[hpsdr] LTC 2208 A/D Thermal Characteristics
Eduardo Jacob
edu at kender.es
Wed Jan 14 08:27:41 PST 2009
Hi
I don't know if this can add some data to the
discussion. I measured temperatures in my mercury
with a (old but unused) Tektronix temperature
probe with an old Tektronix 2465DMS scope and
with an ambient temperature of 18.5 C it gives
44.7 C (after an hour running) . The probe is in
contact with the center of the IC. The ambient
temperature measured with the probe is quite
close to another mercury (btw) thermometer I have (which is also uncalibrated)
Eduardo/EA2BAJ
At 12:20 14/01/2009, Rob Frohne wrote:
>***** High Performance Software Defined Radio Discussion List *****
>
>
>Hi Scott,
>
>That extremely small thermal resistance cannot
>be between the junction and the place where
>Charles and others are measuring the temperature.
>It must be between the junction and the part of
>the case under the chip where it is supposed to
>be soldered to a good heat sink. I am not
>saying there is a problem, only that your
>analysis is not conclusive, given the
>measurements that we can fairly easily
>perform. Here are the words of wisdom from the
>LTC2208 data sheet regarding heat considerations:
>
>Most of the heat generated by the LTC2208 is transferred
>from the die through the bottom-side exposed pad. For
>good electrical and thermal performance, the exposed
>pad must be soldered to a large grounded pad on the PC
>board. It is critical that the exposed pad and all ground
>pins are connected to a ground plane of sufficient area
>with as many vias as possible.
>
>The interesting thing is that their example
>board didn't contain any vias to the ground
>plane that I could see anyway, so it seems that
>they didn't follow their own advice, or maybe I'm blind. :-)
>
>In any case, increasing the heat sinking will
>not cause the device to operate worse, only
>perhaps a little better, so I hesitate to
>discourage folk like Francis from doing as they
>have with more heat sinking at least at this point.
>
>73,
>
>Rob, KL7NA
>
>Scott Cowling wrote:
>>***** High Performance Software Defined Radio Discussion List *****
>>
>>Hi Mercurians,
>>
>>The thermal resistance of the LTC 64-pin UP
>>package (the one that the LTC2208CUP comes in)
>>is specified at 0.24°C/W from the junction to the case.
>>
>>The maximum allowed operating junction temperature is 125°C.
>>
>>The A/D dissipates roughly 1.25W at 3.3V and
>>1.45W at 3.6V. We are running at 3.3V, but lets
>>assume a worst-case power dissipation of 1.5W,
>>which is higher that it will ever be.
>>
>>1.5W * 0.24°C/W = 0.36°C temperature rise from the case to the junction.
>>
>>That means the junction temperature, T(j), will
>>be only about 1/3 of a degree higher than
>>whatever temperature you measure on the case.
>>
>>Since the maximum junction temperature is
>>125°C, the case can get as hot as 124°C WITHOUT
>>EXCEEDING THE MAXIMUM ALLOWED JUNCTION TEMPERATURE.
>>
>>Since the case temperatures mentioned here are
>>in the 50°C to 70°C range, the chip die is
>>operating at well below the maximum allowable temperature.
>>
>>While I will never argue against "cooler is
>>better", I will argue against making a problem where there is none.
>>
>>Could we make it cooler? Sure we could. Do you
>>want to add noise by hooking up a BIG ground
>>plane to the pad on the underside of the chip?
>>Maybe. Designs are about tradeoffs. The
>>designers traded off board area, noise pickup
>>and thermal resistance and came up with a design that works.
>>
>>It is cool *enough*
>>It is quiet *enough*
>>It fits on the board
>>It works
>>
>>That doesn't mean that it is necessarily the
>>optimum choice. By all means, modify it, change
>>it, make it better; that is what HPSDR is all
>>about. There are many solutions, some of which
>>are certainly better that the one that we
>>chose. But please don't call it "broken" just
>>because it feels hot to your finger. :-)
>>
>>Here are some reference points:
>>At 50°C, it takes 2 minutes to give you a third degree burn.
>>At 60°C, it takes 5 seconds to inflict a third-degree burn.
>>At 70°C, it takes only 1 second to give you a third degree burn.
>>source: http://www.cqc.state.ny.us/newsletter/estime.htm
>>
>>It's hot! Be careful!
>>
>>73,
>>Scotty WA2DFI
>>
>>
>>
>>
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>--
>Rob Frohne, Ph.D., P.E.
>E.F. Cross School of Engineering
>Walla Walla University
>100 SW 4th Street
>College Place, WA 99324
>(509) 527-2075 http://people.walllawalla.edu/~rob.frohne
>
>
>
>
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