Analog Front-End IC Presents Total Motor-Control Solution

March 29, 2004
High throughput and simultaneous sampling for multi-axis positioning, motion control, and robotics come via the ADS7869 IC, a complete analog front end for motor-control applications. This Texas Instruments device integrates three 12-bit, 1-Msample/s...

High throughput and simultaneous sampling for multi-axis positioning, motion control, and robotics come via the ADS7869 IC, a complete analog front end for motor-control applications. This Texas Instruments device integrates three 12-bit, 1-Msample/s analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), including seven sample-and-hold circuits and 12 fully differential input channels.

"The ADS7869 advances the industry-standard VECANA01 motor-control solution designed by Burr-Brown 10 years ago, with a faster sampling rate, higher integration, and lower cost," says Miroslav Oljaca, strategic TI's marketing manager for motor-control converter products. "This allows customers to simultaneously measure three motor currents and to precisely determine the position of the motor and load."

The IC includes three fully differential inputs for phase-current measurement. Each input is connected to a window comparator and a sign comparator. This corrects for current distortion caused by dead time and provides a user-selectable level of overcurrent protection. For position-sensor analysis, four sign comparators connected to four input channels and two 16-bit up/down counters are incorporated, along with synchronous and asynchronous sampling to enable precision encoder measurement and position control.

Key specs include 12-bit system offset and gain adjustment for every channel, ±1-LSB integral nonlinearity (INL), ±0.65-LSB differential nonlinearity (DNL), and −78-dB distortion (at 10 kHz). The device has a flexible digital interface, two standard parallel port operating modes, a serial peripheral interface, and a specialized serial interface with three data lines (VECANA01 mode). It interfaces with most DSPs or microcontrollers.

Packaged in a TQFP-100, it costs $14.60 in 1000-piece lots.

Texas Instrumentswww.ti.com
About the Author

Roger Allan

Roger Allan is an electronics journalism veteran, and served as Electronic Design's Executive Editor for 15 of those years. He has covered just about every technology beat from semiconductors, components, packaging and power devices, to communications, test and measurement, automotive electronics, robotics, medical electronics, military electronics, robotics, and industrial electronics. His specialties include MEMS and nanoelectronics technologies. He is a contributor to the McGraw Hill Annual Encyclopedia of Science and Technology. He is also a Life Senior Member of the IEEE and holds a BSEE from New York University's School of Engineering and Science. Roger has worked for major electronics magazines besides Electronic Design, including the IEEE Spectrum, Electronics, EDN, Electronic Products, and the British New Scientist. He also has working experience in the electronics industry as a design engineer in filters, power supplies and control systems.

After his retirement from Electronic Design Magazine, He has been extensively contributing articles for Penton’s Electronic Design, Power Electronics Technology, Energy Efficiency and Technology (EE&T) and Microwaves RF Magazine, covering all of the aforementioned electronics segments as well as energy efficiency, harvesting and related technologies. He has also contributed articles to other electronics technology magazines worldwide.

He is a “jack of all trades and a master in leading-edge technologies” like MEMS, nanolectronics, autonomous vehicles, artificial intelligence, military electronics, biometrics, implantable medical devices, and energy harvesting and related technologies.

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