JAJSUG4 December 2024 TRF1213
PRODUCTION DATA
A common application for the TRF1213 is driving a high-speed ADC that has a differential input (such as the ADC12DJ5200 or AFE7950). Conventionally, passive baluns are used to drive giga-samples-per-second (GSPS) ADCs as a result of the low availability of high-bandwidth, linear amplifiers. The TRF1213 is a single-ended to differential (S2D) RF amplifier that has excellent bandwidth flatness, gain, and phase imbalance comparable to or exceeding costly, passive RF baluns.
Figure 7-1 shows a typical interface circuit for ADC12DJ5200. Depending on the ADC and system requirement, this circuit can be simplified or more complex.
Figure 7-1 shows two sections of the circuit between the driver amp and the ADC: namely, the matching pad (or attenuator pad) and the antialiasing filter. Use small-form-factor, RF-quality, passive components for these circuits. The output swing of the TRF1213 is designed to drive these ADCs to full-scale, while at the same time not overdrive the ADC. This functionality avoids the need for any voltage limiting device at the ADC.
Figure 7-2 shows a typical interface circuit for the AFE7950, where the TRF1213 is the S2D amplifier.