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FEATURES 256 Positions AD5260 - 1-Channel AD5262 - 2-Channel (Independently Programmable) Potentiometer Replacement 20 k , 50 k , 200 k Low Temperature Coefficient 35 ppm/ C 4-Wire SPI-Compatible Serial Data Input 5 V to 15 V Single-Supply; 5.5 V Dual-Supply Operation Power ON Mid-Scale Preset APPLICATIONS Mechanical Potentiometer Replacement Instrumentation: Gain, Offset Adjustment Stereo Channel Audio Level Control Programmable Voltage to Current Conversion Programmable Filters, Delays, Time Constants Line Impedance Matching Low Resolution DAC Replacement GENERAL DESCRIPTION
1-/2-Channel 15 V Digital Potentiometers AD5260/AD5262
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAMS
A W B SHDN VDD VSS VL CS LOGIC 8 CLK SDI GND SERIAL INPUT REGISTER SDO
AD5260
RDAC REGISTER
POWER-ON RESET
PR
A1
W1 B1
A2
W2 B2
SHDN
PERCENT OF NOMINAL END-TO-END RESISTANCE - % RAB
The AD5260/AD5262 provide a single- or dual-channel, 256position, digitally controlled variable resistor (VR) device.* These devices perform the same electronic adjustment function as a potentiometer or variable resistor. Each channel of the AD5260/ AD5262 contains a fixed resistor with a wiper contact that taps the fixed resistor value at a point determined by a digital code loaded into the SPI-compatible serial-input register. The resistance between the wiper and either end point of the fixed resistor varies linearly with respect to the digital code transferred into the VR latch. The variable resistor offers a completely programmable value of resistance, between the A terminal and the wiper or the B terminal and the wiper. The fixed A to B terminal resistance of 20 kW, 50 kW, or 200 kW has a nominal temperature coefficient of 35 ppm/C. Unlike the majority of the digital potentiometers in the market, these devices can operate up to 15 V or 5 V provided proper supply voltages are furnished. Each VR has its own VR latch, which holds its programmed resistance value. These VR latches are updated from an internal serial-to-parallel shift register, which is loaded from a standard 3-wire serial-input digital interface. The AD5260 contains an 8-bit serial register while the AD5262 contains a 9-bit serial register. Each bit is clocked into the register on the positive edge of the CLK. The AD5262 address bit determines the corresponding VR latch to be loaded with the last 8 bits of the data word during the positive edging of CS strobe. A serial data output pin at the opposite end of the serial register enables simple daisy chaining in multiple VR applications without additional external decoding logic. An optional reset pin (PR) forces the wiper to the mid-scale position by loading 80H into the VR latch.
*The terms digital potentiometers, VR, and RDAC are used interchangeably.
VDD VSS VL CS LOGIC 8 CLK SDI GND SERIAL INPUT REGISTER SDO POWER-ON RESET PR RDAC1 REGISTER RDAC2 REGISTER
AD5262
100 RWA RWB
75
50
25
0
0
64
128 CODE - Decimal
192
256
Figure 1. RWA and RWB vs. Code
REV. 0
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices.
The AD5260/AD5262 are available in thin surface-mount TSSOP-14 and TSSOP-16 packages. All parts are guaranteed to operate over the extended industrial temperature range of -40C to +85C.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A. Tel: 781/329-4700 www.analog.com Fax: 781/326-8703 (c) Analog Devices, Inc., 2002
V, V V = -5 V = +5 AD5260/AD5262-SPECIFICATIONS (V ==0 +15 40VC <=T0 < or, V C = +5 V,otherwiseV,noted.) V, V = +5 V, V V, - +85 unless
DD SS DD SS L A B A
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS 20 kW, 50 kW, 200 kW VERSIONS
Parameter Symbol Conditions Min -1 -1 -30 Typ1 1/4 1/2 35 60 0.1 0.05 Max +1 +1 30 150 Unit LSB LSB % ppm/C W % % Bits LSB LSB ppm/C LSB LSB V pF pF 5 2.4 0.8 VL = 3 V, VSS = 0 V VL = 3 V, VSS = 0 V RPULL-UP = 2 kW to 5 V IOL = 1.6 mA, VLOGIC = 5 V VIN = 0 V or 5 V 2.1 0.6 4.9 5 2.7 4.5 4.5 0.4 1 nA mA V V V V V V mA pF V V V mA mA mA mW %/% kHz % ms DC CHARACTERISTICS RHEOSTAT MODE Specifications apply to all VRs Resistor Differential NL2 R-DNL RWB, VA = NC R-INL RWB, VA = NC Resistor Nonlinearity2 RAB TA = 25C Nominal Resistor Tolerance3 Resistance Temperature Coefficient RAB/ T Wiper = No Connect IW = 1 V/RAB Wiper Resistance RW Ch 1 and 2 RWB, DX = 80H Channel Resistance Matching (AD5262 only) RWB/RWB Resistance Drift RAB
DC CHARACTERISTICS POTENTIOMETER DIVIDER MODE Specifications apply to all VRs Resolution N 8 Differential Nonlinearity4 DNL -1 Integral Nonlinearity4 INL -1 Code = 80H Voltage Divider Temperature Coefficient DVW/DT Code = FFH -2 Full-Scale Error VWFSE Zero-Scale Error VWZSE Code = 00H 0 RESISTOR TERMINALS Voltage Range5 Capacitance6 Ax, Bx Capacitance6 Wx Common-Mode Leakage Current Shut Down Current7 DIGITAL INPUTS and OUTPUTS Input Logic High Input Logic Low Input Logic High Input Logic Low Output Logic High (SDO) Output Logic Low (SDO) Input Current8 Input Capacitance6 POWER SUPPLIES Logic Supply Power Single-Supply Range Power Dual-Supply Range Logic Supply Current Positive Supply Current Negative Supply Current Power Dissipation9 Power Supply Sensitivity DYNAMIC CHARACTERISTICS Bandwidth -3 dB Total Harmonic Distortion VW Settling Time Crosstalk11
6, 10
1/4 1/2 5 -1 1
+1 +1 +0 2 VDD
VA, B, W CA,B CW ICM ISHDN VIH VIL VIH VIL VOH VOL IIL CIL VL VDD RANGE VDD/SS RANGE IL IDD ISS PDISS PSS BW THDW tS CT
VSS f = 5 MHz, measured to GND, Code = 80H f = 1 MHz, measured to GND, Code = 80H VA =VB = VDD /2 25 55 1
VSS = 0 V VL = 5 V VIH = 5 V or VIL = 0 V VSS = -5 V VIH = 5 V or VIL = 0 V, VDD = +5 V, VSS = -5 V DVDD = +5 V, 10% RAB = 20 kW/50 kW/200 kW VA = 1 VRMS, VB = 0 V, f = 1 kHz, RAB = 20 kW VA = +5 V, VB = -5 V, 1 LSB error band, RAB = 20 kW VA = VDD, VB = 0 V, Measure VW with Adjacent RDAC Making Full-Scale Code Change (AD5262 only) VA1 = VDD, VB1 = 0V, Measure VW1 with VW2 = 5 V p-p @ f = 10 kHz, RAB = 20 kW/200 kW (AD5262 only) RWB = 20 kW f = 1 kHz -2-
5.5 16.5 5.5 60 1 1 0.3 0.003 0.01
310/130/30 0.014 5
1
nV-s
Analog Crosstalk
CTA
-64 13
dB nV//Hz REV. 0
Resistor Noise Voltage
eN_WB
AD5260/AD5262
Parameter Symbol Conditions
6, 12
Min
Typ
Max 25
Unit MHz ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns ns
INTERFACE TIMING CHARACTERISTICS apply to all parts Clock Frequency fCLK Input Clock Pulsewidth tCH, tCL Clock level high or low Data Setup Time tDS Data Hold Time tDH CLK to SDO Propagation Delay13 tPD RL = 1 k, CL < 20pF CS Setup Time tCSS CS High Pulsewidth tCSW Reset Pulsewidth tRS CLK Fall to CS Rise Hold Time tCSH CS Rise to Clock Rise Setup tCS1
20 10 10 1 5 20 50 0 10
160
NOTES The AD5260/AD5262 contains 1,968 transistors. Die Size: 89 mil. x 105 mil. 9,345 sq. mil. 1 Typicals represent average readings at 25C and VDD = +5 V, VSS = -5 V. 2 Resistor position nonlinearity error R-INL is the deviation from an ideal value measured between the maximum resistance and the minimum resistance wiper positions. R-DNL measures the relative step change from ideal between successive tap positions. Parts are guaranteed monotonic. I W = VDD/R for both VDD = +5 V, VSS = -5 V. 3 VAB = VDD, Wiper (VW) = No connect. 4 INL and DNL are measured at V W with the RDAC configured as a potentiometer divider similar to a voltage output D/A converter. VA = V DD and VB = 0V. DNL specification limits of 1 LSB maximum are Guaranteed Monotonic operating conditions. 5 Resistor terminals A, B, W have no limitations on polarity with respect to each other. 6 Guaranteed by design and not subject to production test. 7 Measured at the Ax terminals. All Ax terminals are open-circuit in shutdown mode. 8 Worst-case supply current consumed when input all logic-input levels set at 2.4 V, standard characteristic of CMOS logic. 9 PDISS is calculated from (IDD VDD). CMOS logic level inputs result in minimum power dissipation. 10 All dynamic characteristics use V DD = +5 V, VSS = -5 V, VL = +5 V. 11 Measured at a V W pin where an adjacent V W pin is making a full-scale voltage change. 12 See timing diagram for location of measured values. All input control voltages are specified with t R = tF = 2ns (10% to 90% of 3 V) and timed from a voltage level of 1.5 V. Switching characteristics are measured using V L = 5 V. 13 Propagation delay depends on value of V DD, RL, and CL. Specifications subject to change without notice.
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS 1
(TA = 25C, unless otherwise noted.)
VDD to GND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3 V, +15 V VSS to GND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 V, -7 V VDD to VSS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15 V VA, VB, VW to GND . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . VSS, VDD AX - BX, AX - WX, BX - WX Intermittent2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20 mA Continuous . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 mA Digital Inputs and Output Voltage to GND . . . . . . . 0 V, 7 V Operating Temperature Range . . . . . . . . . . . . -40C to +85C Maximum Junction Temperature (TJ MAX) . . . . . . . . . . . 150C Storage Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -65C to +150C
Lead Temperature (Soldering, 10 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . 300C Vapor Phase (60 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 215C Infrared (15 sec) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 220C Thermal Resistance3 JA TSSOP-14 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 206C/W TSSOP-16 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 150C/W
NOTES 1 Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those listed in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. 2 Maximum terminal current is bounded by the maximum current handling of the switches, maximum power dissipation of the package, and maximum applied voltage across any two of the A, B, and W terminals at a given resistance setting. 3 Package Power Dissipation = (T J MAX - TA)/ JA
REV. 0
-3-
AD5260/AD5262
ORDERING GUIDE
Model AD5260BRU20 AD5260BRU20-REEL7 AD5260BRU50 AD5260BRU50-REEL7 AD5260BRU200 AD5260BRU200-REEL7 AD5262BRU20 AD5262BRU20-REEL7 AD5262BRU50 AD5262BRU50-REEL7 AD5262BRU200 AD5262BRU200-REEL7
RAB (kW) 20 20 50 50 200 200 20 20 50 50 200 200
Temperature -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C
Package Description TSSOP-14 TSSOP-14 TSSOP-14 TSSOP-14 TSSOP-14 TSSOP-14 TSSOP-16 TSSOP-16 TSSOP-16 TSSOP-16 TSSOP-16 TSSOP-16
Package Option RU-14 RU-14 RU-14 RU-14 RU-14 RU-14 RU-16 RU-16 RU-16 RU-16 RU-16 RU-16
No. of Parts per Container 96 1000 96 1000 96 1000 96 1000 96 1000 96 1000
Branding Information* AD5260B20 AD5260B20 AD5260B50 AD5260B50 AD5260B200 AD5260B200 AD5262B20 AD5262B20 AD5262B50 AD5262B50 AD5262B200 AD5262B200
*Line 1 contains part number, line 2 contains differentiating detail by part type and ADI logo symbol, line 3 contains date code YWW.
CAUTION ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device. Electrostatic charges as high as 4000 V readily accumulate on the human body and test equipment and can discharge without detection. Although the AD5260/AD5262 features proprietary ESD protection circuitry, permanent damage may occur on devices subjected to high-energy electrostatic discharges. Therefore, proper ESD precautions are recommended to avoid performance degradation or loss of functionality.
WARNING!
ESD SENSITIVE DEVICE
-4-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
Table I. AD5260 8-Bit Serial-Data Word Format Table II. AD5262 9-Bit Serial-Data Word Format
DATA B7 B6 B5 D5 B4 D4 B3 D3 B2 D2 B1 D1 B0 D0 LSB 20
ADDR B8 A0 28 B7
DATA B6 B5 D5 B4 D4 B3 D3 B2 D2 B1 D1 B0 D0 LSB 20
D7 D6 MSB 27
D7 D6 MSB 27
SDI
1 0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
SDI (DATA IN)
1 Ax OR Dx 0 1 A x OR D x 0 Dx Dx
CLK CS
1 0 1 0 1 0
CLK 0 1 SDO (DATA OUT)
tDS
tDH
RDAC REGISTER LOAD
tCH
tPD_MAX tCS1 tCL tCSH tCSW tS
VOUT
Figure 2a. AD5260 Timing Diagram
CS 1 0
tCSS
SDI
1 0 1
A0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
VOUT
VDD 0V 1 LSB ERROR BAND
1 LSB
CLK CS
0 1 0 1
Figure 2c. Detail Timing Diagram
RDAC REGISTER LOAD
VOUT
0
PR
1 0
tRS tS
1 LSB
Figure 2b. AD5262 Timing Diagram
VOUT VDD 0V 1 LSB ERROR BAND
Figure 2d. Preset Timing Diagram
REV. 0
-5-
AD5260/AD5262
AD5260 PIN CONFIGURATION
A1 W2 B3 VDD 4 SHDN CLK
5 14 13 12
AD5262 PIN CONFIGURATION
SDO 1 A1 2 W1 3 B1 4 VDD 5 SHDN
16 15 14
SDO NC VL VSS
A2 W2 B2 VL
AD5260
11
AD5262
13
TOP VIEW 10 GND (Not to Scale) 9 PR 6
8
TOP VIEW 12 V SS (Not to Scale) 11 GND 6
10 9
SDI 7
CS
CLK 7 SDI 8
PR CS
AD5260 PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
AD5262 PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
Pin Number 1 2 3 4
Mnemonic A W B VDD
Description A Terminal Wiper Terminal B Terminal Positive power supply, specified for operation at both 5 V or 15 V. (Sum of |VDD| + |VSS| 15 V) Active low input. Terminal A open-circuit. Shutdown controls. Variable Resistors of RDAC. Serial Clock Input, positive edge triggered. Serial Data Input Chip Select Input, Active Low. When CS returns high, data will be loaded into the RDAC register. Active low preset to mid-scale; sets RDAC registers to 80H. Ground Negative Power Supply, specified for operation from 0 V to -5 V. Logic Supply Voltage, needs to be same voltage as the digital logic controlling the AD5260. No Connect (Users should not connect anything other than dummy pad on this pin) Serial Data Output, Open Drain transistor requires pull-up resistor.
Pin Number 1 2 3 4 5
Mnemonic SDO A1 W1 B1 VDD
Description Serial Data Output, Open Drain transistor requires pull-up resistor. A Terminal RDAC #1 Wiper RDAC #1, address A0 = 02 B Terminal RDAC #1 Positive power supply, specified for operation at both 5 V or 15 V. (Sum of |VDD|+|VSS| 15 V) Active low input. Terminal A open-circuit. Shutdown controls Variable Resistors #1 through #2. Serial Clock Input, positive edge triggered. Serial Data Input. Chip Select Input, Active Low. When CS returns high, data in the serial input register is decoded, based on the address Bit A0, and loaded into the target RDAC register. Active low preset to mid-scale sets RDAC registers to 80H. Ground Negative Power Supply, specified for operation at both 0 V or -5 V (Sum of |VDD| + |VSS| <15 V). Logic Supply Voltage, needs to be same voltage as the digital logic controlling the AD5262. B Terminal RDAC #2 Wiper RDAC #2, address A0 = 12 A Terminal RDAC #2
5
SHDN
6
SHDN
6 7 8
CLK SDI CS
7 8 9
CLK SDI CS
9 10 11 12
PR GND VSS VL
10 11 12
PR GND VSS
13
NC
13
VL
14
SDO
14 15 16
B2 W2 A2
-6-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
THEORY OF OPERATION
The AD5260/AD5262 provide a single- or dual-channel, 256-position digitally controlled variable resistor (VR) device and operate up to 15 V maximum voltage. Changing the programmed VR settings is accomplished by clocking an 8-/9-bit serial data word into the SDI (Serial Data Input) pin. For the AD5262, the format of this data word is one address bit. A0 represents the first bit B8, then followed by eight data bits B7-B0 with MSB first. Tables I and II provide the serial register data word format. See Table III for the AD5262 address assignment to decode the location of the VR latch receiving the serial register data in bits B7 through B0. VR outputs can be changed one at a time in random sequence. The AD5260/ AD5262 presets to a mid-scale, simplifying fault condition recovery at power-up. Mid-scale can also be achieved at any time by asserting the PR pin. Both parts have an internal power ON preset that places the wiper in a mid-scale preset condition at power ON. Operation of the power ON preset function depends only on the state of the VL pin. The AD5260/AD5262 contains a power shutdown SHDN pin, which places the RDAC in an almost zero power consumption state where terminals Ax are open circuited, and the wiper W is connected to B, resulting in only leakage currents being consumed in the VR structure. In the shutdown mode, the VR latch settings are maintained so that, returning to operational mode from power shutdown, the VR settings return to their previous resistance values.
Table III. AD5262 Address Decode Table
The positive-edge sensitive CLK input requires clean transitions to avoid clocking incorrect data into the serial input register. Standard logic families work well. If mechanical switches are used for product evaluation, they should be debounced by a flip-flop or other suitable means. Figure 3 shows more detail of the internal digital circuitry. When CS is low, the clock loads data into the serial register on each positive clock edge (see Table IV).
Table IV. Truth Table
CLK CS PR L * X X X L L H X H H
SHDN H H
Register Activity No SR effect, enables SDO pin Shift one bit in from the SDI pin. The eighth previously entered bit is shifted out of the SDO pin. Load SR data into RDAC latch No Operation Sets all RDAC latches to Mid-Scale, wiper centered, and SDO latch cleared. Latches all RDAC latches to 80H. Open circuits all resistor A-terminals, connects W to B, turns off SDO output transistor.
H H L H
H H H
X X
H H
H L
* = positive edge, X = don't care, SR = shift register
A0 0 1
DIGITAL INTERFACING
Latch Loaded RDAC#1 RDAC#2
The AD5260/AD5262 contains a 4-wire SPI-compatible digital interface (SDI, SDO, CS, and CLK). For the AD5260, the 8-bit serial word must be loaded with MSB first, and the format of the word is shown in Table I. For the AD5262, the 9-bit serial word must be loaded with address bit A0 first, then MSB of the data. The format of the word is shown in Table II.
VL CS CLK RDAC LATCH #1 PR SDI A0 SER REG D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 POWERON PRESET A2 RDAC LATCH #2 PR W2 B2 EN ADDR DEC VDD
The data setup and data hold times in the specification table determine the data valid time requirements. The AD5260 uses an 8-bit serial input data register word that is transferred to the internal RDAC register when the CS line returns to logic high. For the AD5262 the last 9 bits of the data word entered into the serial register are held when CS returns high. Any extra bits are ignored. At the same time CS goes high, it gates the address decoder enabling AD5262 one of two positive edge-triggered AD5262 RDAC latches (see Figure 4).
AD5260/AD5262
ADDR DECODE CLK SDI SERIAL REGISTER
CS
RDAC 1 RDAC 2
A1 W1 B1
Figure 4. Equivalent Input Control Logic
The target RDAC latch is loaded with the last 8 bits of the serial data word completing one RDAC update. For the AD5262, two separate 9-bit data words must be clocked in to change both VR settings. During shutdown (SHDN) the SDO output pin is forced to the off (logic high state) to disable power dissipation in the pull-up resistor. See Figure 5 for equivalent SDO output circuit schematic.
SHDN CS SDI CLK PR SERIAL REGISTER D CK Q RS SDO
SDO
PR GND
SHDN VSS
Figure 5. Detail SDO Output Schematic of the AD5260 Figure 3. AD5262 Block Diagram
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-7-
AD5260/AD5262
All digital inputs are protected with a series input resistor and parallel Zener ESD structure as shown in Figure 6. This applies to digital input pins CS, SDI, SDO, PR, SHDN, and CLK.
340 LOGIC
of this data sheet. An internal level shift circuit ensures that the common-mode voltage range of the three terminals extends from VSS to VDD regardless of the digital input level.
POWER-UP SEQUENCE
Figure 6. ESD Protection of Digital Pins
A, B, W
VSS
Since there are diodes to limit the voltage compliance at terminals A, B, and W (see Figure 9), it is important to power VDD/VSS first before applying any voltage to terminals A, B, and W. Otherwise, the diode will be forward biased such that VDD/VSS will be powered unintentionally and may affect the rest of the user's circuit. The ideal power-up sequence is in the following order: GND, VDD, VSS, VL, Digital Inputs, and VA/B/W . The order of powering VA, VB, VW, and Digital Inputs is not important as long as they are powered after VDD/VSS.
Daisy-Chain Operation
Figure 7. ESD Protection of Resistor Terminals
LAYOUT AND POWER SUPPLY BYPASSING
It is a good practice to employ compact, minimum-lead length layout design. The leads to the input should be as direct as possible with a minimum conductor length. Ground paths should have low resistance and low inductance. Similarly, it is also a good practice to bypass the power supplies with quality capacitors for optimum stability. Supply leads to the device should be bypassed with 0.01 mF-0.1 mF disc or chip ceramics capacitors. Low-ESR 1 mF to 10 mF tantalum or electrolytic capacitors should also be applied at the supplies to minimize any transient disturbance (see Figure 8). Notice the digital ground should also be joined remotely to the analog ground to minimize the ground bounce.
VDD C3 C4 VSS C1 10 F 0.1 F C2 10 F 0.1 F VDD
The serial-data output (SDO) pin contains an open drain n-channel FET. This output requires a pull-up resistor to transfer data to the next package's SDI pin. This allows for daisy chaining several RDACs from a single processor serial data line. The pull-up resistor termination voltage can be larger than the VDD supply voltage. It is recommended to increase the Clock period when using a pull-up resistor to the SDI pin of the following device in series because capacitive loading at the daisy-chain node SDO-SDI between devices may induce time delay to subsequent devices. Users should be aware of this potential problem to achieve data transfer successfully (see Figure 10). If two AD5260s are daisychained, this requires a total of 16 bits of data. The first 8 bits, complying with the format shown in Table I, go to U2, and the second 8 bits with the same format go to U1. The CS should be kept low until all 16 bits are clocked into their respective serial registers, and the CS is then pulled high to complete the operation.
VDD
AD5260
VSS GND
U1 C MOSI SDI SDO
RP 2.2k
AD5260
U2 SDI SDO CS CLK
SCLK SS
CS CLK
Figure 8. Power Supply Bypassing
TERMINAL VOLTAGE OPERATING RANGE
The AD5260/AD5262 positive VDD and negative VSS power supply defines the boundary conditions for proper 3-terminal digital potentiometer operation. Supply signals present on terminals A, B, and W that exceed VDD or VSS will be clamped by the internal forward biased diodes (see Figure 9).
VDD
Figure 10. Daisy-Chain Configuration
RDAC STRUCTURE
A W B VSS
Figure 9. Maximum Terminal Voltages Set by VDD and VSS
The ground pin of the AD5260/AD5262 device is primarily used as a digital ground reference, which needs to be tied to the PCB's common ground. The digital input control signals to the AD5260/ AD5262 must be referenced to the device ground pin (GND), and must satisfy the logic level defined in the specification table -8-
The RDAC contains a string of equal resistor segments, with an array of analog switches, that act as the wiper connection. The number of positions is the resolution of the device. The AD5260/ AD5262 have 256 connection points allowing it to provide better than 0.4% set-ability resolution. Figure 11 shows an equivalent structure of the connections between the three terminals that make up one channel of the RDAC. The SWA and SWB will always be ON, while one of the switches SW(0) to SW(2N - 1) will be ON one at a time depending on the resistance position decoded from the data bits. Since the switch is not ideal, there is a 60 W wiper resistance, RW. Wiper resistance is a function of supply voltage and temperature. The lower the supply voltage, the higher the wiper resistance. Similarly, the higher the temperature, the higher the wiper resistance. Users should be aware of the contribution of the wiper resistance when accurate prediction of the output resistance is needed.
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
Ax SHDN RS RS
Note that in the zero-scale condition a finite wiper resistance of 60 W is present. Care should be taken to limit the current flow between W and B in this state to no more than 20 mA to avoid degradation or possible destruction of the internal switches. Like the mechanical potentiometer the RDAC replaces, the AD5260/AD5262 parts are totally symmetrical. The resistance between the wiper W and terminal A also produces a digitally controlled complementary resistance RWA. Figure 12 shows the symmetrical programmability of the various terminal connections. When RWA is used, the B-terminal can be let floating or tied to the wiper. Setting the resistance value for RWA starts at a maximum value of resistance and decreases as the data loaded in the latch is increased in value. The general equation for this operation is: R WA ( D ) = 256 - D R AB + R W 256 (2)
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
RS
Wx
RDAC LATCH AND DECODE
RS R S = R AB /2 N
Bx
DIGITAL CIRCUITRY OMITTED FOR CLARITY
Figure 11. Simplified RDAC Architecture
PROGRAMMING THE VARIABLE RESISTOR Rheostat Operation
For example, RAB = 20 kW, when VA = 0 V and B-terminal is open, the following output resistance RWA will be set for the following RDAC latch codes. The result will be the same if terminal B is tied to W: D (DEC) 256 128 1 0 RWA (W) 60 10060 19982 20060
RWA(D), RWB(D)
The nominal resistances of the RDAC between terminals A and B are available with values of 20 kW, 50 kW, and 200 kW. The final three digits of the part number determine the nominal resistance value, e.g., 20 kW = 20; 50 kW = 50; 200 kW = 200. The nominal resistance (RAB) of the VR has 256 contact points accessed by the wiper terminal, plus the B terminal contact. The 8-bit data in the RDAC latch is decoded to select one of the 256 possible settings. Assuming a 20 kW part is used, the wiper's first connection starts at the B terminal for data 00H. Since there is a 60 W wiper contact resistance, such connection yields a minimum of 60 W resistance between terminals W and B. The second connection is the first tap point corresponds to 138 W (RWB = RAB/256 RW = 78 W 60 W) for data 01H. The third connection is the next tap point representing 216 W (78 2 60) for data 02H and so on. Each LSB data value increase moves the wiper up the resistor ladder until the last tap point is reached at 19982 W [RAB 1 LSB RW]. The wiper does not directly connect to the B terminal. See Figure 11 for a simplified diagram of the equivalent RDAC circuit. The general equation determining the digitally programmed output resistance between W and B is: D R WB ( D ) = R AB + R W 256 (1)
Output State Full-Scale Mid-Scale 1 LSB Zero-Scale
20 RWA 16 RWB
k
12 8 4 RAB = 20K 0 0 64 128 D - CODE in decimal 192 256
where D is the decimal equivalent of the binary code which is loaded in the 8-bit RDAC register, and RAB is the nominal endto-end resistance. For example, RAB = 20 kW, when VB = 0 V and A-terminal is open circuit, the following output resistance values RWB will be set for the following RDAC latch codes. The result will be the same if terminal A is tied to W: D (DEC) 256 128 1 0 RWB (W) 19982 10060 138 60
Figure 12. AD5260/AD5262 Equivalent RDAC Circuit
The typical distribution of the nominal resistance RAB from channel to channel matches within 1%. Device-to-device matching is process lot dependent with the worst case of 30% variation. On the other hand, since the resistance element is processed in thin film technology, the change in RAB with temperature has a low 35 ppm/C temperature coefficient.
Output State Full-Scale (RAB - 1 LSB + RW) Mid-Scale 1 LSB Zero-Scale (wiper contact resistance)
REV. 0
-9-
AD5260/AD5262--Typical Performance Characteristics
0.8 0.7
RHEOSTAT MODE INL - LSB
0.10 12V 5V 0.05 0 -0.05 -0.10 -0.15 -0.20 -0.25
5V
1.0
POTENTIOMETER MODE INL - LSB
5V
15V
0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 -0.8 -1.0 0 32 TA =
TA =
125 C
0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 -0.1 -0.2 15V 0 32 64 96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal 12V 5V
RHEOSTAT MODE DNL - LSB
VDD = 5V VSS = 5V RAB = 20k TA = 85 C
40 C 25 C
TA =
0
32
64
96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal
64
96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal
TPC 1. R-INL vs. Code vs. Supply Voltages
TPC 2. R-DNL vs. Code vs. Supply Voltages
TPC 3. INL vs. Code, V DD /V SS = 5 V
0.5
0.3 0.2 0.1 15V 0 -0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -0.4
POTENTIOMETER MODE DNL - LSB
0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 -0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -0.4 -0.5 0 32 64 5V 5V 15V
POTENTIOMETER MODE DNL - LSB
POTENTIOMETER MODE INL - LSB
0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 -0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -0.4 -0.5 0 32 64 TA = 125 C TA = 40 C TA = 25 C TA = 85 C
5V 5V
96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal
0
32
64
96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal
96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal
TPC 4. DNL vs. Code, VDD/VSS = 5 V
TPC 5. INL vs. Code vs. Supply Voltages
TPC 6. DNL vs. Code vs. Supply Voltages
1.0 POTENTIOMETER MODE INL - LSB
2.0 1.5
124 RON @ VDD/V SS = AVG +3 104 5V/0V
AVG AVG -3 0
WIPER RESISTANCE -
0.5
RHEOSTAT MODE INL - LSB
AVG +3
1.0 0.5 AVG 0 -0.5 -1.0 -1.5 AVG -3
84 RON @ V DD/V SS = 64 44 RON @ VDD/VSS = 24 4 15V/0V 5V/ 5V
-0.5
-1.0
0
5
10 VDD - VSS - V
15
20
-2.0
0
5
10 VDD - VSS - V
15
20
5
1
3 7 VDD - V
11
15
TPC 7. INL vs. Supply Voltages
TPC 8. R-INL vs. Supply Voltages
TPC 9. Wiper ON Resistance vs. Bias Voltage
-10-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
0 2.5 1 -0.5 VDD/V SS = +15V/0V 2.0 VDD/V SS = +5V/0V
ZSE - LSB
IDD/I SS SUPPLY CURRENT - A
VLOGIC = 5V VIH = 5V VIL = 0V 0.1
FSE - LSB
-1.0 VDD/V SS = -1.5 5V
1.5 VDD/V SS = 1.0 VDD/V SS = +15V/0V 5V
0.01
VDD/V SS = VDD/V SS = 5V
15V/0V
-2.0 VDD/V SS = +5V/0V -2.5 -40
0.5
-20
0 20 40 60 TEMPERATURE - C
80
100
0 -40
-20
40 0 20 60 TEMPERATURE - C
80
100
0.001 -40
-7
26 59 92 TEMPERATURE - C
125
TPC 10. Full-Scale Error
TPC 11. Zero-Scale Error
TPC 12. Supply Current vs. Temperature
28.0 27.5 VDD/V SS = +15V/0V 27.0
ILOGIC - A ILOGIC - A
1k
RHEOSTAT MODE TEMPCO - ppm/ C
80
VDD/V SS = 5V/0V VLOGIC = 5V
70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 -10 -20 200k 0 32 64 96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal 50k 20k
26.5 26.0 VDD/V SS = 25.5 25.0 24.5 -40 5V
100
-7
59 26 92 TEMPERATURE - C
125
10
VDD/V SS = 5V/0V VLOGIC = 3V 0 1 2 VIH - V 3 4 5
TPC 13. ILOGIC vs. Temperature
TPC 14. ILOGIC vs. Digital Input Voltage
6 0
TPC 15. Rheostat Mode Tempco DRWB /DT vs. Code
POTENTIOMETER MODE TEMPCO - ppm/ C
120 100 50k 80 60
TA = 25 C
CODE = FFH 80H 40H 20H 10H 08H 04H 02H 01H
-6 -12
GAIN - dB
96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal
40 20 0 -20 200k -40 -60 0 32
20k
-18 -24 -30 -36 -42 -48
64
-54 1k
10k 100k FREQUENCY - Hz
1M
TPC 16. Potentiometer Mode DVWB /DT vs. Code
TPC 17. Gain vs. Frequency vs. Code, RAB = 20 kW
REV. 0
-11-
AD5260/AD5262
6 0 -6 -12 TA = 25 C CODE = FFH 80H 40H 6 0 -6 -12 TA = 25 C CODE = FFH 80H 40H
GAIN - dB
6 0 -6 -12 -18 -24 -30 -36 -42 VIN = 50mV rms -48 -3dB VDD/V SS = 5V BANDWIDTHS -54 1k 10k 100k 1M FREQUENCY - Hz
f-3dB = 310kHz, R = 20k f-3dB = 131kHz, R = 50k
GAIN - dB
GAIN - dB
-18 -24 -30 -36 -42 -48 -54 1k
20H 10H 08H 04H 02H 01H
-18 -24 -30 -36 -42 -48
20H 10H 08H 04H 02H 01H
f-3dB = 30kHz, R = 200k
10k 100k FREQUENCY - Hz
1M
-54 1k
10k FREQUENCY - Hz
100k
TPC 18. Gain vs. Frequency vs. Code RAB = 50 kW
NORMALIZED GAIN FLATNESS - 0.1dB/DIV 0dB
TPC 19. Gain vs. Frequency vs. Code RAB = 200 kW
600 500 600 500 CODE FFH 400
ILOGIC - A
TPC 20. -3 dB Bandwidth
CODE = 80H VDD/V SS = 5V TA = 25 C R = 20k
CODE = 80H, VA = VDD, VB = 0V -PSRR @ VDD = 5V DC 10% p-p AC
400
PSRR - dB
R = 200k
300 VDD/V SS = 200 VDD/V SS = +5V/0V 100 CODE 55H 0 10k 5V
300 200 100 0 100
R = 50k
+PSRR @ VDD = 1k
5V DC
10% p-p AC
100
1k 10k FREQUENCY - Hz
100k
100k 1M FREQUENCY - Hz
10M
10k 100k FREQUENCY - Hz
1M
TPC 21. Normalized Gain Flatness vs. Frequency
TPC 22. ILOGIC vs. Frequency
TPC 23. PSRR vs. Frequency
20mV/DIV 10mV/DIV 5V/DIV
5V/DIV 5V/DIV 1 s/DIV 20 s/DIV 40ns/DIV
TPC 24. Mid-Scale Glitch Energy, Code 80H to 7FH
TPC 25. Large Signal Settling Time
TPC 26. Digital Feedthrough vs. Time
-12-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
CHANGE IN TERMINAL RESISTANCE - %
100 VA = VB = OPEN TA = 25 C 0.10
THEORETICAL IWB_MAX - mA
CODE = 80H VDD = VSS = 5V 0.05 SS = 135 UNITS 0
40 CODE SET TO MID-SCALE TA = 150 C 3 LOTS SAMPLE SIZE = 135
10
AVG -3
FREQUENCY
30
1
RAB = 20k
-0.05 -0.10
AVG
20
0.1
RAB = 50k
AVG +3 -0.15 -0.20 0
10
0.01 0
RAB = 200k 32 64 96 128 160 192 224 256 CODE - Decimal
0
50 100 150 200 250 300 350 400 450 500 HOURS OF OPERATION AT 150 C
-0.50 -0.40 -0.30 -0.20 -0.10 0 0.10 0.20 CHANNEL-TO-CHANNEL RAB MATCH - %
TPC 27. IMAX vs. Code
TPC 28. Long-Term Resistance Drift
TPC 29. Channel-to-Channel Resistance Matching (AD5262)
TEST CIRCUITS
Test Circuits 1 to 9 define the test conditions used in the product specification table.
VA
DUT A V B W VMS V+ = VDD 1LSB = V+/2N
V+ = VDD 10% VDD V+ B PSRR (dB) = 20 LOG A W PSS (%/%) = VMS VMS% VDD%
(
VMS VDD
)
Test Circuit 1. Potentiometer Divider Nonlinearity Error (INL, DNL)
NC DUT A B VMS W NC = NO CONNECT IW
Test Circuit 4. Power Supply Sensitivity (PSS, PSSR)
A VIN OFFSET GND W DUT AD8610 B -13V VOUT +13V
Test Circuit 5. Gain vs. Frequency Test Circuit 2. Resistor Position Nonlinearity Error (Rheostat Operation; R-INL, R-DNL)
DUT A VMS2 B VMS1 RW = [VMS1 - VMS2]/I W
A = NC RSW = 0.1V ISW
DUT W
CODE = 00H ISW VSS TO VDD 0.1V
W
VW
I W = VDD /R NOMINAL
B
Test Circuit 3. Wiper Resistance
Test Circuit 6. Incremental ON Resistance
NC VDD DUT VSS GND ICM
A B
W
VCM
NC
Test Circuit 7. Common-Mode Leakage Current
REV. 0
-13-
AD5260/AD5262
TEST CIRCUITS (continued)
VLOGIC I LOGIC CS CLK SDI DIGITAL INPUT VOLTAGE C GND VDD SS CS CLK SDI D = 80H GND VSS -5.0V VDD 2.5V p-p SCLK MOSI +5.0V 5V p-p
Figure 13. Bipolar Operation from Dual Supplies
Gain Control Compensation
Test Circuit 8. VLOGIC Current vs. Digital Input Voltage
NC VDD DUT VSS GND ICM
Digital potentiometers are commonly used in gain control as in the noninverting gain amplifier shown in Figure 14.
C2 4.7pF R2 200k B A R1 47k C1 25pF W
A B
W
VCM
NC
Test Circuit 9. Analog Crosstalk
U1
Vi
VO
Figure 14. Typical Noninverting Gain Amplifier
PROGRAMMING THE POTENTIOMETER DIVIDER Voltage Output Operation
The digital potentiometer easily generates output voltages at wiperto-B and wiper-to-A to be proportional to the input voltage at A-to-B. Ignore the effect of the wiper resistance at the moment. For example, connecting A-terminal to 5 V and B-terminal to ground produces an output voltage at the wiper-to-B starting at zero volts up to 1 LSB less than 5 V. Each LSB of voltage is equal to the voltage applied across terminal AB divided by the 256 position of the potentiometer divider. Since the AD5260/AD5262 operates from dual supplies, the general equation defining the output voltage at VW with respect to ground for any given input voltage applied to terminals AB is: D (3) VW ( D ) = VAB + VB 256 Operation of the digital potentiometer in the divider mode results in more accurate operation over temperature. Unlike the rheostat mode, the output voltage is dependent on the ratio of the internal resistors RWA and RWB and not the absolute values; therefore, the drift reduces to 5 ppm/C.
APPLICATIONS Bipolar DC or AC Operation from Dual Supplies
Notice that when the RDAC B terminal parasitic capacitance is connected to the op amp noninverting node, it introduces a zero for the 1/bO term with +20 dB/dec, whereas a typical op amp GBP has -20 dB/dec characteristics. A large R2 and finite C1 can cause this Zero's frequency to fall well below the crossover frequency. Hence the rate of closure becomes 40 dB/dec and the system has 0 phase margin at the crossover frequency. The output may ring or oscillate if the input is a rectangular pulse or step function. Similarly, it is also likely to ring when switching between two gain values because this is equivalent to a step change at the input. Depending on the op amp GBP, reducing the feedback resistor may extend the Zero's frequency far enough to overcome the problem. A better approach, however, is to include a compensation capacitor C2 to cancel the effect caused by C1. Optimum compensation occurs when R1 C1 = R2 C2. This is not an option because of the variation of R2. As a result, one may use the relationship above and scale C2 as if R2 is at its maximum value. Doing so may overcompensate and compromise the performance slightly when R2 is set at low values. However, it will avoid the ringing or oscillation at the worst case. For critical applications, C2 should be found empirically to suit the need. In general, C2 in the range of a few pF to no more than a few tenths of pF is usually adequate for the compensation. Similarly, there are W and A terminal capacitances connected to the output (not shown). Fortunately their effect at this node is less significant, and the compensation can be avoided in most cases.
Programmable Voltage Reference
The AD5260/AD5262 can be operated from dual supplies enabling control of ground referenced AC signals or bipolar operation. The AC signal, as high as VDD/VSS, can be applied directly across terminals A-B with output taken from terminal W. See Figure 13 for a typical circuit connection.
For voltage divider mode operation, Figure 15, it is common to buffer the output of the digital potentiometer unless the load is much larger than RWB. Not only does the buffer serve the purpose of impedance conversion, but it also allows a heavier load to be driven.
-14-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
5V 1 VIN U1
AD5260
VOUT 3 A B W
5V
Similar to the previous example, in the simpler (and much more usual) case, where K = 1, a single digital pot AD5260, and U1 is replaced by a matched pair of resistors to apply Vi and - Vi at the ends of the digital pot. The relationship becomes:
VO
GND 2 AD1582
AD8601
A1
E R 2 E 2 D2 VO = A1 + - 1 Vi R1 A 256 E E
(6)
If R2 is large, a few picofarad compensation capacitors may be needed to avoid any gain peaking. Table VIII shows the result of adjusting D, with A2 configured as a unity gain, a gain of 2, and a gain of 10. The result is a bipolar amplifier with linearly programmable gain and 256-step resolution.
Table VIII. Result of Bipolar Gain Amplifier
Figure 15. Programmable Voltage Reference
8-Bit Bipolar DAC
Figure 16 shows a low cost 8-bit bipolar DAC. It offers the same number of adjustable steps but not the precision of conventional DACs. The linearity and temperature coefficients, especially at low values codes, are skewed by the effects of the digital potentiometer wiper resistance. The output of this circuit is: E 2D VO = A - 1 VREF E 256
+5V
D 0 64 128 192 255
R1 = *, R2 = 0 -1 -0.5 0 0.5 0.968
R1 = R2 -2 -1 0 1 1.937
R2 = 9R1 -10 -5 0 5 9.680
(4)
AD5260
Vi U1 VIN VOUT TRIM GND ADR425 +5VREF R W1 U2 W B A R +5V 5VREF A2 -5V
OP2177
VO
Programmable Voltage Source with Boosted Output
For applications that require high current adjustment such as a laser diode driver or turnable laser, a boosted voltage source can be considered (see Figure 18).
Vi VO R1 A W B 10k P1 CC N1 RBIAS
OP2177
A1
5V
-5V
U1
Figure 16. 8-Bit Bipolar DAC
Bipolar Programmable Gain Amplifier
A1
SIGNAL LO
IL
For applications that require bipolar gain, Figure 17 shows one implementation. Digital potentiometer U1 sets the adjustment range. The wiper voltage at W2 can therefore be programmed between Vi and -KVi at a given U2 setting. Configuring A2 in the noninverting mode allows linear gain and attenuation. The transfer function is:
VO E R 2 E D2 = 1+ (1 + K ) - K Vi A R1 A 256 E E
U1= AD5260 A1= AD8601, AD8605, AD8541 P1= FDP360P, NDS9430 N1= FDV301N, 2N7002
Figure 18. Programmable Boosted Voltage Source
(5)
where K is the ratio of RWB1/RWA1 set by U1.
VDD U2
AD5262
W2 A2 A1 B2 B1 W1 U1 VDD -KVi
OP2177
A2 VSS C1 R2
VO
Vi
R1
AD5262
OP2177
A1
In this circuit, the inverting input of the op amp forces the VO to be equal to the wiper voltage set by the digital potentiometer. The load current is then delivered by the supply via the P-Ch FET P1. The N-Ch FET N1 simplifies the op amp driving requirement. A1 needs to be the rail-to-rail input type. Resistor R1 is needed to prevent P1 from not turning off once it is on. The choice of R1 is a balance between the power loss of this resistor and the output turnoff time. N1 can be any general-purpose signal FET; on the other hand, P1 is driven in the saturation state, and therefore its power handling must be adequate to dissipate (Vi - VO) IL power. This circuit can source a maximum of 100 mA at 5 V supply. Higher current can be achieved with P1 in a larger package. Note, a single N-Ch FET can replace P1, N1, and R1 altogether. However, the output swing will be limited unless separate power supplies are used. For precision application, a voltage reference such as ADR423, ADR292, and AD1584 can be applied at the input of the digital potentiometer.
Programmable 4-to-20 mA Current Source
VSS
Figure 17. Bipolar Programmable Gain Amplifier
A programmable 4-to-20 mA current source can be implemented with the circuit shown in Figure 19. REF191 is a unique low supply headroom and high current handling precision reference -15-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
that can deliver 20 mA at 2.048 V. The load current is simply the voltage across terminals B-to-W of the digital pot divided by RS.
IL = VREF D RS
5V 2 U1 VIN REF191 SLEEP GND 4 VOUT 6 0 TO (2.048 C1 1F VL) BW A +5V U2 -2.048V TO VL
Programmable Low-Pass Filter
(7)
Digital potentiometer AD5262 can be used to construct a second order Sallen Key Low-Pass Filter (see Figure 21). The design equations are:
VO = Vi wO wO 2 S2 + S + wO Q
2
(9)
3
wO = Q=
- + -5V RL 100 RS 102 VL IL
1 R1R2C1C 2
(10) (11)
AD5260
1 1 + R1C1 R2C 2
OP1177
Users can first select some convenient values for the capacitors. To achieve maximally flat bandwidth where Q = 0.707, let C1 be twice the size of C2 and let R1 = R2. As a result, users can adjust R1 and R2 to the same settings to achieve the desirable bandwidth.
C1
Figure 19. Programmable 4-to-20 mA Current Source
+2.5V R1 Vi A B W R R C2 A R2 B W
The circuit is simple, but be aware that dual-supply op amps are ideal because the ground potential of REF191 can swing from -2.048 V at zero scale to VL at full scale of the potentiometer setting. Although the circuit works under single supply, the programmable resolution of the system will be reduced.
Programmable Bidirectional Current Source
AD8601
VO
-2.5V
For applications that require bidirectional current control or higher voltage compliance, a Howland current pump can be a solution (see Figure 20). If the resistors are matched, the load current is:
IL =
ADJUSTED TO SAME SETTINGS
Figure 21. Sallen Key Low-Pass Filter
Programmable Oscillator
(R2 A + R2B) /R1 V
R2 B
W
(8)
R1 150k R2 15k
C1 10pF +15V C2 10pF +15V A R1 150k RL 50 VL RL 500 IL A2
In a classic Wien-bridge oscillator, Figure 22, the Wien network (R, R', C, C') provides positive feedback, while R1 and R2 provide negative feedback. At the resonant frequency, fo, the overall phase shift is zero, and the positive feedback causes the circuit to oscillate. With R = R', C = C', and R2 = R2A//(R2B+ RDIODE), the oscillation frequency is: wO = 1 RC or fO = 1 2pRC (12)
+5V
AD8016
where R is equal to RWA such that: 256 - D R AB (13) 256 At resonance, setting R2 =2 (14) R1 balances the bridge. In practice, R2/R1 should be set slightly larger than 2 to ensure the oscillation can start. On the other hand, the alternate turn-on of the diodes D1 and D2 ensures R2/R1 to be smaller than 2 momentarily and therefore stabilizes the oscillation. R= Once the frequency is set, the oscillation amplitude can be tuned by R2B since: 2 V = I D R2B + VD 3O (15)
AD5260
B -5V
-15V R2A 14.95k
W
OP2177
A1 -15V
Figure 20. Programmable Bidirectional Current Source
-16-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
VO, ID, and VD are interdependent variables. With proper selection of R2B, an equilibrium will be reached such that VO converges. R2B can be in series with a discrete resistor to increase the amplitude, but the total resistance cannot be too large to saturate the output. In both circuits in Figures 21 and 22, the frequency tuning requires that both RDACs be adjusted to the same settings. Since the two channels will be adjusted one at a time, an intermediate state will occur that may not be acceptable for certain applications. As a result, different devices can also be used in daisy-chained mode so that parts can be programmed to the same setting simultaneously.
FREQUENCY ADJUSTMENT VP C 2.2nF B R 10k A W C 2.2nF +5V R 10k A W B
A
R2
R1
W
B R2 << R1
Figure 24. Lowering the Nominal Resistance
Figures 23 and 24 show that the digital potentiometers change steps linearly. On the other hand, log taper adjustment is usually preferred in applications like audio control. Figure 25 shows another way of resistance scaling. In this circuit, the smaller the R2 with respect to RAB, the more the pseudo-log taper characteristic behaves.
Vi VO A R1 B W R2 VO
OP1177
U1
AD5262
R1 = R1 = R2B = AD5262 D1 = D2 = 1N4148 VN -5V R2A 2.1k A D1 D2
R2B 10k R1 1k B W
AMPLITUDE ADJUSTMENT
Figure 25. Resistor Scaling with Log Adjustment Characteristics
RDAC CIRCUIT SIMULATION MODEL
Figure 22. Programmable Oscillator with Amplitude Control
Resistance Scaling
The AD5260/AD5262 offer 20 kW, 50 kW, and 200 kW nominal resistance. For users who need lower resistance and still maintain the numbers of step adjustment, they can parallel multiple devices. For example, Figure 23 shows a simple scheme of paralleling both channels of the AD5262. To adjust half of the resistance linearly per step, users need to program both channels coherently with the same settings.
VDD
The internal parasitic capacitances and the external capacitive loads dominate the ac characteristics of the RDACs. Configured as a potentiometer divider, the -3 dB bandwidth of the AD5260 (20 kW resistor) measures 310 kHz at half scale. TPC 20 provides the large signal BODE plot characteristics of the three available resistor versions 20 kW, 50 kW, and 200 kW. A parasitic simulation model is shown in Figure 26. Listing I provides a macro model net list for the 20 kW RDAC.
RDAC 20k A CA 25pF 55pF CW B CB 25pF
A1 B1 W1
A2
W
W2 B2
Figure 26. RDAC Circuit Simulation Model for RDAC = 20 kW
Listing I. Macro Model Net List for RDAC PARAM D=256, RDAC=20E3 * SUBCKT DPOT (A,W,B) * CA A 0 25E-12 RWA A W {(1-D/256)*RDAC+60} CW W 0 55E-12 RWB W B {D/256*RDAC+60} CB B 0 25E-12 * .ENDS DPOT
LD
Figure 23. Reduce Resistance by Half with Linear Adjustment Characteristics
In voltage divider mode, a much lower resistance can be achieved by paralleling a discrete resistor as shown in Figure 24. The equivalent resistance becomes: R WB _ eq = D (R1 R2) + R W 256 (16)
E D R WA _ eq = A1 (R1 R2) + R W 256 E
(17)
REV. 0
-17-
AD5260/AD5262
DIGITAL POTENTIOMETER FAMILY SELECTION GUIDE1 Part Number AD5201 Number of VRs per Package 1 Terminal Voltage Range (V) 3, 5.5 Interface Data Control 3-Wire Nominal Resistance (k ) 10, 50 Resolution Power Supply (No. of Wiper Current Positions) (IDD) ( A) Packages 33 40 mSOIC-10
Comments Full AC Specs, Dual Supply, Power-OnReset, Low Cost No Rollover, Power-On-Reset Single 28 V or Dual 15 V Supply Operation Full AC Specs, Dual Supply, Power-On-Reset Full AC Specs 5 V to 15 V or 5 V Operation, TC < 50 ppm/C I2C Compatible, TC < 50 ppm/C Nonvolatile Memory, Direct Program, I/D, 6 dB settability No Rollover, Stereo, Power-On-Reset, TC < 50 ppm/C Full AC Specs, nA Shutdown Current Full AC Specs, Dual Supply, Power-OnReset, SDO Nonvolatile Memory, Direct Program, I/D, 6 dB Settability Nonvolatile Memory, Direct Program, TC < 50 ppm/C I2C Compatible, TC < 50 ppm/C 5 V to 15 V or 5 V Operation, TC < 50 ppm/C
AD5220 AD7376
1 1
5.5 15, 28
UP/DOWN 3-Wire
10, 50, 100 10, 50, 100, 1000 10, 50
128 128
40 100
PDIP, SO-8, mSOIC-8 PDIP-14, SOL-16, TSSOP-14 mSOIC-10 SO-8 TSSOP-14
AD5200 AD8400 AD5260
1 1 1
3, 5.5 5.5 5, 15
3-Wire 3-Wire 3-Wire
256
40 5 60
1, 10, 50, 100 256 20, 50, 200 256
AD5241 AD5231
1 1
3, 5.5 2.75, 5.5
2-Wire 3-Wire
10, 100, 1000 10, 50, 100
256 1024
50 20
SO-14, TSSOP-14 TSSOP-16
AD5222
2
3, 5.5
UP/DOWN
10, 50, 100, 1000 1, 10, 50, 100 10, 50, 100
128
80
SO-14, TSSOP-14 PDIP, SO-14, TSSOP-14 TSSOP-14
AD8402 AD5207
2 2
5.5 3, 5.5
3-Wire 3-Wire
256 256
5 40
AD5232
2
2.75, 5.5
3-Wire
10, 50, 100
256
20
TSSOP-16
AD52352
2
2.75, 5.5
3-Wire
25, 250
1024
20
TSSOP-16
AD5242 AD5262
2 2
3, 5.5 5, 15
2-Wire 3-Wire
10, 100, 1000 20, 50, 200
256 256
50 60
SO-16, TSSOP-16 TSSOP-16
AD5203 AD5233
4 4
5.5 2.75, 5.5
3-Wire 3-Wire
10, 100 10, 50, 100
64 64
5 20
PDIP, SOL-24, Full AC Specs, nA TSSOP-24 Shutdown Current TSSOP-24 Nonvolatile Memory, Direct Program, I/D, 6 dB Settability
AD5204 AD8403 AD5206
1 2
4 4 6
3, 5.5 5.5 3, 5.5
3-Wire 3-Wire 3-Wire
10, 50, 100
256
60 5 60
PDIP, SOL-24, Full AC Specs, Dual TSSOP-24 Supply, Power-On-Reset PDIP, SOL-24, Full AC Specs, nA TSSOP-24 Shutdown Current PDIP, SOL-24, Full AC Specs, Dual TSSOP-24 Supply, Power-On-Reset
1, 10, 50, 100 256 10, 50, 100 256
For the most current information on digital potentiometers, check the website at: www.analog.com/DigitalPotentiometers Future product, consult factory for latest status.
-18-
REV. 0
AD5260/AD5262
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
Dimensions shown in inches and (mm).
14-Lead TSSOP (RU-14)
0.201 (5.10) 0.193 (4.90)
14
8
0.177 (4.50) 0.169 (4.30) 0.256 (6.50) 0.246 (6.25)
1 7
PIN 1 0.006 (0.15) 0.002 (0.05) 0.0433 (1.10) MAX
SEATING PLANE
0.0256 (0.65) BSC
0.0118 (0.30) 0.0075 (0.19)
0.0079 (0.20) 0.0035 (0.090)
8 0
0.028 (0.70) 0.020 (0.50)
16-Lead TSSOP (RU-16)
0.201 (5.10) 0.193 (4.90)
16
9
0.177 (4.50) 0.169 (4.30) 0.256 (6.50) 0.246 (6.25)
1 8
PIN 1 0.006 (0.15) 0.002 (0.05) 0.0433 (1.10) MAX
SEATING PLANE
8 0.0256 (0.65) 0.0118 (0.30) 0.0079 (0.20) 0 BSC 0.0075 (0.19) 0.0035 (0.090)
0.028 (0.70) 0.020 (0.50)
REV. 0
-19-
-20-
C02695-0-3/02(0)
PRINTED IN U.S.A.


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