Syn470R Datasheet: (300-450Mhz Ask Receiver)
Syn470R Datasheet: (300-450Mhz Ask Receiver)
Syn470R Datasheet: (300-450Mhz Ask Receiver)
1. General Description
The SYN470R is a single chip ASK/OOK (ON-OFF Keyed) RF receiver IC. This device is a true
“antenna-in to data-out” monolithic device. All RF and IF tuning are accomplished automatically
within the IC which eliminates manual tuning and reduces production costs. The result is a highly
reliable yet low cost solution.
The SYN470R is a fully featured part in 16-pin packaging, the SYN480R is the same part
packaged in 8-pin packaging with a reduced feature set.
The SYN470R provides two additional functions, (1) a Shutdown pin, which may be used to turn
the device off for duty-cycled operation, and (2) a “Wake-up” output, which provides an output
flag indicating when an RF signal is present. These features make the SYN470R ideal for low and
ultra-low power applications, such as RKE and remote controls.
All IF filtering and post-detection (demodulator) data filtering is provided within the SYN470R,
so no external filters are necessary. One of four demodulator filter bandwidths may be selected
externally by the user.
The SYN470R offer two modes of operation; fixed-mode (FIX) and sweep-mode (SWP). In fixed
mode the SYN470R functions as a conventional super-heterodyne receiver. In sweep mode the
SYN470R sweeps a wider RF spectrum. Fixed-mode provides better selectivity and sensitivity
performance and sweep mode enables the SYN470R to be used with low cost, imprecise
transmitters.
2. Features
300MHz to 440MHz frequency range
High receiver sensitivity: -106dBm (315MHz), -107dBm (433MHz)
Data-rate up to 10kbps (fixed-mode)
Low Power Consumption
2.5mA fully operational (315MHz)
0.9µA in shutdown
250µA in polled operation (10:1 duty-cycle)
Wake-up output flag to enable decoders and microprocessors
Very low RF re-radiation at the antenna
Highly integrated with extremely low external part count
3. Applications
Automotive Remote Keyless Entry (RKE)
Remote controls
Remote fan and light control
Garage door and gate openers
4. Typical Application
5. Ordering Information
6. Pin Configuration
SEL0 SWEN
VSSRF REFOSC
CTH DO
NC VSSBB
7. 8-Pin Options
The standard 16-pin package allows complete control of all configurable features. Some reduced
function 8-pin versions are also available.
For high-volume applications additional customized 8-pin devices can be produced. SWEN, SEL0
and SEL1 pins are internally bonded to reduce the pin count. Pin 6 may be configured as either
SHUT or WAKEB.
Demodulator Bandwidth
SEL0 SEL1
Sweep Mode Fixed Mode
1 1 5000 Hz 10000Hz
0 1 2500 Hz 5000Hz
1 0 1250 Hz 2500 Hz
0 0 625 Hz 1250 Hz
Table 1. Nominal Demodulator Filter Bandwidth vs. SEL0, SEL1 and Operating Mode
8. Pin Description
RF Section, IF Section
Receiver Sensitivity (Note 4) fRF = 315MHz –106 dBm
Reference Oscillator
ZREFOSC Reference Oscillator Input Impedance Note 8 290 kΩ
Demodulator
ZCTH CTH Source Impedance Note 7 145 kΩ
Digital/Control Section
VIN(high) Input-High Voltage SEL0, SEL1, SWEN 0.8 VDD
VOUT(high) Output High Voltage DO, WAKEB pins, IOUT = –1µA 0.9 VDD
VOUT(low) Output Low Voltage DO, WAKEB pins, IOUT = +1µA 0.1 VDD
tR, tF Output Rise and Fall Times DO, WAKEB pins, CLOAD = 15pF 10 µs
Note 1: Exceeding the absolute maximum rating may damage the device.
Note 2: The device is not guaranteed to function outside its operating rating.
Note 3: Devices are ESD sensitive, use appropriate ESD precautions. Meets class 1 ESD test
For optimal performance is highly recommended that the SYN470R is impedance matched to the
antenna, the matching network will add an additional two or three components.
Four control inputs are shown in the block diagram: SEL0, SEL1, SWEN, and SHUT. Using these
logic inputs, the user can control the operating mode and selectable features of the IC. These
inputs are CMOS compatible, and are internally pulled-up. IF Bandpass Filter Roll-off response of
the IF Filter is 5th order, while the demodulator data filter exhibits a 2nd order response.
up to ±0.5% without the need to retune the receiver and without impacting system performance.
The swept-LO technique does not affect the IF bandwidth, therefore noise performance is not
degraded relative to fixed mode. The IF bandwidth is 430kHz whether the device is operating in
fixed or sweep-mode.
Due to limitations imposed by the LO sweeping process, the upper limit on data rate in sweep
mode is approximately 5.0kbps.
Similar performance is not currently available with crystal-based superheterodyne receivers which
can operate only with SAW- or crystal-based transmitters.
In sweep-mode, a range reduction will occur in installations where there is a strong interferer in
the swept RF band. This is because the process indiscriminately includes all signals within the
sweep range. An SYN470R may be used in place of a superregenerative receiver in most
applications.
The specific reference frequency required is related to the system transmit frequency and to the
operating mode of the receiver as set by the SWEN pin.
fTX
(1) fLO =fTX ±(0.86 )
315
Frequencies fTX and fLO are in MHz. Note that two values of fLO exist for any given fTX,
distinguished as “high-side mixing” and “low-side mixing.” High-side mixing results in an image
frequency above the frequency of interest and low-side mixing results in a frequency below.
After choosing one of the two acceptable values of fLO, use Equation 2 to compute the reference
oscillator frequency fT:
FLO
(2) fT =
64.5
Frequency fT is in MHz. Connect a crystal of frequency fT to REFOSC on the SYN470R.
Four-decimal-place accuracy on the frequency is generally adequate. The following table
identifies fT for some common transmit frequencies when the SYN470R is operated in fixed
mode.
Transmit Frequency (fTX) Reference Oscillator Frequency (fT)
315MHz 4.8970 MHz
390 MHz 6.0630 MHz
418 MHz 6.4983 MHz
433.92 MHz 6.7458 MHz
Table 2. Fixed Mode Recommended Reference Oscillator Values For Typical Transmit
Frequencies (high-side mixing)
FLO
(3) fT =
64.25
Slicing level time constant values vary somewhat with decoder type, data pattern, and data rate,
but typically values range from 5ms to 50ms. Optimization of the value of CTH is required to
maximize range.
The effective resistance of RSC is listed in the electrical characteristics table as 145kΩ at 315MHz,
this value scales linearly with frequency. Source impedance of the CTH pin at other frequencies is
given by equation (4), where fT is in MHz:
4.8970
(4) RSC =145kΩ
fT
τ of 5x the bit-rate is recommended. Assuming that a slicing level time constant τ has been
established, capacitor CTH may be computed using equation
τ
(5) CTH =
RSC
A standard ±20% X7R ceramic capacitor is generally sufficient.
The AGC control voltage is carefully managed on-chip to allow duty-cycle operation of the
SYN470R. When the device is placed into shutdown mode (SHUT pin pulled high), the AGC
capacitor floats to retain the voltage. When operation is resumed, only the voltage droop due to
capacitor leakage must be replenished. A relatively low-leakage capacitor is recommended when
the devices are used in duty-cycled operation.
To further enhance duty-cycled operation, the AGC push and pull currents are boosted for
approximately 10ms immediately after the device is taken out of shutdown. This compensates for
AGC capacitor voltage droop and reduces the time to restore the correct AGC voltage. The current
is boosted by a factor of 45.
large capacitor. However if the capacitor is too large the AGC may react too slowly to incoming
signals. AGC settling time from a completely discharged (zero-volt) state is given approximately
by Equation 6:
Polarity of the droop is unknown, meaning the AGC voltage could droop up or down. Worst-case
from a recovery standpoint is downward droop, since the AGC pull-up current is 1/10th magnitude
of the pulldown current. The downward droop is replenished according to the Equation 7:
I ∆V
(7) =
CAGC ∆t
Where:
I = AGC pullup current for the initial 10ms (67.5µA)
CAGC = AGC capacitor value
∆t = droop recovery time
∆V = droop voltage
For example, if user desires ∆t = 10ms and chooses a 4.7µF CAGC, then the allowable droop is
about 144mV. Using the same equation with 200nA worst case pin leakage and assuming 1µA of
capacitor leakage in the same direction, the maximum allowable ∆t (shutdown time) is about 0.56s
for droop recovery in 10ms.
The ratio of decay-to-attack time-constant is fixed at 10:1 (that is, the attack time constant is
1/10th of the decay time constant). Generally the design value of 10:1 is adequate for the vast
majority of applications. If adjustment is required the constant may be varied by adding a resistor
in parallel with the CAGC capacitor. The value of the resistor must be determined on a case by case
basis.
scales linearly with frequency so the exact value will depend on the operating frequency. Refer to
the “Electrical Characteristics” for the exact filter bandwidth at a chosen frequency.
Demodulator Bandwidth
SEL0 SEL1
Sweep Mode Fixed Mode
1 1 5000Hz 10000 Hz
0 1 2500 Hz 5000 Hz
1 0 1250 Hz 2500 Hz
0 0 625 Hz 1250 Hz
Table 1. Nominal Demodulator Filter Bandwidth vs. SEL0, SEL1 and Operating Mode
The ANT pin can be matched to 50 Ohms with an L-type circuit. That is, a shunt inductor from the
RF input to ground and another in series from the RF input to the antenna pin.
Inductor values may be different from table depending on PCB material, PCB thickness, ground
configuration, and how long the traces are in the layout. Values shown were characterized for a
0.031 thickness, FR4 board, solid ground plane on bottom layer, and very short traces. MuRata
and Coilcraft wire wound 0603 or 0805 surface mount inductors were tested, however any wire
wound inductor with high SRF (self resonance frequency) should do the job.
Frequency ZIN ( )
S11 LSHUNT(nH) LSERIES(nH)
(MHz) Z11
300 12-j166 0.803-j0.529 15 72
305 12-j165 0.800-j0.530 15 72
310 12-j163 0.796-j0.536 15 72
315 13-j162 0.791-j0.536 15 72
320 12-j160 0.789-j0.543 15 68
325 12-j157 0.782-j0.550 12 68
330 12-j155 0.778-j0.556 12 68
335 12-j152 0.770-j0.564 12 68
340 11—j150 0.767-j0.572 15 56
345 11-j148 0.762-j0.578 15 56
350 11-j145 0.753-j0.586 12 56
355 11-j143 0.748-j0.592 12 56
360 11-j141 0.742-j0.597 10 56
365 11-j139 0.735-j0.603 10 56
370 10-j137 0.732-j0.612 12 47
375 10-j135 0.725-j0.619 12 47
380 10-j133 0.718-j0.625 10 47
385 10-j131 0.711-j0.631 10 47
390 10-j130 0.707-j0.634 10 43
395 10-j128 0.700-j0.641 10 43
400 10-j126 0.692-j0.647 10 43
405 10-j124 0.684-j0.653 10 39
410 10-j122 0.675-j0.660 10 39
415 10-j120 0.667-j0.667 10 39
420 10-j118 0.658-j0.673 10 36
425 10-j117 0.653-j0.677 10 36
430 10-j115 0.643-j0.684 10 33
435 10-j114 0.638-j0.687 10 33
440 8-j112 0.635-j0.704 8.2 33
The simplest solution is add analog squelch by introducing a small offset, or squelch voltage, on
the CTH pin so that noise does not trigger the internal comparator. Usually 20mV to 30mV is
sufficient, and may be achieved by connecting a several-megohm resistor from the CTH pin to
either VSS or VDD, depending on the desired offset polarity. Since the SYN470R has receiver AGC
noise at the internal comparator input is always the same, set by the AGC. The squelch offset
requirement does not change as the local noise strength changes from installation to installation.
Introducing squelch will reduce sensitivity and also reduce range. Only introduce an amount of
offset sufficient to quiet the output. Typical squelch resistor values range from 6.8MΩ to 10MΩ.
To activate the Wake-Up function, a received constant RF carrier must be present for 128 counts
or the internal system clock. The internal system clock is derived from the reference oscillator and
is 1/256 the reference oscillator frequency. For example:
fT = 6.4MHz
fS = fT/256 = 25kHz
PS = 1/fS = 0.04ms
128 counts x 0.04ms = 5.12ms
Where:
fT = reference oscillator frequency
fS = system clock frequency
PS = system clock period
The Wake-Up counter will reset immediately after a detected RF carrier drops. The duration of the
Wake-Up signal output is then determined by the required wake up time plus an additional RF
carrier on time interval to create a wake up pulse output.
For designers who wish to use the wakeup function while squelching the output, a positive
squelching offset voltage must be used. This simply requires that the squelch resistor be connected
to a voltage more positive than the quiescent voltage on the CTH pin so that the data output is low
in absence of a transmission.
Operation in this example is at 315MHz, and may be customized by selection of the appropriate
frequency reference (Y1), and adjustment of the antenna length. The value of C4 would also
change if the optional input filter is used. Changes from the 1kb/s data rate may require a change
in the value of R1. A bill of materials accompanies the schematic.