JAJSEC5E December 2011 – December 2022 ADS1113-Q1 , ADS1114-Q1 , ADS1115-Q1
PRODUCTION DATA
The principle I2C connections for the ADS1115-Q1 are shown in Figure 9-1.
The fully-differential voltage input of the ADS111x-Q1 is ideal for connection to differential sources with moderately low source impedance, such as thermocouples and thermistors. Although the ADS111x-Q1 can read bipolar differential signals, these devices cannot accept negative voltages on either input.
The ADS111x-Q1 draw transient currents during conversion. A 0.1-μF power-supply bypass capacitor supplies the momentary bursts of extra current required from the supply.
The ADS111x-Q1 interface directly to standard mode, fast mode, and high-speed mode I2C controllers. Any microcontroller I2C peripheral, including controller-only and single-controller I2C peripherals, operates with the ADS111x-Q1. The ADS111x-Q1 does not perform clock-stretching (that is, the device never pulls the clock line low), so this function does not need to be provided for unless other clock-stretching devices are on the same I2C bus.
Pullup resistors are required on both the SDA and SCL lines because I2C bus drivers are open drain. The size of these resistors depends on the bus operating speed and capacitance of the bus lines. Higher-value resistors consume less power, but increase the transition times on the bus, thus limiting the bus speed. Lower-value resistors allow higher speed, but at the expense of higher power consumption. Long bus lines have higher capacitance and require smaller pullup resistors to compensate. Do not use resistors that are too small to avoid bus drivers being unable to pull the bus lines low.