Differential ladder (attenuator), Ad604 – Analog Devices AD604 User Manual

Page 15

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AD604

The larger portion of the input referred voltage noise comes

from the amplifier with 0.63 nV/VHz. The current noise is
independent of gain and depends only on the bias current in

the input stage of the preamplifier, which is 3 pA/VHz.

The preamplifier can drive 40 O (the nominal feedback resistors)

and the following 175 O ladder load of the DSX with low
distortion. For example, at 10 MHz and 1 V at the output, the

preamplifier has less than -45 dB of second and third harmonic
distortion when driven from a low (25 O) source resistance.

In applications that require more than 48 dB of gain range, two

AD604 channels can be cascaded. Because the preamplifier has
a limited input signal range and consumes over half (120 mW)

of the total power (220 mW), and its ultralow noise is not necessary

after the first AD604 channel, a shutdown mechanism that
disables only the preamplifier is provided. To shut down the

preamplifier, connect the COM1 pin and/or COM2 pin to the
positive supply; the DSX is unaffected. For additional details,
refer to the Applications Information section.

---------- o-------------

E

-DSX1

VGN1

24]

E

+DSX1

VREF 23

l

E

PAO1

OUT1 22l

E

FBK1

GND1

21]

E

PAI1

VPOS 20

PI

>-E

COM1

AD604

V

NEG

19l

1—1 7

COM2

VNEG 18 1

\

m~

8

"

VPOS

\y V

9

"

F

¥

K2

A

b

G

n

D2

ie

l 1

QO

PAO2

OUT2 jU

nr

+DSX2

VOCM 14

l

o

E

-DSX2

VGN2

^ i

Figure 40. Shutdown of Preamplifiers Only

DIFFERENTIAL LADDER (ATTENUATOR)

The attenuator before the fixed-gain amplifier of the DSX is
realized by a differential 7-stage R-1.5R resistive ladder network

with an untrimmed input resistance of 175 O single-ended or

350 O differential. The signal applied at the input of the ladder

network is attenuated by 6.908 dB per tap; thus, the attenuation
at the first tap is 0 dB, at the second, 13.816 dB, and so on, all

the way to the last tap where the attenuation is 48.356 dB

(see Figure 41).

A unique circuit technique is used to interpolate continuously

among the tap points, thereby providing continuous attenuation
from 0 dB to -48.36 dB. The ladder network, together with the

interpolation mechanism, can be considered a voltage-controlled
potentiometer.

Because the DSX circuit uses a single voltage power supply, the
input biasing is provided by the VOCM buffer driving the MID

node (see Figure 41). Without internal biasing, the user would
have to dc bias the inputs externally. If not done carefully, the

biasing network can introduce additional noise and offsets. By
providing internal biasing, the user is relieved of this task and

only needs to ac-couple the signal into the DSX. Note that the
input to the DSX is still fully differential if driven differentially;

that is, Pin +DSXx and Pin -DSXx see the same signal but with
opposite polarity (see the Ultralow Noise, Differential Input­

Differential Output VGA section).

What changes is the load seen by the driver; it is 175 O when

each input is driven single-ended but 350 O when driven
differentially. This is easily explained by thinking of the ladder

network as two 175 O resistors connected back-to-back with
the middle node, MID, being biased by the VOCM buffer. A

differential signal applied between the +DSXx and -DSXx
nodes results in zero current into the MID node, but a single-

ended signal applied to either input, +DSXx or -DSXx, while

the other input is ac-grounded causes the current delivered by

the souice/oflpwinto th#VOCM butfer^ia the MID node.

• The^adder^resistlrJLaiue of 175 Ol^rivides tHb-optimum

balance between the load driving capability of the preamplifier

and the noise contribution of the resistors. An advantage of the

X-AMP architecture is that the output referred noise is constant
vs. gain over most of the gain range. Figure 41 shows that the

tap resistance is equal for all taps after only a few taps away

from the inputs. The resistance seen looking into each tap is
54.4 O, which makes 0.95 nV/VHz of Johnson noise spectral

density. Because there are two attenuators, the overall noise
contribution of the ladder network is V2 times 0.95 nV/VHz

or 1.34 nV/VHz, a large fraction of the total DSX noise. The

balance of the DSX circuit components contributes another

1.2 nV/VHz, which together with the attenuator produces
1.8 nV/VHz of total DSX input referred noise.

R -6.908dB R -13.82dB R -20.72dB R -27.63dB R -34.54dB R -41.45dB R -48.36dB

-----------( I---------- wv (

i

1

.

5R

:

1 (

i

1

.

5R

:

1 -------------------------(

i

1

.

5R

:

1 W» 1

i

1

.

5R

:

1----------Wv—(

■1.5R ■

1--------- WV—(

■1.5R :

■1.5R :

R

VW 1

:1.5R •

R

:1.5R •

R

1 VW (

:1.5R :

R

1 VA (

:1.5R :

R

1 WV 1

:1.5R ■

R

1 W» I

•1.5R :

R

i

vw <

•1.5R :

NOTES
1. R = 960
2. 1.5R = 1440

Figure 41. R-1.5R Dual Ladder Network

Rev. E | Page 15 of 32

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MID

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