19-3109; Rev 3; 6/12 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver The MAX7034 fully integrated low-power CMOS superheterodyne receiver is ideal for receiving amplitudeshift-keyed (ASK) data in the 300MHz to 450MHz frequency range (including the popular 315MHz and 433.92MHz frequencies). The receiver has an RF sensitivity of -114dBm. With few external components and a low-current power-down mode, it is ideal for cost-sensitive and power-sensitive applications typical in the automotive and consumer markets. The MAX7034 consists of a low-noise amplifier (LNA), a fully differential image-rejection mixer, an on-chip phase-locked loop (PLL) with integrated voltage-controlled oscillator (VCO), a 10.7MHz IF limiting amplifier stage with received-signal-strength indicator (RSSI), and analog baseband data-recovery circuitry. Features Optimized for 315MHz or 433.92MHz Band Operates from Single +5.0V Supply Selectable Image-Rejection Center Frequency Selectable x64 or x32 fLO/fXTAL Ratio Low (< 6.7mA) Operating Supply Current < 3.0A Low-Current Power-Down Mode for Efficient Power Cycling 250s Startup Time Built-In 44dB RF Image Rejection Excellent Receive Sensitivity Over Temperature -40C to +125C Operation The MAX7034 is available in a 28-pin (9.7mm x 4.4mm) TSSOP package and is specified over the automotive (-40C to +125C) temperature range. Applications Automotive Remote Keyless Entry Security Systems Garage Door Openers Home Automation Remote Controls Local Telemetry Wireless Sensors Typical Application Circuit appears at end of data sheet. Ordering Information PART TEMP RANGE PIN-PACKAGE MAX7034AUI/V+T -40C to +125C 28 TSSOP /V denotes an automotive qualified part. +Denotes a lead(Pb)-free/RoHS-compliant package. T = Tape and reel. Pin Configuration TOP VIEW XTAL1 1 + 28 XTAL2 AVDD 2 27 SHDN LNAIN 3 26 PDOUT LNASRC 4 25 DATAOUT AGND 5 LNAOUT 6 MAX7034 24 VDD5 23 DSP AVDD 7 22 DFFB MIXIN1 8 21 OPP MIXIN2 9 20 DSN AGND 10 19 DFO IRSEL 11 18 IFIN2 MIXOUT 12 17 IFIN1 DGND 13 16 XTALSEL DVDD 14 15 EN_REG TSSOP For pricing, delivery, and ordering information, please contact Maxim Direct at 1-888-629-4642, or visit Maxim's website at www.maxim-ic.com. 1 MAX7034 General Description MAX7034 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS VDD5 to AGND.......................................................-0.3V to +6.0V AVDD to AGND .....................................................-0.3V to +4.0V DVDD to DGND .....................................................-0.3V to +4.0V AGND to DGND.....................................................-0.1V to +0.1V IRSEL, DATAOUT, XTALSEL, SHDN, EN_REG to AGND ....................-0.3V to (VDD5 + 0.3V) All Other Pins to AGND ..........................-0.3V to (VDVDD + 0.3V) Continuous Power Dissipation (TA = +70C) 28-Pin TSSOP (derate 12.8mW/C above +70C) ..1025.6mW Operating Temperature Range .........................-40C to +125C Storage Temperature Range .............................-65C to +150C Junction Temperature ......................................................+150C Lead Temperature (soldering, 10s) .................................+300C Soldering Temperature (reflow) .......................................+260C Stresses beyond those listed under "Absolute Maximum Ratings" may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (Typical Application Circuit, VDD5 = +4.5V to +5.5V, no RF signal applied. TA = -40C to +125C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VDD5 = +5.0V and TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 1) PARAMETER SYMBOL Supply Voltage VDD5 Supply Current IDD Shutdown Supply Current Input-Voltage Low Input-Voltage High Input Logic Current High ISHDN CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS +5.0V nominal supply voltage 4.5 5.0 5.5 V fRF = 315MHz 6.7 8.2 fRF = 434MHz 7.2 8.7 3 8 A 0.4 V VSHDN = VDD5 VSHDN = 0V VIL EN_REG, SHDN VDD5 0.4 XTALSEL VDVDD 0.4 VIH IIH Image-Reject Select Voltage (Note 2) V 15 fRF = 434MHz, VIRSEL = VDVDD fRF = 375MHz, VIRSEL = VDVDD/2 mA A VDVDD 0.4 VDVDD 1.5 1.1 fRF = 315MHz, VIRSEL = 0V V 0.4 DATAOUT Output-Voltage Low VOL ISINK = 10A 0.125 V DATAOUT Output-Voltage High VOH ISOURCE = 10A VDD5 0.125 V 2 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver (Typical Application Circuit, VDD5 = +4.5V to +5.5V, all RF inputs are referenced to 50, fRF = 433.92MHz, TA = -40C to +125C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VDD5 = +5.0V and TA = +25C.) (Note 1) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS Startup Time tON Receiver Input Frequency Range fRF Time for valid signal detection after VSHDN = VDD5. Does not include baseband filter settling. 250 300 Maximum Receiver Input Level 450 0 Sensitivity at TA = +25oC (Note 3) Sensitivity at TA = +125C (Note 3) Maximum Data Rate s +25C, 315MHz -114 +25C, 434MHz -113 +125C, 315MHz -113 +125C, 434MHz -110 MHz dBm dBm dBm Manchester coded 33 NRZ coded 66 330 IF filter load 45 dB -50 dBm 330 kbps LNA/MIXER LNA/Mixer Voltage Gain (Note 4) LNA/Mixer Input-Referred 1dB Compression Point Mixer Output Impedance ZOUT_MIX fRF = 434MHz, VIRSEL = VDVDD Mixer Image Rejection 42 fRF = 375MHz, VIRSEL = VDVDD/2 44 fRF = 315MHz, VIRSEL = 0V 44 dB INTERMEDIATE FREQUENCY (IF) Input Impedance Operating Frequency ZIN_IF fIF Bandpass response 3dB Bandwidth RSSI Linearity RSSI Dynamic Range RSSI Level 330 10.7 MHz 10 MHz 0.5 dB 80 dB PRFIN < -120dBm 1.15 PRFIN > -40dBm 2.2 V 3 MAX7034 AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS MAX7034 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) (Typical Application Circuit, VDD5 = +4.5V to +5.5V, all RF inputs are referenced to 50, fRF = 433.92MHz, TA = -40C to +125C, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VDD5 = +5.0V and TA = +25C.) (Note 1) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS DATA FILTER Maximum Bandwidth 50 kHz 100 kHz Output High Voltage VVDD5 V Output Low Voltage 0 V DATA SLICER Comparator Bandwidth CRYSTAL OSCILLATOR fRF = 433.92MHz Crystal Frequency (Note 5) fXTAL fRF = 315MHz VXTALSEL = 0V 6.6128 VXTALSEL = VDVDD 13.2256 VXTALSEL = 0V 4.7547 VXTALSEL = VDVDD 9.5094 Crystal Tolerance Input Capacitance Maximum Load Capacitance From each pin to ground CLOAD MHz 50 ppm 6.2 pF 10 pF Note 1: 100% tested at TA = +125C. Guaranteed by design and characterization over entire temperature range. Note 2: IRSEL is internally set to 375MHz IR mode. It can be left open when the 375MHz image-rejection setting is desired. Bypass to AGND with a 1nF capacitor in a noisy environment. Note 3: Peak power level. BER = 2 x 10-3, Manchester encoded, data rate = 4kbps, IF bandwidth = 280kHz. Note 4: The voltage conversion gain is measured with the LNA input matching inductor and the LNA/Mixer resonator in place, and does not include the IF filter insertion loss. Note 5: Crystal oscillator frequency for other RF carrier frequency within the 300MHz to 450MHz range is (fRF - 10.7MHz)/64 for XTALSEL = 0V, and (fRF - 10.7MHz)/32 for XTALSEL = VDVDD. 4 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver MAX7034 Typical Operating Characteristics (Typical Application Circuit, VDD5 = +5.0V, fRF = 433.92MHz, TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.) +85C 7.2 7.0 +25C +105C +125C -40C 6.8 8.0 MAX7034 toc02 +125C 433.92MHz 10.00 7.5 7.0 6.5 +25C 6.0 5.5 6.6 4.9 5.1 5.3 SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V) 5.5 0.01 250 SENSITIVITY vs. TEMPERATURE -104 -106 350 400 450 RF FREQUENCY (MHz) -130 500 2.20 -125 -120 -115 PEAK RF INPUT POWER (dBm) -110 RSSI AND DELTA vs. IF INPUT POWER RSSI vs. RF INPUT POWER 433.92MHz -108 300 2.40 MAX7034 toc04 -102 315MHz -40C IF BANDWIDTH = 280kHz MAX7034 toc06 2.40 MAX7034 toc05 4.7 1.00 0.10 5.0 4.5 2.20 2.00 2.00 1.80 1.80 15 RSSI 10 5 1.60 -5 DELTA 1.60 -10 -114 1.40 1.40 1.20 1.20 -15 -116 -120 110 -140 -120 -100 -80 -60 -40 RF INPUT POWER (dBm) UPPER SIDEBAND 45 49.7dB IMAGE REJECTION 35 fRF = 315MHz 50 IMAGE REJECTION (dB) 55 25 15 LOWER SIDEBAND 30 fRF = 433.92MHz 10 5 0 5 10 15 20 IF FREQUENCY (MHz) 25 30 52 50 48 315MHz 46 433.92MHz 44 42 0 -5 10 IMAGE REJECTION vs. TEMPERATURE 40 20 -25 -90 -80 -70 -60 -50 -40 -30 -20 -10 0 IF INPUT POWER (dBm) 0 IMAGE REJECTION vs. RF FREQUENCY 60 MAX7034 toc07 65 -20 IMAGE REJECTION (dB) 10 35 60 85 TEMPERATURE (C) MAX7034 toc08 -15 LNA/MIXER VOLTAGE GAIN vs. IF FREQUENCY LNA/MIXER VOLTAGE GAIN (dB) 1.00 1.00 -40 -20 MAX7034 toc09 -118 40 280 300 320 340 360 380 400 420 440 460 480 RF FREQUENCY (MHz) -40 -15 10 35 60 85 TEMPERATURE (C) 110 5 DELTA -112 RSSI (V) 0 315MHz -110 RSSI (V) SENSITIVITY (dBm) +85C 100.00 BIT-ERROR RATE (%) 7.4 +105C 8.5 SUPPLY CURRENT (mA) 7.6 SUPPLY CURRENT (mA) 9.0 MAX7034 toc01 7.8 BIT-ERROR RATE vs. PEAK RF INPUT POWER SUPPLY CURRENT vs. RF FREQUENCY MAX7034 toc03 SUPPLY CURRENT vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE Typical Operating Characteristics (continued) (Typical Application Circuit, VDD5 = +5.0V, fRF = 433.92MHz, TA = +25C, unless otherwise noted.) NORMALIZED IF GAIN vs. IF FREQUENCY S11 MAGNITUDE PLOT OF RFIN vs. FREQUENCY 40 30 S11 MAGNITUDE (dB) -5 -10 -15 -20 MAX7034 toc12 MAX7034 toc11 0 S11 SMITH CHART PLOT OF RFIN 50 MAX7034 toc10 5 NORMALIZED IF GAIN (dB) 500MHz WITH INPUT MATCHING 20 10 0 315MHz -10 200MHz 315MHz -24.1dB -20 -30 -25 -40 -30 -50 100 10 200 230 260 290 320 350 380 410 440 470 500 IF FREQUENCY (MHz) FREQUENCY (MHz) PHASE NOISE vs. OFFSET FREQUENCY fRF = 315MHz fRF = 433.92MHz -20 PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz) -20 0 MAX7033 toc13 0 PHASE NOISE vs. OFFSET FREQUENCY -40 -60 -80 -100 -120 MAX7033 toc14 1 PHASE NOISE (dBc/Hz) MAX7034 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver -40 -60 -80 -100 -120 -140 -140 10 100 1k 10k 100k OFFSET FREQUENCY (Hz) 1M 10M 10 100 1k 10k 100k 1M 10M OFFSET FREQUENCY (Hz) Pin Description 6 PIN NAME 1 XTAL1 Crystal Input 1 FUNCTION 2, 7 AVDD Positive Analog Supply Voltage. For +5V operation, pin 2 is the output of an on-chip +3.4V lowdropout regulator, and should be bypassed to AGND with a 0.1F capacitor as close as possible to the pin. Pin 7 must be externally connected to the supply from pin 2, and bypassed to AGND with a 0.01F capacitor as close as possible to the pin (see the Voltage Regulator section and the Typical Application Circuit). 3 LNAIN Low-Noise Amplifier Input. See the Low-Noise Amplifier section. 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver PIN NAME FUNCTION 4 LNASRC 5, 10 AGND 6 LNAOUT 8 MIXIN1 1st Differential Mixer Input. Connect to LC tank filter from LNAOUT through a 100pF capacitor. See the Typical Application Circuit. 9 MIXIN2 2nd Differential Mixer Input. Connect to VDD3 side of the LC tank filter through a 100pF capacitor. See the Typical Application Circuit. 11 IRSEL Image-Rejection Select. Set VIRSEL = 0V to center image rejection at 315MHz. Leave IRSEL unconnected to center image rejection at 375MHz. Set VIRSEL = DVDD to center image rejection at 434MHz. See the Mixer section. 12 MIXOUT 13 DGND Digital Ground 14 DVDD Positive Digital Supply Voltage. Connect to both of the AVDD pins. Bypass to DGND with a 0.01F capacitor as close as possible to the pin (see the Typical Application Circuit). 15 EN_REG Regulator Enable. Connect to VDD5 to enable internal regulator. Pull this pin low to allow device operation between +3.0V and +3.6V. See the Voltage Regulator section. 16 XTALSEL Crystal Divider Ratio Select. Drive XTALSEL low to select fLO/fXTAL ratio of 64, or drive XTALSEL high to select fLO/fXTAL ratio of 32. 17 IFIN1 1st Differential Intermediate-Frequency Limiter Amplifier Input. Connect to the output of a 10.7MHz bandpass filter. 18 IFIN2 2nd Differential Intermediate-Frequency Limiter Amplifier Input. Bypass to AGND with a 1500pF capacitor as close as possible to the pin. 19 DFO Data Filter Output 20 DSN Negative Data Slicer Input 21 OPP Noninverting Op-Amp Input for the Sallen-Key Data Filter 22 DFFB Data Filter Feedback Node. Input for the feedback of the Sallen-Key data filter. 23 DSP Positive Data Slicer Input 24 VDD5 +5V Supply Voltage. Bypass to AGND with a 0.01F capacitor as close as possible to the pin. For +5V operation, VDD5 is the input to an on-chip voltage regulator whose +3.4V output appears at AVDD pin 2. (see the Voltage Regulator section and the Typical Application Circuit). 25 DATAOUT 26 PDOUT 27 SHDN Power-Down Select Input. Drive high to power up the IC. Internally pulled down to AGND with a 100k resistor. 28 XTAL2 Crystal Input 2. Can also be driven with an external reference oscillator. See the Crystal Oscillator section. Low-Noise Amplifier Source for external Inductive Degeneration. Connect inductor to ground to set LNA input impedance. See the Low-Noise Amplifier section. Analog Ground Low-Noise Amplifier Output. Connect to mixer input through an LC tank filter. See the Low-Noise Amplifier section. 330 Mixer Output. Connect to the input of the 10.7MHz bandpass filter. Digital Baseband Data Output Peak-Detector Output 7 MAX7034 Pin Description (continued) 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver MAX7034 Functional Diagram LNASRC 4 LNAIN AVDD VDD5 AVDD DVDD DGND AGND 3 EN_REG LNAOUT 15 6 MIXIN1 MIXIN2 8 9 7 14 13 5, 10 Q IFIN2 18 IMAGE REJECTION I DIVIDE BY 64 VCO PHASE DETECTOR LOOP FILTER /1 IF LIMITING AMPS 90 3.4V REG MAX7034 RSSI DATA FILTER RDF2 100k /2 CRYSTAL DRIVER 16 1 XTALSEL XTAL1 XTAL2 28 27 SHDN RDF1 100k DATA SLICER POWERDOWN 25 DATAOUT Detailed Description The MAX7034 CMOS superheterodyne receiver and a few external components provide the complete receive chain from the antenna to the digital output data. Depending on signal power and component selection, data rates can be as high as 33kbps Manchester (66kbps NRZ). The MAX7034 is designed to receive binary ASK data modulated in the 300MHz to 450MHz frequency range. ASK modulation uses a difference in amplitude of the carrier to represent logic 0 and logic 1 data. Voltage Regulator For operation with a single +4.5V to +5.5V supply voltage, connect VDD5 and the EN_REG pin to the supply voltage. An on-chip voltage regulator drives one of the AVDD pins (pin 2) to approximately +3.4V. For proper operation, DVDD and both AVDD pins must be connected together. For operation with a single +3.0V to +3.6V supply voltage, connect both the AVDD pins, DVDD, and VDD5 to the supply voltage and connect the EN_REG pin to ground (which disables the internal voltage regulator). If the MAX7034 is powered from +3.0V to +3.6V, the performance is limited to the -40C to +105C range. In either supply voltage mode, bypass VDD5, DVDD, and the pin 7 AVDD pin to AGND with 0.01F capacitors, and the pin 2 AVDD to AGND with a 0.1F capacitor, all placed as close as possible to the pins. 8 IFIN1 17 0 LNA 2 24 MIXOUT 12 IRSEL 11 20 23 19 DSN DSP DFO 26 21 22 PDOUT OPP DFFB Low-Noise Amplifier The LNA is an nMOS cascode amplifier with off-chip inductive degeneration. The gain and noise figures are dependent on both the antenna matching network at the LNA input and the LC tank network between the LNA output and the mixer inputs. The off-chip inductive degeneration is achieved by connecting an inductor from LNASRC to AGND. This inductor sets the real part of the input impedance at LNAIN, allowing for a more flexible input impedance match, such as a typical printed-circuit board (PCB) trace antenna. A nominal value for this inductor with a 50 input impedance is 15nH, but is affected by the PCB trace. The LC tank filter connected to LNAOUT comprises L1 and C9 (see the Typical Application Circuit). Select L1 and C9 to resonate at the desired RF input frequency. The resonant frequency is given by: fRF = 1 2 L TOTAL x CTOTAL where: LTOTAL = L1 + LPARASITICS. CTOTAL = C9 + CPARASITICS. 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver Mixer A unique feature of the MAX7034 is the integrated image rejection of the mixer. This device eliminates the need for a costly front-end SAW filter for most applications. Advantages of not using a SAW filter are increased sensitivity, simplified antenna matching, less board space, and lower cost. The mixer cell is a pair of double balanced mixers that perform an IQ downconversion of the RF input to the 10.7MHz IF from a low-side injected LO (i.e., fLO = fRF fIF). The image-rejection circuit then combines these signals to achieve 44dB of image rejection. Low-side injection is required due to the on-chip image-rejection architecture. The IF output is driven by a source follower biased to create a driving-point impedance of 330; this provides a good match to the off-chip 330 ceramic IF filter. The IRSEL pin is a logic input that selects one of the three possible image-rejection frequencies. When VIRSEL = 0V, the image rejection is tuned to 315MHz. VIRSEL = V DVDD/2 tunes the image rejection to 375MHz, and VIRSEL = VDVDD tunes the image rejection to 434MHz. The IRSEL pin is internally set to VDVDD/2 (image rejection at 375MHz) when it is left unconnected, thereby eliminating the need for an external VDVDD/2 voltage. Phase-Locked Loop The PLL block contains a phase detector, charge pump, integrated loop filter, VCO, asynchronous 64x clock divider, and crystal oscillator driver. Besides the crystal, this PLL does not require any external components. The VCO generates a low-side LO. The relationship between the RF, IF, and crystal frequencies is given by: f -f f XTAL = RF IF 32 x M where: M = 1 (VXTALSEL = VDVDD) or 2 (VXTALSEL = 0V) To allow the smallest possible IF bandwidth (for best sensitivity), minimize the tolerance of the reference crystal. Intermediate Frequency and RSSI The IF section presents a differential 330 load to provide matching for the off-chip ceramic filter. The six internal AC-coupled limiting amplifiers produce an overall gain of approximately 65dB, with a bandpassfilter-type response centered near the 10.7MHz IF frequency with a 3dB bandwidth of approximately 10MHz. The RSSI circuit demodulates the IF by producing a DC output proportional to the log of the IF signal level, with a slope of approximately 14.2mV/dB. Applications Information Crystal Oscillator The crystal oscillator in the MAX7034 is designed to present a capacitance of approximately 3pF between the XTAL1 and XTAL2. If a crystal designed to oscillate with a different load capacitance is used, the crystal is pulled away from its intended operating frequency, introducing an error in the reference frequency. Crystals designed to operate with higher differential load capacitance always pull the reference frequency higher. For example, a 4.7547MHz crystal designed to operate with a 10pF load capacitance oscillates at 4.7563MHz with the MAX7034, causing the receiver to be tuned to 315.1MHz rather than 315.0MHz, an error of about 100kHz, or 320ppm. It is very important to use a crystal with a load capacitance that is equal to the capacitance of the MAX7034 crystal oscillator plus PCB parasitics. In actuality, the oscillator pulls every crystal. The crystal's natural frequency is really below its specified frequency, but when loaded with the specified load capacitance, the crystal is pulled and oscillates at its specified frequency. This pulling is already accounted for in the specification of the load capacitance. Additional pulling can be calculated if the electrical parameters of the crystal are known. The frequency pulling is given by: fP = CM 1 1 x 106 2 CCASE + CLOAD CCASE + CSPEC where: fP is the amount the crystal frequency pulled in ppm. CM is the motional capacitance of the crystal. CCASE is the case capacitance. CSPEC is the specified load capacitance. CLOAD is the actual load capacitance. When the crystal is loaded as specified (i.e., CLOAD = CSPEC), the frequency pulling equals zero. 9 MAX7034 LPARASITICS and CPARASITICS include inductance and capacitance of the PCB traces, package pins, mixer input impedance, etc. These parasitics at high frequencies cannot be ignored, and can have a dramatic effect on the tank filter center frequency. The total parasitic capacitance is generally between 4pF and 6pF. MAX7034 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver It is possible to use an external reference oscillator in place of a crystal to drive the VCO. AC-couple the external oscillator to XTAL2 with a 1000pF capacitor. Drive XTAL2 with a signal level of approximately 500mVP-P. AC-couple XTAL1 to ground with a 1000pF capacitor. Data Filter The data filter is implemented as a 2nd-order lowpass Sallen-Key filter. The pole locations are set by the combination of two on-chip resistors and two external capacitors. Adjusting the value of the external capacitors changes the corner frequency to optimize for different data rates. The corner frequency should be set to approximately 1.5 times the fastest expected data rate from the transmitter. Keeping the corner frequency near the data rate rejects any noise at higher frequencies, resulting in an increase in receiver sensitivity. The configuration shown in Figure 1 can create a Butterworth or Bessel response. The Butterworth filter offers a very flat amplitude response in the passband and a rolloff rate of 40dB/decade for the two-pole filter. The Bessel filter has a linear phase response, which works well for filtering digital data. To calculate the value of C7 and C6, use the following equations, along with the coefficients in Table 1: a threshold voltage. One input is supplied by the data filter output. Both comparator inputs are accessible offchip to allow for different methods of generating the slicing threshold, which is applied to the second comparator input. The suggested data slicer configuration uses a resistor (R1) connected between DSN and DSP with a capacitor (C8) from DSN to DGND (Figure 2). This configuration averages the analog output of the filter and sets the threshold to approximately 50% of that amplitude. With this configuration, the threshold automatically adjusts as the analog signal varies, minimizing the possibility for errors in the digital data. The values of R1 and C8 affect how fast the threshold tracks to the analog amplitude. Be sure to keep the corner frequency of the RC circuit much lower than the lowest expected data rate. Note that a long string of zeros or ones can cause the threshold to drift. This configuration works best if a coding scheme, such as Manchester coding, which has an equal number of zeros and ones, is used. To prevent continuous toggling of DATAOUT in the absence of an RF signal due to noise, add hysteresis to the data slicer as shown in Figure 3. C7 = b Table 1. Coefficents to Calculate C7 and C6 a (100k )( ) ( fC ) a b C6 = a Butterworth (Q = 0.707) 1.414 1.000 Bessel (Q = 0.577) 1.3617 0.618 FILTER TYPE 4 (100k )( ) ( fC ) where fC is the desired 3dB corner frequency. For example, to choose a Butterworth filter response with a corner frequency of 5kHz: MAX7034 1. 000 C7 = 450pF (1.414 )(100k )( 3.14 )( 5kHz ) C6 = RSSI 1. 414 225pF ( 4 )(100k )( 3.14 )( 5kHz ) Choosing standard capacitor values changes C7 to 470pF and C6 to 220pF, as shown in the Typical Application Circuit. RDF1 100k RDF2 100k 22 DFFB 21 OPP 19 DFO C6 C7 Data Slicer The data slicer takes the analog output of the data filter and converts it to a digital signal. This is achieved by using a comparator and comparing the analog input to 10 Figure 1. Sallen-Key Lowpass Data Filter 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver MAX7034 Peak Detector The peak-detector output (PDOUT), in conjunction with an external RC filter, creates a DC output voltage equal to the peak value of the data signal. The resistor provides a path for the capacitor to discharge, allowing the peak detector to dynamically follow peak changes of the data-filter output voltage. For faster data slicer response, use the circuit shown in Figure 4. For more details on hysteresis and peak-detector applications, refer to Maxim Application Note 3671, Data Slicing Techniques for UHF ASK Receivers. MAX7034 DATA SLICER Layout Considerations A properly designed PCB is an essential part of any RF/microwave circuit. On high-frequency inputs and outputs, use controlled-impedance lines and keep them as short as possible to minimize losses and radiation. At high frequencies, trace lengths that are on the order of /10 or longer act as antennas. Keeping the traces short also reduces parasitic inductance. Generally, 1 inch of a PCB trace adds about 20nH of parasitic inductance. The parasitic inductance can have a dramatic effect on the effective inductance of a passive component. For example, a 0.5 inch trace connecting a 100nH inductor adds an extra 10nH of inductance or 10%. To reduce the parasitic inductance, use wider traces and a solid ground or power plane below the signal traces. Also, use low-inductance connections to ground on all GND pins, and place decoupling capacitors close to all power-supply pins. Control Interface Considerations When operating the MAX7034 with a +4.5V to +5.5V supply voltage, the SHDN pin can be driven by a microcontroller with either +3.0V or +5V interface logic levels. When operating the MAX7034 with a +3.0V to +3.6V supply, only +3.0V logic from the microcontroller is allowed. 20 DSN 25 DATAOUT 19 DFO 23 DSP R1 C8 Figure 2. Generating Data Slicer Threshold MAX7034 DATA SLICER 25 DATAOUT 20 DSN 23 DSP R1 19 DFO R2 R3 R* C8 *OPTIONAL Figure 3. Generating Data Slicer Hysteresis MAX7034 DATA SLICER 25 DATAOUT 20 DSN 23 DSP 19 DFO 26 PDOUT 25k 47nF Figure 4. Using PDOUT for Faster Startup 11 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver MAX7034 Typical Application Circuit IF VDD IS THEN VDD3 IS AND EN_REG IS 3.0V TO 3.6V CONNECTED TO VDD GROUNDED 4.5V TO 5.5V CREATED BY LDO, AVAILABLE AT AVDD (PIN 2) CONNECTED TO VDD VDD3 VDD (SEE TABLE) X1 C13 C11 C12 1 RF INPUT 2 C1 L1 3 L2 4 5 6 VDD3 C14 7 L3 C3 C2 8 9 C4 C9 10 11 12 13 14 XTAL1 XTAL2 AVDD SHDN LNAIN PDOUT DATAOUT LNASRC MAX7034 AGND LNAOUT VDD5 DSP AVDD DFFB MIXIN1 OPP MIXIN2 DSN AGND DFO IRSEL IFIN2 MIXOUT IFIN1 DGND XTALSEL DVDD EN_REG *** 28 26 R2 25 C15 24 R3 23 22 21 C7 20 19 VDD 18 17 R1 ** 16 15 * Y1 TO/FROM P POWER-DOWN DATA OUT 27 C5 C6 C8 IF FILTER C10 IN OUT GND COMPONENT VALUES IN TABLE 2 12 ***SEE THE MIXER SECTION. *SEE THE PHASE-LOCKED LOOP SECTION. **SEE THE VOLTAGE REGULATOR SECTION. 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver MAX7034 Table 2. Component Values for Typical Application Circuit COMPONENT VALUE FOR fRF = 433MHz VALUE FOR fRF = 315MHz DESCRIPTION C1 100pF 100pF 5% C2 Open Open 0.1pF C3 100pF 100pF 5% C4 100pF 100pF 5% C5 1500pF 1500pF 10% C6 220pF 220pF 5% C7 470pF 470pF 5% C8 0.47F 0.47F 20% C9 220pF 220pF 10% C10 0.01F 0.01F 20% C11 0.1F 0.1F 20% C12 100pF 100pF 5% C13 100pF 100pF 5% C14 0.01F 0.01F 20% C15 0.01F 0.01F 20% L1 56nH 120nH 5% or better** L2 15nH 15nH 5% or better** L3 27nH 51nH 5% or better** R1 5.1k 5.1k 5% R2 Open Open -- R3 0 0 -- X1 (/64) 6.6128MHz* 4.7547MHz* NDK or Suntsu X1 (/32) 13.2256MHz* 9.5094MHz* NDK or Suntsu Y1 10.7MHz ceramic filter 10.7MHz ceramic filter Murata *Crystal frequencies shown are for /64 (VXTALSEL = 0V) and /32 (VXTALSEL = VDD). **Wire wound recommended. Package Information Chip Information PROCESS: CMOS For the latest package outline information and land patterns (footprints), go to www.maxim-ic.com/packages. Note that a "+", "#", or "-" in the package code indicates RoHS status only. Package drawings may show a different suffix character, but the drawing pertains to the package regardless of RoHS status. PACKAGE TYPE PACKAGE CODE OUTLINE NO. LAND PATTERN NO. 28 TSSOP U28+1 21-0066 90-0171 13 MAX7034 315MHz/434MHz ASK Superheterodyne Receiver Revision History REVISION REVISION NUMBER DATE DESCRIPTION PAGES CHANGED 0 1/08 Initial release -- 1 3/09 Added /V designation to part number. 1 2 5/11 Updated Pin Description, Functional Diagram, Voltage Regulator section, Typical Application Circuit, and Package Information; added Control Interface Considerations section 3 6/12 Updated capacitors in Data Filter section; updated Table 1 to reflect correct capacitor; updated Figures 1, 2, 3; updated Table 2 component values and wire wound recommendation 7, 8, 11, 12, 13 10, 11, 13 Maxim cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim product. No circuit patent licenses are implied. Maxim reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time. The parametric values (min and max limits) shown in the Electrical. Characteristics table are guaranteed. Other parametric values quoted in this data sheet are provided for guidance. 14 ____________________Maxim Integrated Products, 160 Rio Robles, San Jose, CA 95134 USA 1-408-601-1000 (c) 2012 Maxim Integrated Products Maxim is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc.