[TechView: Analog & Power]
USB Isolator Simplifies Safety In Medical, Industrial Apps
Don Tuite
ED Online ID #21346
June 25, 2009
Copyright © 2006 Penton Media, Inc., All rights reserved. Printing of this document is for personal use only.
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In embedded applications
that use the PC architecture,
the USB interface has supplanted
RS-232 for remote control,
diagnostics, firmware updates,
configuration of operational
settings, and data exchange.
As with its predecessor, one
drawback to USB in medical
and certain industrial applications
is the lack of a provision
for isolation in the basic
standard, though mains-powered
patient monitors require
it for safety cer tification,
and industrial-control gear
often benefits from isolation
to eliminate ground loops and
to protect inputs from electrostatic
events and sensors from
power anomalies.
A simple way to implement
isolated USB ports now comes
from Analog Devices, which
has offered its line of iCoupler
MEMS-transformer isolators
as a general-purpose alternative
to optoisolators. The latest
iCoupler, the ADuM4160
USB isolator, uses that technology
to provide a complete
USB 2.0 bidirectional isolator
in a 16-lead SOIC for less than
$5 in 1000-unit quantities.
The couplers provide 5-kV
rms medical-grade isolation
and upstream short-circuit
protection, while passing USB
1.5-Mbit/s and 12-Mbit/s
data. ADI says IEC 60601-1
medical safety approvals are
pending. Also, the ADuM4160
operates off the 5-V USB supply
or system-supplied 3.3-V
power using an internal regulator.
The isolator provides
isolated control of the pull-up resistor, allowing the peripheral
to control connection
timing. Maximum idle current
is 2 mA.
DON TUITE
ANALOG DEVICES
www.analog.com/pr/ADuM4160
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