loss of a coaxial cable and an shielded twisted quad (STQ) cable. A good cable assembly has a low return loss that indi-cates its ability to avoid generating reflection. In a full-duplex system such as FPD-Link III, the cable’s return loss also affects a receiver’s ability to reduce echo that impacts the received signal. Figure 4.
LVDS SerDes products, but provide a wider, 18-bit data bus payload to support not only byte-oriented data but also carry other information such as parity, frame, control, status, sync, low frequency bus or clock signals, etc.
Our FPD-Link camera SerDes support uncompressed video, control and power over a single low-latency cable. Our FPD-Link display SerDes support full 1080p, 2k and 3k HD displays, and on-device HDCP keys while also providing adaptive equalization to compensate for cable aging and temperature changes.
Extend cable reach without compromising signal integrity with our high-speed SerDes devices. Increase your system performance and functionality while reducing power consumption in automotive and industrial camera and display applications.
V3Link SerDes simultaneously transmits high-speed video, power, bidirectional clock, control, GPIO, I2C, I2S, and more over a single wire, enabling tiny microcoaxial cable.
Automotive SerDes applications require high signal speeds, so keeping the line capacitance of the ESD diodes very low is important to maintaining signal integrity. The diodes also must have good IEC-61000-4-2 ratings and low clamping voltages. TI offers two ESD devices that protect automotive SerDes applications and other high-
The key concern for SERDES signal traces is to achieve 100 Ωdifferential impedance. This differential impedance is impacted by trace width, trace spacing, distance between planes, and dielectric material.
powered device being implemented with a high-performance FPD-Link III, serializer/deserializer (SerDes) chipset. A FPD-Link III system allows the video data, bidirectional control data, and power to be sent over a single coaxial cable. In a Power-over-Coax circuit, the direct current (DC) power for the sensor is separated from