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5962-8982401PA

Part # 5962-8982401PA
Description IC MONO 5V REFERENCE IC
Category IC
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Analog Devices
Date Code: 0043
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Technical Document


DISCLAIMER: The information provided herein is solely for informational purposes. Customers must be aware of the suitability of this product for their application, and consider that variable factors such as Manufacturer, Product Category, Date Codes, Pictures and Descriptions may differ from available inventory.

AD586
Rev. G | Page 7 of 16
THEORY OF OPERATION
The AD586 consists of a proprietary buried Zener diode refer-
ence, an amplifier to buffer the output, and several high stability
thin-film resistors, as shown in the block diagram in Figure 5.
This design results in a high precision monolithic 5 V output
reference with initial offset of 2.0 mV or less. The temperature
compensation circuitry provides the device with a temperature
coefficient of under 2 ppm/°C.
Using the bias compensation resistor between the Zener output
and the noninverting input to the amplifier, a capacitor can be
added at the noise reduction pin (Pin 8) to form a low-pass
filter and reduce the noise contribution of the Zener to the
circuit.
A1
R
S
R
Z1
R
Z2
R
F
R
T
R
I
AD586
GND
V
IN
NOISE REDUCTION
V
OUT
TRIM
NOTES
1. PINS 1, 3, AND 7 ARE INTERNAL TEST POINTS.
MAKE NO CONNECTIONS TO THESE POINTS.
6
5
4
82
00529-001
Figure 5. Functional Block Diagram
APPLYING THE AD586
The AD586 is simple to use in virtually all precision reference
applications. When power is applied to Pin 2 and Pin 4 is
grounded, Pin 6 provides a 5 V output. No external components
are required; the degree of desired absolute accuracy is achieved
simply by selecting the required device grade. The AD586
requires less than 3 mA quiescent current from an operating
supply of 12 V or 15 V.
An external fine trim may be desired to set the output level to
exactly 5.000 V (calibrated to a main system reference). System
calibration may also require a reference voltage that is slightly
different from 5.000 V, for example, 5.12 V for binary applica-
tions. In either case, the optional trim circuit shown in Figure 6
can offset the output by as much as 300 mV with minimal effect
on other device characteristics.
AD586
GND
V
IN
C
N
1µF
V
O
TRIM
OPTIONAL
NOISE
REDUCTION
CAPACITOR
V
IN
NOISE
REDUCTION
OUTPUT
10k
6
5
2
4
8
00529-005
Figure 6. Optional Fine-Trim Configuration
NOISE PERFORMANCE AND REDUCTION
The noise generated by the AD586 is typically less than 4 µV p-p
over the 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz band. Noise in a 1 MHz bandwidth is
approximately 200 µV p-p. The dominant source of this noise is
the buried Zener, which contributes approximately 100 nV/√Hz.
By comparison, contribution by the op amp is negligible. Figure 7
shows the 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz noise of a typical AD586. The noise
measurement is made with a band-pass filter made of a 1-pole
high-pass filter with a corner frequency at 0.1 Hz, and a 2-pole
low-pass filter with a corner frequency at 12.6 Hz, to create a
filter with a 9.922 Hz bandwidth.
If further noise reduction is desired, an external capacitor can
be added between the noise reduction pin and ground, as
shown in Figure 6. This capacitor, combined with the 4 kΩ R
S
and the Zener resistances, forms a low-pass filter on the output
of the Zener cell. A 1 µF capacitor will have a 3 dB point at
12 Hz, and will reduce the high frequency (to 1 MHz) noise to
about 160 µV p-p. Figure 8 shows the 1 MHz noise of a typical
AD586, both with and without a 1 µF capacitor.
00529-006
1µF
5s1µF
Figure 7. 0.1 Hz to 10 Hz Noise
AD586
Rev. G | Page 8 of 16
00529-007
C
N
= 1µF
NO C
N
50µS
200µV
Figure 8. Effect of 1 µF Noise Reduction Capacitor on Broadband Noise
TURN-ON TIME
Upon application of power (cold start), the time required for
the output voltage to reach its final value within a specified
error band is defined as the turn-on settling time. Two compo-
nents normally associated with this are the time for the active
circuits to settle, and the time for the thermal gradients on the
chip to stabilize. Figure 9, Figure 10, and Figure 11 show the
turn-on characteristics of the AD586. It shows the settling to be
about 60 µs to 0.01%. Note the absence of any thermal tails
when the horizontal scale is expanded to l ms/cm in Figure 10.
Output turn-on time is modified when an external noise reduc-
tion capacitor is used. When present, this capacitor acts as an
additional load to the current source of the internal Zener
diode, resulting in a somewhat longer turn-on time. In the case
of a 1 µF capacitor, the initial turn-on time is approximately
400 ms to 0.01% (see Figure 11).
00529-008
V
IN
V
OUT
10V
1mV
20µS
Figure 9. Electrical Turn-On
00529-009
V
IN
V
OUT
10V 5V
1mS
Figure 10. Extended Time Scale
00529-010
V
IN
V
OUT
10V
1mV 100mS
Figure 11. Turn-On with 1µF C
N
Characteristics
DYNAMIC PERFORMANCE
The output buffer amplifier is designed to provide the AD586
with static and dynamic load regulation superior to less com-
plete references.
Many ADCs and DACs present transient current loads to the
reference, and poor reference response can degrade the per-
formance of the converter.
Figure 12, Figure 13, and Figure 14 display the characteristics of
the AD586 output amplifier driving a 0 mA to 10 mA load.
AD586
V
L
5V
0V
V
OUT
500
3.5V
00529-011
Figure 12. Transient Load Test Circuit
AD586
Rev. G | Page 9 of 16
00529-012
V
L
V
OUT
5V
50mV
1µS
Figure 13. Large-Scale Transient Response
00529-013
V
L
V
OUT
5V
1mV
2µS
Figure 14. Fine-Scale Setting for Transient Load
In some applications, a varying load may be both resistive and
capacitive in nature, or the load may be connected to the AD586
by a long capacitive cable.
Figure 15 and Figure 16 display the output amplifier
characteristics driving a 1000 pF, 0 mA to 10 mA load.
AD586
V
L
5V
0V
V
OUT
C
L
1000pF
500
3.5V
00529-014
Figure 15. Capacitive Load Transient Response Test Circuit
00529-015
C
L
= 0
C
L
= 1000pF
5V
200mV
1µS
Figure 16. Output Response with Capacitive Load
LOAD REGULATION
The AD586 has excellent load regulation characteristics. Figure 17
shows that varying the load several mA changes the output by a
few µV. The AD586 has somewhat better load regulation per-
formance sourcing current than sinking current.
–6 –4 –2
246810
LOAD (mA)
0
–500
–1000
500
1000
V
OUT
(µV)
00529-016
Figure 17. Typical Load Regulation Characteristics
TEMPERATURE PERFORMANCE
The AD586 is designed for precision reference applications
where temperature performance is critical. Extensive tempera-
ture testing ensures that the device maintains a high level of
performance over the operating temperature range.
Some confusion exists with defining and specifying reference
voltage error over temperature. Historically, references have
been characterized using a maximum deviation per degree
Celsius, that is, ppm/°C. However, because of nonlinearities in
temperature characteristics that originated in standard Zener
references (such as “S type characteristics), most manufacturers
have begun to use a maximum limit error band approach to
specify devices. This technique involves measuring the output at
three or more different temperatures to specify an output volt-
age error band.
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