Test & Measurement

New digitisers provide up to 5 MS/s speeds

11th March 2020
Lanna Deamer
0

Spectrum Instrumentation has released 11 new digitiser products that are specifically intended for the capture and analysis of electronic signals in the DC to 2MHz frequency range.

Offering signal acquisition at rates from 1 kS/s to 5 MS/s, and with 16-bit resolution, the products can be used in almost any application where sensors convert a mechanical property (such as vibration, acceleration, pressure, displacement etc.) to an electrical signal. The eleven digitisers are available in two popular formats: as PCIe cards with 2-8 channels and as LXI-Ethernet instruments with 4-48 channels.

Card and Netbox

The PCIe cards go directly inside a PC, turning it into a powerful data acquisition system or data logger. The four new models of the M2p.591x series are available with 2, 4 or 8 channels. It is also possible to connect up to 16 cards together to create larger systems with as many as 128 fully synchronised channels. The LXI based products are part of the company’s digitiserNETBOX series.

They offer similar capabilities to the PCIe cards but connect to a PC or a system network, via a simple Ethernet cable. Two digitiserNETBOX sizes are available. The small DN2.591 products, which provide 4, 8 or 16 channels, and the larger DN6.591 units, that offer 24, 32, 40 or 48 channels.

The compact size of the DN2.591 products allows them to be deployed almost anywhere, even in mobile situations, with an optional 12/24V power supply. The high channel density of the DN6.591 units makes them perfect for situations where multiple signals, such as those coming from arrays of sensors, transducers or antennas, need to be acquired and analysed.

A flexible, general-purpose design

To ensure the new digitisers can be used in as many applications as possible, the channel inputs offer tremendous versatility. Each has its own 16-bit ADC and a fully programmable amplifier with input ranges between ±200mV and ±10V. The capability makes it easy to capture small and large signals alike. All channels have programmable input offset for unipolar measurements, as well as selectable input termination (50Ω and 1MΩ). Whenever required, the digitisers can even be configured in single-ended or differential channel measurement modes.

Flexibility does not mean giving up accuracy. The digitisers produce superior results by combining on-board calibration, a high precision sampling clock, a low noise amplifier design, internal digital filtering and averaging on lower sampling rates. This allows them to deliver dynamic performance as demonstrated by the products having a Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR) as high as 86dB and Spurious-Free-Dynamic-Range (SFDR) better than 103dB. Such performance lets users make measurements with confidence and precision.

Large on-board memories (up to 512 MSamples/card) make it possible to capture both fast and slow events, as does a variety of smart triggering capabilities and acquisition modes. Triggering on problem signals like glitches, spikes, bursts, or even when specific patterns occur, allows the storage of waveforms into memory in the most efficient way possible.

Transient capture, Multiple (burst) Recording, Gated Sampling, ABA Sampling and Data Streaming (FIFO) modes are all supported. In FIFO mode, the acquired data can be sent directly to the PC; where it can be processed by the CPU, stored in PC memory or sent to a GPU (PCIe cards only) for data intensive signal processing. The PCIe cards support data streaming at rates up to 700MB/s while the LXI instruments use Gbit Ethernet to stream at up to 100MB/s.

Mixed mode testing

As standard, all the digitisers include four multi-purpose I/O lines. These lines can run as synchronous digital inputs, or asynchronous I/O lines, status lines, or even additional trigger inputs. On the PCIe cards, there is an option that can add an extra 16 synchronous digital lines to the analogue data. That makes a total of 20 fully programmable I/O lines that can run as synchronous digital inputs. The option is especially helpful in situations where individuals need to test devices (such as micro control systems) that contain both analog and digital interfaces.

Oliver Rovini, CTO at Spectrum, said: “These new digitisers offer a unique set of features that should be of interest to engineers and scientists working with any electromechanical system. It could be in robotics, control system development, acoustics, materials testing, communications, or general product engineering. With such a wide choice of digitiser configurations, it’s possible to tailor a Spectrum system to match almost any required signal testing setup.”

Easy programming and simple remote control

All Spectrum digitisers are fully programmable. Users can write their own control programmes in almost any popular language including C++, VB.NET, C#, J#, Delphi, Java and Python. Support is also provided for third party software tools like LabVIEW and MATLAB. Alternatively, the user can simply run Spectrum’s own software, SBench 6 Professional. SBench 6 lets users control all the modes and settings of the hardware via a simple and easy-to-use interface.

The software has a host of built-in features for data analysis and documentation. These include FFT analysis, XY display, a function interpreter, parameter measurements, data export into ASCII, Wave, MATLAB, comment functions (for annotating signals or displays) and even a simple report and printout function.

“We’re pleased to announce these new Spectrum digitisers are available for immediate delivery,” stated CEO, Gisela Hassler. “They represent the culmination of more than 30 years of German quality engineering and production, allowing us to give an industry-leading five-year warranty on our products. Furthermore, software and firmware updates are free of charge for the lifetime of the product. Support is done directly by our skilled in-house team of engineers - normally within a couple of hours after the request.”

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