Analog Devices' Low-Power Data Conversion Technology Enables New Dimensions in Portability and Performance for Medical and Industrial Electronics.- ADI's New Analog-to-Digital Converter Consumes 80 Percent Less Space and Power Per Conversion Than Competitive ADCs to Enable Wireless Patient Monitors and Fast, Accurate Test and Data Acquisition Equipment NORWOOD, Mass. -- Analog Devices Analog Devices (NYSE: ADI) is an American multinational producer of semiconductor devices. Analog specializes in ADC, DAC, MEMS, and DSP chips for consumer and industrial goods. Analog is presently designing circuits in the 65 nanometer to 3 µm process feature sizes range. Inc. (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange : ADI), the world's leading provider of data conversion signal processing See DSP. technology, is dramatically lowering the power consumption of medical and industrial electronics with its latest precision PulSAR[R] analog-to-digital converter (ADC (1) See A/D converter. (2) (Apple Display Connector) A peripheral connector from Apple that combines digital video display, USB and power in one cable. ). Designed to increase the portability of patient and industrial monitors and improve the performance and throughput of automated test equipment (ATE) and data acquisition systems, Analog Devices' AD7980 1-MSPS (mega-sample per second) 16-bit ADC consumes 80 percent less power and board space than the closest competing 16-bit ADC in its class. "Power consumption is one of the dimensions of data converter performance that receives a lot of attention at ADI," said Dick Meaney, vice president of Precision Signal Processing at Analog Devices. "Offering five times lower power per conversion, combined with outstanding AC and DC linearity, the AD7980 will afford remarkable benefits to end users across many varied applications." Increasing Patient Comfort The small package size and reduced power consumption of the AD7980 lends it to the design of lightweight, wearable electrocardiograms (EKGs), blood pressure monitors, oxygen sensors and other medical instruments that wirelessly transmit patient information to a data center or nurses' station. Such mobility increases patient comfort by allowing them to wear PDA-sized monitors and eliminating the need to push bulky medical equipment when moving around the hospital. Faster and More Accurate Industrial Instruments In industrial equipment, the fast sampling rate and low power consumption of the AD7980 allow designers to place critical components closer together to improve system performance and speed. In today's ATE systems, for example, hundreds of measurement pins are used to test each semiconductor wafer, with each pin requiring an individual ADC to reduce costly test time. The wires, switches and multiplexers used to connect the measurement pin to the measurement unit add cost, increase the risk of measurement errors and slow system response time. Also, the resulting heat dissipation is so great that data conversion must be moved from the test head to a separate mainframe. The exponentially lower power of the AD7980, relative to existing ADCs, allows designers to place the new devices adjacent to each measurement pin, simplifying the design and increasing overall system accuracy and throughput. This, in turn, reduces test time, which is a major cost component for users of ATE systems. Improving Sensor Performance Unlike competing devices, the power and size advantages of the AD7980 allow designers to incorporate the new ADC and a digital interface into analog sensor packages. This new breed of highly integrated "smart sensors" eliminates the parasitic effects, signaling errors and delayed response time caused when the ADC is physically separated from the sensor using signal cables. In industrial sensing applications, this allows equipment operators to more easily and accurately measure changes in vibration, pressure and temperature that can degrade system operation. "At National Instruments, we use ADI's PulSAR converters on a number of our core measurement and industrial I/O (Input/Output) The transfer of data between the CPU and a peripheral device. Every transfer is an output from one device and an input to another. See PC input/output. I/O - Input/Output products," said Kurt Mandeville, principal hardware engineer at National Instruments Inc. "We see the AD7980 introduction extending PulSAR to a new level of combined high speed, low power, and small size, while preserving the performance we've come to expect from the PulSAR architecture." About the AD7980 1-MSPS, 16-Bit PulSAR ADC The AD7980 PulSAR ADC features 7.5 mW power consumption at 1 MSPS MSPS Mega-Samples Per Second MSPS Million Samples Per Second MSPS Michigan Society of Professional Surveyors MSPS Modular Synthesis Plug-In System MSPS Million Symbols per Second MSPS mobilization stationing and planning system (US DoD) and 75 microwatts at 10 kSPSCothe lowest power of any 16-bit ADC at any sample rate. Other performance enhancements include 2-LSB maximum INL INL Idaho National Laboratory INL Inner Nuclear Layer INL Instituut voor Nederlandse Lexicologie INL Integral Non-Linearity INL International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs Bureau (US Department of State) and 91.5-dB signal-to-noise ratio The ratio of the power or volume (amplitude) of a signal to the amount of unwanted interference (the noise) that has mixed in with it. Measured in decibels, signal-to-noise ratio (SNR or S/N) measures the clarity of the signal in a circuit or a wired or wireless transmission channel. (SNR See signal-to-noise ratio. SNR - signal-to-noise ratio ) at 20 kHz. The AD7980 is available in LFCSP/QFN (lead-frame chip-scale package/quad flat no-lead) and MSOP MSOP Mini Small Outline Package MSOP Mini Series of Poker MSOP Minnesota Sex Offender Program MSOP Management Stock Option Plan MSOP Memphis School of Preaching (Memphis, TN) MSOP Minimum Sum-Of-Products (mini small-outline plastic) packages that, respectively, are five and three times smaller than any competing ADC packages. The AD7980 is pin-compatible with the AD768x MSOP family of 16-bit PulSAR ADCs, for designers looking to upgrade to a 1-MSPS sample rate, and works well with Analog Devices' ADA Ada, city, United States Ada (ā`ə), city (1990 pop. 15,820), seat of Pontotoc co., S central Okla.; inc. 1904. It is a large cattle market and the center of a rich oil and ranch area. 4841 driver and buffer op-amps and ADR ADR - Astra Digital Radio 42x, ADR43x and ADR44x voltage references. Pricing and Availability The AD7980 1-MSPS 16-bit PulSAR ADC is sampling now in 10-lead MSOP and LFCSP LFCSP Lead Frame Chip Scale Packaging (analog devices) LFCSP Lead Frame Chip Scale Package packages, with production quantities available in the second quarter of 2007. The AD7980 is priced at $19.50 in 1,000-unit quantities. For more information, visit www.analog.com/pr/AD7980. Analog Devices in Medical and Industrial Instrumentation Analog Devices has a more than 40-year heritage of working in concert with its customers in the medical and industrial instrumentation industries to define, develop and deploy complete signal chain solutions optimized for their applications. ADI's legacy of supporting the sectors' long product life cycles with multi-year manufacturing commitments is augmented by the company's educated sales force, knowledgeable field applications engineers and advanced design support tools that include evaluation boards and SPICE models. About Analog Devices Innovation, performance, and excellence are the cultural pillars on which Analog Devices has built one of the most long-standing, high-growth companies within the technology sector. Acknowledged industry-wide as the world leader in data conversion and signal conditioning technology, Analog Devices serves over 60,000 customers around the world, representing virtually all types of electronics equipment. Celebrating more than 40 years as a leading global manufacturer of high-performance integrated circuits used in analog and digital signal processing See DSP. Digital Signal Processing - (DSP) Computer manipulation of analog signals (commonly sound or image) which have been converted to digital form (sampled). applications, Analog Devices, Inc. is headquartered in Norwood, Massachusetts, and employs approximately 8,900 people worldwide. It has manufacturing facilities in Massachusetts, California, North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop. , Ireland, and the Philippines. Analog Devices' common stock is listed on the New York Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) World's largest marketplace for securities. The exchange began as an informal meeting of 24 men in 1792 on what is now Wall Street in New York City. and ADI is included in the S&P 500 Index. PulSAR is a registered trademark of Analog Devices, Inc. |
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