True Accuracy, 16-Bit ±12 V/±15 V,
Serial Input Voltage Output DAC
AD5570
Rev. B
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. Specifications subject to change without notice. No
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Tel: 781.329.4700 www.analog.com
Fax: 781.461.3113 ©2006 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
FEATURES
Full 16-bit performance
1 LSB maximum INL and DNL
Output voltage range up to ±14 V
On-board reference buffers, eliminating the need for a
negative reference
Controlled output during power-on
Temperature ranges of −40°C to +85°C for A/B version/−40°C
to +125°C for W/Y version
Settling time of 10 μs to 0.003%
Clear function to 0 V
Asynchronous update of outputs (LDAC pin)
Power-on reset
Serial data output for daisy chaining
Data readback facility
APPLICATIONS
Industrial automation
Automatic test equipment
Process control
Data acquisition systems
General-purpose instrumentation
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
V
OUT
V
DD
DGND
AD5570
REFIN
REFGND
LDAC
SDIN CLR
SCLK SYNC
PD
DAC REG ISTER
SHIFT REGISTER
POWER-DOWN
CONTROL LOGIC
POWER-ON
RESET
SDO
V
SS
2R
AGND
AGNDS
R
R
16-BIT
DAC
0
3760-001
Figure 1.
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The AD5570 is a single 16-bit serial input, voltage output DAC
that operates from supply voltages of ±11.4 V up to ±16.5 V.
Integral linearity (INL) and differential nonlinearity (DNL) are
accurate to 1 LSB. During power-up, when the supply voltages
are changing, VOUT is clamped to 0 V via a low impedance path.
The AD5570 DAC comes complete with a set of reference
buffers. The reference buffers allow a single, positive reference
to be used. The voltage on REFIN is gained up and inverted
internally to give the positive and negative reference for the
DAC core. Having the reference buffers on-chip eliminates the
need for external components such as inverters, precision
amplifiers, and resistors, thereby reducing the overall solution
size and cost.
The AD5570 uses a versatile 3-wire interface that is compatible
with SPI®, QSPI™, MICROWIRE™, and DSP® interface standards.
Data is presented to the part as a 16-bit serial word. Serial data
is available on the SDO pin for daisy-chaining purposes. Data
readback allows the user to read the contents of the DAC
register via the SDO pin.
Features on the AD5570 include LDAC which is used to update
the output of the DAC. The device also has a power-down pin
(PD), allowing the DAC to be put into a low power state, and a
CLR pin that allows the output to be cleared to 0 V.
The AD5570 is available in a 16-lead SSOP.
PRODUCT HIGHLIGHTS
1. 1 LSB maximum INL and DNL.
2. Buffered voltage output up to ±14 V.
3. Output controlled during power-up.
4. On-board reference buffers.
5. Wide temperature range of 40°C to +125°C.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 2 of 24
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Features .............................................................................................. 1
Applications....................................................................................... 1
Functional Block Diagram .............................................................. 1
General Description......................................................................... 1
Product Highlights ........................................................................... 1
Revision History ............................................................................... 2
Specifications..................................................................................... 3
Timing Characteristics..................................................................... 5
Standalone ..................................................................................... 5
Timing Characteristics..................................................................... 6
Daisy-Chaining and Readback ................................................... 6
Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 8
ESD Caution.................................................................................. 8
Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions............................. 9
Terminology .................................................................................... 10
Typical Performance Characteristics ........................................... 11
General Description....................................................................... 16
DAC Architecture....................................................................... 16
Reference Buffers........................................................................ 16
Serial Interface............................................................................ 16
Transfer Function....................................................................... 17
Clear (CLR)................................................................................. 17
Power-Down (PD) ..................................................................... 17
Power-On Reset.......................................................................... 17
Serial Data Output (SDO)......................................................... 17
Applications Information.............................................................. 19
Typical Operating Circuit ......................................................... 19
Layout Guidelines....................................................................... 20
Opto-Isolators............................................................................. 20
Microprocessor Interfacing....................................................... 21
Evaluation Board........................................................................ 22
Outline Dimensions ....................................................................... 24
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 24
REVISION HISTORY
9/06—Rev. A to Rev. B
Updated Format..................................................................Universal
Changes to Table 3............................................................................ 6
Changes to Figure 43...................................................................... 21
Changes to AD5570 to 8xC51 Interface Section ........................ 21
Changes to Ordering Guide .......................................................... 24
4/05—Rev. 0 to Rev. A
Changes to Table 1............................................................................ 3
Changes to Table 4............................................................................ 8
Added Figure 16.............................................................................. 12
Revision 0: Initial Version
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 3 of 24
SPECIFICATIONS
VDD = +11.4 V to +16.5 V, VSS = −11.4 V to −16.5 V, VREF = 5 V, REFGND = AGND = DGND = 0 V, RL = 5 kΩ, CL = 200 pF to AGND;
all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted.
Table 1.
Parameter1Min Typ2Max Unit Test Conditions/Comments
ACCURACY
Resolution 16 Bits
Monotonicity 16 Bits
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL) −1 ±0.3 +1 LSB
Relative Accuracy (INL)
B/Y Grade −1 ±0.4 +1 LSB
A/W Grade −2 ±0.6 +2 LSB
Positive INL Drift Over Time3 See Figure 16
A/B Grades 2.5 ppm
W/Y Grades 6.5 ppm
Negative Full-Scale Error ±0.9 ±7.5 mV
Full-Scale Error ±1.8 ±6 mV
Bipolar Zero Error ±0.9 ±7.5 mV
Gain Error ±1.8 ±7.5 mV
Gain Temperature Coefficient4 +0.25 ±1.5 ppm FSR/°C
REFERENCE INPUT
Reference Input Range44 5 5 V With ±11.4 V supplies
4 5 7 V With ±16.5 V supplies
Input Current ±0.1 μA
OUTPUT CHARACTERISTICS4
Output Voltage Range VSS + 1.4 VDD − 1.4 V With ±11.4 V supplies
V
SS + 2.5 VDD − 2.5 V With ±16.5 V supplies
Output Voltage Settling Time 12 16 μs At 16 bits to ±0.5 LSB
10 13 μs To 0.0003%
6 7 μs 512 LSB code change
Slew Rate 6.5 V/μs Measured from 10% to 90%
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Impulse 15 nV-s ±12 V supplies; 1 LSB change around
the major carry
Bandwidth 20 kHz
Short Circuit Current 25 mA
Output Noise Voltage Density 85 nV/Hz f = 1 kHz; midscale loaded
DAC Output Impedance 0.35 0.5 Ω
Digital Feedthrough 0.5 nV-s
WARMUP TIME 5 12 sec
LOGIC INPUTS
Input Currents ±0.1 μA
VINH, Input High Voltage 2 V
VINL, Input Low Voltage 0.8 V
CIN, Input Capacitance 3 pF
LOGIC OUTPUTS
VOL, Output Low Voltage 0.4 V ISINK = 1 mA
Floating-State Output 8 pF
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 4 of 24
Parameter1Min Typ2Max Unit Test Conditions/Comments
POWER REQUIREMENTS
VDD/VSS ±11.4 ±16.5 V
IDD 4 5 mA VOUT unloaded
ISS 3.5 5 mA VOUT unloaded
Power-Down Current 16 μA VOUT unloaded
Power-Supply Sensitivity6 0.1 LSB/V ±15 supplies ±10%; full-scale loaded
Power Dissipation 100 mW VOUT unloaded
1 Temperature ranges: A and B versions = − 40°C to +85°C; W and Y versions = −40°C to +125°C.
2 Typical specifications at ±12 V/±15 V, +25°C.
3 These numbers are generated from the life test of the part.
4 Guaranteed by design.
5 Warmup time is required for the device to reach thermal equilibrium, thus achieving rated performance.
6 Sensitivity of negative full-scale error and positive full-scale error to VDD, VSS variations.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 5 of 24
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
STANDALONE
VDD = +12 V ± 5%, VSS = −12 V ± 5% or VDD = +15 V ± 10%, VSS = −15 V ± 10%, VREF = 5 V, REFGND = AGND = DGND = 0 V, RL = 5 kΩ,
CL = 200 pF to AGND; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted.
Table 2.
Parameter 1, 2Limit at TMIN, TMAX Unit Description
fMAX 10 MHz max SCLK frequency
t1 100 ns min SCLK cycle time
t2 35 ns min SCLK high time
t3 35 ns min SCLK low time
t4 10 ns min
SYNC to SCLK falling edge setup time
t5 35 ns min Data setup time
t6 0 ns min Data hold time
t7 45 ns min
SCLK falling edge to SYNC rising edge
t8 45 ns min
Minimum SYNC high time
t9 0 ns min
SYNC rising edge to LDAC falling edge
t10 50 ns min
LDAC pulse width
t11 0 ns min
LDAC falling edge to SYNC falling edge (no update)
t12 0 ns min
LDAC rising edge to SYNC rising edge (no update)
t13 20 ns min
CLR pulse width
1 All parameters guaranteed by design and characterization. Not production tested.
2 All input signals are measured with tr = tf = 5 ns (10% to 90% of VDD) and timed from a voltage level of (VIL +VIH)/2.
DB15 DB0
SCLK
SYNC
SDIN
LDAC
1
CLR
LDAC
2
NOTES
1
ASYNCHRONOUS LDAC UPDATE MODE. UPDATE ON FALLING EDGE OF LDAC.
2
SYNCHRONOUS LDAC UPDATE MODE. UPDATE ON RISING EDGE OF SYNC.
t3
t2
t5
t6
t7
t9
t1
t4
t8
t12
t11
t10
t13
03760-002
Figure 2. Serial Interface Timing Diagram
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 6 of 24
TIMING CHARACTERISTICS
DAISY-CHAINING AND READBACK
VDD = +12 V ± 5%, VSS = 12 V ± 5% or VDD = +15 V ± 10%, VSS = 15 V ± 10%, VREF = 5 V, REFGND = AGND = DGND = 0 V, RL = 5 kΩ,
CL = 200 pF to AGND; all specifications TMIN to TMAX, unless otherwise noted.
Table 3.
Parameter1, 2Limit at TMIN, TMAX Unit Description
fMAX 2 MHz max SCLK frequency
t1 500 ns min SCLK cycle time
t2 200 ns min SCLK high time
t3 200 ns min SCLK low time
t4 10 ns min
SYNC to SCLK falling edge setup time
t5 35 ns min Data setup time
t6 0 ns min Data hold time
t7 45 ns min
SCLK falling edge to SYNC rising edge
t8 45 ns min
Minimum SYNC high time
t9 0 ns min
SYNC rising edge to LDAC falling edge
t10 50 ns min
LDAC pulse width
t143200 ns max Data delay on SDO
1 All parameters guaranteed by design and characterization. Not production tested.
2 All input signals are measured with tr = tf = 5 ns (10% to 90% of VDD) and timed from a voltage level of (VIL +VIH)/2. SDO; RPULLUP = 5 kΩ, CL = 15 pF.
3 With CL = 0 pF, t14 = 100 ns.
SCLK
SYNC
SDIN DB15 (N)
DB15 (N)
DB0 (N)
DB0 (N)
DB15
(N + 1)
DB15
(N + 1)
DB0
(N + 1)
LDAC1
SDO
LDAC2
NOTES
1ASYNCHRONOUS LDAC UPDATE MODE.
2SYNCHRONOUS LDAC UPDATE MODE.
t
1
t
8
t
10
t
2
t
3
t
4
t
6
t
5
t
9
t
7
t
14
03760-003
Figure 3. Daisy-Chaining Timing Diagram
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 7 of 24
SCLK
SYNC
SDIN
SDO
LDAC
DB15 (N) DB0 (N)
DB0 (N)DB14 (N)DB15 (N)
DB15
(N + 1)
DB0
(N + 1)
t
2
t
3
t
6
t
5
t
7
t
9
t
1
t
10
t
14
t
8
t
4
03760-004
Figure 4. Readback Timing Diagram
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 8 of 24
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
TA = 25°C, unless otherwise noted.
Table 4.
Parameter Rating
VDD to AGND, AGNDS, DGND −0.3 V to +17 V
VSS to AGND, AGNDS, DGND +0.3 V to −17 V
AGND, AGNDS to DGND −0.3 V to +0.3 V
REFGND to AGND, ADNDS −0.3 V to +0.3 V
REFIN to AGND, AGNDS −0.3 V to +17 V
REFIN to REFGND −0.3 V to +17 V
Digital Inputs to DGND −0.3 V to VDD + 0.3 V
VOUT to AGND, AGNDS VSS − 0.3 V to
VDD + 0.3 V
SDO to DGND −0.3 V to +6.5 V
Operating Temperature Range
W/Y Grades −40°C to +125°C
A/B Grades −40°C to +85°C
Storage Temperature Range −65°C to +150°C
Maximum Junction Temperature (TJ max) 150°C
16-Lead SSOP Package
Power Dissipation (TJ max – TA)/θJA
θJA Thermal Impedance 139°C/W
Lead Temperature (Soldering, 10 sec) 300°C
IR Reflow, Peak Temperature 230°C
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 indicated in the operational
section of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute
maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect
device reliability.
ESD CAUTION
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 9 of 24
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS
VSS 1
VDD 2
CLR 3
LDAC 4
SYNC 5
SCLK 6
SDIN 7
SDO 8
REFGND
REFIN
REFGND
VOUT
AGNDS
16
15
14
13
12
AGND
PD
DGND
11
10
9
AD5570
TOP VIEW
(Not to Scale)
03760-005
Figure 5. Pin Configuration
Table 5. Pin Function Descriptions
Pin No. Mnemonic Description
1 VSS Negative Analog Supply Voltage. −12 V ± 5% to −15 V ± 10% for specified performance.
2 VDD Positive Analog Supply Voltage. 12 V ± 5% to 15 V ± 10% for specified performance.
3 CLR Level Sensitive, Active Low Input. A falling edge of CLR resets VOUT to AGND. The contents of the registers
are untouched.
4 LDAC Active Low Control Input. Transfers the contents of the input register to the DAC register. LDAC can be tied
permanently low, enabling the outputs to be updated on the rising edge of SYNC.
5 SYNC Active Low Control Input. This is the frame synchronization signal for the data. When SYNC goes low, it powers
on the SCLK and SDIN buffers and enables the input shift register. Data is transferred in on the falling edges of
the following 16 clocks.
6 SCLK
Serial Clock Input. Data is clocked into the input register on the falling edge of the serial clock input. Data can
be transferred at rates of up to 8 MHz.
7 SDIN Serial Data Input. Data is clocked into the 16-bit register on the falling edge of the serial clock input.
8 SDO
Serial Data Output. Can be used for daisy-chaining a number of devices together or for reading back the data in
the shift register for diagnostic purposes. This is an open-drain output; it must be pulled to logic high with an
external pull-up resistor of ~5 kΩ.
9 DGND Digital Ground. Ground reference for all digital circuitry.
10 PD Active Low Control Input. Allows the DAC to be put into a power-down state.
11 AGND Analog Ground. Ground reference for all analog circuitry.
12 AGNDS Analog Ground Sense. This is normally tied to AGND.
13 VOUT Analog Output Voltage.
14, 16 REFGND Reference Ground. Tie this pin to 0 V.
15 REFIN
Voltage Reference Input. This is internally buffered before being applied to the DAC. For bipolar ±10 V output
range, REFIN is 5 V.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 10 of 24
TERMINOLOGY
Relative Accuracy or Integral Nonlinearity (INL)
Relative accuracy or integral nonlinearity is a measure of
the maximum deviation, in LSBs, from a straight line pass-
ing through the endpoints of the DAC transfer function.
Monotonicity
A DAC is monotonic if the output either increases or remains
constant for increasing digital inputs. The AD5570 is mono-
tonic over its full operating temperature range.
Differential Nonlinearity (DNL)
Differential nonlinearity is the difference between the measured
change and the ideal 1 LSB change between any two adjacent codes.
A specified differential nonlinearity of ±1 LSB maximum ensures
monotonicity.
Gain Error
Gain error is the difference between the actual and ideal analog
output range, expressed as a percent of the full-scale range. It is
the deviation in slope of the DAC transfer characteristic from
the ideal.
Gain Error Temperature Coefficient
Gain error temperature coefficient is a measure of the change in
gain error with changes in temperature. It is expressed in ppm/°C.
Negative Full-Scale Error/Zero Scale Error
Negative full-scale error is the error in the DAC output voltage
when all 0s are loaded into the DAC latch. Ideally, the output
voltage, with all 0s in the DAC latch, is −2 VREF.
Full-Scale Error
Full-scale error is the error in the DAC output voltage when all
1s are loaded to the DAC latch. Ideally, the output voltage with
all 1s loaded into the DAC latch is 2 VREF − 1 LSB.
Bipolar Zero Error
Bipolar zero error is the deviation of the analog input from the
ideal half-scale output of 0.0000 V when the inputs are loaded
with 0x8000.
Output Voltage Settling Time
Output voltage settling time is the amount of time it takes for
the output to settle to a specified level for a full-scale input change.
Slew Rate
The slew rate of a device is a limitation in the rate of change of
output voltage. The output slewing speed of a voltage-output
DAC converter is usually limited by the slew rate of the ampli-
fier used at its output. Slew rate is measured from 10% to 90%
of the output signal and is given in V/μs.
Digital-to-Analog Glitch Impulse
Digital-to-analog glitch impulse is the amount of charge injected
into the analog output when the input codes in the DAC register
change state. It is specified as the area of the glitch in nV-s and
is measured when the digital input code changes by 1 LSB at the
major carry transition, that is, from code 0x7FFF to 0x8000.
Bandwidth
The reference amplifiers within the DAC have a finite band-
width to optimize noise performance. To measure it, a sine
wave is applied to the reference input (REFIN), with full-scale
code loaded to the DAC. The bandwidth is the frequency at
which the output amplitude falls to 3 dB below the input.
Digital Feedthrough
Digital feedthrough is a measure of the impulse injected into
the analog output of the DAC from the digital inputs of the
DAC, but is measured when the DAC output is not updated.
SYNC is held high, while the SCLK and SDIN signals are tog-
gled. Digital feedthrough is specified in nV-s and is measured
with a full-scale code change on the data bus, that is, from all
0s to all 1s, and vice versa.
Power Supply Sensitivity
Power supply sensitivity indicates how the output of the DAC is
affected by changes in the power supply voltage.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 11 of 24
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS
CODE
INL (LSB)
0
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.6
0.4
0.8
50k40k30k20k10k 60k
TA = 25°C
VDD/VSS = ±15V
REFIN = +5V
03760-006
Figure 6. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Code, VDD/VSS = ±15 V
CODE
DNL (LSB)
0
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.6
0.4
0.8
50k40k30k20k10k 60k
TA = 25°C
VDD/VSS = ±15V
REFIN = +5V
03760-007
Figure 7. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Code, VDD/VSS = ±15 V
CODE
INL (LSB)
0
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.6
0.4
0.8
50k40k30k20k10k 60k
TA = 25°C
VDD/VSS = ±12V
REFIN = +5V
03760-008
Figure 8. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Code, VDD/VSS = ±12 V
CODE
DNL (LSB)
0
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.6
0.4
0.8
50k40k30k20k10k 60k
TA = 25°C
VDD/VSS = ±12V
REFIN = +5V
03760-009
Figure 9. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Code, VDD/VSS = ±12 V
TEMPERATUREC)
INL (LSB)
–40
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.8
0.4
0.6
100806040200–20 120
VDD/VSS = ±15V
REFIN = +5V
03760-018
Figure 10. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Temperature, VDD/VSS = ±15 V
TEMPERATUREC)
DNL (LSB)
–40
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.8
0.4
0.6
100806040200–20 120
VDD/VSS = ±15V
REFIN = +5V
03760-019
Figure 11. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Temperature, VDD/VSS = ±15 V
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 12 of 24
TEMPERATURE (°C)
INL (LSB)
–40
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.8
0.4
0.6
100806040200–20 120
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V
REFIN = +5V
03760-020
Figure 12. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Temperature, VDD/VSS = ±12 V
TEMPERATUREC)
DNL (LSB)
–40
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
1.0
0.8
0.4
0.6
100806040200–20 120
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V
REFIN = +5V
03760-021
Figure 13. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Temperature, VDD/VSS = ±12 V
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
INL (LSB)
11.4 15.014.013.012.0 16.0 16.5
03760-023
–1.0
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
–0.8
0.2
0.4
0
1.0
0.6
0.8
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = 5V
Figure 14. Integral Nonlinearity vs. Supply Voltage
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
DNL (LSB)
11.4 15.014.013.012.0 16.0 16.5
03760-024
–1.0
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
–0.8
0.2
0.4
0
1.0
0.6
0.8
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = 5V
Figure 15. Differential Nonlinearity vs. Supply Voltage
TIME (Hours)
INL (LSB)
1.0
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
–0.2
–1.0
–0.4
–0.6
–0.8
0 100 200 300 400 500 700 800 900600 1000
03760-052
VDD/VSS = ±16.5V
TA = 125°C
Figure 16. INL Drift over Time
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
INL ERROR (LSB)
2.0
–1.0
–0.5
0
0.5
1.0
2.0
1.5
4.54.03.53.02.5 5.0 5.5
03760-026
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V
T
A
= 25°C
Figure 17. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. Reference Voltage, VDD/VSS = ±12 V
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 13 of 24
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
DNL ERROR (LSB)
2.0
–0.5
–0.3
–0.2
–0.1
–0.4
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.5
0.4
4.54.03.53.02.5 5.0 5.5
03760-027
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V
T
A
= 25°C
Figure 18. Differential Nonlinearity Error vs. Reference Voltage,
VDD/VSS = ±12 V
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
TUE ERROR (LSB)
2.0
–5.0
–2.5
0
2.5
5.0
10.0
7.5
4.54.03.53.02.5 5.0 5.5
03760-028
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±15V OR ±12V
T
A
= 25°C
Figure 19. TUE Error vs. Reference Voltage, VDD/VSS = ±15 V or ±12 V
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
INL ERROR (LSB)
2.0 2.5
–2.0
–1.5
–1.0
–0.5
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
3.53.0 5.0 5.5 6.04.54.0 6.5
03760-048
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±15V
T
A
= 25°C
Figure 20. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. Reference Voltage, VDD/VSS = ±15 V
REFERENCE VOLTAGE (V)
INL ERROR (LSB)
2.0 2.5
–1.0
–0.8
–0.6
–0.4
–0.2
0
0.2
0.4
0.6
0.8
1.0
3.53.0 5.0 5.5 6.04.54.0 6.5
03760-049
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±15V
T
A
= 25°C
Figure 21. Integral Nonlinearity Error vs. Reference Voltage,
VDD/VSS = ±15 V
V
DD
/V
SS
(V)
|I
SS
|
I
DD
/I
SS
(mA)
11.4
2.0
2.5
3.0
3.5
4.0
5.0
4.5
14.413.412.4 15.4 16.4
|I
DD
|
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = 5V
03760-029
Figure 22. IDD/ISS vs. VDD/VSS
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
I
DD
/I
SS
POWER-DOWN CURRENT (µA)
11.4
0
5
10
15
25
20
14.413.412.4 15.4 16.4
|I
SS IN POWER-DOWN
|
|I
DD IN POWER-DOWN
|
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = +5V
03760-030
Figure 23. IDD/ISS in Power-Down vs. Supply Voltage
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 14 of 24
TEMPERATURE (°C)
OFFSET ERROR (LSB)
–40
–10
–9
–8
–7
–6
–5
–4
0
–1
–3
–2
100806040200–20 120
03760-031
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V OR ±15V
REFIN = 5V
Figure 24. Offset Error vs. Temperature
TEMPERATUREC)
BIPOLAR ZERO ERROR (LSB)
–40
–10
–9
–8
–7
–6
–5
–4
0
–1
–3
–2
100806040200–20 120
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±15V
REFIN = +5V
03760-032
Figure 25. Bipolar Zero Error vs. Temperature
TEMPERATUREC)
GAIN ERROR (LSB)
–40
–10
–8
–6
–4
–2
0
2
10
8
4
6
100806040200–20 120
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±15V
REFIN = +5V
03760-034
Figure 26. Gain Error vs. Temperature
V
LOGIC
(V)
I
DD
(mA)
0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5
3.75
3.80
3.85
3.90
3.95
4.00
4.05
4.10
4.15
5.0
03760-035
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = 5V 15V SUPPLIES
DECREASING
INCREASING
12V SUPPLIES
INCREASING
DECREASING
Figure 27. Supply Current vs. Logic Input Current for SCLK, SYNC, SDIN,
and LDAC Increasing and Decreasing
–10
–4
–6
–8
4
2
0
–2
11
10
8
6
1µs/DIV
VDD = +15V
VSS = –15V
REFIN = +5V
TA= 25°C
03760-046
TIME (µs)
VOUT (V)
Figure 28. Settling Time
CAPACITANCE (nF)
TIME (µs)
012345 6789
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
9.4
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = +5V
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±12V
V
DD
/V
SS
= ±15V
03760-037
Figure 29.14-Bit Settling Time vs. Load Capacitance
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 15 of 24
SINK CURRENT (mA)SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
10864202468
9.9952
9.9955
9.9958
9.9961
9.9964
9.9967
9.9970
9.9973
9.9976
9.9979
9.9982
9.9985
9.9988
9.9991
9.9994
9.9997
10.0000
10
03760-038
15V SUPPLIES
12V SUPPLIES
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = 5V
Figure 30. Source and Sink Capability of Output Amplifier
with Full-Scale Loaded
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
–10 –8 6 –4 –2 0 2 4 6 8
–10.0000
–9.9997
–9.9994
–9.9991
–9.9988
–9.9985
–9.9982
–9.9979
–9.9976
–9.9973
10
03760-039
12V SUPPLIES
15V SUPPLIES
SINK CURRENT (mA)SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
T
A
= 25°C
REFIN = 5V
Figure 31. Source and Sink Capability of Output Amplifier
with Zero-Scale Loaded
1µs/DIV
VOUT (V)
–0.10
–0.09
–0.08
–0.07
–0.06
0.05
VDD = +15V
VSS = –15V
REFIN = +5V
TA= 25°C
7 FFF 8000H
0
3760-040
Figure 32. Major Code Transition Glitch Energy, VDD/VSS = ±15 V
1µs/DIV
VOLTAGE (V)
–0.072
–0.067
–0.062
–0.057
–0.052
–0.047
–0.042
–0.037
–0.032
–0.027
0.022
V
DD
= +12V
V
SS
= –12V
REFIN = +5V
T
A
= 25°C
8000 7FFFH
0
3760-051
Figure 33. Major Code Transition Glitch Energy, VDD/VSS = ±12 V
CH1 20µV/DIV 20µs/PTM 1.0ms 500kS/s
A CH1 0.0V
V
DD
= +15V
V
SS
= –15V
MIDSCALE LOADED
20µV/DIV
V
REFIN
= 0V
03760-047
Figure 34. Peak-to-Peak Noise (100 kHz Bandwidth)
V
DD
= +15V
V
SS
= –15V
REFIN = +5V
T
A
= 25°C
RAMP TIME = 100µs
V
DD
/V
SS
= 10V/DIV
V
OUT
= 10mV/DIV
100µs/DIV
V
OUT
V
SS
V
DD
03760-042
Figure 35. VOUT vs. VDD/VSS on Power-Up
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 16 of 24
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The AD5570 is a single 16-bit serial input, voltage output DAC. It
operates from supply voltages of ±11.4 V to ±16.5 V, and has a
buffered voltage output of up to ±13.6 V. Data is written to the
AD5570 in a 16-bit word format, via a 3-wire serial interface. The
device also offers an SDO pin, available for daisy-chaining or
readback.
The AD5570 incorporates a power-on reset circuit to ensure the
DAC output powers up to 0 V. The device also has a power-down
pin to reduce the typical current consumption to 16 μA.
DAC ARCHITECTURE
The DAC architecture of the AD5570 consists of a 16-bit, current-
mode, segmented R-2R DAC. The simplified circuit diagram for
the DAC section is shown in Figure 36.
The four MSBs of the 16-bit data word are decoded to drive
15 switches, E1 to E15. Each of these switches connects one
of the 15 matched resistors to either AGND or IOUT. The
remaining 12 bits of the data word drive switches S0 to S11
of the 12-bit R-2R ladder network.
2R
E15
V
REF
2R
E14 E1
2R
S11
RR R
2R
S10
2R
12-BIT R-2R LADDER
V
OUT
2R
S0
2R
AGND
IOUT
R/8
4 MSBs DECODED INTO
15 EQUAL SEGMENTS
03760-010
Figure 36. DAC Ladder Structure
REFERENCE BUFFERS
The AD5570 operates with an external reference. The reference
input (REFIN) has an input range of up to 7 V. This input voltage is
then used to provide a buffered positive and negative reference
for the DAC core. The positive reference is given by
REFINREF VV ×=+ 2
and the negative reference to the DAC core is given by
REFINREF VV ×= 2
These positive and negative reference voltages define the DAC
output range.
SERIAL INTERFACE
The AD5570 is controlled over a versatile 3-wire serial interface
that operates at clock rates up to 10 MHz and is compatible with
SPI, QSPI, MICROWIRE, and DSP interface standards.
Input Shift Register
The input shift register is 16 bits wide. Data is loaded into the
device as a 16-bit word under the control of a serial clock input,
SCLK. The timing diagram for this operation is shown in Figure 2.
On power-up, the input shift register and DAC register are
loaded with midscale (0x8000). The DAC coding is straight
binary; all 0s produce an output of −2 VREF; all 1s produce an
output of +2 VREF − 1 LSB.
The SYNC input is a level-triggered input that acts as a frame
synchronization signal and chip enable. SYNC must frame the
serial word being loaded into the device. Data can be transferred
into the device only while SYNCis low. To start the serial data
transfer, SYNC is taken low, observing the minimum SYNC to
SCLK falling edge setup time, t4. After SYNC goes low, serial data
on SDIN is shifted into the devices input shift register on the
falling edges of SCLK. SYNC can be taken high after the falling
edge of the 16th SCLK pulse, observing the minimum SCLK
falling edge to SYNC rising edge time, t7.
After the end of the serial data transfer, data is automatically
transferred from the input shift register to the input register
of the DAC.
When data has been transferred into the input register of the DAC,
the DAC register and DAC output can be updated by taking
LDAC low while SYNC is high.
Load DAC Input (LDAC)
There are two ways that the DAC register and DAC output can
be updated when data has been transferred into the input register
of the DAC. Depending on the status of both SYNC and LDAC,
one of two update modes is selected.
The first mode is synchronous LDAC. In this mode, LDAC is low
while data is being clocked into the input shift register. The DAC
output is updated when SYNC is taken high. The update here
occurs on the rising edge of SYNC.
The second mode is asynchronous LDAC. In this mode, LDAC
is high while data is being clocked in. The DAC output is updated
by taking LDAC low any time after SYNC has been taken high.
The update now occurs on the falling edge of LDAC.
Figure 37 shows a simplified block diagram of the input loading
circuitry.
VOUT
DAC
REGISTER
INPUT SHIFT
REGISTER
OUTPUT
I/V AMPLIFIER
LDAC
SDOSDIN
16-BIT
DAC
VREFIN
SYNC
03760-012
Figure 37. Simplified Serial Interface Showing Input Loading Circuitry
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 17 of 24
TRANSFER FUNCTION
Table 6 shows the ideal input code to the output voltage rela-
tionship for the AD5570.
Table 6. Binary Code Table
Digital Input
MSB LSB Analog Output (VOUT)
1111 1111 1111 1111 +2 VREF × (32,767/32,768)
1000 0000 0000 0001 +2 VREF × (1/32,768)
1000 0000 0000 0000 0 V
0111 1111 1111 1111 −2 VREF × (1/32,768)
0000 0000 0000 0000 −2 VREF
The output voltage expression is given by
]65536/[42 DVVV REFINREFIN
OUT ×+=
where:
D is the decimal equivalent of the code loaded to the DAC.
VREFIN is the reference voltage available at the REFIN pin.
CLEAR (CLR)
CLR is an active low digital input that allows the output to be
cleared to 0 V. When the CLR signal is brought back high, the
output stays at 0 V until LDAC is brought low. The relationship
between LDAC and CLR is explained further in Table 7.
Table 7. Relationships Among PD, CLR, and LDAC
PD CLR LDAC Comments
0 x x PD has priority over LDAC and CLR. The
output remains at 0 V through an internal
20 kΩ resistor. It is still possible to address
both the input register and DAC register
when the AD5570 is in power-down.
1 0 0 Data is written to the input register and
DAC register. CLR has higher priority over
LDAC; therefore, the output is at 0 V.
1 0 1 Data is written to the input register only.
The output is at 0 V and remains at 0 V
when CLR is taken back high.
1 1 0 Data is written to the input register and the
DAC register. The output is driven to the
DAC level.
1 1 1 Data is written to the input register only.
The output of the DAC register is unchanged.
POWER-DOWN (PD)
The power-down pin allows the user to place the AD5570 into
a power-down mode. In power-down mode, power consump-
tion is at a minimum; the device typically consumes only 16 μA.
POWER-ON RESET
The AD5570 contains a power-on reset circuit that controls the
output during power-up and power-down. This is useful in appli-
cations where the known state of the output of the DAC during
power-up is important. On power-up and power-down, the output
of the DAC and VOUT, is held at AGND.
SERIAL DATA OUTPUT (SDO)
The SDO is the internal shift registers output. For the AD5570,
SDO is an internal pull-down only; an external pull-up resistor
of ~5 kΩ to external logic high is required. SDO pull-down is
disabled when the device is in power-down, thus saving current.
The availability of SDO allows any number of AD5570s to be
daisy-chained together. It also allows for the contents of the DAC
register, or any number of DACs daisy-chained together, to be
read back for diagnostic purposes.
Daisy Chaining
This mode of operation is designed for multi DAC systems,
where several AD5570s can be connected in cascade as shown
in Figure 38. This is done by connecting the control inputs in
parallel and then daisy-chaining the SDIN and SDO I/Os of
each device. An external pull-up resistor of ~5 kΩ on SDO is
required when using the part in daisy-chain mode.
As described earlier, when SYNC goes low, serial data on SDIN
is shifted into the input shift register on the falling edge of SCLK.
If more than 16 clock pulses are applied, the data ripples out of
the shift resister and appears on the SDO line. By connecting
this line to the SDIN input on the next AD5570 in the chain, a
multi DAC interface can be constructed.
One data transfer cycle of 16 SCLK pulses is required for each
DAC in the system. Therefore, the total number of clock cycles
must equal 16 N, where N is the total number of devices in the
chain. The first data transfer cycle written into the chain appears at
the last DAC in the system on the final data transfer cycle.
When the serial transfer to all devices is complete, take SYNC high.
This prevents any further data from being clocked into the devices.
A continuous SCLK source can be used if SYNC is held low
for the correct number of clock cycles. Alternatively, a burst
clock containing the exact number of clock cycles can be used
and SYNC is taken high some time later. The outputs of all the
DACs in the system can be updated simultaneously using the
LDAC signal.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 18 of 24
Readback
The AD5570 allows the data contained in the DAC register to
be read back, if required. As with daisy chaining, an external
pull-up resistor of ~5 kΩ on SDO is required. The data in the
DAC register is available on SDO on the falling edges of SCLK
when SYNC is low. On the 16th SCLK edge, SDO is updated to
repeat SDIN with a delay of 16 clock cycles.
To read back the contents of the DAC register without writing
to the part, take SYNC low while LDAC is held high.
Daisy-chaining readback is also possible through the SDO pin
of the last device in the DAC chain because the DAC data passes
through the DAC chain with the appropriate latency.
68HC11*
MISO
SYNC
SDIN
SCLK
MOSI
SCK
PC7
PC6 LDAC
SDO
SYNC
SCLK
LDAC
SDO
SYNC
SCLK
LDAC
SDO
SDIN
SDIN
*ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY.
AD5570*
AD5570*
AD5570*
V
LOGIC
R
R
R
03760-013
Figure 38. Daisy-Chaining Using the AD5570
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 19 of 24
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION
TYPICAL OPERATING CIRCUIT
Figure 39 shows the typical operating circuit for the AD5570.
The only external component needed for this precision 16-bit
DAC is a single external positive reference. Because the device
incorporates reference buffers, it eliminates the need for a negative
reference, external inverters, precision amplifiers, and resistors.
This leads to an overall savings of both cost and board space.
In the circuit shown in Figure 39, VDD and VSS are both connected
to ±15 V, but VDD and VSS can operate supplies from 11.4 V to
16.5 V. AGNDS is connected to AGND, but the option of force/
sense is included on this device if required by the user.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
AD5570
VSS
VDD
CLR
LDAC
SYNC
SCLK
SDIN
SDO
REFGND
REFIN
REFGND
VOUT
AGNDS
AGND
PD
DGND
+15V
0.1µF 10µF
0.1µF 10µF
–15V
VOUT
5V
ADR435
LDAC
SYNC
SCLK
SDIN
SDO
5k
0
3760-044
Figure 39. Typical Operating Circuit
Force/Sense of AGND
Because of the extremely high accuracy of this device, system
design issues (such as grounding and contact resistance) are
very important. The AD5570, with ±10 V output, has an LSB
size of 305 μV. Therefore, series wiring and connector resistances
of very small values can cause voltage drops of an LSB. For this
reason, the AD5570 offers a force/sense output configuration.
Figure 40 shows how to connect the AD5570 to the force/sense
amplifier. Where accuracy of the output is important, an ampli-
fier such as the OP177 is ideal. The OP177 is ultraprecise with
offset voltages of 10 μV maximum at room temperature, and off-
set drift of 0.1 μV/°C maximum. Alternative recommended
amplifiers are the OP1177 and the OP77. For applications where
optimization of the circuit for settling time is needed, the AD845
is recommended.
Precision Voltage Reference Selection
To achieve the optimum performance from the AD5570, give
special attention to the selection of a precision voltage reference.
The AD5570 has just one reference input, REFIN. This voltage
on REFIN is used to provide a buffered positive and negative
reference for the DAC core. Therefore, any error in the voltage
reference is reflected in the output of the device.
6
2
3
(OTHER CONNECTIONS OMITTED
FOR CLARITY)
OP177*
*FOR OPTIMUM SETTLING TIME PERFORMANCE,
THE AD845 IS RECOMMENDED.
03760-045
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
16
15
14
13
12
11
10
9
AD5570
V
SS
V
DD
CLR
LDAC
SYNC
SCLK
SDIN
SDO
REFGND
REFIN
REFGND
V
OUT
AGNDS
AGND
PD
DGND
Figure 40. Driving AGND and AGNDS Using a Force/Sense Amplifier
The four possible sources of error to consider when choosing
a voltage reference for high accuracy applications are initial
accuracy, long-term drift, temperature coefficient of the out-
put voltage, and output voltage noise.
Initial accuracy on the output voltage of an external reference can
lead to a full-scale error in the DAC. Therefore, to minimize
these errors, a reference with low initial accuracy specification
is preferred. Also, choosing a reference with an output trim adjust-
ment, such as the ADR425, allows a system designer to trim out
system errors by setting the reference voltage to a voltage other
than the nominal. The trim adjustment can also be used at tem-
perature to trim out any error.
Long-term drift (LTD) is a measure of how much the reference
drifts over time. A reference with a tight long-term drift specifica-
tion ensures that the overall solution remains relatively stable
over its entire lifetime.
The temperature coefficient of a references output voltage
affects INL, DNL, and TUE. Choose a reference with a tight
temperature coefficient specification to reduce the depend
ence of the DAC output voltage on ambient conditions.
In high accuracy applications that have a relatively low noise
budget, reference output voltage noise needs to be considered.
It is important to choose a reference with as low an output noise
voltage as practical for the system resolution required. Precision
voltage references, such as the ADR435 (XFET® design), produce
low output noise in the 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz region. However, as the
circuit bandwidth increases, filtering the output of the reference
can be required to minimize the output noise.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 20 of 24
Table 8. Partial List of Precision References Recommended
for Use with the AD5570
Part No.
Initial
Accuracy
(mV max)
Long-Term
Drift
(ppm typ)
Temp Drift
(ppm/
°C max)
0.1 Hz to
10 Hz Noise
(μV p-p typ)
ADR435 ±6 30 3 3.4
ADR425 ±6 50 3 3.4
ADR021 ±5 50 3 15
ADR395 ±6 50 25 5
AD586 ±2.5 15 10 4
1 Available in SC70 package.
LAYOUT GUIDELINES
In any circuit where accuracy is important, careful considera-
tion of the power supply and ground return layout helps to
ensure the rated performance. The printed circuit board that
the AD5570 is mounted on is designed so the analog and dig-
ital sections are separated and confined to certain areas of the
board. If the AD5570 is in a system where multiple devices
require an AGND-to-DGND connection, the connection is
made at one point only. The star ground point is established
as close as possible to the device.
The AD5570 has ample supply bypassing of 10 μF in parallel
with 0.1 μF on each supply located as close to the package as
possible, ideally right up against the device. The 10 μF capacitors
are the tantalum bead type. The 0.1 μF capacitor has low effective
series resistance (ESR) and effective series inductance (ESI)
such as the common ceramic types that provide a low imped-
ance path to ground at high frequencies to handle transient
currents due to internal logic switching.
The power supply lines of the AD5570 use as large a trace as pos-
sible to provide low impedance paths and reduce the effects of
glitches on the power supply line. Fast switching signals such as
clocks are shielded with digital ground to avoid radiating noise
to other parts of the board, and are never be run near the refer-
ence inputs. A ground line routed between the SDIN and SCLK
lines reduces crosstalk between them; this is not required on a
multilayer board that has a separate ground plane, but separating
the lines helps. It is essential to minimize noise on the REFIN
line because it couples through to the DAC output.
Avoid crossover of digital and analog signals. Traces on opposite
sides of the board must run at right angles to each other.
This reduces the effects of feed through the board. A micro-
strip technique is by far the best, but not always possible
with a double-sided board. In this technique, the component
side of the board is dedicated to ground plane, while signal
traces are placed on the solder side.
OPTO-ISOLATORS
In many process control applications, it is necessary to provide
an isolation barrier between the controller and the unit being
controlled. Opto-isolators provide voltage isolation in excess of
3 kV. The serial loading structure of the AD5570 makes it ideal
for opto-isolated interfaces, because the number of interface lines
is kept to a minimum. Figure 41 shows a 4-channel isolated inter-
face to the AD5570. To reduce the number of opto-isolators, the
LDAC pin can be tied permanently low if the simultaneous
updating of the DAC is not required. The DAC can then be
updated on the rising edge of SYNC.
V
CC
TO SDIN
TO SCLK
TO SYNC
SYNC OUT
SERIAL CLOCK OUT
SERIAL DATA OUT
µCONTROLLER
OPTO-COUPLER
TO LDAC
CONTROL OUT
03760-050
Figure 41. Opto-Isolated Interface
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 21 of 24
MICROPROCESSOR INTERFACING
Microprocessor interfacing to the AD5570 is via a serial bus
that uses standard protocol compatible with microcontrollers
and DSP processors. The communications channel is a 3-wire
(minimum) interface consisting of a clock signal, a data signal,
and a synchronization signal. The AD5570 requires a 16-bit
data word with data valid on the falling edge of SCLK.
For all the interfaces, the DAC output update can be done auto-
matically when all the data is clocked in, or it can be done under
the control of LDAC. The contents of the DAC register can be
read using the readback function.
AD5570 to MC68HC11 Interface
Figure 42 shows an example of a serial interface between the
AD5570 and the MC68HC11 microcontroller. The serial periph-
eral interface (SPI) on the MC68HC11 is configured for master
mode (MSTR = 1), clock polarity bit (CPOL = 0), and the clock
phase bit (CPHA = 1). The SPI is configured by writing to the SPI
control register (SPCR); see documentation on the MC68HC11.
SCK of the MC68HC11 drives the SCLK of the AD5570, the
MOSI output drives the serial data line (SDIN) of the AD5570,
and the MISO input is driven from SDO. The SYNC is driven
from one of the port lines, in this case, PC7.
When data is being transmitted to the AD5570, the SYNC line
(PC7) is taken low and data is transmitted MSB first. Data appear-
ing on the MOSI output is valid on the falling edge of SCK. Eight
falling clock edges occur in the transmit cycle; therefore, in order
to load the required 16-bit word, PC7 is not brought high until
the second 8-bit word has been transferred to the DACs input
shift register.
AD5570*
SCLK
SDIN
SYNC
MOSI
SCLK
PC7
MC68HC11*
*ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY.
SDO
MISO
03760-014
Figure 42. AD5570 to MC68HC11 Interface
LDAC is controlled by the PC6 port output. The DAC can be
updated after each 2-byte transfer by bringing LDAC low. This
example does not show other serial lines for the DAC. If CLR
were used, control it by the Port Output PC5.
AD5570 to 8xC51 Interface
The AD5570 requires a clock synchronized to the serial data. For
this reason, the 8xC51 must be operated in Mode 0. In this mode,
serial data enters and exits through RxD, and a shift clock is
output on TxD.
P3.3 and P3.4 are bit-programmable pins on the serial port and
are used to drive SYNC and LDAC, respectively.
The 8xC51 provides the LSB of its SBUF register as the first bit
in the data stream. The user must ensure that the data in the SBUF
register is arranged correctly because the DAC expects MSB first.
AD5570*
SCLK
SDIN
SYNC
TxD
P3.3
8xC51*
*ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY.
RxD
LDAC
P3.4
03760-015
Figure 43. AD5570 to 8xC51 Interface
When data is to be transmitted to the DAC, P3.3 is taken low. Data
on RxD is clocked out of the microcontroller on the rising edge
of TxD and is valid on the falling edge. As a result, no glue logic
is required between this DAC and the microcontroller interface.
The 8xC51 transmits data in 8-bit bytes with only eight falling
clock edges occurring in the transmit cycle. Because the DAC
expects a 16-bit word, SYNC (P3.3) must be left low after the first
eight bits are transferred. After the second byte has been trans-
ferred, the P3.3 line is taken high. The DAC can be updated using
LDAC via P3.4 of the 8xC51.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 22 of 24
AD5570 to ADSP21xx
An interface between the AD5570 and the ADSP21xx family is
shown in Figure 44. The ADSP21xx must be set up to operate in
the SPORT transmit alternate framing mode. The ADSP21xx is
programmed through the SPORT control register and is con-
figured as follows: internal clock operation, active low framing,
and 16-bit word length.
Transmission is initiated by writing a word to the Tx register, after
the SPORT has been enabled. As the data is clocked out of the
DSP on the rising edge of SCLK, no glue logic is required to inter-
face the DSP to the DAC. In the interface shown, the DAC output
is updated using the LDAC pin via the DSP. Alternatively, the
LDAC input can be tied permanently low, and then the update
is automatic when TFS is taken high.
AD5570*
SCLK
SDIN
SYNC
DT
SCLK
RFS
ADSP21xx
*ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY.
SDO
DR
TFS
LDAC
FO
03760-016
Figure 44. AD5570 to ADSP21xx Interface
AD5570 to PIC16C6x/7x
The PIC16C6x/7x synchronous serial port (SSP) is configured as
an SPI master with the clock polarity bit set to 0. This is done
by writing to the synchronous serial port control register, SSPCON
(see documentation on the PIC16/17 microcontroller). In this
example, I/O port RA1 is being used to pulse SYNC and enable
the serial port of the AD5570. This microcontroller transfers only
eight bits of data during each serial transfer operation; therefore,
two consecutive write operations are needed. Figure 45 shows
the connection diagram.
AD5570*
SCLK
SDIN
SYNC
SDO/RC5
SCLK/RC3
RA1
PIC16C6x/7x*
ADDITIONAL PINS OMITTED FOR CLARITY.
SDOSDI/RC4
03760-017
Figure 45. AD5570 to PIC16C6x/7x Interface
EVALUATION BOARD
The AD5570 comes with a full evaluation board to aid designers
in evaluating the high performance of the part with minimal
effort. The evaluation board requires a power supply, a PC,
and an oscilloscope.
The AD5570 evaluation kit includes a populated and tested
AD5570 printed circuit board. The evaluation board inter-
faces to the parallel interface of a PC. Software is available
with the evaluation board that allows the user to easily pro-
gram the AD5570. A schematic of the evaluation board is
shown in Figure 46. The software runs on any PC installed
with Microsoft® Windows® 95/ Windows® 98/Windows® ME/
Windows® 2000/Windows® XP.
An application note containing full details on operating the
evaluation board comes supplied with the AD5570 evalua-
tion board.
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 23 of 24
J11–19
J11–12
J11–4
J11–6
J11–7
J11–8
J11–13
J11 – CENTRONICS CONNECTOR
J11–3
J11–2
J11–5
J4 J5 J6 J7 J8 J9 J10
J11–10
J11–9
J13–1
+
+
+
+
++++
C30
10µF
20V
C12
10µF
C11
10µF
+
C13
10µF
+
C21
10µF
+
C22
10µF
C23
0.1µF
C24
0.1µF
C15
0.1µF
C10
10µF
C9
10µF
C8
0.1µF
C7
0.1µF
C6
0.1µF
C14
0.1µF
0.33µF
C2
C4
0.01µF
C36
0.1µF
C3
0.1µF
C35
0.1µF
C16
0.1µF
C34
10µF
C5
10µF
R2
10k
R3
10k
C17
0.1µF
C18
10µF
U5
U3
U1
U2
J1
TP5
V
OUT
C1
R1
REF/2
REF/2
OP
V+
V
WHITE PLASTIC SSOP CLAMP
OP177
ADR435
AD5570
C31
0.1µF
C32
0.1µF
C33
0.1µF
DGND
DGND
DVDD
DVDD
J13–2
J12–1
J12–2
J11–20
J11–21
J11–22
J11–23
J11–24
J11–25
J11–26
J11–27
J11–28
J11–29
J11–30
AVDD
AVDD
AVDD
V
SS
AVDD
DVDD
AVDD
LK2
LK1
TP4
TP10TP7TP1TP2TP9TP3TP8
J2
LK3
VSS
AGND
DGND
AVDD
AVDD
Y0
VIN
SCLK
PD
SDO
SDIN
SCLK
SYNC
LDAC
CLR
VDD
VDD
REFIN
VSS
REFIN
LK5
GND DGND
AGNDS
AGND
REFGND
REFGND
SDATA
BUSY
GND4
U6
GND3
VOUT
VIN
VOUT
VOUT +VIN
TRIM
GND
4
GND2
GND1
9
8
7
6
5
1
2
3
3
2
2
912
12 15
62
5
11 16 14
13
3
7
6
4
18
4
5
6
7
10
8
7
6
5
4
3
4
7
5
3
11
19
13
15
17
Y1
Y2
Y3
A0
A1
A2
A3
AGND
V
SS
74ACT244
LM78L05ACM AD7895-10
U4–B
AGND
J12–3
V
SS
OE
Y0
18
16
14
12
2
1
4
6
8
Y1
Y2
Y3
A0
A1
A2
A3
74ACT244
U4–A
OE
2
1
4
6
8
18
16
14
12
Y0
Y1
Y2
Y3
A0
A1
A2
A3
74ACT244
U9–A
OE
11
19
13
15
17
9
7
5
3
Y0
Y1
Y2
Y3
A0
A1
A2
A3
74ACT244
U9–B
SDO DIN SCLK
SCLK_ADC
SDATA_ADC
DATA
SCLK
DIN
DOUT
OE
REF/2
REF
REF
CONVST
CLR
PD
CONVST
LDAC
SYNC
R4
4.7k
DVDD
R5
4.7k
R7
4.7k
R6
4.7k
DVDD DVDD
LK4
PD LDAC SYNC CLR
03760-043
Figure 46. Evaluation Board Schematic
AD5570
Rev. B | Page 24 of 24
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-150-AC
060106-A
16 9
8
1
6.50
6.20
5.90
8.20
7.80
7.40
5.60
5.30
5.00
SEATING
PLANE
0.05 MIN
0.65 BSC
2.00 MAX
0.38
0.22
COPLANARITY
0.10
1.85
1.75
1.65
0.25
0.09
0.95
0.75
0.55
Figure 47. 16-Lead Shrink Small Outline Package [SSOP]
(RS-16)
Dimensions shown in millimeters
ORDERING GUIDE
Model Temperature Range Package Description Package Option
AD5570ARS −40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570ARS-REEL −40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570ARS-REEL7 −40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570ARSZ1−40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570ARSZ-REEL1−40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570ARSZ-REEL71−40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570BRS −40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570BRS-REEL −40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570BRS-REEL7 −40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570BRSZ1−40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570BRSZ-REEL1−40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570BRSZ-REEL71−40°C to +85°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570WRS −40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570WRS-REEL −40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570WRS-REEL7 −40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570WRSZ1−40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570WRSZ-REEL1−40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570WRSZ-REEL71−40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570YRS −40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570YRS-REEL −40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570YRS-REEL7 −40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570YRSZ1−40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5570YRSZ-REEL1−40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
AD5560YRSZ-REEL71−40°C to +125°C 16-Lead SSOP RS-16
EVAL-AD5570EB Evaluation Board
1 Z = Pb-free part.
©2006 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
C03760-0-9/06(B)