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A resistor ladder is an electrical circuit made from repeating units of
resistors A resistor is a passive two-terminal electrical component that implements electrical resistance as a circuit element. In electronic circuits, resistors are used to reduce current flow, adjust signal levels, to divide voltages, bias active el ...
. Two configurations are discussed below, a string resistor ladder and an R-2R ladder. An R–2R ladder is a simple and inexpensive way to perform digital-to-analog conversion, using repetitive arrangements of precise resistor networks in a ladder-like configuration. A string resistor ladder implements the non-repetitive reference network.


String resistor ladder network (analog to digital conversion, or ADC)

A string of many, often equally dimensioned, resistors connected between two reference voltages is a resistor string ladder network. The resistors act as voltage dividers between the referenced voltages. Each tap of the string generates a different voltage, which can be compared with another ''voltage'': this is the basic principle of a
flash ADC A flash ADC (also known as a direct-conversion ADC) is a type of analog-to-digital converter that uses a linear voltage ladder with a comparator at each "rung" of the ladder to compare the input voltage to successive reference voltages. Often these ...
(analog-to-digital converter). Often a voltage is converted to a ''current'', enabling the possibility to use an R–2R ladder network. * Disadvantage: for an ''n''-bit ADC, the number of resistors
grows exponentially Exponential growth is a process that increases quantity over time. It occurs when the instantaneous rate of change (that is, the derivative) of a quantity with respect to time is proportional to the quantity itself. Described as a function, a q ...
, as 2^n resistors are required, while the R–2R resistor ladder only increases linearly with the number of bits, as it needs only 2n resistors. * Advantage: higher impedance values can be reached using the same number of components.


R–2R resistor ladder network (digital to analog conversion)

A basic R–2R resistor ladder network is shown in Figure 1. Bit a''n''−1 (most significant bit, MSB) through bit a0 (least significant bit, LSB) are driven from digital logic gates. Ideally, the bit inputs are switched between ''V'' = 0 (logic 0) and ''V'' = ''V''ref (logic 1). The R–2R network causes these digital bits to be weighted in their contribution to the output voltage ''V''out. Depending on which bits are set to 1 and which to 0, the output voltage (''V''out) will have a corresponding stepped value between 0 and ''V''ref minus the value of the minimal step, corresponding to bit 0. The actual value of ''V''ref (and the voltage of logic 0) will depend on the type of technology used to generate the digital signals. For a digital value VAL, of a R–2R DAC with ''N'' bits and 0 V/''V''ref logic levels, the output voltage ''V''out is: : V_o = V_ \times \tfrac For example, if ''N'' = 5 (hence 2''N'' = 32) and ''V''ref = 3.3 V (typical CMOS logic 1 voltage), then ''V''out will vary between 0 volts (VAL = 0 = 000002) and the maximum (VAL = 31 = 111112): : V_o = 3.3\,\text \times \tfrac = 3.196875\,\text with steps (corresponding to VAL = 1 = 000012) : \Delta V_o = 3.3\,\text \times \tfrac = 0.103125\,\text The R–2R ladder is inexpensive and relatively easy to manufacture, since only two resistor values are required (or even one, if R is made by placing a pair of 2R in parallel, or if 2R is made by placing a pair of R in series). It is fast and has fixed output impedance R. The R–2R ladder operates as a string of current dividers, whose output accuracy is solely dependent on how well each resistor is matched to the others. Small inaccuracies in the MSB resistors can entirely overwhelm the contribution of the LSB resistors. This may result in non- monotonic behavior at major crossings, such as from 011112 to 100002. Depending on the type of logic gates used and design of the logic circuits, there may be transitional voltage spikes at such major crossings even with perfect resistor values. These can be filtered with capacitance at the output node (the consequent reduction in bandwidth may be significant in some applications). Finally, the 2R resistance is in series with the digital-output impedance. High-output-impedance gates (e.g., LVDS) may be unsuitable in some cases. For all of the above reasons (and doubtless others), this type of DAC tends to be restricted to a relatively small number of bits; although integrated circuits may push the number of bits to 14 or even more, 8 bits or fewer is more typical.


Accuracy of R–2R resistor ladders

Resistors used with the more significant bits must be proportionally more accurate than those used with the less significant bits; for example, in the R–2R network discussed above, inaccuracies in the bit-4 (MSB) resistors must be insignificant compared to R/32 (i.e., much better than 3%). Further, to avoid problems at the 100002-to-011112 transition, the sum of the inaccuracies in the lower bits must be significantly less than R/32. The required accuracy doubles with each additional bit: for 8 bits, the accuracy required will be better than 1/256 (0.4%). Within integrated circuits, high-accuracy R–2R networks may be printed directly onto a single substrate using thin-film technology, ensuring the resistors share similar electrical characteristics. Even so, they must often be laser-trimmed to achieve the required precision. Such on-chip resistor ladders for digital-to-analog converters achieving 16-bit accuracy have been demonstrated.http://www.ti.com/lit/ds/symlink/dac161s055.pdf


Resistor ladder with unequal rungs

It is not necessary that each "rung" of the R–2R ladder use the same resistor values. It is only necessary that the "2R" value matches the sum of the "R" value plus the Thévenin-equivalent resistance of the lower-significance rungs. Figure 2 shows a linear 4-bit DAC with unequal resistors. This allows a reasonably accurate DAC to be created from a heterogeneous collection of resistors by forming the DAC one bit at a time. At each stage, resistors for the "rung" and "leg" are chosen so that the rung value matches the leg value plus the equivalent resistance of the previous rungs. The rung and leg resistors can be formed by pairing other resistors in series or parallel in order to increase the number of available combinations. This process can be automated.


See also

*
Logarithmic resistor ladder A logarithmic resistor ladder is an electronic circuit composed of a series of resistors and switches, designed to create an attenuation from an input to an output signal, where the logarithm of the attenuation ratio is proportional to a digital cod ...
* Digital-to-analog converter *
Covox Speech Thing The Covox Speech Thing is an external audio device attached to the computer to output digital sound. It was composed of a primitive 8-bit DAC using a resistor ladder and an analogue signal output, and plugged into the printer port of the PC. T ...
*
Voltage ladder A voltage ladder is a simple electronic circuit consisting of several resistors connected in series with a voltage placed across the entire resistor network. Voltage ladders are useful for providing a set of successive voltage references, for inst ...


References


External links

{{Commons category, Mixed analog and digital circuits
ECE209: DAC Lecture Notes
- Ohio State University
EE247: D/A Converters
- Berkeley University of California
Simplified DAC/ADC Lecture Notes
- University of Michigan
Digital to Analog Converters (slides)
- Georgia Tech
Tutorial MT-014: String DACs and Fully-Decoded DACs
- Analog Devices
Tutorial MT-015: Binary DACs
- Analog Devices
Tutorial MT-016: Segmented DACs
- Analog Devices
Tutorial MT-018: Intentionally Nonlinear DACs
- Analog Devices
R2R Resistor Ladder Networks
- BI Technologies
R/2R Ladder Networks Application Note
- TT Electronics Analog circuits