Analog Devices' AD7190 delta-sigma converter Portland OR

A look at Analog Devices' AD7190 delta-sigma converter. The article offers a description of the products processing abilities.

Local Companies

ABHT Structural Engineers
503-243-6682
1640 NW Johnson St.
Portland, OR
Sherpa Design Inc.
503-771-3570
6700 N. New York Avenue
Portland, AK
Prime Design Engineering LLC
503-544-6606
18145 sw Jeremy street
Beaverton, OR
Froelich Consulting Engineers
(503) 624-7005
6969 SW Hampton St
Portland, OR
Insite Group
(503) 222-2044
310 SW 4th Ave
Portland, OR
Ltk Engineering Service
(503) 248-1790
101 SW Main St Ste 810
Portland, OR
American Council of Engineering Comapnies of Oregon
(503) 292-2348
5319 SW Westgate Dr Ste 221
Portland, OR
Beyaz & Patel Inc
(503) 331-2606
2820 Nothup Way
Portland, OR
New Paradigm Engineering
(503) 459-4169
4605 NE Fremont St
Portland, OR
Worth Technical Services
(503) 771-8255
3004 SE 50th Ave
Portland, OR

provided by: EDN

Analog Devices' AD7190 delta-sigma converter includes the functions to make a complete precision-measurement front end. In addition to the 24-bit converter, the part features a PGA (programmable-gain amplifier) configurable for gains of one to 128. The device also has an internal multiplexer to provide for two differential-measurement sources or four pseudodifferential sources. It incorporates an internal clock source, a temperature sensor, and a bridge-power-down circuit to allow power savings by deactivating the bridge that the part is measuring. The high-precision converter, which can detect an open-sensor condition, suits use in strain gauges, scales, process measurement, control modules, scientific instrumentation and chromatography instruments, and other high-resolution data-acquisition tasks.

Operating with 3 to 5.25V of power, the AD7190 consumes 6 mA of current; rms noise is 7 nV at a gain of 128. The offset drift is 5 nV/°C, and gain drift is 2 ppm/°C.

The device produces noise-free, 21-bit measurements at 4.7 Hz and 16.5-bit, noise-free measurements at 2.4 kHz, and it performs simultaneous 50- and 60-Hz rejection on an incoming signal. The ADC interfaces to the digital system using an SPI (serial-peripheral interface) or Microwire-compatible interface. You can select a no-latency mode to reduce software overhead if you need a valid conversion per output data. The device also has four general-purpose digital outputs, although two of these outputs also serve as alternative external-reference inputs.

The AD7190 is available in a 24-pin TSSOP for a suggested retail price of $5.90 (1000). It operates over a -40 to +105°C temperature range. Samples are available now, and production quantities will be available in November. An evaluation kit interfaces to a PC with a USB.

Analog Devices, www.analog.com.



author: by Paul Rako

EDN. Copyright © 2008 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Featured Local Company

ABHT Structural Engineers

503-243-6682
1640 NW Johnson St.
Portland, OR

Related Local Events
North American Tunneling Conference
Dates: 6/12/2010 - 6/16/2010
Location: Marriott Waterfront Downtown
Portland, OR
View Details

Northwest Design-2-Part Show - Portland, OR
Dates: 9/16/2009 - 9/17/2009
Location: Portland Expo Center
Portland, OR
View Details

American Institute of Building Design Annual Convention and Trade Show
Dates: 7/8/2009 - 7/11/2009
Location: Portland Marriott Downtown Waterfront
Portland, OR
View Details