AD9222
Data Sheet
Rev. F | Page 26 of 60
By asserting the PDWN pin high, t
he AD9222 is placed into
power-down mode. In this state, the ADC typically dissipates
11 mW. During power-down, the LVDS output drivers are placed
operating mode when the PDWN pin is pulled low. This pin is
both 1.8 V and 3.3 V tolerant.
In power-down mode, low power dissipation is achieved by
shutting down the reference, reference buffer, PLL, and biasing
networks. The decoupling capacitors on REFT and REFB are
discharged when entering power-down mode and must be
recharged when returning to normal operation. As a result, the
wake-up time is related to the time spent in the power-down
mode; shorter cycles result in proportionally shorter wake-up
times. With the recommended 0.1 F and 4.7 F decoupling
capacitors on REFT and REFB, approximately 1 sec is required
to fully discharge the reference buffer decoupling capacitors,
and approximately 375 s is required to restore full operation.
There are several other power-down options available when
using the SPI. The user can individually power down each
channel or put the entire device into standby mode. The latter
option allows the user to keep the internal PLL powered when
fast wake-up times (~600 ns) are required. See the
MemoryMap section for more details on using these features.
Digital Outputs and Timing
T
he AD9222 differential outputs conform to the ANSI-644 LVDS
standard on default power-up. This can be changed to a low power,
reduced signal option (similar to the IEEE 1596.3 standard) via the
SDIO/ODM pin or SPI. This LVDS standard can further reduce
the overall power dissipation of the device by approximately
current is derived on chip and sets the output current at each
output equal to a nominal 3.5 mA. A 100 differential termination
resistor placed at the LVDS receiver inputs results in a nominal
350 mV swing at the receiver.
T
he AD9222 LVDS outputs facilitate interfacing with LVDS
receivers in custom ASICs and FPGAs for superior switching
performance in noisy environments. Single point-to-point net
topologies are recommended with a 100 termination resistor
placed as close to the receiver as possible. If there is no far-end
receiver termination or there is poor differential trace routing,
timing errors may result. To avoid such timing errors, it is
recommended that the trace length be no longer than 24 inches
and that the differential output traces be kept close together and
at equal lengths. An example of the FCO and data stream with
proper trace length and position is shown in
Figure 71.CH1 500mV/DIV = FCO
CH2 500mV/DIV = DCO
CH3 500mV/DIV = DATA
5.0ns/DIV
05967-
058
Figure 71. LVDS Output Timing Example in ANSI-644 Mode (Default),
AD9222-50
CH1 500mV/DIV = FCO
CH2 500mV/DIV = DCO
CH3 500mV/DIV = DATA
5.0ns/DIV
05967-
084
Figure 72. LVDS Output Timing Example in ANSI-644 Mode (Default),
AD9222-65