[time-nuts] Power Supply for AD9852 / AD9854
d0ct0r
time at patoka.org
Sun Mar 16 04:21:32 UTC 2014
Many thanks indeed for detailed answer ! Yes, I will using Evaluation
Board for my project.
Regards,
V.P.
On 2014-03-16 00:06, Charles Steinmetz wrote:
>> By design, DDS "stones" like AD9852 from Analog Devices, required
>> separated power lines for AVDD, DVDD and VCC. What will is simple
>> solution for that ? I am planing to use following approach: +5V from
>> linear PS, then three LC filters, then three 3.3V voltage regulators
>> (Ex.: MC33269T) connected to each filter. Is it good enough ? May be
>> its better solution for this ? Or may be that could be simplified to
>> join AVDD and VCC (AVDD will be connected to VCC via 100 Ohm).
>
> Do you have the AD evaluation board, or are you starting with the bare
> chip?
>
> If you really want to know how simple you can make it, why not try it
> yourself, and see what you need? You will learn a lot more that way
> than by asking first every time a question occurs to you.
>
> Follow the evaluation board plan and put a 0.1uF (100nF) monolithic
> ceramic capacitor right at each power input pin of the IC itself
> (something like 10 capacitors per supply).
>
> First, use one 3.3v regulator and feed its output straight to all
> three circuits, with simply a local bypass cap for each one (plus the
> per-pin capacitors as noted above). Run the DDS and see how it
> performs.
>
> Then, see how three separate LC filters perform (each LC fed by the
> regulated 3.3v supply).
>
> Finally, feed the unregulated supply to the "upstream" side of each of
> the three LC filters, and use a separate 3.3v regulator on the
> "downstream" side for each supply.
>
> In each case, note carefully (at a lot of different output
> frequencies) the general output noise level and the presence of any
> spurs and birdies in the output, as well as any logic faults you find
> (wrong frequency, system hangs up, bus errors, etc.).
>
> It might be more instructive to run those steps backwards -- first,
> see how it works with the most complex (and presumably best) supply,
> then try the simpler circuits and see what problems crop up.
>
> Of course, with either test protocol it is difficult to know whether
> you have tried every operating state that could cause a problem, so
> play with it quite a while with each setup and try to use every
> function and combination.
>
> As Chris said, you need to be very careful with your grounds. These
> chips are intended to be put on boards with four or more layers. The
> AD evaluation board has four layers with a common ground plane for the
> analog and digital circuitry -- it is possible you could do better
> with more careful attention to grounding.
>
> Best regards,
>
> Charles
>
>
>
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--
WBW,
V.P.
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