Hi All,
This is a newbie question I suppose. I am clocking the LO of a receiver IC with an external PLL clock generator. Both the LO input and PLL output are balanced. Can I connect the directly with decoupling capacitors?
I understand the use of a balun to convert from balanced to unbalanced but is it also used to connect balanced ports?
If inputs and outputs are both true differential drive and have compatible common mode voltage range you may not even require coupling caps.
Sometimes the outputs require D.C. supplies so a centertapped transformer is used, or two coils and coupling caps, to feed D.C. to open drain or open collector outputs.
Here is the input circuit from an evaluation board for this receiver, it is what I find confusing. It appears to accept a balanced LO signal and run it through a 50:50 balun to a balance input. I am not sure why.
Here is the input circuit from an evaluation board for this receiver, it is what I find confusing. It appears to accept a balanced LO signal and run it through a 50:50 balun to a balance input. I am not sure why.
It's not a balanced input, unbalanced input to drive your circuit externally.
Signal generators supply generally unbalanced signals and your circuit needs a balanced input clock signal and therefore they have put a balun transformer between balanced pins and clock input.
And some matching circuit...
The circuit appears to be an application test fixture board that allows a single ended input (through coax connector symbol) or balanced input (through two test points). It would not be necessary in your actual circuit if you have a balance LO output drive.
It looks like you can do it, but unless you can find info on both data sheets to say they can be dc connected, I would definately leave in the two series caps c20 and c24. You can throw away that transformer mess.