Figure 9-6 shows an example design using the THS3215 to deliver a 10 VPP maximum
voltage from a DAC input, and includes an example external, third-order, interstage
Bessel filter. Some of the salient considerations for this design include:
- Termination resistance at the D2S
inputs is increased to reduce DAC output current. This example is intended to be
used with a current-sourcing DAC with an output compliance voltage of at least 1
V on a
0.5 V common-mode voltage. The 10-mA,
single-ended, DAC tail current produces a 0 V to 1 V swing on each 100 Ω
termination. The resulting 2 VPP differential DAC signal produces a
higher SNR signal at the THS3215 inputs.
- The midscale buffer is not used.
VREF (pin 14) is grounded to set the inputs to a 4-VPP
ground-centered maximum output swing at VO1 (pin 6). The external input to the
OPS is selected by setting PATHSEL (pin 4) to 3.3 V (anything over 1.3 V is
adequate, or tie this pin to +VCC for fixed, external-path
operation).
- The interstage Bessel filter is
–0.3 dB flat through 12 MHz, with only 1.55 dB of insertion loss. The filter is
designed to be low insertion-loss with relatively high resistor values. The
filter uses standard inductor values. The capacitors are also standard-value,
and slightly off from the exact filter solution. The final resistor to ground is
designed for 500 Ω, but increased here to a standard 511 Ω externally to account
for the internal 18.5 kΩ resistor on the external OPS input pin to GND. To
isolate the last 75 pF filter capacitor from the OPS input stage, a 10 Ω series
resistor is added close to the VIN+ (pin 9) input.
- The filter adds 1.55 dB of
insertion loss that is recovered, to achieve a 10 VPP maximum output
by designing the OPS for a gain of 3 V/V. Looking at Table 8-6, this gain setting requires the 205 Ω external RF and 102 Ω
RG to ground for best operation.
- For 10 VPP maximum
output, the ±7.5 V supplies shown in Figure 9-6 give adequate headroom in the OPS output stage. The operating maximum supply
of 15.8 V requires a 5% tolerance on these ±7.5 V supplies.
- The Bessel filter gives a very
low overshoot full-scale output step-response, as shown in the 5 MHz, ±5 V
square wave of Figure 9-8. The frequency response of the system is shown in Figure 9-7.