Features
- Guaranteed Zero Reading for 0V Input on All Scales
- True Polarity at Zero for Precise Null Detection
- 1pA Typical Input Current
- True Differential Input and Reference, Direct Display Drive
- LCD ICL7106, LED lCL7107
- Low Noise - Less Than 15µVP-P
- On Chip Clock and Reference
- Low Power Dissipation - Typically Less Than 10mW
- No Additional Active Circuits Required
- Enhanced Display Stability
- Pb-Free Plus Anneal Available (RoHS Compliant)
Description
Support is limited to customers who have already adopted these products.
The Intersil ICL7106 and ICL7107 are high performance, low power, 31/2 digit A/D converters. Included are seven segment decoders, display drivers, a reference, and a clock. The ICL7106 is designed to interface with a liquid crystal display (LCD) and includes a multiplexed backplane drive; the ICL7107 will directly drive an instrument size light emitting diode (LED) display. The ICL7106 and ICL7107 bring together a combination of high accuracy, versatility, and true economy. It features autozero to less than 10µV, zero drift of less than 1µV/oC, input bias current of 10pA (Max), and rollover error of less than one count. True differential inputs and reference are useful in all systems, but give the designer an uncommon advantage when measuring load cells, strain gauges and other bridge type transducers. Finally, the true economy of single power supply operation (ICL7106), enables a high performance panel meter to be built with the addition of only 10 passive components and a display.
| Part Number | Status | Samples | Stock | Package | Lead Count (#) | Carrier Type | Moisture Sensitivity Level (MSL) | Pb (Lead) Free | Pb Free Category | Temp. Range (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ICL7107SCPLZ | Obsolete | N/A | Out of Stock | PDIP | 40# | Tube | Not Applicable | Yes | Pb-Free 100% Matte Tin Plate w/Anneal-e3 | 0 to +70°C |
Filters
Applied Filters
- Application NotePDF 503 KB an9675 Aug 13, 1999AI-generated Summary: Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) depends critically on precise coherence in A/D sampling, with small frequency shifts significantly impacting accuracy. Unwrapping reconstructs coherently sampled sine waves, while windowing controls spectral leakage by shaping the acquisition window. Resampling and interpolation adjust sample sets to avoid leakage in FFT analysis. Different window functions balance side lobe levels and bandwidth, affecting spectral resolution and leakage reduction.
- Application NotePDF 1.08 MB an002 Nov 19, 1998AI-generated Summary: Data acquisition and conversion involve quantization, where the smallest resolvable analog difference (quantum) depends on the full scale range and resolution. Quantization introduces an irreducible error called quantizing error or noise. Aperture time, the conversion time uncertainty, causes amplitude errors when signals change during conversion. Sample-hold circuits reduce aperture time by storing sampled signals. The Sampling Theorem states that sampling frequency must be at least twice the highest signal frequency to avoid distortion from frequency folding or aliasing. Natural binary code is commonly used for digital representation in converters, with the most and least significant bits defining the code's resolution and value.
- Application NotePDF 287 KB an9705 Feb 21, 1997AI-generated Summary: Coherent sampling requires the ratio of signal frequency to sampling frequency to be a rational number, expressed as ko/N. When this condition is not met, frequency smearing occurs across bins. Data Acquisition Systems (DAS) can mitigate this by windowing, fixing sampling frequency and tuning input frequency, or fixing input frequency and tuning sampling frequency. The latter two methods are practical for most systems. Pseudo-code illustrates the frequency response for non-integer ko values.
Recommended Documents (1)
Datasheets (1)
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- Application NotePDF 503 KB an9675 Aug 13, 1999AI-generated Summary: Effective Number of Bits (ENOB) depends critically on precise coherence in A/D sampling, with small frequency shifts significantly impacting accuracy. Unwrapping reconstructs coherently sampled sine waves, while windowing controls spectral leakage by shaping the acquisition window. Resampling and interpolation adjust sample sets to avoid leakage in FFT analysis. Different window functions balance side lobe levels and bandwidth, affecting spectral resolution and leakage reduction.
- Application NotePDF 1.08 MB an002 Nov 19, 1998AI-generated Summary: Data acquisition and conversion involve quantization, where the smallest resolvable analog difference (quantum) depends on the full scale range and resolution. Quantization introduces an irreducible error called quantizing error or noise. Aperture time, the conversion time uncertainty, causes amplitude errors when signals change during conversion. Sample-hold circuits reduce aperture time by storing sampled signals. The Sampling Theorem states that sampling frequency must be at least twice the highest signal frequency to avoid distortion from frequency folding or aliasing. Natural binary code is commonly used for digital representation in converters, with the most and least significant bits defining the code's resolution and value.
- Application NotePDF 287 KB an9705 Feb 21, 1997AI-generated Summary: Coherent sampling requires the ratio of signal frequency to sampling frequency to be a rational number, expressed as ko/N. When this condition is not met, frequency smearing occurs across bins. Data Acquisition Systems (DAS) can mitigate this by windowing, fixing sampling frequency and tuning input frequency, or fixing input frequency and tuning sampling frequency. The latter two methods are practical for most systems. Pseudo-code illustrates the frequency response for non-integer ko values.
Application Notes & White Papers (3)
Product Notices (PCN, EOL, etc) (1)
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