SCDA017A September   2019  – July 2024 BQ24392 , HD3SS212 , HD3SS213 , HD3SS214 , HD3SS215 , HD3SS3202 , HD3SS3212 , HD3SS3220 , HD3SS3411 , HD3SS460 , TMUXHS4212 , TS3DV642 , TS3USB221 , TS3USB221A , TS3USB221E , TS3USB30 , TS3USB3000 , TS3USB3031 , TS3USB30E , TS3USB31 , TS3USB31E , TS3USB3200 , TS5USBA224 , TS5USBC400 , TS5USBC402 , TS5USBC41 , TUSB1042I , TUSB542

 

  1.   1
  2.   Passive Mux Selection Based On Bandwidth > Ron
  3.   Trademarks
  4. 1Introduction
  5. 2Key Performance Parameters
    1. 2.1 On Resistance (RON) and RON Flatness
    2. 2.2 Bandwidth (BW)
    3. 2.3 Signal Harmornics and Distortion
  6. 3What is More Important for High-Speed Interface and Video Systems
    1. 3.1 Muxes for USB Systems
    2. 3.2 Muxes for High Speed Video Systems (HDMI, Displayport)
  7. 4Summary
  8. 5Revision History

Muxes for High Speed Video Systems (HDMI, Displayport)

HDMI and DisplayPort are high-speed video interfaces for transmitting uncompressed video data from an HDMI or DisplayPort source device to a compatible computer monitor, video game console, or HDTV. The HDMI and DisplayPort signal consist of four low-voltage differential signal (LVDS) pairs for the red, green, blue (RGB) video. An ideal HDMI and DisplayPort mux contains four differential pairs of 1:2 or 2:1 muxes with high bandwidth to avoid degrading video quality.

The Niquist frequency of HDMI 2.0 is 3 GHz, and 4 GHz for DP1.4. For some analog muxes TI offers for HDMI and DisplayPort video applications, see Table 3-2.

Table 3-2 TI Muxes for Video Systems
Part Function Ron (Ω) BW (Mhz) Supply (V) OVP (V) ESD System
HD3SS215 SPDT 8 7000 3–3.6 x HBM 1.5 kv HDMI2.0/DP1.2
HD3SS214 SPDT 8 8000 3–3.6 x HBM 2 kv DP1.4
TS3DV642 SPDT 8.2 6900 2.6–4.5 x HBM 2 kv HDMI2.0/DVI
TMUXHS4612 SPDT 8 10000 3 - 3.6 x HBM 2kV HDMI2.1/ DP2.1