flag is reset to 0 when one of the following two conditions is met: (1) The controller writes a one to this bit. (2) The measured voltage decreases below the programmed VHIGH limit minus the programmed VHYST value (See Figure 27) . The alert will only self-clear if the Alert Hold bit is cleared in the Configuration register. If the Alert Hold bit is set, the only way to clear an over range alert is to write a one to this bit. 0 Under Range Alert Flag Bit is set to 1 when the measured voltage falls below the VLOW limit stored in the programmable VLOW limit register. Flag is reset to 0 when one of the following two conditions is met: (1) The controller writes a one to this bit. (2) The measured voltage increases above the programmed VLOW limit plus the programmed VHYST value. The alert will only self-clear if the Alert Hold bit is cleared in the Configuration register. If the Alert Hold bit is set, the only way to clear an under range alert is to write a one to this bit. Configuration Register Pointer Address 02h (Read/Write) Default Value: 00h D7 D6 D5 Cycle Time [2:0] D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 Alert Hold Alert Flag Enable Alert Pin Enable 0 Polarity Cycle Time[2:0] Conversion Interval Typical fconvert (ksps) D7 D6 D5 0 0 0 Mode Disabled 0 0 0 1 Tconvert x 32 27 0 1 0 Tconvert x 64 13.5 0 1 1 Tconvert x 128 6.7 1 0 0 Tconvert x 256 3.4 1 0 1 Tconvert x 512 1.7 1 1 0 Tconvert x 1024 0.9 1 1 1 Tconvert x 2048 0.4 Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 19 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Bits Name Description 7:5 Cycle Time Configures Automatic Conversion mode. When these bits are set to zeros, the automatic conversion mode is disabled. This is the case at power-up. When these bits are set to a non-zero value, the ADC will begin operating in automatic conversion mode. (See AUTOMATIC CONVERSION MODE). The Cycle Time table shows how different values provide various conversion intervals. 4 Alert Hold 0: Alerts will self-clear when the measured voltage moves within the limits by more than the hysteresis register value. 1: Alerts will not self-clear and are only cleared when a one is written to the alert high flag or the alert low flag in the Alert Status register. 3 Alert Flag Enable 0: Disables alert status bit [D15] in the Conversion Result register. 1: Enables alert status bit [D15] in the Conversion Result register. 2 Alert Pin Enable 0: Disables the ALERT output pin. The ALERT output will TRI-STATE when the pin is disabled. 1: Enables the ALERT output pin. *This bit does not apply to the ADC081C027. 1 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. 0 Polarity This bit configures the active level polarity of the ALERT output pin. 0: Sets the ALERT pin to active low. 1: Sets the ALERT pin to active high. *This bit does not apply to the ADC081C027. VLOW -- Alert Limit Register - Under Range This register holds the lower limit threshold used to determine the alert condition. If the conversion moves lower than this limit, a VLOW alert is generated. Pointer Address 03h (Read/Write) Default Value: 0000h D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 Reserved D7 D9 D8 VLOW Limit [7:4] D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 VLOW Limit [3:0] D1 D0 Reserved Bits Name Description 15:12 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. 11:4 VLOW Limit Sets the lower limit threshold used to determine the alert condition. If the conversion moves lower than this limit, a VLOW alert is generated. 3:0 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. VHIGH -- Alert Limit Register - Over Range This register holds the upper limit threshold used to determine the alert condition. If the conversion moves higher than this limit, a VHIGH alert is generated. Pointer Address 04h (Read/Write) Default Value: 0FFFh D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 Reserved D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 VHIGH Limit [3:0] 20 Submit Documentation Feedback D9 D8 VHIGH Limit [7:4] D1 D0 Reserved Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Bits Name Description 15:12 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. 11:4 VHIGH Limit Sets the upper limit threshold used to determine the alert condition. If the conversion moves higher than this limit, a VHIGH alert is generated. 3:0 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. VHYST -- Alert Hysteresis Register This register holds the hysteresis value used to determine the alert condition. After a VHIGH or VLOW alert occurs, the conversion result must move within the VHIGH or VLOW limit by more than this value to clear the alert condition. Note: If the Alert Hold bit is set in the configuration register, alert conditions will not self-clear. Pointer Address 05h (Read/Write) Default Value: 0000h D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 Reserved D7 D9 D8 Hysteresis [7:4] D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 Hysteresis [3:0] D1 D0 Reserved Bits Name Description 15:12 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. 11:4 Hysteresis Hysteresis value. D11 is MSB. 3:0 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. VMIN -- Lowest Conversion Register This register holds the Lowest Conversion result when in the automatic conversion mode. Each conversion result is compared against the contents of this register. If the value is lower, it becomes the lowest conversion and replaces the current value. If the value is higher, the register contents remain unchanged. The lowest conversion value can be cleared at any time by writing 0FFFh to this register. The value of this register will update automatically when the automatic conversion mode is enabled, but is NOT updated in the normal mode. Pointer Address 06h (Read/Write) Default Value: 0FFFh D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 Reserved D7 D6 D10 D9 D8 Lowest Conversion [7:4] D5 D4 D3 D2 Lowest Conversion [3:0] Bits Name Description 15:12 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. 11:4 Lowest Conversion Lowest conversion result data. D11 is MSB. 3:0 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 D1 D0 Reserved Submit Documentation Feedback 21 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com VMAX -- Highest Conversion Register This register holds the Highest Conversion result when in the Automatic mode. Each conversion result is compared against the contents of this register. If the value is higher, it replaces the previous value. If the value is lower, the register contents remain unchanged. The highest conversion value can be cleared at any time by writing 0000h to this register. The value of this register will update automatically when the automatic conversion mode is enabled, but is NOT updated in the normal mode. Pointer Address 07h (Read/Write) Default Value: 0000h D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 Reserved D7 D6 D9 D8 Highest Conversion [7:4] D5 D4 D3 D2 Highest Conversion [3:0] D1 D0 Reserved Bits Name Description 15:12 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. 11:4 Highest Conversion Highest conversion result data. D11 is MSB. 3:0 Reserved Always reads zeros. Zeros must be written to these bits. SERIAL INTERFACE The I2C-compatible interface operates in all three speed modes. Standard mode (100kHz) and Fast mode (400kHz) are functionally the same and will be referred to as Standard-Fast mode in this document. High-Speed mode (3.4MHz) is an extension of Standard-Fast mode and will be referred to as Hs-mode in this document. The following diagrams describe the timing relationships of the clock (SCL) and data (SDA) signals. Pull-up resistors or current sources are required on the SCL and SDA busses to pull them high when they are not being driven low. A logic zero is transmitted by driving the output low. A logic high is transmitted by releasing the output and allowing it to be pulled-up externally. The appropriate pull-up resistor values will depend upon the total bus capacitance and operating speed. The ADC081C021 offers extended ESD tolerance (8kV HBM) for the I2C bus pins (SCL & SDA) allowing extension of the bus across multiple boards without extra ESD protection. Basic I2C Protocol The I2C interface is bi-directional and allows multiple devices to operate on the same bus. The bus consists of master devices and slave devices which can communicate back and forth over the I2C interface. Master devices control the bus and are typically microcontrollers, FPGAs, DSPs, or other digital controllers. Slave devices are controlled by a master and are typically peripheral devices such as the ADC081C021. To support multiple devices on the same bus, each slave has a unique hardware address which is referred to as the "slave address." To communicate with a particular device on the bus, the controller (master) sends the slave address and listens for a response from the slave. This response is referred to as an acknowledge bit. If a slave on the bus is addressed correctly, it acknowledges (ACKs) the master by driving the SDA bus low. If the address doesn't match a device's slave address, it not-acknowledges (NACKs) the master by letting SDA be pulled high. ACKs also occur on the bus when data is being transmitted. When the master is writing data, the slave ACKs after every data byte is successfully received. When the master is reading data, the master ACKs after every data byte is received to let the slave know it wants to receive another data byte. When the master wants to stop reading, it NACKs after the last data byte and creates a stop condition on the bus. All communication on the bus begins with either a Start condition or a Repeated Start condition. The protocol for starting the bus varies between Standard-Fast mode and Hs-mode. In Standard-Fast mode, the master generates a Start condition by driving SDA from high to low while SCL is high. In Hs-mode, starting the bus is more complicated. Please refer to High-Speed (Hs) Mode for the full details of a Hs-mode Start condition. A Repeated Start is generated to address a different device or register, or to switch between read and write modes. The master generates a Repeated Start condition by driving SDA low while SCL is high. Following the Repeated Start, the master sends out the slave address and a read/write bit as shown in Figure 25. The bus continues to operate in the same speed mode as before the Repeated Start condition. 22 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 All communication on the bus ends with a Stop condition. In either Standard-Fast mode or Hs-Mode, a Stop condition occurs when SDA is pulled high while SCL is high. After a Stop condition, the bus remains idle until a master generates another Start condition. Please refer to the Philips I2C® Specification (Version 2.1 Jan, 2000) for a detailed description of the serial interface. SDA 1 2 6 MSB R/W Direction Bit Acknowledge from the Device 7-bit Slave Address SCL ACK LSB MSB 7 8 9 LSB N/ACK Data Byte *Acknowledge or Not-ACK 1 2 8 Repeated for the Lower Data Byte and Additional Data Transfers START or REPEATED START 9 STOP *Note: In continuous mode, this bit must be an ACK from the data receiver. Immediately preceding a STOP condition, this bit must be a NACK from the master. Figure 25. Basic Operation. Standard-Fast Mode In Standard-Fast mode, the master generates a start condition by driving SDA from high to low while SCL is high. The start condition is always followed by a 7-bit slave address and a Read/Write bit. After these 8 bits have been transmitted by the master, SDA is released by the master and the ADC081C021 either ACKs or NACKs the address. If the slave address matches, the ADC081C021 ACKs the master. If the address doesn't match, the ADC081C021 NACKs the master. For a write operation, the master follows the ACK by sending the 8-bit register address pointer to the ADC. Then the ADC081C021 ACKs the transfer by driving SDA low. Next, the master sends the upper 8-bits to the ADC081C021. Then the ADC081C021 ACKs the transfer by driving SDA low. For a single byte transfer, the master should generate a stop condition at this point. For a 2-byte write operation, the lower 8-bits are sent by the master. The ADC081C021 then ACKs the transfer, and the master either sends another pair of data bytes, generates a Repeated Start condition to read or write another register, or generates a Stop condition to end communication. A read operation can take place either of two ways: If the address pointer is pre-set before the read operation, the desired register can be read immediately following the slave address. In this case, the upper 8-bits of the register, set by the pre-set address pointer, are sent out by the ADC. For a single byte read operation, the Master sends a NACK to the ADC and generates a Stop condition to end communication after receiving 8-bits of data. For a 2-Byte read operation, the Master continues the transmission by sending an ACK to the ADC. Then, the ADC sends out the lower 8-bits of the ADC register. At this point, the master either sends; an ACK to receive more data or, a NACK followed by a Stop or Repeated Start. If the master sends an ACK, the ADC sends the next upper data byte, and the read cycle repeats. If the ADC081S021 address pointer needs to be set, the master needs to write to the device and set the address pointer before reading from the desired register. This type of read requires a start, the slave address, a write bit, the address pointer, a Repeated Start (if appropriate), the slave address, and a read bit (refer to Figure 30). Following this sequence, the ADC sends out the upper 8-bits of the register. For a single byte read operation, the Master must then send a NACK to the ADC and generate a Stop condition to end communication. For a 2-Byte write operation, the Master sends an ACK to the ADC. Then, the ADC sends out the lower 8-bits of the ADC register. At this point, the master sends either an ACK to receive more data, or a NACK followed by a Stop or Repeated Start. If the master sends an ACK, the ADC sends another pair of data bytes, and the read cycle will repeat. The number of data words that can be read is unlimited. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 23 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com High-Speed (Hs) Mode For Hs-mode, the sequence of events to begin communication differs slightly from Standard-Fast mode. Figure 26 describes this in further detail. Initially, the bus begins running in Standard-Fast mode. The master generates a Start condition and sends the 8-bit Hs master code (00001XXX) to the ADC081C021. Next, the ADC081C021 responds with a NACK. Once the SCL line has been pulled to a high level, the master switches to Hs-mode by increasing the bus speed and generating a second Repeated Start condition (driving SDA low while SCL is pulled high). At this point, the master sends the slave address to the ADC081C021, and communication continues as shown above in the "Basic Operation" Diagram (see Figure 25). When the master generates a Repeated Start condition while in Hs-mode, the bus stays in Hs-mode awaiting the slave address from the master. The bus continues to run in Hs-mode until a Stop condition is generated by the master. When the master generates a Stop condition on the bus, the bus must be started in Standard-Fast mode again before increasing the bus speed and switching to Hs-mode. SDA NACK MSB 8-ELW 0DVWHU FRGH ³00001[[[´ 7-bit Slave Address Not-Acknowledge from the Device 1 SCL 2 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 Repeated START START Standard-Fast Mode Hs-Mode Figure 26. Beginning Hs-Mode Communication I2C Slave (Hardware) Address The ADC has a seven-bit hardware address which is also referred to as a slave address. For the VSSOP-8 version of the ADC081C021, this address is configured by the ADR0 and ADR1 addres selection inputs. For the ADC081C027, the address is configured by the ADR0 address selection input. ADR0 and ADR1 can be grounded, left floating, or tied to VA. If desired, ADR0 can be set to VA/2 rather than left floating. The state of these inputs sets the hardware address that the ADC responds to on the I2C bus (see Table 2). For the SOT-6 version of the ADC081C021, the hardware address is not pin-configurable and is set to 1010100. The diagrams in COMMUNICATING WITH THE ADC081C021 describe how the I2C controller should address the ADC via the I2C interface. Pin compatible alternatives that provide additional address options to the SOT-6 version of the ADC081C021 and the ADC081C027 are available. Table 2. Slave Addresses Slave Address [A6 - A0] 24 ADC081C027 (SOT-6) ADC081C021 (SOT-6) ADC081C021 (VSSOP-8) ADR0 ALERT ADR1 ADR0 1010000 Floating ----------------- Floating Floating 1010001 GND ----------------- Floating GND 1010010 VA ----------------- Floating VA 1010100 ----------------- Single Address GND Floating 1010101 ----------------- ----------------- GND GND 1010110 ----------------- ----------------- GND VA 1011000 ----------------- ----------------- VA Floating 1011001 ----------------- ----------------- VA GND 1011010 ----------------- ----------------- VA VA Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 ALERT FUNCTION The ALERT function is an "out-of-range" indicator. At the end of every conversion, the measured voltage is compared to the values in the VHIGH and VLOW registers. If the measured voltage exceeds the value stored in VHIGH or falls below the value stored in VLOW, an alert condition occurs. The Alert condition is indicated in up to three places. First, the alert condition always causes either or both of the alert flags in the Alert Status register to go high. If the measured voltage exceeds the VHIGH limit, the Over Range Alert Flag is set. If the measured voltage falls below the VLOW limit, the Under Range Alert Flag is set. Second, if the Alert Flag Enable bit is set in the Configuration register, the alert condition also sets the MSB of the Conversion Result register. Third, if the Alert Pin Enable bit is set in the Configuration register, the ALERT output becomes active (see Figure 27). The ALERT output (ADC081S021 only) can be configured as an active high or active low output via the Polarity bit in the Configuration register. If the Polarity bit is cleared, the ALERT output is configured as active low. If the Polarity bit is set, the ALERT output is configured as active high. The Over Range Alert condition is cleared when one of the following two conditions is met: 1. The controller writes a one to the Over Range Alert Flag bit. 2. The measured voltage goes below the programmed VHIGH limit minus the programmed VHYST value and the Alert Hold bit is cleared in the Configuration register. (see Figure 27). If the Alert Hold bit is set, the alert condition persists and only clears when a one is written to the Over Range Alert Flag bit. The Under Range Alert condition is cleared when one of the following two conditions is met: 1. The controller writes a one to the Under Range Alert Flag bit. 2. The measured voltage goes above the programmed VLOW limit plus the programmed VHYST value and the Alert Hold bit is cleared in the Configuration register. If the Alert Hold bit is set, the alert condition persists and only clears when a one is written to the Under Range Alert Flag bit. If the alert condition has been cleared by writing a one to the alert flag while the measured voltage still violates the VHIGH or VLOW limits, an alert condition will occur again after the completion of the next conversion (see Figure 28). Alert conditions only occur if the input voltage exceeds the VHIGH limit or falls below the VLOW limit at the samplehold instant. The input voltage can exceed the VHIGH limit or fall below the VLOW limit briefly between conversions without causing an alert condition. Measured Voltage VOLTAGE VHIGH Limit VHIGH - VHYST ALERT pin (Active Low) TIME Figure 27. Alert condition cleared when measured voltage crosses VHIGH - VHYST Over Range Alert )ODJ VHW WR ³1´ Measured Voltage VOLTAGE VHIGH Limit VHIGH - VHYST ALERT pin (Active Low) TIME Figure 28. Alert condition cleared by writing a "1" to the Alert Flag. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 25 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com AUTOMATIC CONVERSION MODE The automatic conversion mode configures the ADC to continually perform conversions without receiving "read" instructions from the controller over the I2C interface. The mode is activated by writing a non-zero value into the Cycle Time bits - D[7:5] - of the Configuration register (see Configuration Register). Once the ADC081C021 enters this mode, the internal oscillator is always enabled. The ADC's control logic samples the input at the sample rate set by the cycle time bits. Although the conversion result is not transmitted by the 2-wire interface, it is stored in the conversion result register and updates the various status registers of the device. In automatic conversion mode, the out-of-range alert function is active and updates after every conversion. The ADC can operate independently of the controller in automatic conversion mode. When the input signal goes "outof-range", an alert signal is sent to the controller. The controller can then read the status registers and determine the source of the alert condition. Also, comparison and updating of the VMIN and VMAX registers occurs after every conversion in automatic conversion mode. The controller can occasionally read the VMIN and/or VMAX registers to determine the sampled input extremes. These register values persist until the user resets the VMIN and VMAX registers. These two features are useful in system monitoring, peak detection, and sensing applications. COMMUNICATING WITH THE ADC081C021 The ADC081C021's data registers are selected by the address pointer (see Address Pointer Register). To read/write a specific data register, the pointer must be set to that register's address. The pointer is always written at the beginning of a write operation. When the pointer needs to be updated for a read cycle, a write operation must precede the read operation to set the pointer address correctly. On the other hand, if the pointer is preset correctly, a read operation can occur without writing the address pointer register. The following timing diagrams describe the various read and write operations supported by the ADC. Reading from a 2-Byte ADC Register The following diagrams indicate the sequence of actions required for a 2-Byte read from an ADC081C021 Register. 1 9 1 9 1 9 SCL SDA A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 Start by Master Frame 1 Address Byte from Master A0 R/W D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 ACK by ADC Frame 2 Data Byte from ADC D8 D7 D6 ACK by Master D5 D4 D3 D2 Frame 3 Data Byte from ADC D1 D0 N/ACK* Stop by by Master Master Repeat Frames 2 & 3 for Continuous Mode *Note: In continuous mode, this bit must be an ACK. Immediately preceding a STOP condition, this bit must be a NACK. Figure 29. (a) Typical Read from a 2-Byte ADC Register with Preset Pointer 26 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 1 9 1 9 SCL SDA A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 R/W Frame 1 Address Byte from Master SCL (continued) SDA (continued) 0 1 A6 Repeat Start by Master A4 A3 A2 A1 0 0 P2 P1 P0 Ack by ADC 1 A0 R/W 9 D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 ACK by ADC Frame 3 Address Byte from Master 0 Frame 2 Pointer Byte from Master 9 A5 0 Ack by ADC Start by Master 1 D8 9 D7 D6 D5 ACK by Master Frame 4 Data Byte from ADC D4 D3 D2 D1 Frame 5 Data Byte from ADC D0 N/ACK* Stop by by Master Master Repeat Frames 4 & 5 for Continuous Mode *Note: In continuous mode, this bit must be an ACK. Immediately preceding a STOP condition, this bit must be a NACK. Figure 30. (b) Typical Pointer Set Followed by Immediate Read of a 2-Byte ADC Register Reading from a 1-Byte ADC Register The following diagrams indicate the sequence of actions required for a single Byte read from an ADC081C021 Register. 1 1 9 9 SCL SDA A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 R/W D7 D6 D5 ACK by ADC Start by Master Frame 1 Address Byte from Master D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 Stop NACK by by Master Master Frame 2 Data Byte from ADC Figure 31. (a) Typical Read from a 1-Byte ADC Register with Preset Pointer 1 9 1 9 SCL SDA A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 SDA (continued) 1 A6 Repeat Start by Master 9 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 Frame 3 Address Byte from Master 0 0 Ack by ADC Frame 1 Address Byte from Master SCL (continued) 0 R/W Start by Master A0 R/W 0 P2 P1 P0 Ack by ADC Frame 2 Pointer Byte from Master 1 D7 ACK by ADC 0 9 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 Frame 4 Data Byte from ADC D1 D0 Stop NACK by by Master Master Figure 32. (b) Typical Pointer Set Followed by Immediate Read of a 1-Byte ADC Register Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 27 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com Writing to an ADC Register The following diagrams indicate the sequence of actions required for writing to an ADC081C021 Register. 1 9 1 9 1 9 SCL SDA A6 Start by Master A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 0 R/W 0 0 ACK by ADC Frame 1 Address Byte from Master 0 0 P2 P1 D7 P0 D6 D5 ACK by ADC Frame 2 Pointer Byte from Master D4 D3 D2 D1 Frame 3 Data Byte from Master D0 ACK by ADC Stop by Master Figure 33. (a) Typical Write to a 1-Byte ADC Register 1 9 1 9 SCL SDA A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 SDA (continued) 1 9 D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 Frame 3 Data Byte from Master 0 0 Ack by ADC Frame 1 Address Byte from Master SCL (continued) 0 R/W Start by Master D8 0 P2 P1 P0 Ack by ADC Frame 2 Pointer Byte from Master 1 D7 ACK by ADC 0 9 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 Frame 4 Data Byte from Master D1 D0 Stop NACK by by Master Master Figure 34. (b) Typical Write to a 2-Byte ADC Register QUIET INTERFACE MODE To improve performance at High Speed, operate the ADC in Quiet Interface Mode. This mode provides improved INL and DNL performance in I2C Hs-Mode (3.4MHz). The Quiet Interface mode provides a maximum throughput rate of 162ksps. Figure 35 describes how to read the conversion result register in this mode. Basically, the Master needs to release SCL for at least 1µs before the MSB of every upper data byte. The diagram assumes that the address pointer register is set to its default value. Quiet Interface mode will only improve INL and DNL performance in Hs-Mode. Standard and Fast mode performance is unaffected by the Quiet Interface mode. 28 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Interface Delay tQuiet 8 1us 1 9 1 9 SCL SDA A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 R/W D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 ACK by ADC Start by Master Frame 1 Address Byte from Master D8 ACK by Master Frame 2 Upper Data Byte from ADC Interface Delay tQuiet 8 1us SCL (continued) SDA (continued) 1 D7 9 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 Frame 3 Lower Data Byte from ADC D1 D0 1 9 D15 D14 D13 D12 D11 D10 D9 ACK by Master Frame 4 Upper Data Byte from ADC D8 1 9 D7 D6 ACK by Master D5 D4 D3 D2 Frame 5 Lower Data Byte from ADC D1 D0 Stop NACK by by Master Master Repeat Frames 4 and 5 for Continuous Mode Figure 35. Reading in Quiet Interface Mode Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 29 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com APPLICATIONS INFORMATION TYPICAL APPLICATION CIRCUIT A typical application circuit is shown in Figure 36. The analog supply is bypassed with a capacitor network located close to the ADC081C021. The ADC uses the analog supply (VA) as its reference voltage, so it is very important that VA be kept as clean as possible. Due to the low power requirements of the ADC081C021, it is possible to use a precision reference as a power supply. The bus pull-up resistors (RP) should be powered by the controller's supply. It is important that the pull-up resistors are pulled to the same voltage potential as VA. This will ensure that the logic levels of all devices on the bus are compatible. If the controller's supply is noisy, an appropriate bypass capacitor should be added between the controller's supply pin and the pull-up resistors. For Hs-mode applications, this bypass capacitance will improve the accuracy of the ADC. The value of the pull-up resistors (RP) depends upon the characteristics of each particular I2C bus. The I2C specification describes how to choose an appropriate value. As a general rule-of-thumb, we suggest using a 1kΩ resistor for Hs-mode bus configurations and a 5kΩ resistor for Standard or Fast Mode bus configurations. Depending upon the bus capacitance, these values may or may not be sufficient to meet the timing requirements of the I2C bus specification. Please see the I2C specification for further information. Regulated Supply 0.1 PF 4.7 PF 5 k: RP RP VDD Controller VA 22: INPUT INTERRUPT ALERT VIN ADC081C021 470 pF SDA SCL SCL 2 I C BUS ... GND SDA Figure 36. Typical Application Circuit BUFFERED INPUT A buffered input application circuit is shown in Figure 37. The analog input is buffered by a TI LMP7731. The non-inverting amplifier configuration provides a buffered gain stage for a single ended source. This application circuit is good for single-ended sensor interface. The input must have a DC bias level that keeps the ADC input signal from swinging below GND or above the supply (+5V in this case). The LM4132, with its 0.05% accuracy over temperature, is an excellent choice as a reference source for the ADC081C021. 30 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 Unregulated Supply LM4132 4.7 PF 0.1 PF 4.7 PF VA + LMP7731 - INPUT RS VIN ADC081C027 CS GND ADDR SDA SCL R1 R2 Figure 37. Buffered Input Circuit INTELLIGENT BATTERY MONITOR REF [LP2980-2.8] R 120 nF 20 kÖ VA ALERT VIN ADC081C021 SCL GND RECHARGE CYCLE VHigh Limit Low Battery Indicator 20 kÖ Measured Battery Voltage VOLTAGE + VBATT The ADC081C021 is easily used as an intelligent battery monitor. The simple circuit shown in Figure 38, uses the ADC081C021, the LP2980 fixed reference, and a resistor divider to implement an intelligent battery monitor with a window supervisory feature. The window supervisory feature is implemented by the "out of range" alert function. When the battery is recharging, the Over Range Alert will indicate that the charging cycle is complete (see Figure 39). When the battery is nearing depletion, the Under Range Alert will indicate that the battery is low (see Figure 40). To Controller... ALERT pin (Active Low) SDA TIME Figure 38. Intelligent Battery Monitor Circuit Figure 39. Recharge Cycle DISCHARGE CYCLE VOLTAGE Measured Battery Voltage VLOW Limit ALERT pin (Active Low) TIME Figure 40. Discharge Cycle In addition to the window supervisory feature, the ADC081C021 will allow the controller to read the battery voltage at any time during operation. Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 31 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 www.ti.com The accurate voltage reading and the alert feature will allow a controller to improve the efficiency of a batterypowered device. During the discharge cycle, the controller can switch to a low-battery mode, safely suspend operation, or report a precise battery level to the user. During the recharge cycle, the controller can implement an intelligent recharge cycle, decreasing the charge rate when the battery charge nears capacity. Trickle Charge Controller While a battery is discharging, the ADC081C021 can be used to control a trickle charge to keep the battery near full capacity (see Figure 41). When the alert output is active, the battery will recharge. An intelligent recharge cycle will prevent over-charging and damaging the battery. With a trickle charge, the battery powered device can be disconnected from the charger at any time with a full charge. Measured Battery Voltage VOLTAGE VLOW+VHYST VLOW Limit ALERT pin (Active Low) TIME Figure 41. Trickle Charge LAYOUT, GROUNDING, AND BYPASSING For best accuracy and minimum noise, the printed circuit board containing the ADC081C021 should have separate analog and digital areas. The areas are defined by the locations of the analog and digital power planes. Both of these planes should be located on the same board layer. A single, solid ground plane is preferred if digital return current does not flow through the analog ground area. Frequently a single ground plane design will utilize a "fencing" technique to prevent the mixing of analog and digital ground currents. Separate ground planes should only be utilized when the fencing technique is inadequate. The separate ground planes must be connected in one place, preferably near the ADC121C021. Special care is required to ensure that signals do not pass over power plane boundaries. Return currents must always have a continuous return path below their traces. The ADC081C021 power supply should be bypassed with a 4.7µF and a 0.1µF capacitor as close as possible to the device with the 0.1µF right at the device supply pin. The 4.7µF capacitor should be a tantalum type and the 0.1µF capacitor should be a low ESL type. The power supply for the ADC081C021 should only be used for analog circuits. Avoid crossover of analog and digital signals and keep the clock and data lines on the component side of the board. The clock and data lines should have controlled impedances. 32 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 ADC081C021, ADC081C027 www.ti.com SNAS447C – FEBRUARY 2008 – REVISED MARCH 2013 REVISION HISTORY Changes from Revision B (March 2013) to Revision C • Page Changed layout of National Data Sheet to TI format .......................................................................................................... 32 Copyright © 2008–2013, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: ADC081C021 ADC081C027 Submit Documentation Feedback 33 PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM www.ti.com 10-Dec-2020 PACKAGING INFORMATION Orderable Device Status (1) Package Type Package Pins Package Drawing Qty Eco Plan (2) Lead finish/ Ball material MSL Peak Temp Op Temp (°C) Device Marking (3) (4/5) (6) ADC081C021CIMK/NOPB ACTIVE SOT-23-THIN DDC 6 1000 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 105 X34C ADC081C021CIMKX/NOPB ACTIVE SOT-23-THIN DDC 6 3000 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 105 X34C ADC081C021CIMM/NOPB ACTIVE VSSOP DGK 8 1000 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM X36C ADC081C021CIMMX/NOPB ACTIVE VSSOP DGK 8 3500 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM X36C ADC081C027CIMK/NOPB ACTIVE SOT-23-THIN DDC 6 1000 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 105 X35C ADC081C027CIMKX/NOPB ACTIVE SOT-23-THIN DDC 6 3000 RoHS & Green SN Level-1-260C-UNLIM -40 to 105 X35C (1) The marketing status values are defined as follows: ACTIVE: Product device recommended for new designs. LIFEBUY: TI has announced that the device will be discontinued, and a lifetime-buy period is in effect. NRND: Not recommended for new designs. Device is in production to support existing customers, but TI does not recommend using this part in a new design. PREVIEW: Device has been announced but is not in production. Samples may or may not be available. OBSOLETE: TI has discontinued the production of the device. (2) RoHS: TI defines "RoHS" to mean semiconductor products that are compliant with the current EU RoHS requirements for all 10 RoHS substances, including the requirement that RoHS substance do not exceed 0.1% by weight in homogeneous materials. Where designed to be soldered at high temperatures, "RoHS" products are suitable for use in specified lead-free processes. TI may reference these types of products as "Pb-Free". RoHS Exempt: TI defines "RoHS Exempt" to mean products that contain lead but are compliant with EU RoHS pursuant to a specific EU RoHS exemption. Green: TI defines "Green" to mean the content of Chlorine (Cl) and Bromine (Br) based flame retardants meet JS709B low halogen requirements of
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