Texas Instruments today introduced the ADC32RF45, the industry’s fastest 14-bit analog-to-digital converter (ADC) with what the company states is the highest level of radio-frequency (RF) sampling performance. This dual-channel ADC enables direct RF signal conversion up to 4 GHz, giving engineers access to the highest dynamic range and input bandwidth. The first in a new data converter family in TI’s RF sampling portfolio, the ADC32RF45 eliminates up to four intermediate-frequency downconversion stages in multiband receivers, which simplifies system architecture and reduces board space up to 75 percent.
“It’s unbelievable how dense a customers’ system is,” said Mark Stropoli, Business Manager for TI’s Industrial, Medical Imaging, Test and Measurement and Broadband. “High-density systems are a challenge for our customers. They need a device with a small form factor and low power consumption. The ADC32RF45 meets their need for a compact, highly integrated device with the smallest footprint available in a 14-bit ADC. The analog input of this ADC supports out up to 4 GHz of bandwidth for what we call true RF sampling. This further meets engineers’ requirements for higher integration, better noise performance, wider bandwidth and smaller footprints for applications such as radar, software-defined radio, aerospace and defense, test and measurement, wireless communication, and radio astronomy systems.”
Key features and benefits
- Support for RF inputs up to 4 GHz enables direct RF signal conversion in the first, second and third Nyquist zones (including all L- and S-band frequency ranges). This reduces filter complexity, saves board space and decreases component count.
- The ADC32RF45 detects even the weakest signals with industry-leading noise-spectral density of -155 dBFS/Hz, 5 dB better than competitive devices. It offers industry-leading signal-to-noise ratio of 58.5 dB at a 1.8-GHz input frequency.
- Fastest 14-bit ADC with a 3-GSPS maximum sample rate delivers an instantaneous 1.5-GHz-per-channel bandwidth, enabling engineers to implement wideband in-phase and quadrature-component receivers beyond 2.5 GHz.
- The multiband digital downconverter extracts one or two sub-bands per channel, a dramatic digital interface data throughput reduction by up to 92 percent, saving system size, power and processing resources.
Available now through the TI store, the ADC32RF45EVM is priced at US$2,499 and the TSW14J56EVM data-capture card is available for US$1,249. Additional support includes TI Designs reference designs and application notes.
Texas Instruments, Inc.
www.ti.com
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