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Ultrasound examinations are increasingly conducted in
non-traditional environments, such as doctor's offices, ambulatory units, and
remote rural or under-developed locations. But the convenience of portability
has required manufacturers to sacrifice image quality, limiting the medical
diagnoses that can be made with portable ultrasound equipment. A new imaging
chip from Analog Devices, Inc. (NYSE: ADI)
promises to greatly ease this trade-off. A global leader in high-performance
semiconductors for signal-processing applications and the leading provider of
data conversion technology, ADI is well-known to medical imaging equipment
makers as an innovator and strategic supplier. The AD9271
integrates a complete eight-channel (octal) ultrasound receiver on a single
chip. This unprecedented level of integration allows medical equipment
designers to reduce the size of the signal path for mobile ultrasound systems by
50 percent and lower power requirements by 25 percent, all while achieving noise
levels and other performance metrics required in critical care settings.
Specifically, the AD9271 analog front end (AFE) replaces
previous multi-chip discrete solutions and their associated requirements for
interconnect and package space with a single chip that combines a low-noise
amplifier (LNA), a variable-gain amplifier (VGA), an anti-aliasing filter (AAF)
and a 12-bit analog-to-digital converter (ADC).
Primarily targeted toward the
medical imaging market, the new AD9271 is designed for low power consumption,
small size and ease of use. Allowing greater channel count without increasing
battery and power supply size, the AD9271 ADC with integrated front end operates
from 10 MSPS (mega samples per second) to 50 MSPS using only 115-mW to
175-mW-per-channel respectively-25 percent less than competing solutions.
Fabricated in an advanced CMOS process, the AD9271 includes an integrated
crosspoint switch, allowing numerous multi-channel configuration options that
can be enabled with the CW (continuous wave) Doppler mode. This makes possible
the powering down of individual channels to save battery life. Each channel of
the AD9271 features a variable gain range of 30 dB, and the integrated ADC has
70 dB SNR (signal-to-noise ratio), matching the performance previously available
only in discrete solutions.
Like
other products in ADI's complete high-speed ADC family, the AD9271 contains
several features to help maximize flexibility and minimize system cost. These
include programmable clock, data alignment and digital-test-pattern generation.
The AD9271 was specifically designed to interface
with the AD8339,
a quad programmable I&Q demodulator with phase shifter that is
ideally suited for CW Doppler ultrasound systems. The AD9271 also complements
ADI's AD7980, AD9704, ADV212 and
ADR510,
comprising the broadest product portfolio targeting the medical imaging and
ultrasound markets available from any IC manufacturer.
Availability and Pricing
The AD9271 ADC with integrated
AFE is sampling now with volume production scheduled for May 2007. The new
device is priced at $40 to $72 in 1,000-unit quantities depending on speed
grade. The AD9271 is housed in a Pb-free, 14 mm x 14 mm, 100-lead TQFP
(thin-quad flat pack) package. Sample units are now available. For more
information, visit http://www.analog.com/pr/AD9271
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