LTC1402
U
W U U
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
15mW. The internal reference remains powered in Nap
mode. One or more rising edges at SCK wake up the
LTC1402 for service very quickly, and CONV can start an
accurateconversionwithinaclockcycle.Fourrisingedges
at CONV, without any intervening rising edges at SCK, put
the LTC1402 in Sleep mode and the power drain drops
from 90mW to 10µW. One or more rising edges at SCK
wake up theLTC1402foroperation. The internalreference
(VREF) takes 2ms to slew and settle with a 10µF load, and
the REFREADY bit in the DOUT stream takes an additional
10mstogohighafterthereferenceoutputPin5(VREF)has
finished slewing. Note that, using sleep mode more fre-
quently than every 2ms, compromises the settled accu-
racy of the internal reference. Figure 12 shows the power
consumption versus the conversion rate. Note that, for
slower conversion rates, the Nap and Sleep modes can be
used for substantial reductions in power consumption.
CONV at Pin 16
The rising edge of CONV starts a conversion but subse-
quent rising edges at CONV, during the following 14 SCK
cycles of conversion, are ignored by the LTC1402. The
duty cycle of CONV can be arbitrarily chosen to be used as
a frame sync signal for the processor serial port. A simple
approach to generate CONV is to create a pulse that is one
SCK wide to drive the LTC1402 and then buffer this signal
withtheappropriatenumberofinverterstodrivetheframe
sync input of the processor serial port. It is good practice
todrivetheLTC1402CONVinputfirsttoavoiddigitalnoise
interferenceduringthesample-to-holdtransitiontriggered
by CONV at the start of conversion. Another point to con-
sider is the level of jitter in the CONV signal if the input
signals have fast transients or sinewaves. Some proces-
sors can be programmed to generate a convenient frame
sync pulse at their serial port, but often this signal is de-
rived from a jittery processor phase locked loop clock
multiplier. Thisistrueevenifalowjittercrystalclockisthe
reference for the processor clock multiplier.
100
V
CURRENT
DD
DUAL ±5V
V
CURRENT
DD
SINGLE 5V
10
1
SCK at Pin 15
V
CURRENT
DD
The rising edge of SCK advances the conversion process
and also udpates each bit in the DOUT data stream. After
CONV rises, the second rising edge of SCK sends out the
REFREADY bit. Subsequent edges send out the 12 data
bits, with the MSB sent first. A simple approach is to
generate SCK to drive the LTC1402 and then buffer this
signalwiththeappropriatenumberofinverterstodrivethe
serial clock input of the processor serial port. The rising
edge of SCK is guaranteed to coincide with stable data at
DOUT. It is good practice to drive the LTC1402 SCK input
first to avoid digital noise interference during the internal
bit comparison decision by the internal high speed com-
parator. Unlike the CONV input, the SCK input is not
sensitive to jitter because the input signal is already
sampled and held constant.
NAP MODE
V
CURRENT
DD
SLEEP MODE
0.1
V
CURRENT
SINGLE 5V
SS
V
CURRENT
0.01
SS
DUAL ±5V
0.001
0.01
0.1
1
10
SAMPLE RATE (MHz)
1402 F12
Figure 12. Power Consumption vs Sample Rate
in Normal Mode, Nap Mode and Sleep Mode
DIGITAL INTERFACE
The LTC1402 has a 3-wire SPI (Serial Protocol Interface)
interface. The SCK and CONV inputs and DOUT output
implementthisinterface.TheSCKandCONVinputsareTTL
compatibleandalsoacceptswingsfrom3Vor5Vlogic.The
amplitude of DOUT can easily produce 5V logic or 3V logic
swings by tying the independent output supply OVDD
(Pin11) tothesamesupplyassystemlogic. Adetailedde-
scription of the three serial port signals follows.
DOUT at Pin 10
Upon power-up, the DOUT output is automatically reset to
thehighimpedancestate.TheDOUT outputremainsinhigh
impedance until a new conversion is started. DOUT sends
out13bitsintheoutputdatastreamafterthesecondrising
edge of SCK after the start of conversion with the rising
16