ZHCSSH5A August 2023 – December 2024 LOG200
PRODMIX
請(qǐng)參考 PDF 數(shù)據(jù)表獲取器件具體的封裝圖。
For an illustration of typical system error for a LOG200 implementation, consider the example use case defined by the following conditions:
| PARAMETER | SYMBOL | EXAMPLE VALUE |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum input current | Imax | 200μA |
| Minimum input current | Imin | 10nA |
| Output reference voltage | VREF | REF165 (1.65V) |
| Input reference current | II2 | IREF (1μA) |
| Supply voltage | VS | 10V (±5V) |
Table 7-2lists the major error sources, and the typical values of each under the provided conditions. Typical values are generally the sum of the mean value and one standard deviation. Calculations using these typical values tend to be conservative, as the summation of uncorrelated errors tends to result in a larger compounded total predicted error than the actual total error observed in a real system.
| PARAMETER | SYMBOL | TYPICAL VALUE |
|---|---|---|
| IREF reference current error | IREF_error | 0.3% |
| REF165 reference error | REF165error | 0.06% |
| Scaling factor error | Kerror | 0.15% |
| Logarithmic conformity error | LCE | 0.05% |
| Logarithmic amplifier output offset error | VOSO | 1.3mV |
These error terms are used to calculate actual values, as per the following equations:
Begin error analysis by solving for the nominal output voltage at the minimum and maximum currents, without considering error terms. The results are then used to approximate the contribution of the logarithmic conformity error, in mV.
Repeat this exercise, taking into account typical error values as previously calculated, and then determine the difference of the results to calculate the output error at each current level.
The output error at a given current level is then expressed as a percentage of the full-scale range as per Equation 19 and Equation 20: