特性
- Loss of Signal (LOS) output; supports fault tolerant systems
- Supports PCIe Gen 1–5 CC and IR in fanout mode
- Supports PCIe Gen 1–5 CC in high bandwidth Zero-Delay Buffer (ZDB) mode
- Direct connection to 85Ω transmission lines; saves 32 resistors compared to standard PCIe devices
- Spread spectrum tolerant; allows reduction of EMI
- Pin/SMBus selectable PLL bandwidth and PLL bypass; minimize phase jitter for each application
- Easy AC-coupling to other logic families, see application note AN-891.
- Space saving 6mm × 6mm 48-VFQFPN; minimal board space
描述
The 9DBL0853 zero-delay/fanout buffer is a low-power high-performance member of Renesas' full-featured PCIe family. The buffer supports PCIe Gen 1–5 and provides a Loss of Signal (LOS) indicator. The device is an easy upgrade from the 9DBL0851.
For information regarding evaluation boards and material, please contact your local sales representative.
产品参数
| 属性 | 值 |
|---|---|
| Temp. Range (°C) | -40 to 85°C |
封装选项
| Pkg. Type | Pkg. Dimensions (mm) | Lead Count (#) | Pitch (mm) |
|---|---|---|---|
| VFQFPN | 6.0 x 6.0 x 0.9 | 48 | 0.4 |
应用
- PCIe riser cards
- nVME storage
- Networking
- Accelerators
- Industrial control/embedded
当前筛选条件
筛选
软件与工具
样例程序
模拟模型
A detailed overview of IDT's full-featured PCI Express (PCIe) clock and timing solutions. The presentation addresses PCIe Gen 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, and Gen 4 architectures and how IDT's industry-leading solutions provide all the functions, features, and performance required by the application.
Presented by Ron Wade, System Architect at IDT. For more information visit the PCIe clocks page.
This is the first video in our PCIe series. In this video, we define PCIe architectures, focusing on common and separate clock architectures. Watch the rest of the video series below where Ron will cover the impact of different timing architectures.
In this episode, Ron Wade from IDT (acquired by Renesas) explains PCIe common clocking and its impact on timing solutions. Learn about using a single clock source, fan-out buffers, and the considerations for spread spectrum and non-spread spectrum clocking in PCIe systems.
In this video, we explore PCIe with separate reference clocks and the effects of clock selection. Learn how separate reference clocks work and their impact on system performance and stability.
This video provides a high-level overview of Separate Reference Clock with Independent Spread (SRIS) architectures for PCI Express systems, additional performance requirements that this clocking architecture imposes on the reference clocks, and some system implications encountered trying to implement the architecture.
An overview of IDT's full-featured PCI Express (PCIe) clock zero-delay buffers and fanout buffers addressing PCIe Gen 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, and Gen 4.
Presented by Ron Wade, System Architect at IDT.
An overview of PCI Express applications and how IDT's industry-leading portfolio of PCIe clock products addresses the requirements. The video briefly discusses PCIe riser cards, embedded SOC, and PCIe storage (NVME) examples.
Presented by Ron Wade, System Architect at IDT.
A brief overview of how data rates have changed from PCI Express (PCIe) Generation 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, Gen 4 and Gen 5.
Presented by Ron Wade, system architect at IDT. For more information about IDT's PCIe timing solutions, visit the PCI Express (PCIe) Clocks page.
A brief overview of how clock and timing specifications have changed from PCI Express (PCIe) Generation 1, Gen 2, Gen 3, Gen 4 and Gen 5.
Presented by Ron Wade, system architect at IDT (acquired by Renesas). For more information, visit Renesas's PCIe Timing Solutions page.
A brief overview of the PCI Express common clock (CC) jitter model, and the transfer functions as they relate to the timing PLLs. This model applies to PCI Express (PCIe) Gen 2, Gen 3, Gen 4 and Gen 5. The equations would be slightly different for other PCIe architectures, such as SRIS, SRnS, or data clocked.
Presented by Ron Wade, system architect at IDT (acquired by Renesas). For more information about Renesas's PCIe timing solutions, visit the PCI Express (PCIe) Clocks page.