Texas Instruments MSP50C614 User Manual

Page 81

Advertising
background image

Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC)

3-11

Peripheral Functions

For a given sampling rate and DAC resolution, the CPU clock rate may be
increased, if necessary, through the use of over-sampling. In the previous
example, an original sampling rate of 8 kHz and a PDM rate of 4 MHz was
used. A 2-times over-sampling, therefore, would require the PDM rate to be
8 MHz. This can be accomplished in two ways:

PDM rate = 8 MHz : Set the master clock to 8 MHz also (ClkSpdCtrl).

Set the PDMCD bit to 1: 1x master clock (IntGenCtrl).
CPU clock rate will be 4 MHz.

PDM rate = 8 MHz : Set the master clock to 16 MHz.

Set the PDMCD bit to 0: 1/2 master clock.
CPU clock rate will be 8 MHz.

In the case of over-sampling, the same number of instructions are achievable
between each INT0 interrupt. Not every INT0, however, requires an
independently computed synthesis value, hence, the advantage in increased
instruction capacity. A 2-times over-sampling means that every 2nd INT0
requires a computed update from the synthesis algorithm. The other INT0 may
be satisfied with an interpolating filter computation, then a return to the main
program.

As stated previously, the maximum ensured CPU clock frequency for the C614
operates over the entire V

DD

range. This rate applies to the speed of the core

processor. Operating the processor higher than the listed specification is not
recommended by Texas Instruments.

The following tables illustrate a number of possible combinations with respect
to sampling rate, PDM rate, DAC resolution, master clock rate, and CPU clock
rate. The first table applies to the 8 kHz sampling rate and N-times-8 kHz
over-sampling. The second applies to the 10 kHz sampling rate and
N-times-10 kHz over-sampling.

Note:

The value programmed to the PLLM register is not exactly the multiplicative
factor between the 32-kHz reference and the master clock. Refer to
Section 2.9.3,

Clock Speed Control Register, for more information on the

relationship between the PLLM and the resulting MC rate.

The column in these tables output sampling rate reports the true audio
sampling rate achievable by the C614, using the 32.768-kHz CRO. The values
reported are not always exact multiples of the 8-kHz and 10-kHz options;
however, they are the closest obtainable (using the PLLM multiplier) under the
given set of constraints.

Advertising