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MAX1090 Datasheet, PDF (18/20 Pages) Maxim Integrated Products – 400ksps, +5V, 8-/4-Channel, 10-Bit ADCs with +2.5V Reference and Parallel Interface
400ksps, +5V, 8-/4-Channel, 10-Bit ADCs
with +2.5V Reference and Parallel Interface
SUPPLIES
+3V
VLOGIC = +3V/+5V GND
R* = 5Ω
4.7µF
0.1µF
VDD
GND
COM
+3V/+5V DGND
MAX1090
MAX1092
DIGITAL
CIRCUITRY
*OPTIONAL
Figure 11. Power-Supply and Grounding Connections
Signal-to-Noise Ratio
For a waveform perfectly reconstructed from digital
samples, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) is the ratio of full-
scale analog input (RMS value) to the RMS quantization
error (residual error). The ideal theoretical minimum
analog-to-digital noise is caused by quantization error
only and results directly from the ADC’s resolution (N
bits):
SNR = (6.02 · N + 1.76)dB
In reality, there are other noise sources besides quanti-
zation noise, including thermal noise, reference noise,
clock jitter, etc. Therefore, SNR is computed by taking
the ratio of the RMS signal to the RMS noise, which
includes all spectral components minus the fundamen-
tal, the first five harmonics, and the DC offset.
Signal-to-Noise Plus Distortion
Signal-to-noise plus distortion (SINAD) is the ratio of the
fundamental input frequency’s RMS amplitude to RMS
equivalent of all other ADC output signals.
SINAD (dB) = 20 · log (SignalRMS / NoiseRMS)
Effective Number of Bits
Effective number of bits (ENOB) indicates the global
accuracy of an ADC at a specific input frequency and
sampling rate. An ideal ADC’s error consists of quanti-
zation noise only. With an input range equal to the
ADC’s full-scale range, calculate the ENOB as follows:
ENOB = (SINAD - 1.76) / 6.02
Total Harmonic Distortion
Total harmonic distortion (THD) is the ratio of the RMS
sum of the input signal’s first five harmonics to the fun-
damental itself. This is expressed as:
⋅ THD = 20

log 


V22
+
V32
+
V42
+
V52



/ V1
where V1 is the fundamental amplitude, and V2 through
V5 are the amplitudes of the 2nd- through 5th-order
harmonics.
Spurious-Free Dynamic Range
Spurious-free dynamic range (SFDR) is the ratio of RMS
amplitude of the fundamental (maximum signal compo-
nent) to the RMS value of the next-largest distortion
component.
Chip Information
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