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ISL8325 Datasheet(PDF) 7 Page - Intersil Corporation |
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ISL8325 Datasheet(HTML) 7 Page - Intersil Corporation |
7 / 10 page 7 Detailed Description The ISL8323–ISL8325 dual analog switches offer precise switching capability from a single 2.7V to 12V supply with low on-resistance and high speed operation. The devices are especially well suited to portable battery powered equipment thanks to the low operating supply voltage (2.7V), low power consumption (5 µW), low leakage currents (100pA max), and the small SOIC packaging. High frequency applications also benefit from the wide bandwidth, and the very high off isolation and crosstalk rejection. Supply Sequencing And Overvoltage Protection With any CMOS device, proper power supply sequencing is required to protect the device from excessive input currents which might permanently damage the IC. All I/O pins contain ESD protection diodes from the pin to V+ and to GND (see Figure 8). To prevent forward biasing these diodes, V+ must be applied before any input signals, and input signal voltages must remain between V+ and GND. If these conditions cannot be guaranteed, then one of the following two protection methods should be employed. Logic inputs can easily be protected by adding a 1k Ω resistor in series with the input (see Figure 8). The resistor limits the input current below the threshold that produces permanent damage, and the sub-microamp input current produces an insignificant voltage drop during normal operation. Adding a series resistor to the switch input defeats the purpose of using a low RON switch, so two small signal diodes can be added in series with the supply pins to provide overvoltage protection for all pins (see Figure 8). These additional diodes limit the analog signal from 1V below V+ to 1V above GND. The low leakage current performance is unaffected by this approach, but the switch resistance may increase, especially at low supply voltages. Power-Supply Considerations The ISL832X construction is typical of most CMOS analog switches, except that they have only two supply pins: V+ and GND. V+ and GND drive the internal CMOS switches and set their analog voltage limits. Unlike switches with a 13V maximum supply voltage, the ISL832X 15V maximum supply voltage provides plenty of room for the 10% tolerance of 12V supplies, as well as room for overshoot and noise spikes. The minimum recommended supply voltage is 2.7V. It is important to note that the input signal range, switching times, and on-resistance degrade at lower supply voltages. Refer to the electrical specification tables and Typical Performance curves for details. V+ and GND also power the internal logic and level shifters. The level shifters convert the logic levels to switched V+ and GND signals to drive the analog switch gate terminals. This family of switches cannot be operated with bipolar supplies, because the input switching point becomes negative in this configuration. Logic-Level Thresholds This switch family is TTL compatible (0.8V and 2.4V) over a supply range of 3V to 11V (see Figure 12). At 12V the VIH level is about 2.5V. This is still below the TTL guaranteed high output minimum level of 2.8V, but noise margin is reduced. For best results with a 12V supply, use a logic family the provides a VOH greater than 3V. The digital input stages draw supply current whenever the digital input voltage is not at one of the supply rails. Driving the digital input signals from GND to V+ with a fast transition time minimizes power dissipation. Leakage Considerations Reverse ESD protection diodes are internally connected between each analog-signal pin and both V+ and GND. One of these diodes conducts if any analog signal exceeds V+ or GND. Virtually all the analog leakage current comes from the ESD diodes to V+ or GND. Although the ESD diodes on a given signal pin are identical and therefore fairly well balanced, they are reverse biased differently. Each is biased by either V+ or GND and the analog signal. This means their leakages will vary as the signal varies. The difference in the two diode leakages to the V+ and GND pins constitutes the analog- signal-path leakage current. All analog leakage current flows between each pin and one of the supply terminals, not to the other switch terminal. This is why both sides of a given switch can show leakage currents of the same or opposite polarity. There is no connection between the analog-signal paths and V+ or GND. FIGURE 8. OVERVOLTAGE PROTECTION GND VCOM VNO or NC OPTIONAL PROTECTION V+ INX DIODE OPTIONAL PROTECTION DIODE OPTIONAL PROTECTION RESISTOR ISL8323, ISL8324, ISL8325 |
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Similar Description - ISL8325 |
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