SNAS724A February   2018  – April 2018 LMK05028

PRODUCTION DATA.  

  1. Features
  2. Applications
  3. Description
    1.     Device Images
      1.      Simplified Block Diagram
  4. Revision History
  5. Description (continued)
  6. Pin Configuration and Functions
    1.     Pin Functions
    2. 6.1 Device Start-Up Modes
  7. Specifications
    1. 7.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 7.2 ESD Ratings
    3. 7.3 Recommended Operating Conditions
    4. 7.4 Thermal Information
    5. 7.5 Electrical Characteristics
    6. 7.6 Timing Diagrams
    7. 7.7 Typical Characteristics
  8. Parameter Measurement Information
    1. 8.1 Output Clock Test Configurations
  9. Detailed Description
    1. 9.1 Overview
      1. 9.1.1 ITU-T G.8262 (SyncE) Standards Compliance
    2. 9.2 Functional Block Diagrams
      1. 9.2.1 PLL Architecture Overview
      2. 9.2.2 3-Loop Mode
        1. 9.2.2.1 PLL Output Clock Phase Noise Analysis in 3-Loop Mode
      3. 9.2.3 2-Loop REF-DPLL Mode
      4. 9.2.4 2-Loop TCXO-DPLL Mode
      5. 9.2.5 PLL Configurations for Common Applications
    3. 9.3 Feature Description
      1. 9.3.1  Oscillator Input (XO_P/N)
      2. 9.3.2  TCXO/OCXO Input (TCXO_IN)
      3. 9.3.3  Reference Inputs (INx_P/N)
      4. 9.3.4  Clock Input Interfacing and Termination
      5. 9.3.5  Reference Input Mux Selection
        1. 9.3.5.1 Automatic Input Selection
        2. 9.3.5.2 Manual Input Selection
      6. 9.3.6  Hitless Switching
      7. 9.3.7  Gapped Clock Support on Reference Inputs
      8. 9.3.8  Input Clock and PLL Monitoring, Status, and Interrupts
        1. 9.3.8.1 XO Input Monitoring
        2. 9.3.8.2 TCXO Input Monitoring
        3. 9.3.8.3 Reference Input Monitoring
          1. 9.3.8.3.1 Reference Validation Timer
          2. 9.3.8.3.2 Amplitude Monitor
          3. 9.3.8.3.3 Missing Pulse Monitor (Late Detect)
          4. 9.3.8.3.4 Runt Pulse Monitor (Early Detect)
          5. 9.3.8.3.5 Frequency Monitoring
          6. 9.3.8.3.6 Phase Valid Monitor for 1-PPS Inputs
        4. 9.3.8.4 PLL Lock Detectors
        5. 9.3.8.5 Tuning Word History
        6. 9.3.8.6 Status Outputs
        7. 9.3.8.7 Interrupt
      9. 9.3.9  PLL Channels
        1. 9.3.9.1  PLL Frequency Relationships
        2. 9.3.9.2  Analog PLL (APLL)
        3. 9.3.9.3  APLL XO Doubler
        4. 9.3.9.4  APLL Phase Frequency Detector (PFD) and Charge Pump
        5. 9.3.9.5  APLL Loop Filter
        6. 9.3.9.6  APLL Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCO)
          1. 9.3.9.6.1 VCO Calibration
        7. 9.3.9.7  APLL VCO Post-Dividers (P1, P2)
        8. 9.3.9.8  APLL Fractional N Divider (N) With SDM
        9. 9.3.9.9  REF-DPLL Reference Divider (R)
        10. 9.3.9.10 TCXO/OCXO Input Doubler and M Divider
        11. 9.3.9.11 TCXO Mux
        12. 9.3.9.12 REF-DPLL and TCXO-DPLL Time-to-Digital Converter (TDC)
        13. 9.3.9.13 REF-DPLL and TCXO-DPLL Loop Filter
        14. 9.3.9.14 REF-DPLL and TCXO-DPLL Feedback Dividers
      10. 9.3.10 Output Clock Distribution
      11. 9.3.11 Output Channel Muxes
        1. 9.3.11.1 TCXO/Ref Bypass Mux
      12. 9.3.12 Output Dividers
      13. 9.3.13 Clock Outputs (OUTx_P/N)
        1. 9.3.13.1 AC-Differential Output (AC-DIFF)
        2. 9.3.13.2 HCSL Output
        3. 9.3.13.3 LVCMOS Output (1.8 V, 2.5 V)
        4. 9.3.13.4 Output Auto-Mute During LOL or LOS
      14. 9.3.14 Glitchless Output Clock Start-Up
      15. 9.3.15 Clock Output Interfacing and Termination
      16. 9.3.16 Output Synchronization (SYNC)
      17. 9.3.17 Zero-Delay Mode (ZDM) Configuration
      18. 9.3.18 PLL Cascading With Internal VCO Loopback
    4. 9.4 Device Functional Modes
      1. 9.4.1 Device Start-Up Modes
        1. 9.4.1.1 EEPROM Mode
        2. 9.4.1.2 ROM Mode
      2. 9.4.2 PLL Operating Modes
        1. 9.4.2.1 Free-Run Mode
        2. 9.4.2.2 Lock Acquisition
        3. 9.4.2.3 Locked Mode
        4. 9.4.2.4 Holdover Mode
      3. 9.4.3 PLL Start-Up Sequence
      4. 9.4.4 Digitally-Controlled Oscillator (DCO) Mode
        1. 9.4.4.1 DCO Frequency Step Size
        2. 9.4.4.2 DCO Direct-Write Mode
      5. 9.4.5 Zero-Delay Mode (ZDM)
      6. 9.4.6 Cascaded PLL Operation
    5. 9.5 Programming
      1. 9.5.1 Interface and Control
      2. 9.5.2 I2C Serial Interface
        1. 9.5.2.1 I2C Block Register Transfers
      3. 9.5.3 SPI Serial Interface
        1. 9.5.3.1 SPI Block Register Transfer
      4. 9.5.4 Register Map Generation
      5. 9.5.5 General Register Programming Sequence
      6. 9.5.6 EEPROM Programming Flow
        1. 9.5.6.1 EEPROM Programming Using Register Commit (Method #1)
          1. 9.5.6.1.1 Write SRAM Using Register Commit
          2. 9.5.6.1.2 Program EEPROM
        2. 9.5.6.2 EEPROM Programming Using Direct SRAM Writes (Method #2)
          1. 9.5.6.2.1 Write SRAM Using Direct Writes
      7. 9.5.7 Read SRAM
      8. 9.5.8 Read EEPROM
      9. 9.5.9 EEPROM Start-Up Mode Default Configuration
    6. 9.6 Register Maps
  10. 10Application and Implementation
    1. 10.1 Application Information
      1. 10.1.1 Device Start-Up Sequence
      2. 10.1.2 Power Down (PDN) Pin
      3. 10.1.3 Power Rail Sequencing, Power Supply Ramp Rate, and Mixing Supply Domains
        1. 10.1.3.1 Mixing Supplies
        2. 10.1.3.2 Power-On Reset (POR) Circuit
        3. 10.1.3.3 Powering Up From a Single-Supply Rail
        4. 10.1.3.4 Power Up From Split-Supply Rails
        5. 10.1.3.5 Non-Monotonic or Slow Power-Up Supply Ramp
      4. 10.1.4 Slow or Delayed XO Start-Up
    2. 10.2 Typical Application
      1. 10.2.1 Design Requirements
      2. 10.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure
      3. 10.2.3 Application Curves
    3. 10.3 Do's and Don'ts
  11. 11Power Supply Recommendations
    1. 11.1 Power Supply Bypassing
  12. 12Layout
    1. 12.1 Layout Guidelines
    2. 12.2 Layout Example
    3. 12.3 Thermal Reliability
  13. 13Device and Documentation Support
    1. 13.1 Device Support
      1. 13.1.1 Clock Architect
      2. 13.1.2 TICS Pro
    2. 13.2 Documentation Support
      1. 13.2.1 Related Documentation
    3. 13.3 Receiving Notification of Documentation Updates
    4. 13.4 Community Resources
    5. 13.5 Trademarks
    6. 13.6 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    7. 13.7 Glossary
  14. 14Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information

Overview

The LMK05028 is a high-performance network synchronizer clock device that provides jitter cleaning, clock generation, advanced clock monitoring, and superior hitless switching performance to meet the stringent timing requirements of communications infrastructure and industrial applications.

The LMK05028 features four reference inputs, two independent PLL channels, and eight output clocks with RMS phase jitter of 150-fs typical. The flexible PLL channels provide programmable loop bandwidths for input jitter and wander attenuation and fractional-N PLL frequency synthesis to generate any output frequency from any input frequency. Each PLL channel has three phase-locked loops comprised of two digital PLLs (DPLLs) and one analog PLL (APLL) with a low-noise integrated VCO. Each channel supports three-loop or two-loop mode configurations to optimize clock performance and solution cost for different use cases.

The reference input muxes support automatic input selection or manual input selection through software or pin control. The reference switchover event will be hitless with superior phase transient performance (50-ps typical). The reference clock input monitoring block monitors the clock inputs and will perform a switchover or holdover when a loss of reference (LOR) is detected. A LOR condition can be detected upon any violation of the threshold limits set for the input monitors, which include amplitude, frequency, missing pulse, runt pulse, and 1-PPS (pulse-per-second) detectors. The threshold limits for each input detector can be set and enabled independently per clock input. The tuning word history monitor feature allows the initial output frequency accuracy upon entry into holdover to be determined by the historical average frequency when locked, minimizing the frequency and phase disturbance during a LOR condition.

The device has eight outputs with programmable drivers, allowing up to eight differential clocks, eight LVCMOS pairs (two outputs per pair), or a combination of both. The output clocks can be selected from either PLL/VCO domain by the output muxes. A 1-PPS output can be supported on outputs 0 and 7. The output dividers have a SYNC feature to allow multiple outputs to be phase-aligned. If needed, zero delay can be enabled to achieve a deterministic phase offset between any specified PLL output clock and its selected input clock.

To support IEEE 1588 PTP slave clock or other clock steering applications, each PLL channel also supports DCO mode with <1-ppt (part per trillion) frequency resolution for precise frequency and phase adjustment through external software or pin control.

The device is fully programmable through I2C or SPI and features custom start-up frequency configuration with the internal EEPROM, which is custom factory pre-programmable and in-system programmable. Internal LDO regulators provide excellent PSNR to reduce the cost and complexity of the power delivery network. The clock input and PLL monitoring status can be observed through the status pins and interrupt registers for full diagnostic capability.