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ADC

Analog to Digital Converter: An integrated circuit (IC) which converts an analog signal to a digital representation.

Intermediate

Adapted from pgmfi.org wiki

Analog to Digital Converter: An integrated circuit (IC) which converts an analog signal to a digital representation. As an example let's consider an 8-bit ADC with a 5.00V reference. 8-bit: An "8-bit ADC" means that it will convert the input signal to an 2^8 equivalent numerical representation (that's where the "8" comes in.) 2^8 = 2222222*2 = 256 possible values. In the digital world, zero is a legitimate number, which uses up one of the possible combinations, giving us a 0-255 count output. 5.00V reference: The reference voltage is what the input signal is compared to, as a fraction. If we put a 5.00V signal into our ADC, and it's using a 5.00V reference, what will be the output? Full scale! In our 8-bit example "full scale" is 255 counts so that's what we get for the output. A zero signal input will output zero. Anyway the math works out to: Digital output = ((Vin / Vref) * 2^number of bits) - 1 With this you can find out exactly what your software will read from the ADC with a given input signal. (For the purpose of this example I left out the case of measuring both positive and negative voltages, we won't see that in an automotive ECU.) Analog to digital conversion is never perfect. It is a process of approximation - each exact digital value has to represent a range of analog values. The resolution (normally measured in bits) of an analog to digital converter represents how many possible values the analog range can be divided into.

Credits and source

Authors Anonymous PGMFI contributor

Source Adapted from ADC on pgmfi.org wiki. Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 1.0.