598 C H A P T E R 1 2 • Interfacing Analog and Digital Circuits
Solution We must examine the graph in two sections:
1. From 0 to 3 ms
2. From 3 to 9 ms
A different constant input voltage is applied for each section of the graph.
0 to 3 ms:
The output at 3 ms is given by:
slope _ _
R
V
C
in _ _ __
(0.025_
1
F
V
)(10 k)
_
_ _4 V/ms
Vo(3 ms) _ vo(0) _ (t/RC) Vin
_ 0V _ [(3 ms)(_4 V/ms)]
_ _12 V
The output changes at a rate of _4 V/ms for 3 ms.
3 to 9 ms:
The output at 9 ms is given by:
slope _ _
R
V
C
in _ _ __
(0.02
(
5
_
_
0
F
.5
)(1
V
0
)
k)
_
_ _2 V/ms
FIGURE 12.26
Example 12.12
Integrator Operation
12.3 • Analog-to-Digital Conversion 599
Vo (9 ms) _ vo(3 ms) _ (t/RC) Vin
_ _12 V _ [(6 ms)(_ 2 V/ms)]
_ _12 V _ (_12 V)
_ 0 V
The output changes at a rate of _2 V/ms for 6 ms. This cancels the effect of the original
input. ❘❙❚
Figure 12.27 shows the block diagram of an 8-bit dual slope analog-to-digital converter.
Integrator output voltages for several input values are shown in Figure 12.28. Assume
that the integrator has the same R and C values as in Figure 12.25.
FIGURE 12.27
Dual Slope ADC
FIGURE 12.28
Integrator Outputs for Various
Input Voltages
600 C H A P T E R 1 2 • Interfacing Analog and Digital Circuits
1. Before conversion starts, an auto-zero circuit sets the comparator output to 0 V by applying
a compensating voltage to the comparator.
2. The input analog voltage causes the integrator output to increase in magnitude, as
shown in the left half of Figure 12.28. As soon as this integrator voltage is nonzero, the
comparator enables a counter via the control logic.
3. When the counter overflows (i.e., recycles to 00000000), the integrator input is
switched from the analog input to _Vref.
4. The reference voltage causes the integrator output to move toward 0 V at a known
rate, as shown in the right half of Figure 12.28. During this rezeroing time, the
counter continues to clock. When the integrator output voltage reaches 0 V, the comparator
disables the counter. The digital equivalent of the analog voltage is now contained
in the counter.
The reason this works is that in the initial integrating phase, the integrator output operates
for a known time, producing a final output proportional to the input voltage. In the
second phase, the output moves toward zero at a known rate, reaching zero in a time proportional
to the final voltage of the first phase.
For example, assume that the components of the integrator and the clock rate of the
counter are such that a 1-V input corresponds to the full-scale digital output (FS). The
integrator output reaches a value of _12 V in 3 ms. The time required to rezero the integrator
is the same as the initial integrating phase, 3 ms. The counter completes one
cycle in the integrating phase and another cycle in the rezeroing phase, so that its final
value is 00000000. (Note that this is the result obtained when 1 LSB is added to
11111111.)
If the input voltage is 0.25 volts, the integrator output is _3 V after 3 ms (one counter
cycle). Since the integrator always rezeros at the same rate (4 V/ms), the rezeroing time is
0.75 ms, or one fourth of a counter cycle (since 12 V/4 _ 3 V). The counter has time to
reach state 01000000 or _1
4
_ FS.
If we attempt to measure a voltage beyond that corresponding to full scale, the integrator
output cannot rezero within the second counter cycle. Usually, an output pin on the
ADC activates to show this condition. Some digital multimeters that use dual slope ADCs
show an overvoltage or out-of-range condition by blanking the display, except for a leading
digit 1.
One advantage of a dual slope ADC is its accuracy. One particular dual slope ADC is
accurate to within _0.05% _ 1 count. This accuracy is balanced against a relatively slow
conversion time, in the milliseconds, compared to microseconds for a successive approximation
ADC and nanoseconds for a flash converter.
Another advantage is the ability of the integrator to reject noise. If we assume that
noise voltage is random, then it will be positive about half the time and negative about half
the time. Over time it should average out to zero.
As was alluded to above, a common application of this device is as a voltmeter circuit,
where speed is less important than accuracy.
❘❙❚ SECTION 12.3 REVIEW PROBLEMS
12.7 Suppose that the dual slope ADC described above (same component values) has an
input voltage of 0.375 V (3/8 full scale).
a. What is the slope of the integrator voltage during the integrating phase?
b. What is its slope during the rezeroing phase?
c. How much time elapses during the rezeroing phase?
d. What digital code is contained in the output latch after the conversion is
complete?
12.3 • Analog-to-Digital Conversion 601
Sample and Hold Circuit
Sample and hold circuit A circuit that samples an analog signal at periodic intervals
and holds the sampled value long enough for an ADC to convert it to a digital
code.
For the sake of analysis, we have been assuming that the analog input voltage of any analog-
to-digital converter is constant. This is an actual requirement. Most of these circuits
will not produce a correct digital code if the analog voltage at the input changes during
conversion time.
Unfortunately, most analog signals are not constant. Usually, we want to sample these
signals at periodic intervals and generate a series of digital codes that tells us something
about the way the input signal is changing over time. A circuit called a sample and hold
circuit must be used to bridge the gap between a changing analog signal and a requirement
for a constant ADC input voltage.
Figure 12.29 shows a basic sample and hold circuit. The voltage followers act as
buffers with high input and low output impedances. The transmission gate is enabled
during the sampling period, during which it charges the hold capacitor to the current
value of the analog signal. During the hold period, the capacitor retains its charge,
thus preserving the sampled analog voltage. The high input impedance of the second
voltage follower prevents the capacitor from discharging significantly during the hold
period.
K E Y T E R M
FIGURE 12.29
Sample and Hold Circuit
FIGURE 12.30
Sample and Hold Output
Figure 12.30 shows how a sample and hold circuit produces a steady series of constant
analog voltages for an ADC input. Since these sampled values have yet to be converted to
digital codes, they can take on any value within the analog range; they are not yet limited
by the number of bits in the quantization.
602 C H A P T E R 1 2 • Interfacing Analog and Digital Circuits
Ideally, a sample and hold circuit should charge quickly in sample mode and discharge
slowly in hold mode. These characteristics are facilitated by the low output impedance and
high input impedance of the voltage follower circuits.
Zo
vanalog vc
_
_
vc
_
_
Zi
a. Sampling phase b. Hold phase
FIGURE 12.31
Equivalent Circuits for Sample-and-Hold Circuit
Figure 12.31 shows the equivalent circuits of the sample and hold modes of the
circuit in Figure 12.29. In sample mode, the capacitor charges through the output impedance,
Zo, of the first voltage follower. Since this is a very small value (about 75 _
10_5 _), the capacitor will charge quickly. In the hold mode, the capacitor discharges
slowly through the very high input impedance of the second voltage follower (about
2 _ 1011 _).
The input and output impedances of the voltage follower are significantly different
from the open-loop op amp values. This is because, in the voltage follower configuration,
the input impedance is divided by the open loop gain (about 75 _/100,000)
and the output impedance is multiplied by the open loop gain (about 2 M_ _
100,000).
A variation of the sample and hold circuit is the track and hold circuit. The difference
is not so much in the circuit as in the way it is operated. A sample and hold
circuit is restricted by the charging speed of its hold capacitor. If there is a large
change in signal level between samples, the hold capacitor may not be able to keep
up with the change. A track and hold circuit samples the analog signal continuously,
minimizing charging delays of the hold capacitor. When the analog signal needs to be
converted, the track and hold circuit reverts to hold mode by closing the analog transmission
gate. Many high-speed ADCs have a track and hold circuit as an integral part
of the device.
Sampling Frequency and Aliasing
Nyquist sampling theorem A theorem from information theory that states that,
in order to preserve all information in a signal, it must be sampled at a rate of twice
the highest-frequency component of the signal. (fs 2fmax)
Aliasing A phenomenon that produces an unwanted low-frequency component in
a sampled analog signal due to a sampling frequency that is too slow relative to the
sampled analog signal.
Anti-aliasing filter A low-pass filter with a corner frequency of twice the maximum
frequency of a sampled signal, used to prevent aliasing in an ADC.
K E Y T E R M S
N O T E
12.3 • Analog-to-Digital Conversion 603
In the first section of this chapter, we saw that the sampling frequency of an ADC has a
great effect on the quality of the digital representation of an analog signal. We may ask,
what is the minimum value of the sampling frequency for any particular analog signal and
what happens if this criterion is not met?
A theorem in information theory, called the Nyquist sampling theorem, states that a
periodic signal must be sampled at least twice a cycle to preserve all its information. In
practice, this means that the sampling frequency of a particular system must be twice the
maximum frequency of any signal to be sampled by the system. (These frequencies might
also include harmonics of a signal that add to the basic signal to give it its characteristic
shape.) This can be expressed mathematically as fs 2fmax for a sampling frequency fs and
a maximum-frequency component of fmax.
For example, the sampling frequency for compact disc audio is 44.1 kHz, which allows
signals of up to 22.05 kHz to be sampled accurately. This fits in nicely with the statistical
range of human hearing: 20 Hz–20 kHz. (People who have listened to any amount
of rock music in their youth can probably only get up to 12 kHz.) Telephone-quality signals
are sampled at 8 kHz, yielding a maximum frequency of 4 kHz, which is a bit more
than the classical telephone-line bandwidth of 300 Hz–3300 Hz.
A sampling frequency of an ADC system that does not meet the criterion required by
the Nyquist sampling theorem results in aliasing, a phenomenon that generates a false lowfrequency
component of the digital sample.
To get an idea of how aliasing works, let us examine a sine wave with a period of 12 _s
( f _ 83.3 kHz), shown in Figure 12.32. If we sampled the signal every 1 _s, we would
capture the values listed in Table 12.5.
t
v
Actual signal
Implied signal (alias)
Sampling pulses
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40
, _s
FIGURE 12.32
Effect of Sampling Too Slowly
The points in Table 12.5 can be used to accurately reconstruct the original sine wave.
(The reconstructed output would need to be filtered to eliminate introduced high-frequency
components, but the fundamental frequency would be correct.)
Suppose now that we sample the same sine wave at less than twice a cycle. Table 12.6
shows the samples captured by a series of sampling pulses that are spaced by 13 _s. The
first four samples in the table are shown by vertical lines in Figure 12.32.
The samples in Table 12.6 have exactly the same amplitude as those taken in Table
12.5. However, the samples are spaced at 13 _s intervals, rather than 1 _s. For example,
the sample at 13 _s measures the sine wave amplitude at 390°, which is the same as 30° of
604 C H A P T E R 1 2 • Interfacing Analog and Digital Circuits
the second cycle. If these samples were used to reconstruct a sine wave, it would have a period
of 156 _s, rather than 12 _s. This false low-frequency component is shown by the broken
line connecting the first four samples in Figure 12.32, which represent measurements,
not in a single cycle, but in four cycles of the original analog signal. Figure 12.33 shows
one complete cycle of the alias frequency as a broken line and thirteen cycles of the sampled
signal as a solid line.
Aliasing can be prevented by filtering the analog input to an ADC with an antialiasing
filter, as shown in Figure 12.34.
The anti-aliasing filter is a low-pass filter with the corner frequency set to 2 fmax. Frequencies
less than 2 fmax are allowed to pass to the analog input of the ADC. Frequencies
greater than 2 fmax are attenuated. In this way, the ADC never converts any signal with a
frequency greater than 2 fmax and thus an alias frequency cannot develop.
Table 12.6 Sampled Values of an 83.3 kHz
Sine Wave (13 _s Sampling)
Time (_s) Degrees Fraction of Peak
0 0° 0.000
13 390° 0.500
26 780° 0.866
39 1170° 1.000
52 1560° 0.866
65 1950° 0.500
78 2340° 0.000
91 2730° _0.500
104 3120° _0.866
117 3510° _1.000
130 3900° _0.866
143 4290° _0.500
156 4680° 0.000
t
v
Analog signal
Alias frequency
FIGURE 12.33
Aliasing
Table 12.5 Sampled Values of an 83.3 kHz
Sine Wave (1 _s Sampling)
Time (_s) Degrees Fraction of Peak
0 0° 0.000
1 30° 0.500
2 60° 0.866
3 90° 1.000
4 120° 0.866
5 150° 0.500
6 180° 0.000
7 210° _0.500
8 240° _0.866
9 270° _1.000
10 300° _0.866
11 330° _0.500
12 360° 0.000
12.4 • Data Acquisition 605
12.4 Data Acquisition
Data acquisition network A circuit that gathers and digitizes data from several
analog sources.
CPLD Interface for an ADC
Figure 12.35 shows the symbol for an ADC0808 analog-to-digital converter. This successive
approximation ADC can form the basis of a data acquisition network, a system that
can convert analog information from up to eight channels and store the converted values in
a series of output latches.
K E Y T E R M
ADC
START
CLK
Digital
outputs
Anti-aliasing
filter
Analog
signal
source
fc _ 2
fs
fmax
FIGURE 12.34
Anti-aliasing Filtering
ADC0808
D3
D6
D7
D5
D4
EOC
D2
D1
D0
ADD A
IN1
IN0
IN7
ALE
ADD B
ADD C
START
CLOCK
OE
8-bit
digital output
8 mutiplexed
analog inputs
Address latch
enable
Start
conversion
Output enable
Analog channel
select
End-of-conversion
FIGURE 12.35
ADC0808 Analog-to-Digital Converter
www.electronictech.com
TheADC0808 has a built-in 8-channel analogmultiplexerwith inputs IN0 through IN7,
which are selected by the states of three address inputs, ADD C, ADD B, and ADD A, where
ADD C is the most significant bit. Before an analog input can be converted, its address must
be stored in an internal address latch by a high-going pulse on ALE (Address Latch Enable).
606 C H A P T E R 1 2 • Interfacing Analog and Digital Circuits
The conversion process starts with a high-going pulse on the START input. (START
and ALE can be tied together.) End-of-conversion is indicated by the EOC output. The conversion
process is driven by the CLOCK input. After conversion is complete, the digital
output can be read by making OE (Output Enable) HIGH. When OE is not active, the digital
outputs are in the high-impedance state.
CLOCK
START/ALE
EOC
OUTPUT ENABLE
FIGURE 12.36
Timing Diagram for an ADC0808
Figure 12.36 shows a timing diagram relating the various control signals of the
ADC0808. Figure 12.37 is an excerpt from the ADC0808 data sheet that shows relevant
timing information. The ADC is reset on the rising edge of START. After START/ALE goes
LOW, the ADC makes EOC go LOW within 8 clock cycles _ 2 _s. EOC stays LOW until
conversion is complete. The simplest way to operate the ADC on a stand-alone basis is to
tie the EOC line to the START/ALE line so that the ADC starts as soon as EOC goes HIGH
and the ADC continuously updates the value of the digital output.
We can design a state machine that controls the ADC and stores output values in an octal
latch automatically. Figure 12.38 shows such a circuit. The controller is a state machine
that will accept a LOW pulse from a pushbutton switch labeled go, perform one analog-todigital
conversion from one of eight analog channels and store the resulting 8-bit digital
value in an octal latch. The analog channel is manually selected by DIP switches at the address
select inputs. The entire state machine and latch portion of the circuit is contained in
one CPLD, such as the Altera EPM7128SLC84-7 on the Altera UP-1 circuit board.
Figure 12.39 shows the state diagram of the controller, with two synchronous inputs
called go and eoc. The asynchronous reset, which sets the machine to the idle state, is not
shown on the state diagram. Outputs are sc (start conversion), oe (output enable), and en
(latch enable). The states are as follows:
• idle—Wait for go _ 0 (switch pressed). All outputs are LOW.
• start—Wait for go _ 1 (switch released). Transition to wait1 makes sc _ 1
(START/ALE pulse). Other outputs are LOW.
• wait1—Wait for eoc _ 0. (Wait for conversion to start. EOC is LOW during, but not before,
conversion. Do not test for eoc _ 1 until after conversion.) All outputs LOW.
• wait2—Wait for eoc _ 1. (Conversion complete.) When complete, transition to read. At
that time, oe _ 1, en _ 1.
• read—Enable ADC output (oe _ 1) and make latch transparent (en _ 1).
• store—Keep ADC output enabled, put latch in store mode (en _ 0). ADC digital output
is now stored in the output latch.
Figure 12.40 shows a simulation of the controller. Both the latch and controller can be
implemented as VHDL design entities and instantiated as components in the top level of a
VHDL hierarchy. This and later VHDL examples will be saved as exercises for the lab
manual accompanying this book. The VHDL files are available to instructors in the Online
Companion to this book.
We should note that if the controller/latch circuit is to be implemented on the Altera
12.4 • Data Acquisition 607
Electrical Characteristics (Continued)
Digital Levels and DC Specifications: ADC0808CCN, ADC0808CCV, ADC0809CCN and ADC0809CCV, 4.75≤VCC≤5.25V,
–40 C≤TA≤+85C unless otherwise noted
Symbol Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Units
DATA OUTPUTS AND EOC (INTERRUPT)
VOUT(1) Logical ™“1” Output Voltage VCC = 4.75V
IOUT = –360 _A
IOUT = –10 _A
2.4
4.5
V(min)
V(min)
VOUT(0) Logical ™“0” Output Voltage IO=1.6 mA 0.45 V
VOUT(0) Logical ™“0” Output Voltage EOC IO=1.2 mA 0.45 V
IOUT TRI-STATE Output Current VO=5V 3 _ A
VO=0 –3 _ A
Electrical Characteristics
Timing Specifications VCC=VREF(+)=5V, VREF(˛) =GND, tr=tf=20 ns and TA=25C unless otherwise noted.
Symbol Parameter Conditions MIn Typ Max Units
tWS Minimum Start Pulse Width (Figure 5) 100 200 ns
tWALE Minimum ALE Pulse Width (Figure 5) 100 200 ns
ts Minimum Address Set-Up Time (Figure 5) 2
tH Minimum Address Hold Time (Figure 5) 2 n
tD Analog MUX Delay Time RS=0(Figure 5) 1 2.5 _s
From ALE
tH1, tH0 OE Control to Q Logic State CL=50 pF, RL=10k (Figure 8) 125
25 50 ns
25 50 ns
250 ns
t1H, t0H OE Control to Hi-Z CL=10 pF, RL=10k (Figure 8) 125 250 ns
tc Conversion Time fc=640 kHz, (Figure 5) (Note 7) 90 100 116 _s
fc Clock Frequency 10 640 1280 kHz
tEOC EOC Delay Time (Figure 5) 0 8+2 _S Clock
Periods
CIN Input Capacitance At Control Inputs 10 15 pF
COUT TRI-STATE Output At TRI-STATE Outputs 10 15 pF
Capacitance
Note 1: Absolute Maximum Ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. DC and AC electrical specifications do not apply when operating
the device beyond its specified operating conditions.
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