S
Stef
Guest
To generate frequencies from approximately 0.5 mHz to 12 MHz with a DDS
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).
Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?
I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).
But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?
If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?
--
Stef
Baker\'s First Law of Federal Geometry:
A block grant is a solid mass of money surrounded on all sides by
governors.
a minimum clock of >24, say 25 MHz, is required. To be able to go down
to 0.5 mHz, a phase accumulator of at least 36 bits is required. This
will give sub mHz resolution over the entire range. Nice for the low
frequencies, but not of much use for MHz frequencies (in this
application).
Is there any objection to using a smaller phase accumulator and a clock
pre-scaler to generate the lower frequencies?
I see Analog Devices has DDS chips up to 48 bits, so 36 bits would not
be a problem (except for cost maybe).
But al of the DDS chips I find from Analog seem only to implement a
fixed sine table/function. Do DDS chips exist that allow downloading an
arbitrary lookup table with 2^10 - 2^16 entries of 10 - 16 bit each?
If no such standard chips exist, I expect I need to implement the DDS
in an FPGA. Using a smaller accumulator would probably save some space
in the FPGA. Or am I just optoimizing prematurely?
--
Stef
Baker\'s First Law of Federal Geometry:
A block grant is a solid mass of money surrounded on all sides by
governors.