2020-06-07 6:16 AM - last edited on 2025-02-11 2:25 AM by Andrew Neil
When using differential ADC, it is safe to to measure voltages above VDD ?
I am trying to measure a voltage different across a current sense resistor from 12VDC power supply.
2020-06-07 6:23 AM
No, all voltages need to be within 0 and VREF+.
2020-06-07 7:27 AM
The purpose of differential is NOT to have a higher voltage than Vdd. It is to cancel common mode noise. This is also for the same reason that your USB cable is using a differential pair... In the digital world, you can have common voltage higher IF you typically use embedded clock 8b/10b coding AND AC coupling. This is not done on USB nor LVDS, you will find it in Display Port interface.
2020-06-08 6:05 PM
Hello,
Thank you for taking time to answer my question. Understood now that sampling voltage should not exceed VDD.
2020-06-08 10:28 PM
This trouble is caused by ST's inappropriate use of terms.
A real differential ADC would have an input range spanning positive and negative voltages (e.g. -Vref ... +Vref).
But ST's differential ADC measures the difference between two ADC inputs, while both ADC input potential must be in the range 0V...Vdda.
2020-06-09 12:10 AM
Voltages ranges usually are specified in the electrical tables inbdatasheet. TI ADS1299 datasheet do this too.