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MIXED-SIGNALAND DSP
DESIGN TECHNIQUES
INTRODUCTION SECTION 1
SAMPLED DATA SYSTEMS SECTION 2
ADCs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 3
DACs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 4
FAST FOURIER TRANSFORMS SECTION 5
DIGITAL FILTERS SECTION 6
DSP HARDWARE SECTION 7
INTERFACING TO DSPs SECTION 8
DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 9
HARDWARE DESIGN SECTION 10
TECHNIQUES
INDEX
ANALOG DEVICES TECHNICAL REFERENCE BOOKS
PUBLISHED BY PRENTICE HALL
Analog-Digital Conversion Handbook
Digital Signal Processing Applications Using the ADSP-2100 Family
(Volume 1:1992, Volume 2:1994)
Digital Signal Processing in VLSI
DSP Laboratory Experiments Using the ADSP-2101
ADSP-2100 Family User's Manual
PUBLISHED BY ANALOG DEVICES
Practical DesignTechniques for Sensor Signal Conditioning
Practical DesignTechniques for Power and Thermal Management
High Speed Design Techniques
Practical Analog Design Techniques
Linear Design Seminar
ADSP-21000 Family Applications Handbook
System Applications Guide
Amplifier Applications Guide
Nonlinear Circuits Handbook
Transducer Interfacing Handbook
Synchro & Resolver Conversion
THE BEST OF Analog Dialogue, 1967-1991
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Non-800 Number: 781-937-1428.
MIXED-SIGNAL AND DSP
DESIGN TECHNIQUES
a
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Thanks are due the many technical staff members of Analog Devices in Engineering
and Marketing who provided invaluable inputs during this project. Particular credit is due
the individual authors whose names appear at the beginning of their material.
Special thanks go to Wes Freeman, Ed Grokulsky, Bill Chestnut, Dan King, Greg
Geerling, Ken Waurin, Steve Cox, and Colin Duggan for reviewing the material for
content and accuracy.
Judith Douville compiled the index.
Walt Kester
2000
Copyright
2000 by Analog Devices, Inc.
Printed in the United States of America
All rights reserved. This book, or parts thereof, must not be reproduced in any form
without permission of the copyright owner.
Information furnished by Analog Devices, Inc., is believed to be accurate and reliable.
However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices, Inc., for its use.
Analog Devices, Inc., makes no representation that the interconnections of its circuits as
described herein will not infringe on existing or future patent rights, nor do the
descriptions contained herein imply the granting of licenses to make, use, or sell
equipment constructed in accordance therewith.
Specifications are subject to change without notice.
ISBN-0-916550-23-0
MIXED-SIGNAL AND DSP
DESIGN TECHNIQUES
SECTION 1
INTRODUCTION
SECTION 2
SAMPLED DATA SYSTEMS
■ Discrete Time Sampling of Analog Signals
■ ADC and DAC Static Transfer Functions and DC Errors
■ AC Errors in Data Converters
■ DAC Dynamic Performance
SECTION 3
ADCs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS
■ Successive Approximation ADCs
■ Sigma-Delta ADCs
■ Flash Converters
■ Subranging (Pipelined) ADCs
■ Bit-Per-Stage (Serial, or Ripple) ADCs
SECTION 4
DACs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS
■ DAC Structures
■ Low Distortion DAC Architectures
■ DAC Logic
■ Sigma-Delta DACs
■ Direct Digital Synthesis (DDS)
SECTION 5
FAST FOURIER TRANSFORMS
■ The Discrete Fourier Transform
■ The Fast Fourier Transform
■ FFT Hardware Implementation and Benchmarks
■ DSP Requirements for Real Time FFT Applications
■ Spectral Leakage and Windowing
SECTION 6
DIGITAL FILTERS
■ Finite Impulse Response (FIR) Filters
■ Infinite Impulse Response (IIR) Filters
■ Multirate Filters
■ Adaptive Filters
SECTION 7
DSP HARDWARE
■ Microcontrollers, Microprocessors, and Digital Signal
Processors (DSPs)
■ DSP Requirements
■ ADSP-21xx 16-Bit Fixed-Point DSP Core
■ Fixed-Point Versus Floating Point
■ ADI SHARC® Floating Point DSPs
■ ADSP-2116x Single-Instruction, Multiple Data (SIMD)
Core Architecture
■ TigerSHARC™: The ADSP-TS001 Static Superscalar
DSP
■ DSP Benchmarks
■ DSP Evaluation and Development Tools
SECTION 8
INTERFACING TO DSPs
■ Parallel Interfacing to DSP Processors: Reading Data
From Memory-Mapped Peripheral ADCs
■ Parallel Interfacing to DSP Processors: Writing Data to
Memory-Mapped DACs
■ Serial Interfacing to DSP Processors
■ Interfacing I/O Ports, Analog Front Ends, and Codecs to
DSPs
■ DSP System Interface
SECTION 9
DSP APPLICATIONS
■ High Performance Modems for Plain Old Telephone
Service (POTS)
■ Remote Access Server (RAS) Modems
■ ADSL (Assymetric Digital Subscriber Line)
■ Digital Cellular Telephones
■ GSM Handset Using SoftFone™ Baseband Processor
and Othello™ Radio
■ Analog Cellular Basestations
■ Digital Cellular Basestations
[...]...I Motor Control I Codecs and DSPs in Voiceband and Audio Applications I A Sigma-Delta ADC with Programmable Digital Filter SECTION 10 HARDWARE DESIGN TECHNIQUES I Low Voltage Interfaces I Grounding in Mixed Signal Systems I Digital Isolation Techniques I Power Supply Noise Reduction and Filtering I Dealing with High Speed Logic INDEX MIXED-SIGNALANDDSP DESIGN TECHNIQUES INTRODUCTION SECTION... ADCs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 3 DACs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 4 FAST FOURIER TRANSFORMS SECTION 5 DIGITAL FILTERS SECTION 6 DSP HARDWARE SECTION 7 INTERFACING TO DSPs SECTION 8 DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 9 HARDWARE DESIGN TECHNIQUES SECTION 10 INDEX INTRODUCTION SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION 1.a INTRODUCTION 1.b INTRODUCTION SECTION 1 INTRODUCTION Walt Kester ORIGINS OF REAL-WORLD SIGNALS AND THEIR... in passband, no ripple in stopband), and the response is shown in Figure 1.5 In practice, this filter would probably be realized using three 2-pole stages, each of which requires an op amp, and several resistors and capacitors Modern filter design CAD packages make the 6-pole design relatively straightforward, but maintaining the 0.5dB ripple specification requires accurate component selection and matching... previously derived using extensive DSP analysis (i.e.,sound source, microphone, preamp, ADC, etc.) 1.3 INTRODUCTION METHODS AND TECHNOLOGIES AVAILABLE FOR PROCESSING REAL-WORLD SIGNALS Signals may be processed using analog techniques (analog signal processing, or ASP), digital techniques (digital signal processing, or DSP) , or a combination of analog and digital techniques (mixed signal processing,... the figure show the DSP approach Note that once the decision has been made to use DSP techniques, the next decision must be where to place the ADC in the signal path 1.4 INTRODUCTION ANALOG AND DIGITAL SIGNAL PROCESSING OPTIONS REAL WORLD SENSOR ANALOG CONDITIONING ANALOG SIGNAL PROCESSING ANALOG CONDITIONING SENSOR SIGNAL PROCESSING SENSOR SENSOR ADC DSP DAC ADC AND CONDITIONING DSP DAC ADC CODEC OR... Autocorrelation, Convolution) I Capture and Store Signal in Digital Format for Analysis (FFT Techniques) Figure 1.2 GENERATION OF REAL-WORLD SIGNALS In most of the above examples (the ones requiring DSP techniques) , both ADCs and DACs are required In some cases, however, only DACs are required where realworld analog signals may be generated directly using DSPand DACs Video raster scan display systems... between fa and fs/2 are not of interest and do not limit the dynamic range 2.4 SAMPLED DATA SYSTEMS The antialiasing filter transition band is therefore determined by the corner frequency fa, the stopband frequency fs – fa, and the desired stopband attenuation, DR The required system dynamic range is chosen based on the requirement for signal fidelity OVERSAMPLING RELAXES REQUIREMENTS ON BASEBAND ANTIALIASING... transition region between 1MHz and 2MHz (1 octave) requires a minimum of 10 poles - not a trivial filter, and definitely a design challenge Therefore, other filter types are generally more suited to high speed applications where the requirement is for a sharp transition band and in-band flatness coupled with linear phase response Elliptic filters meet these criteria and are a popular choice There are... Frequency / RF Filtering, Modulation, Demodulation N Analog Anti-Aliasing and Reconstruction Filters with ADCs and DACs N Where COMMON SENSE and Economics Dictate! Figure 1.7 1.8 INTRODUCTION REFERENCES 1 Practical Design Techniques for Sensor Signal Conditioning, Analog Devices, 1998 2 Daniel H Sheingold, Editor, Transducer Interfacing Handbook, Analog Devices, Inc., 1972 3 Richard J Higgins, Digital Signal... to the analog mixing process and implies that some filtering ahead of the sampler (or ADC) is required to remove frequency components which are outside the Nyquist bandwidth, but whose aliased components fall inside it The filter performance will depend on how close the out-of-band signal is to fs/2 and the amount of attenuation required Baseband Antialiasing Filters Baseband sampling implies that the . DEVICES Practical Design Techniques for Sensor Signal Conditioning Practical Design Techniques for Power and Thermal Management High Speed Design Techniques Practical Analog Design Techniques Linear Design. MIXED-SIGNAL AND DSP DESIGN TECHNIQUES INTRODUCTION SECTION 1 SAMPLED DATA SYSTEMS SECTION 2 ADCs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 3 DACs FOR DSP APPLICATIONS SECTION 4 FAST. area of interest. For price and delivery, select option three. For literature and samples, select option two. Non-800 Number: 781-937-1428. MIXED-SIGNAL AND DSP DESIGN TECHNIQUES a ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Thanks