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AD7665ACP AD7665ACP 12470 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT CMOS 5V 48-LFCSP 48-VFQFN Exposed Pad, CSP
AD7679ACPRL AD7679ACPRL 19184 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 18BIT SAR W/BUFF 48-LFCSP 48-VFQFN Exposed Pad, CSP
AD7707BRU AD7707BRU 5926 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT SIGMA-DELTA 20TSSOP 20-TSSOP (0.173", 4.40mm Width)
AD7672KP10 AD7672KP10 4201 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 12BIT LC2MOS 28-PLCC 28-LCC (J-Lead)
AD7708BR AD7708BR 26934 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT SIGMA-DELTA 28SOIC 28-SOIC (0.295", 7.50mm Width)
AD7677ASTRL AD7677ASTRL 26165 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT DIFF INP 48-LQFP 48-LQFP
AD7665ASTRL AD7665ASTRL 23942 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT CMOS 5V 48-LQFP 48-LQFP
AD7672BQ10 AD7672BQ10 14725 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 12BIT LC2MOS 24-CDIP 24-CDIP (0.300", 7.62mm)
AD7660ACP AD7660ACP 28919 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT UNIPOLAR 48-LFCSP 48-VFQFN Exposed Pad, CSP
AD7703CR AD7703CR 28790 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 20BIT SIGMA-DELTA 20SOIC 20-SOIC (0.295", 7.50mm Width)
AD7706BRU AD7706BRU 22941 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT SIGMA-DELTA 16TSSOP 16-TSSOP (0.173", 4.40mm Width)
AD7706BR-REEL7 AD7706BR-REEL7 10900 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT SIGMA-DELTA 16SOIC 16-SOIC (0.295", 7.50mm Width)
AD7703AR-REEL AD7703AR-REEL 4639 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 20BIT SIGMA-DELTA 20SOIC 20-SOIC (0.295", 7.50mm Width)
AD7664ACP AD7664ACP 8397 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT UNIPOLAR 48-LFCSP 48-VFQFN Exposed Pad, CSP
AD7678ACP AD7678ACP 1701 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 18BIT SAR W/BUFF 48-LFCSP 48-VFQFN Exposed Pad, CSP
AD7701BN AD7701BN 4728 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT SIGMA-DELTA 20DIP 20-DIP (0.300", 7.62mm)
AD7580BQ AD7580BQ 19287 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 10BIT LC2MOS 24-CDIP 24-CDIP (0.300", 7.62mm)
AD7664AST AD7664AST 3886 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT UNIPOLAR 48-LQFP 48-LQFP
AD7665AST AD7665AST 14281 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT CMOS 5V 48-LQFP 48-LQFP
AD7655ACP AD7655ACP 20075 Analog Devices Inc. IC ADC 16BIT 4CH 48-LFCSP 48-VFQFN Exposed Pad, CSP

Analog to Digital Converters (ADC)

1. What are Analog to Digital Converters (ADC)?

‌Basic Definition

ADC (Analog-to-digital converter) is an electronic device that converts continuously changing analog signals (such as voltage and current) into discrete digital signals (binary code). It builds a bridge between the physical world (analog signal) and digital systems (processors, controllers).

 

‌Functional Significance

Digital systems (such as microprocessors) can only process binary signals (0/1), while the analog signals output by physical sensors (temperature, pressure, etc.) need to be converted into digital quantities through ADC before they can be recognized and processed by digital circuits.

 

2. How does Analog to Digital Converters (ADC) Work?

The conversion process of ADC includes four key steps:

‌Sampling‌: Collect the instantaneous value of the analog signal at fixed time intervals.

‌Holding‌: Hold the sampled value for a short time to ensure signal stability during conversion.

‌Quantization‌: Map the sampled value to a finite discrete level (determined by the resolution).

‌Encoding‌: Convert the quantized value to a binary digital output.

 

For example, a 4-bit ADC divides the analog voltage into 24=16 discrete levels and outputs a 4-bit binary code to represent the relative voltage value.

 

3. Key Performance Parameters of Analog to Digital Converters (ADC)

‌Resolution

The number of bits of the output digital quantity (such as 8 bits, or 12 bits) determines the minimum resolvable voltage (Vref/(2N−1)).

 

‌Sampling Rate

The number of samples per second (Hz), which must meet the Nyquist theorem (twice higher than the highest frequency of the signal).

 

‌Reference Voltage 

The reference standard for conversion, the output digital quantity represents the ratio of the input signal to the reference voltage.

 

4. What are Analog to Digital Converters (ADC) Used for?

‌Automotive electronics‌: temperature/pressure sensor signal conversion to ECU (electronic control unit).

‌Medical Equipment‌: digital acquisition of physiological signals (such as electrocardiogram, blood pressure).

‌Industrial Control‌: real-time monitoring of analog quantities (flow, displacement) and feedback to digital systems.

 

5. What are the Types of Analog to Digital Converters (ADC)?

ADC types are diverse, including:

‌Successive Approximation Register (SAR) ‌: balance speed and accuracy.

‌Σ-Δ Type‌: high-resolution audio processing.

‌Pipeline Type‌: high-speed communication system.

 

ADC is the core interface device of modern electronic systems, and its performance directly affects the accuracy and efficiency of data acquisition.

 

6. Analog to Digital Converters (ADC) FAQs

1)‌How to reduce ADC errors? ‌

Use an external high-stability reference voltage source (instead of an internal reference);

Add hardware filtering (such as RC low-pass filtering) to reduce noise;

Optimize PCB layout: shorten signal routing and keep away from high-frequency interference sources;

Software calibration of offset/gain errors.

 

2) ‌What to do if the input signal amplitude is too small? ‌

The pre-gain amplifier (PGA) amplifies the signal to the ADC range and improves the effective resolution.

 

3) ‌How to avoid interference when acquiring multiple channels? ‌

Configure a reasonable sampling time (allow the signal to stabilize);

Use differential input mode to suppress common-mode noise.

 

4) ‌How to choose an ADC model? ‌

Resolution: The more subtle the change in sensor output, the higher the bit number required (e.g. 12 bits for temperature monitoring, 16 bits or more for audio acquisition);

Sampling Rate: Dynamic signals (e.g. audio) require MHz level, and low-speed sensors can be reduced to kSPS35.

 

5) ‌What is the performance of the built-in ADC of MCUs such as STM32? ‌

Most of them meet general requirements: 12-bit resolution, 1MSPS sampling rate, support for multi-channel scanning and calibration functions, and better cost performance than external ADC chips.