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CDCM61004RHBR/2801

CDCM61004RHBR/2801

  • 厂商:

    BURR-BROWN(德州仪器)

  • 封装:

    VFQFN32_EP

  • 描述:

    IC CLK GEN 1:4 LOW JITTER 32QFN

  • 数据手册
  • 价格&库存
CDCM61004RHBR/2801 数据手册
Product Folder Sample & Buy Support & Community Tools & Software Technical Documents CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 CDCM61004 Four Output, Integrated VCO, Low-Jitter Clock Generator 1 Features 2 Applications • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Low-Jitter Clock Driver for High-End Datacom Applications Including SONET, Ethernet, Fibre Channel, Serial ATA, and HDTV Cost-Effective High-Frequency Crystal Oscillator Replacement 3 Description The CDCM61004 is a highly versatile, low-jitter frequency synthesizer capable of generating four lowjitter clock outputs, selectable between low-voltage positive emitter coupled logic (LVPECL), low-voltage differential signaling (LVDS), or low-voltage complementary metal oxide semiconductor (LVCMOS) outputs, from a low-frequency crystal of LVCMOS input for a variety of wireline and data communication applications. The CDCM61004 features an onboard PLL that can be easily configured solely through control pins. The overall output random jitter performance is less than 1 ps, RMS (from 10 kHz to 20 MHz), making this device a perfect choice for use in demanding applications such as SONET, Ethernet, Fibre Channel, and SAN. The CDCM61004 is available in a small, 32-pin, 5-mm × 5-mm VQFN package. Device Information(1) PART NUMBER CDCM61004 PACKAGE BODY SIZE (NOM) VQFN (32) 5.00 mm × 5.00 mm (1) For all available packages, see the orderable addendum at the end of the data sheet. CDCM61004 Block Diagram RSTN PR[1...0] 2 OD[2...0] 3 CDCM61004 PFD Charge Pump Loop Filter Crystal/ LVCMOS VCO Feedback Divider Output Divider • One Crystal/LVCMOS Reference Input Including 24.8832 MHz, 25 MHz, and 26.5625 MHz Input Frequency Range: 21.875 MHz to 28.47 MHz On-Chip VCO Operates in Frequency Range of 1.75 GHz to 2.05 GHz 4x Output Available: – Pin-Selectable Between LVPECL, LVDS, or 2-LVCMOS; Operates at 3.3 V LVCMOS Bypass Output Available Output Frequency Selectable by /1, /2, /3, /4, /6, /8 from a Single Output Divider Supports Common LVPECL/LVDS Output Frequencies: – 62.5 MHz, 74.25 MHz, 75 MHz, 77.76 MHz, 100 MHz, 106.25 MHz, 125 MHz, 150 MHz, 155.52 MHz, 156.25 MHz, 159.375 MHz, 187.5 MHz, 200 MHz, 212.5 MHz, 250 MHz, 311.04 MHz, 312.5 MHz, 622.08 MHz, 625 MHz Supports Common LVCMOS Output Frequencies: – 62.5 MHz, 74.25 MHz, 75 MHz, 77.76 MHz, 100 MHz, 106.25 MHz, 125 MHz, 150 MHz, 155.52 MHz, 156.25 MHz, 159.375 MHz, 187.5 MHz, 200 MHz, 212.5 MHz, 250 MHz Output Frequency Range: 43.75 MHz to 683.264 MHz (See Table 4) Internal PLL Loop Bandwidth: 400 kHz High-Performance PLL Core: – Phase Noise typically at –146 dBc/Hz at 5-MHz Offset for 625-MHz LVPECL Output – Random Jitter typically at 0.509 ps, RMS ( 10 kHz to 20 MHz) for 625-MHz LVPECL Output Output Duty Cycle Corrected to 50% (± 5%) Low Output Skew of 30 ps on LVPECL Outputs Divider Programming Using Control Pins: – Two Pins for Prescaler/Feedback Divider – Three Pins for Output Divider – Two Pins for Output Select Chip Enable Control Pin Available 3.3-V Core and I/O Power Supply Industrial Temperature Range: –40°C to 85°C 5-mm × 5-mm, 32-pin, VQFN (RHB) Package ESD Protection Exceeds 2 kV (HBM) Prescaler 1 Output Driver LVPECL/ LVCMOS/ LVDS Output Driver LVPECL/ LVCMOS/ LVDS Output Driver LVPECL/ LVCMOS/ LVDS Output Driver LVPECL/ LVCMOS/ LVDS 3.3 V LVCMOS CE 2 OS[1...0] 1 An IMPORTANT NOTICE at the end of this data sheet addresses availability, warranty, changes, use in safety-critical applications, intellectual property matters and other important disclaimers. PRODUCTION DATA. CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com Table of Contents 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Features .................................................................. Applications ........................................................... Description ............................................................. Revision History..................................................... Description (Continued) ........................................ Pin Configuration and Functions ......................... Specifications......................................................... 7.1 7.2 7.3 7.4 7.5 7.6 7.7 7.8 7.9 7.10 8 9 1 1 1 2 4 5 7 Absolute Maximum Ratings ..................................... 7 ESD Ratings.............................................................. 7 Recommended Operating Conditions....................... 7 Thermal Information .................................................. 8 Electrical Characteristics........................................... 9 Typical Output Phase Noise Characteristics ......... 10 Typical Output Jitter Characteristics ...................... 11 Crystal Characteristics ............................................ 11 Dissipation Ratings ................................................ 11 Typical Characteristics .......................................... 12 Parameter Measurement Information ................ 13 Detailed Description ............................................ 15 9.1 Overview ................................................................. 15 9.2 Functional Block Diagram ....................................... 15 9.3 Feature Description................................................. 16 9.4 Device Functional Modes........................................ 19 10 Application and Implementation........................ 22 10.1 Application Information.......................................... 22 10.2 Typical Application ................................................ 26 11 Power Supply Recommendations ..................... 28 11.1 Power Considerations ........................................... 28 11.2 Thermal Management ........................................... 29 11.3 Power-Supply Filtering .......................................... 29 12 Layout................................................................... 30 12.1 Layout Guidelines ................................................. 30 12.2 Layout Example .................................................... 30 13 Device and Documentation Support ................. 31 13.1 13.2 13.3 13.4 13.5 Device Support...................................................... Community Resources.......................................... Trademarks ........................................................... Electrostatic Discharge Caution ............................ Glossary ................................................................ 31 31 31 31 31 14 Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information ........................................................... 31 4 Revision History NOTE: Page numbers for previous revisions may differ from page numbers in the current version. Changes from Revision G (May 2011) to Revision H Page • Added ESD Ratings table, Feature Description section, Device Functional Modes, Application and Implementation section, Power Supply Recommendations section, Layout section, Device and Documentation Support section, and Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information section. ................................................................................................ 1 • Changed input capacitance, only typical. .............................................................................................................................. 6 • Added Allowable Temperature Drift for Continuous PLL Lock parameter ............................................................................. 7 • Changed on-chip load capacitance, only typical. ................................................................................................................. 11 • Changed parisitic to parasitic. .............................................................................................................................................. 17 • Added paragraph about temperature drift while locked. ..................................................................................................... 18 Changes from Revision F (February 2011) to Revision G Page • Changed the On-Chip VCO section ..................................................................................................................................... 18 • Changed Figure 15............................................................................................................................................................... 18 • Moved the LVCMOS INPUT INTERFACE section prior to the Output Divider section........................................................ 18 Changes from Revision E (July 2010) to Revision F Page • Changed Note 1 of the Pin Functions table From: Pullup and Pull-down see...To: Pullup refers to ..................................... 6 • Deleted RPULLDOWN from the Table 1 table.............................................................................................................................. 6 • Changed the text of Configuring the PLL, deleted the last sentence................................................................................... 16 • Changed the On-Chip VCO section ..................................................................................................................................... 18 • Changed the Output Buffer section ...................................................................................................................................... 19 • Changed values in row 24.75 of Table 3.............................................................................................................................. 19 • Changed the power dissipation equation From: 610.5 mW – 4 × 50 mW = 41.7 mW To: 617.1 mW – 4 × 50 mW = 2 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 417.1 mW ............................................................................................................................................................................. 28 • Deleted figure "Recommended PCB Layout for CDCM61001" from the Thermal Management section. Added text "See the mechanical data at the end of the data sheet.." .................................................................................................... 29 Changes from Revision D (February 2010) to Revision E Page • Added LVCMOS reference to first Features bullet ................................................................................................................. 1 • Added reference to LVCMOS input in Description ................................................................................................................. 1 • Added reference to LVCMOS inputs in XIN parameter of Pin Functions table...................................................................... 6 • Changed name of Control Pin LVCMOS Input Characteristics section in Electrical Characteristics table ............................ 9 • Changed description of Crystal Input Interface section........................................................................................................ 16 • Changed description of LVCMOS Input Interface section.................................................................................................... 18 Changes from Revision C (July 2009) to Revision D Page • Deleted references to Single-Ended and LVCMOS input throughout the document ............................................................. 1 • Deleted fIN, ΔV/ΔT, and DutyREF parameters from Electrical Characteristics table.............................................................. 9 • Added LVCMOS Input Interface section............................................................................................................................... 18 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 3 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 5 Description (Continued) The CDCM61004 is a high-performance, low-phase noise, fully-integrated voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO) clock synthesizer with four universal output buffers that can be configured to be LVPECL, LVDS, or LVCMOS compatible. Each universal output can also be converted to two LVCMOS outputs. Additionally, an LVCMOS bypass output clock is available in an output configuration which can help with crystal loading to achieve an exact desired input frequency. It has one fully-integrated, low-noise, LC-based VCO that operates in the 1.75 GHz to 2.05 GHz range. The phase-locked loop (PLL) synchronizes the VCO with respect to the input, which can either be a lowfrequency crystal. The output share an output divider sourced from the VCO core. All device settings are managed through a control pin structure, which has two pins that control the prescaler and feedback divider, three pins that control the output divider, two pins that control the output type, and one pin that controls the output enable. Any time the PLL settings (including the input frequency, prescaler divider, or feedback divider) are altered, a reset must be issued through the Reset control pin (active low for device reset). The reset initiates a PLL recalibration process to ensure PLL lock. When the device is in reset, the outputs and dividers are turned off. The output frequency (fOUT) is proportional to the frequency of the input clock (fIN). The feedback divider, output divider, and VCO frequency set fOUT with respect to fIN. For a configuration setting for common wireline and datacom applications, see Table 3. For other applications, use Equation 1 to calculate the exact crystal oscillator frequency required for the desired output. Output Divider f fIN = Feedback Divider OUT (1) ( ( The output divider can be chosen from 1, 2, 3, 4, 6, or 8 through the use of control pins. Feedback divider and prescaler divider combinations can be chosen from 25 and 3, 24 and 3, 20 and 4, or 15 and 5, respectively, also through the use of control pins. CDCM61004 Block Diagram shows a high-level diagram of the CDCM61004. The device operates in a 3.3-V supply environment and is characterized for operation from –40°C to 85°C. 4 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 6 Pin Configuration and Functions OUTP2 OUTN2 VCC_OUT OUTP3 OUTN3 VCC_OUT PR1 PR0 RHB Package 32-Pin VQFN Top View 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 VCC_OUT 1 24 NC OUTN1 2 23 OSC_OUT OUTP1 3 22 GND1 VCC_OUT 4 21 XIN OUTN0 5 20 VCC_IN OUTP0 6 19 REG_CAP1 CE 7 18 VCC_PLL1 NC 8 17 REG_CAP2 CDCM61004 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 VCC_VCO OS1 OS0 RSTN OD0 OD1 OD2 VCC_PLL2 Thermal Pad (must be soldered to ground) Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 5 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com Pin Functions PIN NAME NO. TYPE DIRECTION (1) DESCRIPTION CE 7 Input Pullup GND1 22 Ground — Additional ground for device. (GND1 shorted on-chip to GND) GND Pad Ground — Ground is on thermal pad. See Thermal Management NC 8, 24 — — No connection OD2, OD1, OD0 15, 14, 13 Input Pullup Output divider control pins (see Table 6) OS1, OS0 10, 11 Input Pullup Output type select control pin (see Table 7) OSC_OUT 23 Output — Bypass LVCMOS output OUTP0, OUTN0 6, 5 Output — Differential output pair or two single-ended outputs OUTP1, OUTN1 3, 2 Output — Differential output pair or two single-ended outputs OUTP2, OUTN2 32, 31 Output — Differential output pair or two single-ended outputs OUTP3, OUTN3 29, 28 Output — Differential output pair or two single-ended outputs PR1, PR0 26, 25 Input Pullup REG_CAP1 19 Output — Capacitor for internal regulator (connect to a 10-μF Y5V capacitor to GND) REG_CAP2 17 Output — Capacitor for internal regulator (connect to a 10-μF Y5V capacitor to GND) RSTN Chip enable control pin (see Table 8) Prescaler and Feedback divider control pins (see Table 5) 12 Input Pullup VCC_OUT 1, 4, 27, 30 Power — 3.3-V supply for the output buffers VCC_PLL1 18 Power — 3.3-V supply for the PLL circuitry VCC_PLL2 16 Power — 3.3-V supply for the PLL circuitry VCC_VCO 9 Power — 3.3-V supply for the internal VCO VCC_IN 20 Power — 3.3-V supply for the input buffers XIN 21 Input — Parallel resonant crystal or LVCMOS inputs (1) Device reset (active low) (see Table 9) Pullup refers to internal input resistors; see Table 1, Pin Characteristics for typical values. Table 1. Pin Characteristics PARAMETER CIN Input capacitance RPULLUP Input pullup resistor 6 MIN Submit Documentation Feedback TYP MAX UNIT 10 pF 150 kΩ Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 7 Specifications 7.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings Over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted). (1) PARAMETER MIN MAX UNIT –0.5 4.6 V VCC_OUT, VCC_PLL1 Supply voltage (2) VCC VCC_PLL2 VCC_VCO VCC_IN VIN Input voltage (3) –0.5 VCC_IN + 0.5 V VOUT Output voltage range (3) –0.5 VCC_OUT + 0.5 V IN Input current –20 20 mA IOUT Output current –50 50 mA Tstg Storage temperature –65 150 °C (1) (2) (3) Stresses beyond those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated under Recommended Operating Conditions is not implied. Exposure to absolute-maximum-rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. All supply voltages must be supplied simultaneously. Input and output negative voltage ratings may be exceeded if the input and output clamp-current ratings are observed. 7.2 ESD Ratings VALUE V(ESD) (1) (2) Electrostatic discharge Human-body model (HBM), per ANSI/ESDA/JEDEC JS-001 (1) UNIT ±3000 Charged-device model (CDM), per JEDEC specification JESD22-C101 (2) V ±1000 JEDEC document JEP155 states that 500-V HBM allows safe manufacturing with a standard ESD control process. Manufacturing with less than 500-V HBM is possible with the necessary precautions. JEDEC document JEP157 states that 250-V CDM allows safe manufacturing with a standard ESD control process. Manufacturing with less than 250-V CDM is possible with the necessary precautions. 7.3 Recommended Operating Conditions Over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted). MIN NOM MAX VCC_OUT Output supply voltage 3 3.3 3.6 V VCC_PLL1 PLL supply voltage 3 3.3 3.6 V VCC_PLL2 PLL supply voltage 3 3.3 3.6 V VCC_VCO On-chip VCO supply voltage 3 3.3 3.6 V VCC_IN Input supply voltage 3 3.3 3.6 V TA Ambient temperature 85 °C |TCL| Allowable temperature drift for continuous PLL lock (1) 100 °C (1) –40 UNIT The maximum allowable temperature drift for continuous lock is how far the temperature can drift in either direction from the value it was at the time when the On-Chip VCO was calibrated with the condition that the PLL stays in lock throughout the temperature drift. The internal VCO calibration takes place at device start-up and when the device is reset using the RSTN pin. A more detailed description can be found in On-Chip VCO and Start-Up Time Estimation.This implies the part will work over the entire frequency range, but if the temperature drifts more than the maximum allowable temperature drift for continuous lock, then it is necessary to re-calibrate the VCO to ensure the PLL stays in lock. Regardless of what temperature the part was initially calibrated at, the temperature can never drift outside the ambient temperature range of –40 °C to 85 °C. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 7 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 7.4 Thermal Information CDCM61004 THERMAL METRIC (1) RHB (VQFN) UNIT 32 PINS RθJA Junction-to-ambient thermal resistance 33.1 °C/W RθJC(top) Junction-to-case (top) thermal resistance 25.7 °C/W RθJB Junction-to-board thermal resistance 0.3 °C/W ψJT Junction-to-top characterization parameter 7.1 °C/W ψJB Junction-to-board characterization parameter 2 °C/W RθJC(bot) Junction-to-case (bottom) thermal resistance 6.12 °C/W (1) 8 For more information about traditional and new thermal metrics, see the Semiconductor and IC Package Thermal Metrics application report, SPRA953. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 7.5 Electrical Characteristics At VCC = 3 V to 3.6 V and TA = –40°C to 85°C, unless otherwise noted. PARAMETER TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT CONTROL PIN LVCMOS INPUT CHARACTERISTICS VIH Input high voltage VIL Input low voltage IIH Input high current IIL Input low current 0.6 VCC V 0.4 VCC V VCC = 3.6 V, VIL = 0 V 200 μA VCC = 3 V, VIH = 3.6 V –200 μA 21.875 28.47 MHz 43.75 250 MHz LVCMOS OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS (1) (See Figure 7 and Figure 8) fOSC_OUT Bypass output frequency fOUT Output frequency VOH Output high voltage VCC = min to max, IOH = –100 μA VOL Output low voltage VCC = min to max, IOL = 100 μA tRJIT RMS phase jitter 250 MHz (10 kHz to 20 MHz) tSLEW-RATE Output rise/fall slew rate 20% to 80% ODC Output duty cycle tSKEW Skew between outputs ICC, LVCMOS Device current, LVCMOS LVPECL OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS VCC –0.5 V 0.3 0.85 ps, RMS 2.4 V/ns 45% fIN = 25 MHz, fOUT = 250 MHz, CL = 5 pF (2) V 55% 175 60 ps 205 mA MHz (See Figure 9 and Figure 10) fOUT Output frequency VOH Output high voltage VOL Output low voltage |VOD| Differential output voltage tRJIT RMS phase jitter 625 MHz (10 kHz to 20 MHz) tR/tF Output rise/fall time 20% to 80% ODC Output duty cycle tSKEW Skew between outputs ICC, LVPECL Device current, LVPECL 43.75 683.264 VCC –1.18 VCC –0.73 V VCC –2 VCC –1.55 V 0.6 1.23 V 0.77 ps, RMS 175 45% fIN = 25 MHz, fOUT = 625 MHz ps 55% 180 30 ps 215 mA MHz LVDS OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS (3) (See Figure 11 and Figure 12) fOUT Output frequency 43.75 683.264 |VOD| Differential output voltage 0.247 0.454 ΔVOD VDD magnitude change VOS Common-mode voltage ΔVOS VOS magnitude change tRJIT RMS phase jitter 625 MHz (10 kHz to 20 MHz) tR/tF Output rise/fall time 20% to 80% ODC Output duty cycle tSKEW Skew between outputs ICC, LVDS Device current, LVDS (1) (2) (3) 50 1.125 1.375 50 V mV 0.73 ps, RMS 255 45% fIN = 25 MHz, fOUT = 625 MHz V mV ps 55% 150 40 ps 195 mA Figure 7 and Figure 8 show DC and AC test setups, respectively. Jitter measurements made using 25-MHz quartz crystal inches. Figure 9 and Figure 10 show DC and AC test setups, respectively. Jitter measurements made using 25-MHz quartz crystal inches. Figure 11 and Figure 12 show DC and AC test setups, respectively. Jitter measurements made using 25-MHz quartz crystal inches. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 9 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 7.6 Typical Output Phase Noise Characteristics Over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted). PARAMETER 250-MHz LVCMOS OUTPUT (1) TEST CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT (See Figure 8) phn100 Phase noise at 100-Hz offset –95 dBc/Hz phn1k Phase noise at 1-kHz offset –110 dBc/Hz phn10k Phase noise at 10-kHz offset –117 dBc/Hz phn100k Phase noise at 100-kHz offset –120 dBc/Hz phn1M Phase noise at 1-MHz offset –135 dBc/Hz phn10M Phase noise at 10-MHz offset –148 dBc/Hz phn20M Phase noise at 20-MHz offset –148 dBc/Hz tRJIT RMS phase jitter from 10 kHz to 20 MHz 544 fs, RMS tPJIT Total period jitter 27.4 ps, PP tSTARTUP Start-up time, power supply ramp time of 1 ms, final frequency accuracy of ±10 ppm 2.25 ms –81 dBc/Hz 625-MHz LVPECL OUTPUT (2) (See Figure 10) phn100 Phase noise at 100-Hz offset phn1k Phase noise at 1-kHz offset –101 dBc/Hz phn10k Phase noise at 10-kHz offset –109 dBc/Hz phn100k Phase noise at 100-kHz offset –112 dBc/Hz phn1M Phase noise at 1-MHz offset –129 dBc/Hz phn10M Phase noise at 10-MHz offset –146 dBc/Hz phn20M Phase noise at 20-MHz offset –146 dBc/Hz tRJIT RMS phase jitter from 10 kHz to 20 MHz 509 fs, RMS tPJIT Total period jitter 26.9 ps, PP tSTARTUP Start-up time, power supply ramp time of 1 ms, final frequency accuracy of ±10 ppm 2.25 ms 625-MHz LVDS OUTPUT (3) (See Figure 12) phn100 Phase noise at 100-Hz offset –88 dBc/Hz phn1k Phase noise at 1-kHz offset –102 dBc/Hz phn10k Phase noise at 10-kHz offset –109 dBc/Hz phn100k Phase noise at 100-kHz offset –112 dBc/Hz phn1M Phase noise at 1-MHz offset –129 dBc/Hz phn10M Phase noise at 10-MHz offset –146 dBc/Hz phn20M Phase noise at 20-MHz offset –146 dBc/Hz tRJIT RMS phase jitter from 10 kHz to 20 MHz 510 fs, RMS tPJIT Total period jitter 27 ps, PP tSTARTUP Start-up time, power supply ramp time of 1 ms, final frequency accuracy of ±10 ppm (1) (2) (3) 10 2.25 ms Figure 8 shows test setup and uses 25-MHz quartz crystal in, VCC = 3.3 V, and TA = 25°C. Figure 10 shows test setup and uses 25-MHz quartz crystal in, VCC = 3.3 V, and TA = 25°C. Figure 12 shows test setup and uses 25-MHz quartz crystal in, VCC = 3.3 V, and TA = 25°C. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 7.7 Typical Output Jitter Characteristics (1) OUTPUT FREQUENCY (MHz) INPUT (MHz) 62.5 (1) LVCMOS OUTPUT LVPECL OUTPUT LVDS OUTPUT tRJIT (fs, RMS) tPJIT (psPP) tRJIT (fs, RMS) tPJIT (psPP) tRJIT (fs, RMS) tPJIT (psPP) 25 592 32.9 611 20.7 667 28.4 75 25 518 27.5 533 19.4 572 25.7 77.76 24.8832 506 29.2 526 20.9 567 26.9 100 25 507 24.5 510 20.7 533 26.5 106.25 26.5625 535 23.5 524 20.2 553 26.5 125 25 557 39.6 556 21.4 570 27.1 150 25 518 38.4 493 18.9 515 26.2 155.52 24.8832 498 36.9 486 19.8 502 26.7 156.25 25 510 37.7 503 20.7 518 26.5 159.375 26.5625 535 37.4 510 19.9 534 26.3 187.5 25 506 32.8 506 20.3 509 25.5 200 25 491 23.3 492 30 499 34.9 212.5 26.5625 520 47.8 509 30.8 530 37.3 250 25 544 27.4 541 21.4 550 27.5 311.04 24.8832 481 20.5 496 24.7 312.5 25 501 20.8 508 25.8 622.08 24.8832 492 27.2 500 27.2 625 25 515 26.9 509 27 Figure 8, Figure 10, and Figure 12 show LVCMOS, LVPECL, and LVDS test setups (respectively) using appropriate quartz crystal in, VCC = 3.3 V, and TA = 25°C. 7.8 Crystal Characteristics PARAMETER MIN Mode of oscillation TYP MAX Fundamental Frequency MHz 21.875 28.47 Equivalent series resistance (ESR) On-chip load capacitance 8 Drive level UNIT 0.1 Maximum shunt capacitance MHz 50 Ω 10 pF 1 mW 7 pF 7.9 Dissipation Ratings (1) (2) TEST CONDITIONS PARAMETER θJA θJP (1) (2) (3) Thermal resistance, junction-to-ambient (3) 0 LFM Thermal resistance, junction-to-pad VALUE 4 × 4 VIAS ON PAD UNIT 35 °C/W 4 °C/W The package thermal resistance is calculated in accordance with JESD 51 and JEDEC 2S2P (high-K board). Connected to GND with nine thermal vias (0.3-mm diameter). θJP (junction-to-pad) is used for the VQFN package, because the primary heat flow is from the junction to the GND pad of the VQFN package. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 11 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 7.10 Typical Characteristics Over operating free-air temperature range (unless otherwise noted). 205 170 Output-divide-by-8 Output-divide-by-8 Output-divide-by-6 Output-divide-by-6 Output-divide-by-4 200 Output-divide-by-4 165 Output-divide-by-3 Output-divide-by-3 Output-divide-by-2 Output-divide-by-1 Supply Current (mA) Supply Current (mA) Output-divide-by-2 195 190 185 Output-divide-by-1 160 155 150 180 145 0 200 400 600 800 0 200 400 Output Frequency (MHz) Figure 1. Typical Current Consumption for LVPECL Output vs Output Frequency 175 0.76 Differential Output Voltage, VOD (V) 0.77 Supply Current (mA) 165 155 145 135 Output-divide-by-8 125 Output-divide-by-6 Output-divide-by-4 115 0.75 0.74 0.73 0.72 0.71 Output-divide-by-3 Output-divide-by-2 0.70 105 0 50 100 150 200 250 0 300 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 Output Frequency (MHz) Output Frequency (MHz) Figure 4. Typical LVPECL Differential Output Voltage vs Output Frequency Figure 3. Typical Current Consumption for LVCMOS Output With 5-pF Load vs Output Frequency 0.42 3.30 0.40 3.25 Output Voltage, VOUT (V) Differential Output Voltage, VDO (V) 800 Figure 2. Typical Current Consumption for LVDS Output vs Output Frequency 185 0.38 0.36 0.34 0.32 3.20 3.15 3.10 3.05 0.30 3.00 0 100 200 300 400 500 600 700 50 100 Output Frequency (MHz) 150 200 250 Output Frequency (MHz) Figure 5. Typical LVDS Differential Output Voltage vs Output Frequency 12 600 Output Frequency (MHz) Figure 6. Typical LVCMOS Output Voltage With 5-pF Load vs Output Frequency Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 8 Parameter Measurement Information This section describes the function of each block for the CDCM61004. Figure 7 through Figure 13 illustrate how the device should be set up for a variety of output configurations. LVCMOS 5 pF Figure 7. LVCMOS Output Loading During Device Test Phase Noise Analyzer LVCMOS Figure 8. LVCMOS AC Configuration During Device Test Oscilloscope LVPECL 50 W 50 W VCC - 2V Figure 9. LVPECL DC Configuration During Device Test Phase Noise Analyzer LVPECL 150 W 150 W 50 W Figure 10. LVPECL AC Configuration During Device Test LVDS 100 W Oscilloscope Figure 11. LVDS DC Configuration During Device Test Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 13 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com Parameter Measurement Information (continued) Phase Noise Analyzer LVDS 50 W Figure 12. LVDS AC Configuration During Device Test VOH Yx VOD VOL Yx 80% VOUTpp 20% 0V tr tf Figure 13. Output Voltage and Rise and Fall Times 14 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 9 Detailed Description 9.1 Overview The CDCM61004 is a high-performance PLL that generates 4 copies of commonly used reference clocks with less than 1 ps, RMS jitter from a low-cost crystal. 9.2 Functional Block Diagram VCC_IN VCC_PLL1 XO LVCMOS XIN VCC_PLL2 Phase Frequency Detector 21.875 MHz to 28 .47 MHz VCC_VCO VCC_VDD VCC_OUT Loop Filter Charge Pump 224 mA 400 kHz ¸15 FB_MUX ¸5 VCO 1.75 GHz to 2.05 GHz ¸20 ¸4 ¸24 RSTN ¸3 Prescaler Divider ¸25 Feedback Divider LVCMOS ¸1 PR1 DIV_MUX PR0 ¸2 LVPECL OUTP[1...0] ¸3 4 ¸4 LVDS OUTN[1...0] ¸6 REG_CAP1 ¸8 LVCMOS Output Divider REG_CAP2 LVCMOS OSC_OUT CDCM61004 CE GND1 OD2 OD1 OD0 OS1 OS0 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 15 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 9.3 Feature Description 9.3.1 Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) The CDCM61004 includes an on-chip PLL with an on-chip VCO. The PLL blocks consist of a crystal input interface, which can also accept an LVCMOS signal, a phase frequency detector (PFD), a charge pump, an onchip loop filter, and prescaler and feedback dividers. Completing the CDCM61004 device are the output divider and universal output buffer. The PLL is powered by on-chip, low-dropout (LDO) linear voltage regulators. The regulated supply network is partitioned such that the sensitive analog supplies are powered from separate LDOs rather than the digital supplies which use a separate LDO regulator. These LDOs provide isolation for the PLL from any noise in the external power-supply rail. The REG_CAP1 and REG_CAP2 pins should each be connected to ground by 10-μF capacitors to ensure stability. 9.3.2 Configuring the PLL The CDCM61004 permits PLL configurations to accommodate the various input and output frequencies listed in Table 3 and Table 4. These configurations are accomplished by setting the prescaler divider, feedback divider and output divider. The various dividers are managed by setting the device control pins as shown in Table 5 and Table 6. 9.3.3 Crystal Input Interface Fundamental mode is the recommended oscillation mode of operation for the input crystal and parallel resonance is the recommended type of circuit for the crystal. A crystal load capacitance refers to all capacitances in the oscillator feedback loop. It is equal to the amount of capacitance seen between the terminals of the crystal in the circuit. For parallel resonant mode circuits, the correct load capacitance is necessary to ensure the oscillation of the crystal within the expected parameters. The CDCM61004 implements an input crystal oscillator circuitry, known as the Colpitts oscillator, and requires one pad of the crystal to interface with the XIN pin; the other pad of the crystal is tied to ground. In this crystal interface, it is important to account for all sources of capacitance when calculating the correct value for the discrete capacitor component, CL, for a design. The CDCM61004 has been characterized with 10-pF parallel resonant crystals. The input crystal oscillator stage in the CDCM61004 is designed to oscillate at the correct frequency for all parallel resonant crystals with low-pull capability and rated with a load capacitance that is equal to the sum of the onchip load capacitance at the XIN pin (10-pF), crystal stray capacitance, and board parasitic capacitance between the crystal and XIN pin. The normalized frequency error of the crystal, as a result of load capacitance mismatch, can be calculated as Equation 2: CS CS Df = f 2(CL,R + CO) 2(CL,A + CO) where • • • • • • • CS is the motional capacitance of the crystal, C0 is the shunt capacitance of the crystal, CL,R is the rated load capacitance for the crystal, CL,A is the actual load capacitance in the implemented PCB for the crystal, Δf is the frequency error of the crystal, and f is the rated frequency of the crystal. The first three parameters can be obtained from the crystal vendor. (2) To minimize the frequency error of the crystal to meet application requirements, the difference between the rated load capacitance and the actual load capacitance should be minimized and a crystal with low-pull capability (low CS) should be used. 16 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 Feature Description (continued) For example, if an application requires less than ±50-ppm frequency error and a crystal with less than ±50-ppm frequency tolerance is picked, the characteristics are as follows: C0 = 7 pF, CS = 10 fF, and CL,R = 12 pF. In order to meet the required frequency error, calculate CL,A using Equation 2 to be 17 pF. Subtracting CL,R from CL,A, results in 5 pF; take care during printed-circuit-board (PCB) layout with the crystal and the CDCM61004 to ensure that the sum of the crystal stray capacitance and board parasitic capacitance is less than the calculated 5 pF. Good layout practices are fundamental to the correct operation and reliability of the oscillator. It is critical to locate the crystal components very close to the XIN pin to minimize routing distances. Long traces in the oscillator circuit are a very common source of problems. Do not route other signals across the oscillator circuit. Also, make sure power and high-frequency traces are routed as far away as possible to avoid crosstalk and noise coupling. Avoid the use of vias; if the routing becomes very complex, it is much better to use 0-Ω resistors as bridges to go over other signals. Vias in the oscillator circuit should only be used for connections to the ground plane. Do not share ground connections; instead, make a separate connection to ground for each component that requires grounding. If possible, place multiple vias in parallel for each connection to the ground plane. Especially in the Colpitts oscillator configuration, the oscillator is very sensitive to capacitance in parallel with the crystal. Therefore, the layout must be designed to minimize stray capacitance across the crystal to less than 5 pF total under all circumstances to ensure proper crystal oscillation. Be sure to consider both PCB and crystal stray capacitance. Table 2 lists several recommended crystals and the respective manufacturer of each. Table 2. Recommended Crystal Manufacturers MANUFACTURER PART NUMBER Vectron VXC1-1133 Fox 218-3 Saronix FP2650002 9.3.4 Phase Frequency Detector (PFD) The PFD takes inputs from the input interface and the feedback divider and produces an output that depends on the phase and frequency differences between the two inputs. The allowable range of frequencies at the PFD inputs is 21.875 MHz to 28.47 MHz. 9.3.5 Charge Pump (CP) The charge pump is controlled by the PFD, which dictates either to pump up or down to charge or discharge the integrating section of the on-chip loop filter. The integrated and filtered charge pump current is then converted to a voltage that drives the control voltage node of the internal VCO through the on-chip loop filter. The charge pump current is preset to 224 μA and cannot be changed. 9.3.6 On-Chip PLL Loop Filter Figure 14 shows the on-chip active loop filter topology implemented in the device. This design corresponds to a PLL bandwidth of 400 kHz for a PFD in the range of 21.875 MHz to 28.47 MHz, and a charge pump current of 224 μA. 473.5 pF Charge Pump Output 20 kW 15 kW VCO Control Figure 14. On-Chip PLL Loop Filter Topology Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 17 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 9.3.7 Prescaler Divider and Feedback Divider The VCO output is routed to the prescaler divider and then to the feedback divider. The prescaler divider and feedback divider are set in tandem with each other, according to the control pin settings given in Table 5. The allowable combinations of the two dividers ensure that the VCO frequency and the PFD frequency are within the specified limits. 9.3.8 On-Chip VCO The CDCM61004 includes an on-chip, LC oscillator-based VCO with low phase noise covering a frequency range of 1.75 GHz to 2.05 GHz. The VCO must be calibrated to ensure proper operation over the valid device operating conditions. This calibration requires that the PLL be set up properly to lock the PLL loop and that the reference clock input be present. During the first device initialization after power-up, which occurs after the Power-On-Reset is released (2.64 V or lower, over valid device operating conditions) or a device reset with the RSTN pin, a VCO calibration sequence is initiated after 16,384 × Reference Input Clock Cycles. The VCO calibration then takes about 20 µs over the allowable range of the reference clock input. The VCO calibration can also be reinitiated with a pulse on the RSTN pin at any time after POR is released on power-up; the RSTN pulse must be at least 100 ns wide. For proper device operation, the reference input must be stable at the start of VCO calibration. Since inputs from crystals or crystal oscillators can typically take up to 1-2ms to be stable, TI recommends to establish circuitry on the RSTN pin that ensures device initialization including VCO calibration after a delay of greater than 5 ms compared to the power-up ramp, as shown in Figure 15. A possible implementation of the delay circuitry on the RSTN pin would be a 47-nF capacitor to GND, and this in tandem with the 150-kΩ on-chip pullup resistor ensures the appropriate delay. The CE pin has an internal 150-kΩ pullup resistor and can be left unconnected or pulled to high for proper device operation. The device can operate at temperatures within the ambient temperature range TA. Within the ambient temperature limits and after the point in time when the VCO calibrated, the absolute temperature drift must be smaller than the maximum allowable temperature drift for continuous lock |TCL| for the PLL to stay in lock to an appropriate input reference. When a larger absolute temperature drift has to be covered, the VCO needs to be re-calibrated as described above. tCE>0 3.3 V Vtrigger(POR) tRST = 5 ms RSTN CE VIL, RST VIH Figure 15. Suggested Timing Recommendations 9.3.9 LVCMOS Input Interface Alternately, the CDCM61004 can be operated with an external AC-coupled 2.5-V LVCMOS or DC-coupled 3.3-V LVCMOS reference input applied to the XIN pin. For proper operation, the LVCMOS reference should be available and fairly stable by the time the power supply voltages or the RSTN pin voltage on the CDCM61004 reaches 2.27 V. For more details about the LVCMOS input interface to the CDCM61004, see the application report, Using LVCMOS Input to the CDM6100x (SCAA111), available on ti.com. 9.3.10 Output Divider The output from the prescaler divider is also routed to the output divider. The output divider can be set with control pins according to Table 6. 18 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 9.3.11 Output Buffer Each output buffer can be set to LVPECL or LVDS or 2x LVCMOS, according to Table 7. OSC_OUT is an LVCMOS output that can be used to monitor proper loading of the input crystal to achieve the necessary crystal frequency with the least error. The OSC_OUT turns on as soon as power is available and remains on during deviec calibration. The output buffers are disabled during VCO calibration and are enabled only after calibration is complete. The output buffers on the CDCM61004 can also be disabled, along with other sections of the device, using the CE pin according to Table 8. 9.4 Device Functional Modes Table 3. Common Configuration INPUT (MHz) PRESCALER DIVIDER FEEDBACK DIVIDER VCO FREQUENCY (MHz) OUTPUT DIVIDER OUTPUT FREQUENCY (MHz) APPLICATION 25 4 20 2000 8 62.5 GigE 24.75 3 24 1782 8 74.25 HDTV 25 3 24 1800 8 75 SATA 24.8832 3 25 1866.24 8 77.76 SONET 25 3 24 1800 6 100 PCI express 26.5625 3 24 1912.5 6 106.25 Fibre channel 25 4 20 2000 4 125 GigE 25 3 24 1800 4 150 SATA 24.8832 3 25 1866.24 4 155.52 SONET 25 3 25 1875 4 156.25 10 GigE 26.5625 3 24 1912.5 4 159.375 10-G Fibre channel 25 5 15 1875 2 187.5 12 GigE 25 3 24 1800 3 200 PCI Express 26.5625 3 24 1912.5 3 212.5 4-G Fibre channel 25 4 20 2000 2 250 GigE 24.8832 3 25 1866.24 2 311.04 SONET 25 3 25 1875 2 312.5 XGMII 24.8832 3 25 1866.24 1 622.08 SONET 25 3 25 1875 1 625 10 GigE Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 19 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com Table 4. Generic Configuration INPUT FREQUENCY RANGE (MHz) PRESCALER DIVIDER FEEDBACK DIVIDER VCO FREQUENCY RANGE (MHz) OUTPUT DIVIDER OUTPUT FREQUENCY RANGE (MHz) 21.875 to 25.62 4 20 1750 to 2050 8 54.6875 to 64.05 21.875 to 25.62 4 20 1750 to 2050 6 72.92 to 85.4 21.875 to 25.62 4 20 1750 to 2050 4 109.375 to 128.1 21.875 to 25.62 4 20 1750 to 2050 3 145.84 to 170.8 21.875 to 25.62 4 20 1750 to 2050 2 218.75 to 256.2 21.875 to 25.62 4 20 1750 to 2050 1 437.5 to 512.4 23.33 to 27.33 3 25 1750 to 2050 8 72.906 to 85.408 23.33 to 27.33 3 25 1750 to 2050 6 97.21 to 113.875 23.33 to 27.33 3 25 1750 to 2050 4 145.812 to 170.816 23.33 to 27.33 3 25 1750 to 2050 3 194.42 to 227.75 23.33 to 27.33 3 25 1750 to 2050 2 291.624 to 341.632 23.33 to 27.33 3 25 1750 to 2050 1 583.248 to 683.264 23.33 to 27.33 5 15 1750 to 2050 8 43.75 to 51.25 23.33 to 27.33 5 15 1750 to 2050 6 58.33 to 68.33 23.33 to 27.33 5 15 1750 to 2050 4 87.5 to 102.5 23.33 to 27.33 5 15 1750 to 2050 3 116.66 to 136.66 23.33 to 27.33 5 15 1750 to 2050 2 175 to 205 23.33 to 27.33 5 15 1750 to 2050 1 350 to 410 24.305 to 28.47 3 24 1750 to 2050 8 72.915 to 85.41 24.305 to 28.47 3 24 1750 to 2050 6 97.22 to 113.88 24.305 to 28.47 3 24 1750 to 2050 4 145.83 to 170.82 24.305 to 28.47 3 24 1750 to 2050 3 194.44 to 227.76 24.305 to 28.47 3 24 1750 to 2050 2 291.66 to 341.64 24.305 to 28.47 3 24 1750 to 2050 1 583.32 to 683.28 Table 5. Programmable Prescaler and Feedback Divider Settings CONTROL INPUTS 20 PFD FREQUENCY PR1 PR0 PRESCALER DIVIDER FEEDBACK DIVIDER MIN MAX 0 0 3 24 24.305 28.47 0 1 5 15 23.33 27.33 1 0 3 25 23.33 27.33 1 1 4 20 21.875 25.62 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 Table 6. Programmable Output Divider CONTROL INPUTS OUTPUT DIVIDER OD2 OD1 OD0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 0 3 0 1 1 4 1 0 0 Reserved 1 0 1 6 1 1 0 Reserved 1 1 1 8 Table 7. Programmable Output Type CONTROL INPUTS OUTPUT TYPE OS1 OS0 0 0 0 1 LVDS, OSC_OUT Off 1 0 LVPECL, OSC_OUT Off 1 1 LVPECL, OSC_OUT On LVCMOS, OSC_OUT Off Table 8. Output Enable CONTROL INPUT CE OPERATING CONDITION OUTPUT 0 Power down High-Z 1 Normal Active Table 9. Reset CONTROL INPUT RSTN OPERATING CONDITION OUTPUT 0 Device reset High-Z 0→1 PLL recalibration High-Z 1 Normal Active Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 21 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 10 Application and Implementation NOTE Information in the following applications sections is not part of the TI component specification, and TI does not warrant its accuracy or completeness. TI’s customers are responsible for determining suitability of components for their purposes. Customers should validate and test their design implementation to confirm system functionality. 10.1 Application Information 10.1.1 Start-Up Time Estimation The CDCM61004 start-up time can be estimated based on the parameters defined in Table 10 and graphically shown in Figure 16. Table 10. Start-Up Time Dependencies PARAMETER DEFINITION DESCRIPTION FORMULA/METHOD OF DETERMINATION 1 fREF tREF Reference clock period The reciprocal of the applied reference frequency in seconds. tpul Power-up time (low limit) Power-supply rise time to low limit of Power On Reset (POR) trip point Time required for power supply to ramp to 2.27 V tpuh Power-up time (high limit) Power supply rise time to high limit of POR trip point Time required for power supply to ramp to 2.64 V trsu Reference start-up time After POR releases, the Colpits oscillator is enabled. This start-up time is required for the 500 μs best-case and 800 μs oscillator to generate the requisite signal worst-case levels for the delay block to be clocked by the reference input. tdelay Delay time Internal delay time generated from the reference clock. This delay provides time for the reference oscillator to stabilize. tdelay= 16384 × tref tVCO_CAL VCO calibration time VCO Calibration Time generated from the reference clock. This process selects the operating point for the VCO based on the PLL settings. tVCO_CAL= 550 × tref tPLL_LOCK PLL lock time Based on the 400-kHz loop Time required for PLL to lock within ±10 ppm bandwidth, the PLL settles in of fREF 5τ or 12.5 μs. 22 Submit Documentation Feedback tREF = Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 Power Supply (V) Power up Reference Startup Delay VCO Calibration PLL Lock 2.64 V 2.27 V tpul trsu Time (s) tpuh tVCO_CAL tPLL_LOCK tdelay Figure 16. Start-up Time Dependencies The CDCM61004 start-up time limits, tMAX and tMIN, can be calculated as follows in Equation 3 and Equation 4: tMAX = tpuh + trsu + tdelay + tVCO_CAL + tPLL_LOCK tMIN = tpul + trsu + tdelay + tVCO_CAL + tPLL_LOCK (3) (4) 10.1.2 Output Termination The CDCM61004 is a 3.3-V clock driver with the following output options: LVPECL, LVDS, or LVCMOS. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 23 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 10.1.3 LVPECL Termination The CDCM61004 is an open emitter for LVPECL outputs. Therefore, proper biasing and termination are required to ensure correct operation of the device and to minimize signal integrity. The proper termination for LVPECL is 50 Ω to (VCC–2) V, but this DC voltage is not readily available on most PCBs. Thus, a Thevenin equivalent circuit is worked out for the LVPECL termination in both direct-coupled (DC) and ac-coupled (AC) cases, as shown in Figure 17 and Figure 18. TI recommends placing all resistive components close to either the driver end or the receiver end. If the supply voltage of the driver and receiver are different, ac-coupling is required. 130 W 130 W VCC_OUT VCC_OUT CDCM61004 LVPECL 82 W 82 W Figure 17. LVPECL Output DC Termination VBB CDCM61004 LVPECL 150 W 150 W 50 W 50 W Figure 18. LVPECL Output AC Termination 24 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 10.1.4 LVDS Termination The proper LVDS termination for signal integrity over two 50-Ω lines is 100 Ω between the outputs on the receiver end. Either direct-coupled termination or ac-coupled termination can be used for LVDS outputs, as shown in Figure 19 and Figure 20. TI recommends placing all resistive components close to either the driver end or the receiver end. If the supply voltage of the driver and the receiver are different, ac-coupling is required. 100 W CDCM61004 LVDS Figure 19. LVDS Output DC Termination 100 W CDCM61004 LVDS Figure 20. LVDS Output AC Termination 10.1.5 LVCMOS Termination Series termination is a common technique used to maintain the signal integrity for LVCMOS drivers, if connected to a receiver with a high-impedance input with a pullup or a pulldown resistor. For series termination, a series resistor (RS) is placed close to the driver, as shown in Figure 21. The sum of the driver impedance and RS should be close to the transmission line impedance, which is usually 50 Ω. Because the LVCMOS driver in the CDCM61004 has an impedance of 30 Ω, RS is recommended to be 22 Ω to maintain proper signal integrity. RS = 22 W CDCM61004 LVCMOS Figure 21. LVCMOS Output Termination Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 25 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 10.1.6 Interfacing Between LVPECL and HCSL Because the LVPECL common-mode voltage is different from the HCSL common-mode voltage, ac-coupled termination is used. The 150-Ω resistor ensures proper biasing of the CDCM61004 LVPECL output stage, while the 471-Ω and 56-Ω resistor network biases the HCSL receiver input stage, as shown in Figure 22. 471 W 471 W VCC_OUT VCC_OUT 0W CDCM61004 HCSL 0W 150 W 150 W 56 W 56 W Figure 22. LVPECL to HCSL Interface 10.2 Typical Application Low-jitter PHY ref clocks PLL 25-MHz crystal 1.875 GHz CLK Dist. 156.25 MHz (2x) 3.125G PHY 156.25 MHz (2x) 1G PHY Figure 23. Ethernet Switch 10.2.1 Design Requirements Consider a typical wired communications application, like a top-of-rack switch, which needs to clock 1-Gbps or 3.125-Gbps Ethernet PHYs. For such asynchronous systems, the reference input can be a crystal. In such systems, the clocks are expected to be available upon power up without the need for any device-level programming. An example of clock input and output requirements is shown below: • Clock Input: – 25-MHz crystal • Clock Outputs: – 2× 156.25 MHz clock for uplink 3.125 Gbps, LVPECL – 2× 156.25 MHz clock for downlink 3.125 Gbps, LVPECL The section below describes the detailed design procedure to generate the required output frequencies for the above scenario using CDCM61004. 10.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure Design of all aspects of the CDCM61004 is quite involved and software support is available to assist in part selection and phase noise simulation. This design procedure will give a quick outline of the process. 1. Device Selection – The first step is to calculate the VCO frequency given the required output frequency. The device must be able to produce the VCO frequency that can be divided down to the required output frequency. – The WEBENCH Clock Architect Tool from TI will aid in the selection of the right device that meets the customer's output frequencies and format requirements. 26 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 Typical Application (continued) 2. Device Configuration – The WEBENCH Clock Architect Tool attempts to maximize the phase detector frequency, use smallest dividers, and maximizes PLL bandwidth. 10.2.2.1 Device Selection Use the WEBENCH Clock Architect Tool. Enter the required frequencies and formats into the tool. To use this device, find a solution using the CDCM61004. 10.2.2.1.1 Calculation Using LCM In this example, the valid VCO frequency for CDCM61004 is 1.875 GHz. 10.2.2.2 Device Configuration For this example, when using the WEBENCH Clock Architect Tool, the reference would have been manually entered as 25 MHz according to input frequency requirements. Enter the desired output frequencies and click on Generate Solutions. Select CDCM61004 from the solution list. From the simulation page of the WEBENCH Clock Architect Tool, it can be seen that to maximize phase detector frequencies, the N divider is set to 25 and prescaler divider is set to 3. This results in a VCO frequency of 1.875 GHz. The output divider is set to 4. At this point the design meets all input and output frequency requirements and it is possible to design a loop filter for system and simulate performance on the clock outputs. Figure 24 shows the typical phase noise plot of the 156.25 MHz LVPECL output. 10.2.3 Application Curve Figure 24. Typical Phase Noise Plot of 156.25 MHz LVPECL Output Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 27 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 11 Power Supply Recommendations 11.1 Power Considerations As a result of the different possible configurations of the CDCM61004, Table 11 is intended to provide enough information on the estimated current consumption of the device. Unless otherwise noted, VCC = 3.3 V and TA = 25°C. Table 11. Estimated Block Power Consumption BLOCK Entire device, core current Output buffer Divide circuitry CURRENT CONSUMPTION (mA) IN-DEVICE POWER DISSIPATION (mW) Output off, no termination resistors 65 214.5 LVPECL output, active mode 28 42.4 LVCMOS output pair, static 4.5 14.85 LVCMOS output pair, transient, 'CL' load, 'f' MHz output frequency V × fOUT × (CL + 20 × 10–12) × 103 V2 × fOUT × (CL + 20 × 10–12) × 103 LVDS output, active mode 20 66 Divide enabled, divide = 1 5 16.5 Divide enabled, divide = 2 10 33 Divide enabled, divide = 3, 4 15 49.5 Divide enabled, divide = 6, 8 20 66 CONDITION EXTERNAL RESISTOR POWER DISSIPATION (mW) 50 From Table 11, the current consumption can be calculated for any configuration. For example, the current for the entire device with four LVPECL outputs in active mode can be calculated by adding up the following blocks: core current, 4x LVPECL output buffer current, and the divide circuitry current. The overall in-device power consumption can also be calculated by summing the in-device power dissipated in each of these blocks. As an example scenario, let us consider the use case of a crystal input frequency of 25 MHz and device output frequency of 312.5 MHz in LVPECL mode. For this case, the typical overall power dissipation can be calculated as seen in Equation 5: 3.3 V × (65 + 4 × 28 + 10) mA = 617.1 mW (5) Because each LVPECL output has two external resistors and the power dissipated by these resistors is 50 mW, the typical overall in-device power dissipation is as seen in Equation 6: 617.1 mW – 4 × 50 mW = 417.1 mW (6) When the LVPECL output is active, the average voltage is approximately 1.9 V on each output as calculated from the LVPECL VOH and VOL specifications. Therefore, the power dissipated in each emitter resistor is approximately (1.9 V)2/150Ω = 25 mW. When the LVCMOS output is active and drives a load capacitance, CL, the overall LVCMOS output current consumption is the sum of a static pre-driver current and a dynamic switching current (which is a function of the output frequency and the load capacitance). Let us consider another use case of a crystal input frequency of 26.5625 MHz and device output frequency of 212.5 MHz in LVCMOS mode and driving a 5-pF load capacitance with a typical signal swing of 3.18 V. For this case, the typical overall power dissipation can be calculated as seen in Equation 7: 3.3 V × (65 + 15 + 4 × 21.4) mA = 546.48 mW 28 Submit Documentation Feedback (7) Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 11.2 Thermal Management Power consumption of the CDCM61004 can be high enough to require attention to thermal management. For reliability and performance reasons, the die temperature should be limited to a maximum of 125°C. That is, as an estimate, TA (ambient temperature) plus device power consumption times θJA should not exceed 125°C. The device package has an exposed pad that provides the primary heat removal path as well as an electrical grounding to the printed circuit board (PCB). To maximize the removal of heat from the package, a thermal land pattern including multiple vias to a ground plane must be incorporated on the PCB within the footprint of the package. The exposed pad must be soldered down to ensure adequate heat conduction out of the package. Check the mechanical data at the end of the data sheet for land and via pattern examples. 11.3 Power-Supply Filtering PLL-based frequency synthesizers are very sensitive to noise on the power supply, which can dramatically increase the jitter of the PLL. This characteristic is especially true for analog-based PLLs. Thus, it is essential to reduce noise from the system power supply, especially when jitter/phase noise is very critical to applications. A PLL would have attenuated jitter as a result of power-supply noise at frequencies beyond the PLL bandwidth because of attenuation by the loop response. Filter capacitors are used to eliminate the low-frequency noise from the power supply, where the bypass capacitors provide the very low impedance path for high-frequency noise and guard the power-supply system against the induced fluctuations. These bypass capacitors also provide instantaneous current surges as required by the device and should have low equivalent series resistance (ESR). To properly use these bypass capacitors, they must be placed very close to the power-supply pins and laid out with short loops to minimize inductance. TI recommends adding as many high-frequency (for example, 0.1-μF) bypass capacitors as there are supply pins in the package. The CDCM61004 power-supply requirements can be grouped into two sets: the analog supply line and the output/input supply line. The analog supply line consists of the following power-supply pins on the CDCM61004: VCC_PLL1, VCC_PLL2, and VCC_VCO. These pins can be shorted together. The output/input supply line consists of the VCC_OUT and the VCC_IN power-supply pins on the CDCM61004. These pins can be shorted together. Inserting a ferrite bead between the analog supply line and the output/input supply line isolates the high-frequency switching noises generated by the device input and outputs, preventing them from leaking into the sensitive analog supply line. Choosing an appropriate ferrite bead with very low DC resistance is important because it is imperative to provide adequate isolation between the sensitive analog supply line and the other board supply lines, and to maintain a voltage at the analog power-supply pins of the CDCM61004 that is greater than the minimum voltage required for proper operation. Figure 25 shows a general recommendation for decoupling the power supply. Board/ Output/Input Supply Analog Supply Ferrite Bead C 10 mF C 0.1 mF (x5) C 10 mF C 0.1 mF (x3) Figure 25. Recommended Power-Supply Decoupling Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 29 CDCM61004 SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 www.ti.com 12 Layout 12.1 Layout Guidelines The CDCM61004 is a high-performance device; therefore careful attention must be paid to device configuration and printed circuit board layout with respect to power consumption. Observing good thermal layout practices enables the thermal pad on the backside of the VQFN-32 package to provide a good thermal path between the die contained within the package and the ambient air. This thermal pad also serves as the ground connection the device; therefore, a low inductance connection to the ground plane is essential. 12.2 Layout Example Figure 26 shows a general recommendation of PCB layout with the CDCM61004 that ensures good system-level thermal reliability. Back Side Component Side QFN-32 Solder Mask Thermal Slug (package bottom) Internal Ground Plane Internal Power Plane Thermal Dissipation Pad (back side) Thermal Vias No Solder Mask Figure 26. Recommended PCB Layout 30 Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 CDCM61004 www.ti.com SCAS871H – FEBRUARY 2009 – REVISED JANUARY 2016 13 Device and Documentation Support 13.1 Device Support 13.1.1 Third-Party Products Disclaimer TI'S PUBLICATION OF INFORMATION REGARDING THIRD-PARTY PRODUCTS OR SERVICES DOES NOT CONSTITUTE AN ENDORSEMENT REGARDING THE SUITABILITY OF SUCH PRODUCTS OR SERVICES OR A WARRANTY, REPRESENTATION OR ENDORSEMENT OF SUCH PRODUCTS OR SERVICES, EITHER ALONE OR IN COMBINATION WITH ANY TI PRODUCT OR SERVICE. 13.2 Community Resources The following links connect to TI community resources. Linked contents are provided "AS IS" by the respective contributors. They do not constitute TI specifications and do not necessarily reflect TI's views; see TI's Terms of Use. TI E2E™ Online Community TI's Engineer-to-Engineer (E2E) Community. Created to foster collaboration among engineers. At e2e.ti.com, you can ask questions, share knowledge, explore ideas and help solve problems with fellow engineers. Design Support TI's Design Support Quickly find helpful E2E forums along with design support tools and contact information for technical support. 13.3 Trademarks E2E is a trademark of Texas Instruments. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. 13.4 Electrostatic Discharge Caution 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. 13.5 Glossary SLYZ022 — TI Glossary. This glossary lists and explains terms, acronyms, and definitions. 14 Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information The following pages include mechanical, packaging, and orderable information. This information is the most current data available for the designated devices. This data is subject to change without notice and revision of this document. For browser-based versions of this data sheet, see the left-hand navigation. Submit Documentation Feedback Copyright © 2009–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated Product Folder Links: CDCM61004 31 PACKAGE OPTION ADDENDUM www.ti.com 23-Apr-2022 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) CDCM61004RHBR ACTIVE VQFN RHB 32 3000 RoHS & Green NIPDAUAG Level-2-260C-1 YEAR -40 to 85 CDCM 61004 CDCM61004RHBR/2801 ACTIVE VQFN RHB 32 3000 RoHS & Green NIPDAUAG Level-2-260C-1 YEAR -40 to 85 CDCM 61004 CDCM61004RHBT ACTIVE VQFN RHB 32 250 RoHS & Green NIPDAUAG Level-2-260C-1 YEAR -40 to 85 CDCM 61004 (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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