Features
- Two Independent 8-Tap FIR Filters Configurable as a Single 16-Tap FIR
- 10-Bit Data and Coefficients
- On-Board Storage for 32 Programmable Coefficient Sets
- Up To: 256 FIR Taps, 16x16 2-D Kernels, or 10x19-Bit Data and Coefficients
- Programmable Decimation to 16
- Programmable Rounding on Output
- Standard Microprocessor Interface
- Pb-Free Plus Anneal Available (RoHS Compliant)
Description
Support is limited to customers who have already adopted these products.
The HSP43168 Dual FIR Filter consists of two independent 8-tap FIR filters. Each filter supports decimation from 1 to 16 and provides on-board storage for 32 sets of coefficients. The Block Diagram shows two FIR cells each fed by a separate coefficient bank and one of two separate inputs. The outputs of the FIR cells are either summed or multiplexed by the MUX/Adder. The compute power in the FIR Cells can be configured to provide quadrature filtering, complex filtering, 2-D convolution, 1-D/2-D correlations, and interpolating/decimating filters. The FIR cells take advantage of symmetry in FIR coefficients by pre-adding data samples prior to multiplication. This allows an 8-tap FIR to be implemented using only 4 multipliers per filter cell. These cells can be configured as either a single 16-tap FIR filter or dual 8-tap FIR filters. Asymmetric filtering is also supported. Decimation of up to 16 is provided to boost the effective number of filter taps from 2 to 16 times. Further, the Decimation Registers provide the delay necessary for fractional data conversion and 2-D filtering with kernels to 16x16. The flexibility of the Dual is further enhanced by 32 sets of user programmable coefficients. Coefficient selection may be changed asynchronously from clock to clock. The ability to toggle between coefficient sets further simplifies applications such as polyphase or adaptive filtering. The HSP43168 is a low power fully static design implemented in an advanced CMOS process. The configuration of the device is controlled through a standard microprocessor interface.
Applications
- Quadrature, Complex Filtering
- Image Processing
- Polyphase Filtering
- Adaptive Filtering
| Part Number | Status | Samples | Stock | Package | Carrier Type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HSP43168JC-33 | Obsolete | N/A | In Stock | PLCC | Tube |
| HSP43168JC-33Z | Obsolete | N/A | In Stock | PLCC | Tube |
| HSP43168VC-45 | Obsolete | N/A | In Stock | MQFP-HS | Tray |
| HSP43168VC-45Z | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | MQFP-HS | Tray |
Filters
Applied Filters
- End Of Life NoticePDF 200 KB PLC15033 Jun 11, 2015
- Application NotePDF 232 KB an9658 May 08, 2000AI-generated Summary: The document details the implementation of a high-rate radio receiver using specific Renesas components. It emphasizes the importance of anti-aliasing filters to prevent signal interference and aliasing during analog-to-digital conversion. The design includes oversampling and decimation techniques, matched baseband filters, and digital signal processing elements like the Digital Quadrature Tuner and Costas loop. The system limits symbol rates to 22.5MHz and uses level detection to optimize input signal levels.
- Application NotePDF 292 KB an9418 May 08, 2000AI-generated Summary: The document explains the operation of the HSP43168 dual FIR filter for complex filtering using 16 taps and decimation by four. It details how four filters run in parallel, processing input samples sequentially every four clocks to produce real and imaginary output components. The internal data flow, register structure, and timing diagrams illustrate the calculation of partial sums and accumulation of products over multiple clock cycles. The architecture supports flexible implementation of complex filters with varying lengths and data rates.
- Application NotePDF 328 KB an9661 May 01, 2000AI-generated Summary: The document explains implementing polyphase filtering using the HSP50110, HSP50210, and HSP43168 devices. It details clock and control connections, emphasizing the programmable divider and resampler NCO for precise phase resolution. The SSTRB signal synchronizes sample phases with the DATARDY signal. It describes the FIR filter's role in resampling and decimation, highlighting the dual FIR filter's capability to handle I and Q components with up to 256 taps. The document also covers synchronization of signals and jitter considerations in the NCO output.
- Application NotePDF 524 KB an9603 Apr 28, 2000AI-generated Summary: Digital filters process signals by manipulating sampled data using two main types: Finite Impulse Response (FIR) and Infinite Impulse Response (IIR). FIR filters have only zeros and are always stable with linear phase response, while IIR filters include feedback, offering sharper transitions but potential stability issues. Filter design involves specifying ideal responses, creating floating-point coefficients, and quantizing them for fixed-point implementation. Decimation reduces sampling rates by discarding samples, improving efficiency, whereas interpolation increases sampling rates by inserting zeros and filtering to preserve the signal spectrum.
- Application NotePDF 377 KB an9421 Apr 28, 2000AI-generated Summary: The HSP43168 performs multi-channel filtering using symmetric and asymmetric configurations. Asymmetric filtering disables the reverse path and completes a 4-tap filter convolution in one clock cycle. Double-clocked asymmetric filtering doubles the filter taps to 8 by clocking twice as fast, using the SHFTEN input to manage data shifting. Decimation delay registers separate channel data, enabling efficient multi-channel processing with timing diagrams illustrating data flow and clocking.
- DocumentPDF 194 KB tb314 May 09, 2000
Recommended Documents (1)
Datasheets (1)
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Try fewer, different, or more general terms to vary your search.
If you have filters applied, consider deselecting some to broaden your results.
- Search our extensive knowledgebase, designed to help customers with their FAQs.
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- Application NotePDF 232 KB an9658 May 08, 2000AI-generated Summary: The document details the implementation of a high-rate radio receiver using specific Renesas components. It emphasizes the importance of anti-aliasing filters to prevent signal interference and aliasing during analog-to-digital conversion. The design includes oversampling and decimation techniques, matched baseband filters, and digital signal processing elements like the Digital Quadrature Tuner and Costas loop. The system limits symbol rates to 22.5MHz and uses level detection to optimize input signal levels.
- Application NotePDF 292 KB an9418 May 08, 2000AI-generated Summary: The document explains the operation of the HSP43168 dual FIR filter for complex filtering using 16 taps and decimation by four. It details how four filters run in parallel, processing input samples sequentially every four clocks to produce real and imaginary output components. The internal data flow, register structure, and timing diagrams illustrate the calculation of partial sums and accumulation of products over multiple clock cycles. The architecture supports flexible implementation of complex filters with varying lengths and data rates.
- Application NotePDF 328 KB an9661 May 01, 2000AI-generated Summary: The document explains implementing polyphase filtering using the HSP50110, HSP50210, and HSP43168 devices. It details clock and control connections, emphasizing the programmable divider and resampler NCO for precise phase resolution. The SSTRB signal synchronizes sample phases with the DATARDY signal. It describes the FIR filter's role in resampling and decimation, highlighting the dual FIR filter's capability to handle I and Q components with up to 256 taps. The document also covers synchronization of signals and jitter considerations in the NCO output.
- Application NotePDF 524 KB an9603 Apr 28, 2000AI-generated Summary: Digital filters process signals by manipulating sampled data using two main types: Finite Impulse Response (FIR) and Infinite Impulse Response (IIR). FIR filters have only zeros and are always stable with linear phase response, while IIR filters include feedback, offering sharper transitions but potential stability issues. Filter design involves specifying ideal responses, creating floating-point coefficients, and quantizing them for fixed-point implementation. Decimation reduces sampling rates by discarding samples, improving efficiency, whereas interpolation increases sampling rates by inserting zeros and filtering to preserve the signal spectrum.
- Application NotePDF 377 KB an9421 Apr 28, 2000AI-generated Summary: The HSP43168 performs multi-channel filtering using symmetric and asymmetric configurations. Asymmetric filtering disables the reverse path and completes a 4-tap filter convolution in one clock cycle. Double-clocked asymmetric filtering doubles the filter taps to 8 by clocking twice as fast, using the SHFTEN input to manage data shifting. Decimation delay registers separate channel data, enabling efficient multi-channel processing with timing diagrams illustrating data flow and clocking.
Application Notes & White Papers (5)
- End Of Life NoticePDF 200 KB PLC15033 Jun 11, 2015
Product Notices (PCN, EOL, etc) (2)
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- DocumentPDF 194 KB tb314 May 09, 2000
Other (2)
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Support Communities
-
HSP43168
According to the HSP43168 chip manual, how exactly is this chip interpolation filter and decimation filter implemented? How to use FPGA design to achieve arbitrary 2~1000 times the sampling rate interpolation or decimation?
Jul 20, 2023 -
HSP43168
According to the HSP43168 chip manual, how exactly is this chip interpolation filter and decimation filter implemented? How to use FPGA design to achieve arbitrary 2~1000 times the sampling rate interpolation or decimation?
Jul 21, 2023