LMH6583 LMH6583 16x8 550 MHz Analog Crosspoint Switch, Gain of 2 Literature Number: SNOSAP5D LMH6583 16x8 550 MHz Analog Crosspoint Switch, Gain of 2 General Description Features The LMH(R) family of products is joined by the LMH6583, a high speed, non-blocking, analog, crosspoint switch. The LMH6583 is designed for high speed, DC coupled, analog signals like high resolution video (UXGA and higher). The LMH6583 has 16 inputs and 8 outputs. The non-blocking architecture allows an output to be connected to any input, including an input that is already selected. With fully buffered inputs the LMH6583 can be impedance matched to nearly any source impedance. The buffered outputs of the LMH6583 can drive up to two back terminated video loads (75 load). The outputs and inputs also feature high impedance inactive states allowing high performance input and output expansion for array sizes such as 16 x 16 or 32 x 8 by combining two devices. The LMH6583 is controlled with a 4 pin serial interface. Both single serial mode and addressed chain modes are available. The LMH6583 comes in a 64-pin thermally enhanced TQFP package. It also has diagonally symmetrical pin assignments to facilitate double sided board layouts and easy pin connections for expansion. 16 inputs and 8 outputs 64-pin exposed pad TQFP package -3 dB bandwidth (VOUT = 2 VPP, RL = 1 k) 550 MHz -3 dB bandwidth (VOUT = 2 VPP,RL = 150) 450 MHz Fast slew rate 1800 V/s Channel to channel crosstalk (10/ 100 MHz) -70/ -52 dBc All Hostile Crosstalk (10/ 100 MHz) -55/-45 dBc Easy to use serial programming 4 wire bus Two programming modes Serial & addressed modes Symmetrical pinout facilitates expansion. Output current 60 mA Gainf of 1 version also available LMH6582 Applications Studio monitoring/production video systems Conference room multimedia video systems KVM (keyboard video mouse) systems Security/surveillance systems Multi antenna diversity radio Video test equipment Medical imaging Wide-band routers & switches Block Diagram Connection Diagram 20150411 20150402 LMH(R) is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation. TRI-STATE(R) is a registered trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation. (c) 2007 National Semiconductor Corporation 201504 www.national.com LMH6583 16x8 550 MHz Analog Crosspoint Switch, Gain of 2 August 2007 LMH6583 Storage Temperature Range Soldering Information Infrared or Convection (20 sec.) Wave Soldering (10 sec.) Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 1) If Military/Aerospace specified devices are required, please contact the National Semiconductor Sales Office/ Distributors for availability and specifications. ESD Tolerance (Note 2) Human Body Model Machine Model VS IIN (Input Pins) IOUT Input Voltage Range Maximum Junction Temperature Operating Ratings 2000V 200V 6V 20 mA (Note 3) V- to V+ +150C 3.3V Electrical Characteristics -65C to +150C 235C 260C (Note 1) Temperature Range (Note 4) Supply Voltage Range -40C to +85C 3V to 5.5V JA 27C/W Thermal Resistance 64-Pin Exposed Pad TQFP JC 0.82C/W (Note 5) Unless otherwise specified, typical conditions are: TA = 25C, AV = +2, VS = 3.3V, RL = 100; Boldface limits apply at the temperature extremes. Symbol Parameter Conditions Min (Note 8) Typ (Note 7) Max (Note 8) Units Frequency Domain Performance SSBW -3 dB Bandwidth LSBW VOUT = 0.5 VPP 425 VOUT = 2 VPP, RL = 1 k 500 VOUT = 2 VPP, RL = 150 450 80 MHz GF 0.1 dB Gain Flatness VOUT = 2 VPP, RL = 150 DG Differential Gain RL = 150, 3.58 MHz/ 4.43 MHz 0.05 % DP Differential Phase RL = 150, 3.58 MHz/ 4.43 MHz 0.05 deg MHz Time Domain Response tr Rise Time 2V Step, 10% to 90% 1.7 ns tf Fall Time 2V Step, 10% to 90% 1.4 ns OS Overshoot 2V Step 4 % SR Slew Rate 4 VPP, 40% to 60% (Note 6) 1700 V/s ts Settling Time 2V Step, VOUT within 0.5% 9 ns Distortion And Noise Response HD2 2nd Harmonic Distortion 2 VPP, 10 MHz -76 dBc HD3 3rd 2 VPP, 10 MHz -76 dBc en Input Referred Voltage Noise >1 MHz 12 nV/ in Input Referred Noise Current >1 MHz 2 pA/ Harmonic Distortion Switching Time 16 ns XTLK Crosstalk All Hostile, f = 100 MHz -45 dBc ISOL Off Isolation f = 100 MHz -60 dBc Static, DC Performance AV Gain 2.00 2.014 VOS TCVOS Output Offset Voltage 3 17 Output Offset Voltage Average Drift (Note 10) 38 IB Input Bias Current Non-Inverting (Note 9) -5 A TCIB Input Bias Current Average Drift Non-Inverting (Note 10) -12 nA/C VO Output Voltage Range RL = 100 1.75 2.1 V VO Output Voltage Range RL = (Note 11) +2.1 -2.05 2.2 V PSRR Power Supply Rejection Ratio 45 dB ICC Positive Supply Current www.national.com 1.986 RL = 98 2 mV V/C 120 mA IEE Parameter Conditions Min (Note 8) Typ (Note 7) Max (Note 8) Units Negative Supply Current RL = 92 115 mA Tri State Supply Current RST Pin > 2.0V 17 25 mA 100 Miscellaneous Performance RIN Input Resistance Non-Inverting CIN Input Capacitance Non-Inverting RO Output Resistance Enabled Closed Loop, Enabled RO Output Resistance Disabled Disabled CMVR Input Common Mode Voltage Range IO Output Current 1100 Sourcing, VO = 0 V k 1 pF 300 m 1300 1450 1.3 V 50 mA Digital Control VIH Input Voltage High 2.0 V VIL Input Voltage Low VOH Output Voltage High >2.2 VOL Output Voltage Low <0.4 V TS Setup Time 7 ns TH Hold Time 7 ns 0.8 5V Electrical Characteristics V V (Note 5) Unless otherwise specified, typical conditions are: TA = 25C, AV = +2, VS = 5V, RL = 100; Boldface limits apply at the temperature extremes. Symbol Parameter Conditions Min (Note 8) Typ (Note 7) Max (Note 8) Units Frequency Domain Performance SSBW -3 dB Bandwidth LSBW VOUT = 0.5 VPP 475 VOUT = 2 VPP, RL = 1 k 550 MHz VOUT = 2 VPP, RL = 150 450 GF 0.1 dB Gain Flatness VOUT = 2 VPP, RL = 150 100 DG Differential Gain RL = 150, 3.58 MHz/ 4.43 MHz 0.04 % DP Differential Phase RL = 150, 3.58 MHz/ 4.43 MHz 0.04 deg MHz Time Domain Response tr Rise Time 2V Step, 10% to 90% 1.4 ns tf Fall Time 2V Step, 10% to 90% 1.3 ns OS Overshoot 2V Step 2 % SR Slew Rate 6 VPP, 40% to 60% (Note 6) 1800 V/s ts Settling Time 2V Step, VOUT Within 0.5% 7 ns Distortion And Noise Response HD2 2nd Harmonic Distortion 2 VPP, 5 MHz -80 dBc HD3 3rd 2 VPP, 5 MHz -70 dBc en Input Referred Voltage Noise >1 MHz 12 nV/ in Input Referred Noise Current >1 MHz 2 pA/ Harmonic Distortion Switching Time XTLK Cross Talk ISOL Off Isolation 15 ns All Hostile, f = 100 MHz -45 dBc Channel to Channel, f = 100 MHz -52 dBc f = 100 MHz -65 dBc Static, DC Performance AV Gain LMH6583 1.986 3 2.00 2.014 www.national.com LMH6583 Symbol LMH6583 Symbol Parameter Conditions Min (Note 8) Typ (Note 7) Max (Note 8) 2 17 Input Referred Units VOS Offset Voltage TCVOS Output Offset Voltage Average Drift (Note 10) mV IB Input Bias Current Non-Inverting (Note 9) -5 TCIB Input Bias Current Average Drift Non-Inverting (Note 10) -12 nA/C VO Output Voltage Range RL = 100 +3.3 -3.4 3.6 V VO Output Voltage Range RL = 3.7 3.9 V PSRR Power Supply Rejection Ratio DC 42 45 dB XTLK DC Crosstalk DC, Channel to Channel -58 -90 dB ISOL DC Off Isloation DC -60 -90 dB ICC Positive Supply Current RL = 110 130 mA IEE Negative Supply Current RL = 104 124 mA Tri State Supply Current RST Pin > 2.0V 22 30 mA 38 V/C -12 A Miscellaneous Performance RIN Input Resistance Non-Inverting 100 k CIN Input Capacitance Non-Inverting 1 pF RO Output Resistance Enabled Closed Loop, Enabled 300 m RO Output Resistance Disabled Disabled, Resistance to Ground CMVR Input Common Mode Voltage Range IO Output Current Sourcing, VO = 0 V 1100 60 1300 1450 3.0 V 70 mA Digital Control VIH Input Voltage High VIL Input Voltage Low 2.0 V VOH Output Voltage High >2.4 V VOL Output Voltage Low <0.4 V TS Setup Time 5 ns TH Hold Time 5 ns 0.8 V Note 1: Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. Operating Ratings indicate conditions for which the device is intended to be functional, but specific performance is not guaranteed. For guaranteed specifications, see the Electrical Characteristics tables. Note 2: Human Body Model, applicable std. MIL-STD-883, Method 3015.7. Machine Model, applicable std. JESD22-A115-A (ESD MM std. of JEDEC) Field-Induced Charge-Device Model, applicable std. JESD22-C101-C (ESD FICDM std. of JEDEC). Note 3: The maximum output current (IOUT) is determined by device power dissipation limitations. Note 4: The maximum power dissipation is a function of TJ(MAX)and JA. The maximum allowable power dissipation at any ambient temperature is PD = (TJ(MAX) - TA)/ JA. All numbers apply for packages soldered directly onto a PC Board. Note 5: Electrical Table values apply only for factory testing conditions at the temperature indicated. No guarantee of parametric performance is indicated in the electrical tables under conditions different than those tested. Note 6: Slew Rate is the average of the rising and falling edges. Note 7: Typical values represent the most likely parametric norm as determined at the time of characterization. Actual typical values may vary over time and will also depend on the application and configuration. The typical values are not tested and are not guaranteed on shipped production material. Note 8: Room Temperature limits are 100% production tested at 25C. Device self heating results in TJ TA, however, test time is insufficient for TJto reach steady state conditions. Limits over the operating temperature range are guaranteed through correlation using Statistical Quality Control (SQC) methods. Note 9: Negative input current implies current flowing out of the device. Note 10: Drift determined by dividing the change in parameter at temperature extremes by the total temperature change. Note 11: This parameter is guaranteed by design and/or characterization and is not tested in production. Ordering Information Package Part Number Package Marking Transport Media 64-Pin QFP LMH6583YA LMH6583YA 160 Units/Tray www.national.com 4 NSC Drawing VXE64A LMH6583 Typical Performance Characteristics 2 VPP Frequency Response 2 VPP Frequency Response 20150449 20150448 Large Signal Bandwidth Large Signal Bandwidth 20150422 20150423 Small Signal Bandwidth Small Signal Bandwidth 20150424 20150425 5 www.national.com LMH6583 Group Delay Frequency Response 1 k Load 20150445 20150441 2 VPP Pulse Response 2 VPP Pulse Response 20150414 20150413 4 VPP Pulse Response 4 VPP Pulse Response Broadcast 20150416 www.national.com 20150417 6 LMH6583 4 VPP Pulse Response 6 VPP Pulse Response 20150415 20150418 2 VPP Off Isolation 2 VPP Crosstalk 20150420 20150419 2 VPP All Hostile Crosstalk Second Order Distortion (HD2) vs. Frequency 20150421 20150427 7 www.national.com LMH6583 Third Order Distortion (HD3) vs. Frequency Second Order Distortion vs. Frequency 20150426 20150428 Third Order Distortion vs. Frequency No Load Output Swing 20150434 20150429 Positive Swing over Temperature Negative Swing Over Temperature 20150438 www.national.com 20150439 8 LMH6583 No Load Output Swing Positive Swing over Temperature 20150431 20150436 Negative Swing over Temperature Enabled Output Impedance 20150437 20150450 Disabled Output Impedance Switching Time 20150451 20150452 9 www.national.com LMH6583 Application Information INTRODUCTION The LMH6583 is a high speed, fully buffered, non blocking, analog crosspoint switch. Having fully buffered inputs allows the LMH6583 to accept signals from low or high impedance sources without the worry of loading the signal source. The fully buffered outputs will drive 75 or 50 back terminated transmission lines with no external components other than the termination resistor. When disabled, the outputs are in a high impedance state. The LMH6583 can have any input connected to any (or all) output(s). Conversely, a given output can have only one associated input. INPUT AND OUTPUT EXPANSION The LMH6583 has high impedance inactive states for both inputs and outputs allowing maximum flexibility for Crosspoint expansion. In addition the LMH6583 employs diagonal symmetry in pin assignments. The diagonal symmetry makes it easy to use direct pin to pin vias when the parts are mounted on opposite sides of a board. As an example two LMH6583 chips can be combined on one board to form either an 16 x 16 crosspoint or a 32 x 8 crosspoint. To make a 16 x 16 crosspoint all 16 input pins would be tied together (Input 0 on side 1 to input 15 on side 2 and so on) while the 8 output pins on each chip would be left separate. To make the 32 x 8 crosspoint, the 8 outputs would be tied together while all 32 inputs would remain independent. In the 32 x 8 configuration it is important not to have 2 connected outputs active at the same time. With the 16 x 16 configuration, on the other hand, having two connected inputs active is a valid state. Crosspoint expansion as detailed above has the advantage that the signal path has only one crosspoint in it at a time. Expansion methods that have cascaded stages will suffer bandwidth loss far greater than the small loading effect of parallel expansion. Output expansion is very straight forward. Connecting the inputs of two crosspoint switches has a very minor impact on performance. Input expansion requires more planning. As show in Figure 1 and Figure 2 there are two ways to connect the outputs of the crosspoint switches. In Figure 2 the crosspoint switch outputs are connected directly together and share one termination resistor. This is the easiest configuration to implement and has only one drawback. Because the disabled output of the unused crosspoint (only one output can be active at a time) has a small amount of capacitance the frequency response of the active crosspoint will show peaking. This is illustrated in Figure 4 and Figure 5. In most cases this small amount of peaking is not a problem. As illustrated in Figure 1 each crosspoint output can be given its own termination resistor. This results in a frequency response nearly identical to the non expansion case. There is one drawback for the gain of 2 crosspoint, and that is gain error. With a 75 termination resistor the 1250 resistance of the disabled crosspoint output will cause a gain error. In order to counter act this the termination resistors of both crosspoints should be adjusted to approximately 71. This will provide very good matching, but the gain accuracy of the system will now be dependent on the process variations of the crosspoint resistors which have a variability of approximately 20%. www.national.com 20150442 FIGURE 1. Output Expansion 20150443 FIGURE 2. Input Expansion with Shared Termination Resistors 10 LMH6583 20150447 FIGURE 5. Input Expansion Frequency Response DRIVING CAPACITIVE LOADS Capacitive output loading applications will benefit from the use of a series output resistor ROUT. Capacitive loads of 5 pF to 120 pF are the most critical, causing ringing, frequency response peaking and possible oscillation. The chart "Suggested ROUT vs. Cap Load" gives a recommended value for selecting a series output resistor for mitigating capacitive loads. The values suggested in the charts are selected for 0.5 dB or less of peaking in the frequency response. This gives a good compromise between settling time and bandwidth. For applications where maximum frequency response is needed and some peaking is tolerable, the value of ROUT can be reduced slightly from the recommended values. When driving transmission lines the 50 or 75 matching resistor makes the series output resistor unnecessary. 20150444 FIGURE 3. Input Expansion with Separate Termination Resistors USING OUTPUT BUFFERING TO ENHANCE BANDWIDTH AND INCREASE RELIABILITY The LMH6583 crosspoint switch can offer enhanced bandwidth and reliability with the use of external buffers on the outputs. The bandwidth is increased by unloading the outputs and driving a higher impedance. The 1 k load resistor was chosen to provide the best performance on our evaluation board. See the Frequency Response 1 k Load curve in the Typical Performance section for an example of bandwidth achieved with less loading on the outputs. For this technique to provide maximum benefit a very high speed amplifier such as the LMH6703 should be used, as shown in Figure 6 . Besides offering enhanced bandwidth performance using an external buffer provides for greater system reliability. The first advantage is to reduce thermal loading on the crosspoint switch. This reduced die temperature will increase the life of the crosspoint. The second advantage is enhanced ESD reliability. It is very difficult to build high speed devices that can withstand all possible ESD events. With external buffers the crosspoint switch is isolated from ESD events on the external system connectors. 20150446 FIGURE 4. Input Expansion Frequency Response 11 www.national.com LMH6583 DIGITAL CONTROL Block Diagram 20150440 FIGURE 6. Buffered Output In the example in Figure 6the resistor RL is required to provide a load for the crosspoint output buffer. Without RLexcessive frequency response peaking is likely and settling times of transient signals will be poor. As the value of RL is reduced the bandwidth will also go down. The amplifier shown in the example is an LMH6703 this amplifier offers high speed and flat bandwidth. Another suitable amplifiers is the LMH6702. The LMH6702 is a faster amplifier that can be used to generate high frequency peaking in order to equalize longer cable lengths. If board space is at a premium the LMH6739 or the LMH6734 are triple selectable gain buffers which require no external resistors. 20150411 FIGURE 7. The LMH6583 has internal control registers that store the programming states of the crosspoint switch. The logic is two staged to allow for maximum programming flexibility. The first stage of the control logic is tied directly to the crosspoint switching matrix. This logic consists of one register for each output that stores the on/off state and the address of which input to connect to. These registers are not directly accessible by the user. The second level of logic is another bank of registers identical to the first, but set up as shift registers. These registers are accessed by the user via the serial input bus. As described further below, there are two modes for programing the LMH6582, Serial Mode and Addressed Mode. The LMH6583 is programmed via a serial input bus with the support of 4 other digital control pins. The Serial bus consists of a clock pin (CLK), a serial data in pin (DIN), and a serial data out pin (DOUT). The serial bus is gated by a chip select pin (CS). The chip select pin is active low. While the chip select pin is high all data on the serial input pin and clock pins is ignored. When the chip select pin is brought low the internal logic is set to begin receiving data by the first positive transition (0 to 1) of the clock signal. The chip select pin must be brought low at least 5 ns before the first rising edge of the clock signal. The first data bit is clocked in on the next negative transition (1 to 0) of the clock signal. All input data is read from the bus on the negative edge of the clock signal. Once the last valid data has been clocked in, the chip select pin must go high then the clock signal must make at least one more low to high transition. Otherwise invalid data will be clocked into the chip. The data clocked into the chip is not transferred to the crosspoint matrix until the CFG pin is pulsed high. This is the case regardless of the state of the Mode pin. The CFG pin is not dependent on the state of the Chip select pin. If no new data is clocked into the chip subsequent pulses on the CFG pin will have no effect on device operation. The programming format of the incoming serial data is selected by the MODE pin. When the mode pin is HIGH the crosspoint can be programmed one output at a time by entering a string of data that contains the address of the output that is going to be changed (Addressed Mode). When the mode pin is LOW the crosspoint is in Serial Mode. In this mode the crosspoint accepts a 40 bit array of data that programs all of the outputs. In both modes the data fed into the chip does not change the chip operation until the Configure CROSSTALK When designing a large system such as a video router crosstalk can be a very serious problem. Extensive testing in our lab has shown that most crosstalk is related to board layout rather than occurring in the crosspoint switch. There are many ways to reduce board related crosstalk. Using controlled impedance lines is an important step. Using well decoupled power and ground planes will help as well. When crosstalk does occur within the crosspoint switch itself it is often due to signals coupling into the power supply pins. Using appropriate supply bypassing will help to reduce this mode of coupling. Another suggestion is to place as much grounded copper as possible between input and output signal traces. Care must be taken, though, not to influence the signal trace impedances by placing shielding copper too closely. One other caveat to consider is that as shielding materials come closer to the signal trace the trace needs to be smaller to keep the impedance from falling too low. Using thin signal traces will result in unacceptable losses due to trace resistance. This effect becomes even more pronounced at higher frequencies due to the skin effect. The skin effect reduces the effective thickness of the trace as frequency increases. Resistive losses make crosstalk worse because as the desired signal is attenuated with higher frequencies crosstalk increases at higher frequencies. www.national.com 12 all 8 outputs of the crosspoint. The data is fed to the chip as shown in the Serial Mode Data Frame tables below (4 tables are required to show the entire data frame). The table is arranged such that the first bit clocked into the crosspoint register is labeled bit number 0. The register labeled Load Register in the block diagram is a shift register. If the chip select pin is left low after the valid data is shifted into the chip and if the clock signal keeps running then additional data will be shifted into the register, and the desired data will be shifted out. Also illustrated is the timing relationships for the digital pins in the Timing Diagram for Serial Mode shown below. It is important to note that all the pin timing relationships are important, not just the data and clock pins. One example is that the Chip Select pin (CS) must transition low before the first rising edge of the clock signal. This allows the internal timing circuits to synchronize to allow data to be accepted on the next falling edge. After the final data bit has been clocked in, the chip select pin must go high, then the clock signal must make at least one more low to high transition. As shown in the timing diagram, the chip select pin state should always occur while the clock signal is low. The configure (CFG) pin timing is not so critical, but it does need to be kept low until all data has been shifted into the crosspoint registers. THREE WIRE VS. FOUR WIRE CONTROl There are two ways to connect the serial data pins. The first way is to control all 4 pins separately, and the second option is to connect the CFG and the CS pins together for a 3 wire interface. The benefit of the 4 wire interface is that the chip can be configured independently of the CS pin. This would be an advantage in a system with multiple crosspoint chips where all of them could be programmed ahead of time and then configured simultaneously. The 4 wire solution is also helpful in a system that has a free running clock on the CLK pin. In this case, the CS pin needs to be brought high after the last valid data bit to prevent invalid data from being clocked into the chip. The three wire option provides the advantage of one less pin to control at the expense of having less flexibility with the configure pin. One way around this loss of flexibility would be If the clock signal is generated by an FPGA or microcontroller where the clock signal can be stopped after the data is clocked in. In this case the Chip select function is provided by the presence or absence of the clock signal. SERIAL PROGRAMMING MODE Serial programming mode is the mode selected by bringing the MODE pin low. In this mode a stream of 40 bits programs 20150409 Timing Diagram for Serial Mode Serial Mode Data Frame (First 2 Words) Output 0 Output 1 Input Address LSB 0 Off = TRI-STATE(R), 1 2 On = 0 Input Address MSB Off = 1 LSB 3 4 5 6 On = 0 7 MSB Off = 1 8 9 Bit 0 is first bit clocked into device. 13 www.national.com LMH6583 pin is pulsed high. The configure and mode pins are independent of the chip select pin. LMH6583 Serial Mode Data Frame (Continued) Output 2 Output 3 Input Address LSB 10 11 12 On = 0 Input Address MSB Off = 1 LSB 13 14 15 16 On = 0 17 MSB Off = 1 18 19 Serial Mode Data Frame (Continued) Output 4 Output 5 Input Address LSB 20 21 22 On = 0 Input Address MSB Off = 1 LSB 23 24 25 26 On = 0 27 MSB Off = 1 28 29 Serial Mode Data Frame (Last 2 Words) Output 6 Output 7 Input Address LSB 30 31 32 On = 0 Input Address MSB Off = 1 LSB 33 34 35 36 On = 0 37 MSB Off = 1 38 39 Bit 39 is last bit clocked into device. important, not just the data and clock pins. One example is that the Chip Select pin (CS) must transition low before the first rising edge of the clock signal. This allows the internal timing circuits to synchronize to allow data to be accepted on the next falling edge. After the final data bit has been clocked in, the chip select pin must go high, then the clock signal must make at least one more low to high transition. As shown in the timing diagram, the chip select pin state should always occur while the clock signal is low. The configure (CFG) pin timing is not so critical, but it does need to be kept low until all data has been shifted into the crosspoint registers. ADDRESSED PROGRAMMING MODE Addressed programming mode makes it possible to change only one output register at a time. To utilize this mode the mode pin must be High. All other pins function the same as in serial programming mode except that the word clocked in is 8 bits and is directed only at the output specified. In addressed mode the data format is shown below in the table titled Addressed Mode Word Format. Also illustrated is the timing relationships for the digital pins in the Timing Diagram for Addressed Mode shown below. It is important to note that all the pin timing relationships are www.national.com 14 LMH6583 20150410 Timing Diagram for Addressed Mode Addressed Mode Word Format Output Address LSB 0 1 Input Address MSB LSB 2 3 TRI-STATE 4 5 MSB 1 = TRI-STATE 0 = On 6 7 Bit 0 is first bit clocked into device. logic 1 level the chip is configured with all outputs disabled and in a high impedance state. The RST pin programs all the registers with input address 0 and all the outputs are turned off. In this configuration the device draws only 20 mA. The reset pin can used as a shutdown function to reduce power consumption. The other special control pin is the broadcast (BCST) pin. The BCST pin is also active high and sets all the outputs to the on state connected to input 0. Both of these pins are level sensitive and require no clock signal. The two special control pins overwrite the contents of the configuration register. DAISY CHAIN OPTION IN SERIAL MODE The LMH6583 supports daisy chaining of the serial data stream between multiple chips. This feature is available only in the Serial programming mode. To use this feature serial data is clocked into the first chip DIN pin, and the next chip DIN pin is connected to the DOUT pin of the first chip. Both chips may share a chip select signal, or the second chip can be enabled separately. When the chip select pin goes low on both chips a double length word is clocked into the first chip. As the first word is clocking into the first chip the second chip is receiving the data that was originally in the shift register of the first chip (invalid data). When a full 40 bits have been clocked into the first chip the next clock cycle begins moving the first frame of the new configuration data into the second chip. With a full 80 clock cycles both chips have valid data and the chip select pin of both chips should be brought high to prevent the data from overshooting. A configure pulse will activate the new configuration on both chips simultaneously, or each chip can be configured separately. The mode, chip select, configure and clock pins of both chips can be tied together and driven from the same sources. THERMAL MANAGEMENT The LMH6583 is packaged in a thermally enhanced Quad Flat Pack package. Even so, it is a high performance device that produces a significant amount of heat. With a 5V supply, the LMH6583 will dissipate approximately 1.1W of idling power with all outputs enabled. Idling power is calculated based on the typical supply current of 110 mA and a 10V supply voltage. This power dissipation will vary within the range of 800 mW to 1.4W due to process variations. In addition, each equivalent video load (150) connected to the outputs should be budgeted 30 mW of power. For a typical application with one video load for each output this would be a total power of 1.14 W. With a typical JA of 27C/W this will result in the silicon being 31C over the ambient temperature. A more aggressive application would be two video loads per output which would SPECIAL CONTROL PINS The LMH6583 has two special control pins that function independent of the serial control bus. One of these pins is the reset (RST) pin. The RST pin is active high meaning that a 15 www.national.com LMH6583 result in 1.38 W of power dissipation. This would result in a 37C temperature rise. For heavier loading, the QFP package thermal performance can be significantly enhanced with an external heat sink and by providing for moving air ventilation. Also, be sure to calculate the increase in ambient temperature from all devices operating in the system case. Because of the high power output of this device, thermal management should be considered very early in the design process. Generous passive venting and vertical board orientation may avoid the need for fan cooling or heat sinks. Also, the LMH6583 can be operated with a 3.3V power supply. This will cut power dissipation substantially while only reducing bandwidth by about 10% (2 VPP output). The LMH6583 is fully characterized and factory tested at the 3.3V power supply condition for applications where reduced power is desired. If a heat sink is desired AAVD/Thermalloy part # 375324B00035G is the proper size for the LMH6583 package. This heat sink comes with adhesive tape for ease in assembly. With natural convection the heat sink will reduce the JA from 27C/W to approximately 21C/W. Using a fan will increase the effectiveness of the heat sink considerably. When doing thermal design it is important to note that everything from board layout to case material will impact the actual JA of the device. The JA specified in the datasheet is for a typical board layout. PRINTED CIRCUIT LAYOUT Generally, a good high frequency layout will keep power supply and ground traces away from the input and output pins. Parasitic capacitances on these nodes to ground will cause frequency response peaking and possible circuit oscillations (see Application Note OA-15 for more information). If digital control lines must cross analog signal lines (particularly inputs) it is best if they cross perpendicularly. National Semiconductor suggests the following evaluation boards as a guide for high frequency layout and as an aid in device testing and characterization: 20150453 FIGURE 8. Maximum Dissipation vs. Ambient Temperature www.national.com 16 Device Package LMH6583 64-Pin TQFP Evaluation Board Part Number LMH730156 LMH6583 Physical Dimensions inches (millimeters) unless otherwise noted 64-Pin Exposed Pad QFP NS Package Number VXE64A 17 www.national.com LMH6583 16x8 550 MHz Analog Crosspoint Switch, Gain of 2 Notes THE CONTENTS OF THIS DOCUMENT ARE PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH NATIONAL SEMICONDUCTOR CORPORATION ("NATIONAL") PRODUCTS. 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