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3.2 Basic AI Acquisition
In this section, we are going to explain the basic acquisition timing.
3�2�1 Analog Input Path
The following figure shows the block diagram of the single analog input path of a digitizer.
Each path provides a choice of 50 Ω input impedance or high impedance. The gain amplifier
is optimized for each input range with low noise and high dynamic range. An antialiasing
filter is also adopted to eliminate high frequency noise. The 16-bit ADC provides not only
accurate DC performance but also high signal-to-noise ratio, high spurious-free dynamic
range in AC performance.
50
O
Anti-aliasing
Filter
Calibration Source
Protection
Circuitry
Gain Amplifier
Hi Impedance
Buffer
16-bit
40M/20M/10M
ADC
Onboard
Memory
PCI Interface
Figure 3-3: Analog Input Signal Block Diagram
3.2.2 Basic Acquisition Timing
The trigger is a signal that starts or stops the acquisition. In post trigger mode and delay
trigger mode, the trigger is used to initiate acquisition. In pre-trigger mode, the trigger is
used to stop acquisition. In middle-trigger mode, the trigger is used to inform the acquisition
engine to acquire the specific number of data and then stop.
Timebase is a clock that sent to the ADC of each channel and the acquisition engine for
essential timing functionality. The source of timebase can be either internal oscillator or
external clock generator. Usually the maximum sampling rate of a digitizer is determined by
the speed of timebase. However, other sampling rate can be achieved by specifying a scan
interval counter. Please refer to
Table 3-1 below and Section “3.3.4” on page 26 for more details.
Table 3-1 shows several basic counters required for operating digitizers.