Wiki

Differences

This shows you the differences between two versions of the page.

Link to this comparison view

Both sides previous revisionPrevious revision
resources:eval:user-guides:ad-fmclidar1-ebz:hardware_daq [02 Sep 2019 11:08] Cristian Orianresources:eval:user-guides:ad-fmclidar1-ebz:hardware_daq [03 Jan 2021 22:04] (current) – fix links Robin Getz
Line 5: Line 5:
 The Data Acquisition (DAQ) board connects to the FPGA carrier via an FMC HPC connector. This board is where the analog-to-digital conversion is completed and the result is sent to the FPGA via a JESD 204B interface. The low phase-noise and synchronized clock signals required by the ADC as well as all the signals needed for JESD Subclass 1 operation, ensuring deterministic latency, are also generated here. Additionally, low noise voltages are supplied to the ADC, PLL and clock buffer. All the digital signals between the FPGA carrier board and the AFE and Laser boards pass through the DAQ board going to two 100 pin high speed connectors that correspond to similar connectors on the other two boards. The digital connection between the boards is made with ribbon cables. The 4 ADC channels are exposed on SMA connectors to mate with the corresponding signal sources on the AFE and Laser boards. This modular design allows the AFE and Laser boards to be oriented in the desired direction as well as to use different variantes of these boards designed according to specific applications requirements. The Data Acquisition (DAQ) board connects to the FPGA carrier via an FMC HPC connector. This board is where the analog-to-digital conversion is completed and the result is sent to the FPGA via a JESD 204B interface. The low phase-noise and synchronized clock signals required by the ADC as well as all the signals needed for JESD Subclass 1 operation, ensuring deterministic latency, are also generated here. Additionally, low noise voltages are supplied to the ADC, PLL and clock buffer. All the digital signals between the FPGA carrier board and the AFE and Laser boards pass through the DAQ board going to two 100 pin high speed connectors that correspond to similar connectors on the other two boards. The digital connection between the boards is made with ribbon cables. The 4 ADC channels are exposed on SMA connectors to mate with the corresponding signal sources on the AFE and Laser boards. This modular design allows the AFE and Laser boards to be oriented in the desired direction as well as to use different variantes of these boards designed according to specific applications requirements.
  
-The ADC on the DAQ board is the [[https://www.analog.com/en/products/ad9094.html|AD9094]], a quad, 8-bit, 1GSPS ADC. It supports JESD204B lane rate up to 15 Gbps, four integrated wideband decimation filters, numerically controlled oscillator blocks and it is programmable via an SPI interface. +The ADC on the DAQ board is the [[adi>en/products/ad9094.html|AD9094]], a quad, 8-bit, 1GSPS ADC. It supports JESD204B lane rate up to 15 Gbps, four integrated wideband decimation filters, numerically controlled oscillator blocks and it is programmable via an SPI interface. 
  
 {{:resources:eval:user-guides:AD-FMCLIDAR1-EBZ:DAQ Board.png?350 |DAQ Block Diagram}} {{:resources:eval:user-guides:AD-FMCLIDAR1-EBZ:DAQ Board.png?350 |DAQ Block Diagram}}
  
-The IC selection for clock signals generation ensures low phase-noise, programmable delays for proper deterministic latency and low power consumption. The [[https://www.analog.com/en/products/adf4360-7.html|ADF4360-7]] is a PLL which takes a crystal generated 25MHz input and outputs a low phase-noise 1GHz clock signal. This signal is then fed to an [[https://www.analog.com/en/products/ad9528.html|AD9528]], which outputs five clock signals as required by the ADC and JESD204B interface. The AD9528 can divide frequencies and/or delay clock signals, thus ensuring synchronization for deterministic latency. The AD9528 is used in buffer mode to reduces power consumption. In this mode the internal PLLs are disabled and the AD9528 acts as a clock distribution chip, dividing the input clock to get the desired clock rates at the output.+The IC selection for clock signals generation ensures low phase-noise, programmable delays for proper deterministic latency and low power consumption. The [[adi>en/products/adf4360-7.html|ADF4360-7]] is a PLL which takes a crystal generated 25MHz input and outputs a low phase-noise 1GHz clock signal. This signal is then fed to an [[adi>en/products/ad9528.html|AD9528]], which outputs five clock signals as required by the ADC and JESD204B interface. The AD9528 can divide frequencies and/or delay clock signals, thus ensuring synchronization for deterministic latency. The AD9528 is used in buffer mode to reduces power consumption. In this mode the internal PLLs are disabled and the AD9528 acts as a clock distribution chip, dividing the input clock to get the desired clock rates at the output.
  
-The stringent noise challenges posed by the 1GSPS analog-to-digital conversion are met by ultralow noise regulators such as the [[https://www.analog.com/en/products/adp7156.html|ADP7156]] and [[https://www.analog.com/en/products/adp7159.html|ADP7159]]. All the power for this board is derived for the 3.3V and 12V supplies coming off the FPGA board via the FMC connector.+The stringent noise challenges posed by the 1GSPS analog-to-digital conversion are met by ultralow noise regulators such as the [[adi>en/products/adp7156.html|ADP7156]] and [[adi>en/products/adp7159.html|ADP7159]]. All the power for this board is derived for the 3.3V and 12V supplies coming off the FPGA board via the FMC connector.
  
 The DAQ board meets the VITA 57 design specs for width but not for length. The DAQ board meets the VITA 57 design specs for width but not for length.
resources/eval/user-guides/ad-fmclidar1-ebz/hardware_daq.txt · Last modified: 03 Jan 2021 22:04 by Robin Getz