National Instruments Network Card NI PXIe 6672 User Manual

PXI Express  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
Timing and Synchronization Module for PXI Express  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
June 2008  
372185F-01  
 
 
Important Information  
Warranty  
The NI PXIe-6672 is warranted against defects in materials and workmanship for a period of one year from the date of shipment, as evidenced  
by receipts or other documentation. National Instruments will, at its option, repair or replace equipment that proves to be defective during the  
warranty period. This warranty includes parts and labor.  
The media on which you receive National Instruments software are warranted not to fail to execute programming instructions, due to defects in  
materials and workmanship, for a period of 90 days from date of shipment, as evidenced by receipts or other documentation. National Instruments  
will, at its option, repair or replace software media that do not execute programming instructions if National Instruments receives notice of such defects  
during the warranty period. National Instruments does not warrant that the operation of the software shall be uninterrupted or error free.  
A Return Material Authorization (RMA) number must be obtained from the factory and clearly marked on the outside of the package before any  
equipment will be accepted for warranty work. National Instruments will pay the shipping costs of returning to the owner parts which are covered by  
warranty.  
National Instruments believes that the information in this document is accurate. The document has been carefully reviewed for technical accuracy. In  
the event that technical or typographical errors exist, National Instruments reserves the right to make changes to subsequent editions of this document  
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About This Manual  
Conventions ...................................................................................................................vii  
Chapter 1  
Introduction  
Unpacking......................................................................................................................1-2  
Chapter 2  
Installing the Software...................................................................................................2-1  
Chapter 3  
Routing Signals..............................................................................................................3-9  
Determining Sources and Destinations ...........................................................3-11  
Using Front Panel PFIs As Inputs.....................................................3-12  
Using Front Panel PFIs As Outputs ..................................................3-13  
Using the PXI Triggers .....................................................................3-14  
Using the PXI Star Triggers..............................................................3-15  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 
Contents  
Choosing the Type of Routing........................................................................ 3-15  
Synchronous Routing ....................................................................... 3-17  
Chapter 4  
Factory Calibration........................................................................................................ 4-1  
TCXO Frequency............................................................................................ 4-1  
DDS Start Trigger Phase................................................................................. 4-1  
DDS Initial Phase............................................................................................ 4-2  
Additional Information.................................................................................................. 4-2  
Appendix A  
Technical Support and Professional Services  
Glossary  
Index  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
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About This Manual  
Thank you for purchasing the National Instruments NI PXIe-6672 Timing  
and Synchronization Module. The NI PXIe-6672 enables you to pass  
PXI timing and trigger signals between two or more PXI Express chassis.  
The NI PXIe-6672 can generate and route clock signals between devices in  
multiple chassis, providing a method to synchronize multiple devices  
in a multichassis PXI Express system.  
This manual describes the electrical and mechanical aspects of the  
NI PXIe-6672 and contains information concerning its operation and  
programming.  
Conventions  
The following conventions appear in this manual:  
<>  
Angle brackets that contain numbers separated by an ellipsis represent  
a range of values associated with a bit or signal name—for example,  
AO <3..0>.  
»
The » symbol leads you through nested menu items and dialog box options  
to a final action. The sequence File»Page Setup»Options directs you to  
pull down the File menu, select the Page Setup item, and select Options  
from the last dialog box.  
This icon denotes a tip, which alerts you to advisory information.  
This icon denotes a note, which alerts you to important information.  
This icon denotes a caution, which advises you of precautions to take to  
avoid injury, data loss, or a system crash. When this symbol is marked on  
the product, refer to the Safety Information section of Chapter 1,  
Introduction, for precautions to take.  
bold  
Bold text denotes items that you must select or click in the software, such  
as menu items and dialog box options. Bold text also denotes parameter  
names and hardware labels.  
italic  
Italic text denotes variables, emphasis, a cross-reference, or an introduction  
to a key concept. Italic text also denotes text that is a placeholder for a word  
or value that you must supply.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 
     
About This Manual  
monospace  
Text in this font denotes text or characters that you should enter from the  
keyboard, sections of code, programming examples, and syntax examples.  
This font is also used for the proper names of disk drives, paths, directories,  
programs, subprograms, subroutines, device names, functions, operations,  
variables, filenames, and extensions.  
NI PXIe-6672  
This phrase refers to the NI PXIe-6672 module for the PXI Express bus.  
National Instruments Documentation  
The NI PXIe-6672 User Manual is one piece of the documentation set for  
your measurement system. You could have any of several other documents  
describing your hardware and software. Use the documentation you have  
as follows:  
Measurement hardware documentation—This documentation contains  
detailed information about the measurement hardware that plugs into  
or is connected to the computer. Use this documentation for hardware  
installation and configuration instructions, specifications about the  
measurement hardware, and application hints.  
Software documentation—Refer to the NI-Sync User Manual,  
available at ni.com/manuals.  
You can download NI documentation from ni.com/manuals.  
Related Documentation  
The following documents contain information that you might find helpful  
as you read this manual:  
PICMG 2.0 R3.0, CompactPCI Core Specification, available from  
PXI-5 PXI Express Hardware Specification, Revision 1.0, available  
NI-VISA User Manual, available from ni.com/manuals  
NI-VISA Help, included with the NI-VISA software  
NI-Sync User Manual, available from ni.com/manuals  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
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1
Introduction  
The NI PXIe-6672 timing and triggering module enables you to pass  
PXI timing signals between two or more PXI Express chassis. The  
NI PXIe-6672 module generates and routes clock signals between devices  
in multiple chassis, providing a method for synchronizing multiple devices  
in a PXI Express system.  
What You Need to Get Started  
To set up and use the NI PXIe-6672, you need the following items:  
NI PXIe-6672 Timing and Triggering Module  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
NI-Sync CD  
An Application Development Environment such as:  
LabVIEW  
LabWindows/CVI™  
Microsoft Visual C++ (MSVC)  
PXI Express chassis  
PXI Express embedded controller or a desktop computer connected to  
the PXI Express chassis using MXI-Express hardware  
For information on using the driver software for synchronization, refer  
to the NI-Sync User Manual, which you can find on the NI-Sync CD or  
download from ni.com/manuals.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Chapter 1  
Introduction  
Unpacking  
The NI PXIe-6672 is shipped in an antistatic package to prevent  
electrostatic damage to the module. Electrostatic discharge (ESD)  
can damage several components on the module.  
Caution Never touch the exposed pins of connectors.  
To avoid such damage in handling the module, take the following  
precautions:  
Ground yourself using a grounding strap or by touching a grounded  
object.  
Touch the antistatic package to a metal part of the computer chassis  
before removing the module from the package.  
Remove the module from the package and inspect the module for loose  
components or any sign of damage. Notify NI if the module appears  
damaged in any way. Do not install a damaged module into the computer.  
Store the NI PXIe-6672 in the antistatic envelope when not in use.  
Software Programming Choices  
When programming the NI PXIe-6672, you can use NI application  
development environment (ADE) software such as LabVIEW or  
LabWindows/CVI, or you can use other ADEs such as Visual C/C++.  
LabVIEW features interactive graphics, a state-of-the-art interface,  
and a powerful graphical programming language. The LabVIEW Data  
Acquisition VI Library, a series of virtual instruments for using LabVIEW  
with National Instruments DAQ hardware, is included with LabVIEW.  
LabWindows/CVI is a complete ANSI C ADE that features an interactive  
user interface, code generation tools, and the LabWindows/CVI Data  
Acquisition and Easy I/O libraries.  
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Chapter 1  
Introduction  
Safety Information  
The following section contains important safety information that you must  
follow when installing and using the product.  
Do not operate the product in a manner not specified in this document.  
Misuse of the product can result in a hazard. You can compromise the  
safety protection built into the product if the product is damaged in any  
way. If the product is damaged, return it to National Instruments for repair.  
Do not substitute parts or modify the product except as described in this  
document. Use the product only with the chassis, modules, accessories, and  
cables specified in the installation instructions. You must have all covers  
and filler panels installed during operation of the product.  
Do not operate the product in an explosive atmosphere or where there may  
be flammable gases or fumes. If you must operate the product in such an  
environment, it must be in a suitably rated enclosure.  
If you need to clean the product, use a soft, nonmetallic brush. The product  
must be completely dry and free from contaminants before you return it to  
service.  
Operate the product only at or below Pollution Degree 2. Pollution is  
foreign matter in a solid, liquid, or gaseous state that can reduce dielectric  
strength or surface resistivity. The following is a description of pollution  
degrees:  
Pollution Degree 1 means no pollution or only dry, nonconductive  
pollution occurs. The pollution has no influence.  
Pollution Degree 2 means that only nonconductive pollution occurs in  
most cases. Occasionally, however, a temporary conductivity caused  
by condensation must be expected.  
Pollution Degree 3 means that conductive pollution occurs, or dry,  
nonconductive pollution occurs that becomes conductive due to  
condensation.  
You must insulate signal connections for the maximum voltage for which  
the product is rated. Do not exceed the maximum ratings for the product.  
Do not install wiring while the product is live with electrical signals. Do not  
remove or add connector blocks when power is connected to the system.  
Avoid contact between your body and the connector block signal when hot  
swapping modules. Remove power from signal lines before connecting  
them to or disconnecting them from the product.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Chapter 1  
Introduction  
Operate the product at or below the installation category1 marked on the  
hardware label. Measurement circuits are subjected to working voltages2  
and transient stresses (overvoltage) from the circuit to which they are  
connected during measurement or test. Installation categories establish  
standard impulse withstand voltage levels that commonly occur in  
electrical distribution systems. The following is a description of installation  
categories:  
Installation Category I is for measurements performed on circuits not  
directly connected to the electrical distribution system referred to as  
MAINS3 voltage. This category is for measurements of voltages from  
specially protected secondary circuits. Such voltage measurements  
include signal levels, special equipment, limited-energy parts of  
equipment, circuits powered by regulated low-voltage sources,  
and electronics.  
Installation Category II is for measurements performed on circuits  
directly connected to the electrical distribution system. This category  
refers to local-level electrical distribution, such as that provided by a  
standard wall outlet (for example, 115 V for U.S. or 230 V for Europe).  
Examples of Installation Category II are measurements performed on  
household appliances, portable tools, and similar products.  
Installation Category III is for measurements performed in the building  
installation at the distribution level. This category refers to  
measurements on hard-wired equipment such as equipment in fixed  
installations, distribution boards, and circuit breakers. Other examples  
are wiring, including cables, bus-bars, junction boxes, switches,  
socket-outlets in the fixed installation, and stationary motors with  
permanent connections to fixed installations.  
Installation Category IV is for measurements performed at the primary  
electrical supply installation (<1,000 V). Examples include electricity  
meters and measurements on primary overcurrent protection devices  
and on ripple control units.  
1
Installation categories, also referred to as measurement categories, are defined in electrical safety standard IEC 61010-1.  
2
3
Working voltage is the highest rms value of an AC or DC voltage that can occur across any particular insulation.  
MAINS is defined as a hazardous live electrical supply system that powers equipment. Suitably rated measuring circuits may  
be connected to the MAINS for measuring purposes.  
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2
Installing and Configuring  
This chapter describes how to install the NI PXIe-6672 hardware and  
software and how to configure the device.  
Installing the Software  
Refer to the readme.htm file that accompanies the NI-Sync CD for  
software installation directions.  
Note Be sure to install the driver software before installing the NI PXIe-6672 hardware.  
Installing the Hardware  
The following are general installation instructions. Consult the chassis  
user manual or technical reference manual for specific instructions and  
warnings about installing new modules.  
1. Power off and unplug the chassis.  
2. Locate the System Timing Slot in your chassis. It is marked by either  
a square glyph shown in Figure 2-1, or a square glyph with a circle  
inside of it, as shown in Figure 2-2.  
Figure 2-1. System Timing Device Slot Indicator Glyph without Circle  
Figure 2-2. System Timing Device Slot Indicator Glyph on the NI PXIe-1062Q Chassis  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Chapter 2  
Installing and Configuring  
Note The slot number printed on the glyph may vary from chassis to chassis.  
The circle inside of the square indicates that the slot may also be used as a PXI Express  
peripheral slot.  
3. Remove the filler panel for the PXI slot you located in step 2.  
4. Ground yourself using a grounding strap or by holding a grounded  
object. Follow the ESD protection precautions described in the  
Unpacking section of Chapter 1, Introduction.  
5. Remove any packing material from the front panel screws and  
backplane connectors.  
6. Insert the NI PXIe-6672 into the PXI Express slot. Use the  
injector/ejector handle to fully insert the module into the chassis.  
7. Screw the front panel of the device to the front panel mounting rail of  
the chassis.  
8. Visually verify the installation. Make sure the module is not touching  
other modules or components and is fully inserted into the slot.  
9. Plug in and power on the chassis.  
The NI PXIe-6672 is now installed.  
Configuring the Module  
The NI PXIe-6672 is completely software configurable. The system  
software automatically allocates all module resources.  
The two LEDs on the front panel provide information about module status.  
The front panel description sections of Chapter 3, Hardware Overview,  
describe the LEDs in greater detail.  
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3
Hardware Overview  
This chapter presents an overview of the hardware functions of  
the NI PXIe-6672. Figure 3-1 provides a functional overview of  
the NI PXIe-6672 hardware.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 
     
Chapter 3  
Hardware Overview  
PXI_CLK10_IN  
PXI_CLK10  
AC Coupled  
Clock Detector  
CLKIN  
PLL  
TCXO  
TCXO  
Calibration  
DAC  
TCXO  
Clock  
CLKOUT  
CLKIN  
DDS  
DDS Clock  
Driver/  
PFI 0  
PFI 1  
PFI 2  
PFI 3  
PFI 4  
PFI 5  
PXI_STAR<0..16>  
PXI_TRIG<0..7>  
Comparator  
CLOCK and  
TRIGGER  
Routing  
PFI 0  
Threshold  
DAC  
Driver/  
Comparator  
PFI 1  
Threshold  
DAC  
Driver/  
Comparator  
PCI Interface  
PFI 2  
Threshold  
DAC  
Driver/  
Comparator  
PFI 3  
Threshold  
DAC  
Driver/  
Comparator  
PFI 4  
Threshold  
DAC  
Driver/  
Comparator  
PFI 5  
Threshold  
DAC  
Figure 3-1. Functional Overview of the NI PXIe-6672  
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Chapter 3  
Hardware Overview  
NI PXIe-6672 Front Panel  
Figure 3-2 shows the connectors and LEDs on the front panel of the  
NI PXIe-6672.  
NI PXIe-6672  
Timing Module  
1
3
2
ACCESS  
ACTIVE  
CLK  
OUT  
CLK  
IN  
4
PFI 0  
PFI 1  
PFI 2  
PFI 3  
PFI 4  
PFI 5  
5
1
2
3
Access LED  
Active LED  
CLKOUT Connector  
4
5
CLKIN Connector  
PFI <0..5> Connectors  
Figure 3-2. NI PXIe-6672 Front Panel  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 
         
Chapter 3  
Hardware Overview  
Access LED  
The Access LED indicates the communication status of the NI PXIe-6672.  
Refer to Figure 3-2 for the location of the Access LED.  
Table 3-1 summarizes what the Access LED colors represent.  
Table 3-1. Access LED Color Indication  
Color  
Off  
Status  
Module is not yet functional.  
Driver has initialized the module.  
Green  
Amber  
Module is being accessed. The Access LED  
flashes amber for 50 ms when the module is  
accessed.  
Active LED  
The Active LED can indicate an error or phase-locked loop (PLL) activity.  
You can change the Active LED to amber, unless an error overrides the  
selection. Refer to Figure 3-2 for the location of the Active LED.  
Tip Changing the Active LED color to amber is helpful when you want to identify devices  
in a multichassis situation or when you want an indication that your application has  
reached a predetermined section of the code.  
Table 3-2 illustrates the meaning of each Active LED color.  
Table 3-2. Active LED Color Quick Reference Table  
PXI_CLK10  
Stopped  
PLL  
Error  
User  
Setting  
PLL  
Active  
Color  
Red  
Yes  
No  
No  
No  
Yes  
No  
No  
No  
Yes  
No  
No  
Amber  
Green  
Off  
Yes  
No  
Note A red Active LED can indicate that either PXI_CLK10 has stopped or that there is  
a PLL error.  
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Chapter 3  
Hardware Overview  
Connectors  
This section describes the connectors on the front panel of the  
NI PXIe-6672.  
CLKIN—Clock Input. This connector supplies the module with  
a clock that can be programmatically routed to the onboard PLL  
for use as a reference or routed directly to the PXI backplane  
(PXI_CLK10_IN) for distribution to the other modules in the chassis.  
CLKOUT—Clock Output. This connector is used to source  
a clock that can be routed programmatically from the  
temperature-compensated crystal oscillator (TCXO), direct  
digital synthesis (DDS), or backplane clock (PXI_CLK10).  
PFI <0..5>—Programmable Function Interface <0..5>. These  
connectors can be used for either input or output. Additionally, PFI 0  
can be used as a clock input for internally synchronizing other signals.  
Refer to the Synchronous Routing section for more information about  
this functionality. You can program the behavior of these PFI  
connections individually.  
Refer to Figure 3-2 for a diagram showing the locations of these  
connections on the NI PXIe-6672 front panel.  
Caution Connections that exceed any of the maximum ratings of input or output signals  
on the NI PXIe-6672 can damage the module and the computer. NI is not liable for any  
damage resulting from such signal connections.  
Hardware Features  
The NI PXIe-6672 perform two broad functions:  
Generating clock and trigger signals  
Routing internally or externally generated signals from one location  
to another  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 
                           
Chapter 3  
Hardware Overview  
Table 3-3 outlines the function and direction of the signals discussed in  
detail in the remainder of this chapter.  
Table 3-3. Signal Descriptions  
Signal Name  
Direction  
Description  
PXI_CLK10_IN  
Out  
This is a signal that can replace the native 10 MHz oscillator  
on the PXI backplane. PXI_CLK10_IN may originate from  
the onboard TCXO or from an external source.  
PXI_CLK10  
In  
This signal is the PXI 10 MHz backplane clock. By default,  
this signal is the output of the native 10 MHz oscillator in the  
chassis. An NI PXIe-6672 in the System Timing Slot can  
replace this signal with PXI_CLK10_IN.  
TCXO Clock  
CLKIN  
Out  
In  
This is the output of the 10 MHz TCXO. The TCXO is an  
extremely stable and accurate frequency source.  
CLKIN is a signal connected to the SMB input pin of the  
same name. CLKIN can serve as PXI_CLK10_IN, a phase  
lock reference for the TCXO, or as a source for routing to  
PXI_STAR.  
CLKOUT  
Out  
Out  
CLKOUT is the signal on the SMB output pin of the same  
name. Either the TCXO clock, DDS clock, or PXI_CLK10  
may be routed to this location.  
DDS Clock  
This is the output of the DDS. The DDS frequency can be  
programmed with fine granularity from 1 Hz to 105 MHz.  
The DDS chip automatically phase-locks to PXI_CLK10.  
PXI_STAR <0..16>  
In/Out  
The PXI star trigger bus connects the System Timing Slot to  
all other slots in a star configuration. The electrical paths of  
each star line are closely matched to minimize intermodule  
skew. An NI PXIe-6672 in System Timing Slot can route  
signals to all other slots using the star trigger bus.  
PFI <0..5>  
In/Out  
In/Out  
The Programmable Function Interface pins on the  
NI PXIe-6672 route timing and triggering signals between  
multiple PXI chassis. A wide variety of input and output  
signals can be routed to or from the PFI lines.  
PXI_TRIG <0..7>  
The PXI trigger bus consists of eight digital lines shared  
among all slots in the PXI chassis. The NI PXIe-6672 can  
route a wide variety of signals to and from these lines.  
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Chapter 3  
Hardware Overview  
The remainder of this chapter describes how these signals are used,  
acquired, and generated by the NI PXIe-6672 hardware, and explains  
how you can route the signals between various locations to synchronize  
multiple measurement devices and PXI chassis.  
Clock Generation  
The NI PXIe-6672 can generate two types of clock signals. The first clock  
is generated using the onboard DDS chip, and the second is generated with  
a precise 10 MHz oscillator. The following sections describe the two types  
of clock generation and explain the considerations for choosing either type.  
Direct Digital Synthesis (DDS)  
DDS is a method of generating a clock with programmable frequency.  
DDS consists of a frequency tuning word, an accumulator, a sine-lookup  
table, a D/A converter (DAC), and a comparator.  
The frequency tuning word is a number that specifies the desired  
frequency. Each master clock cycle, the frequency tuning word is added to  
the accumulator, which rolls over when it gets to its maximum value. The  
accumulator value is used to get a point in the sine-lookup table, which is  
converted to an analog voltage by the DAC. For example, if the sine table  
is 128 points long, and the frequency tuning word is one, the accumulator  
takes 128 clock cycles to output one sine wave. If you change the frequency  
tuning word to 3, the accumulator steps through the sine table three times  
as fast, and outputs a sine wave in 128/3, or 42.6, clock cycles.  
The output of the DAC is run through an analog filter to smooth the sine  
wave. The filtered output is then run through a comparator, which changes  
the output to a square wave with the specified frequency.  
You can specify the programmable DDS frequency on the NI PXIe-6672  
with a precision of approximately .07 Hz within the range 1 Hz to  
105 MHz. The accuracy of the frequency depends on the PXI_CLK10  
reference clock, so a precise 10 MHz source improves the accuracy of the  
DDS output. You can replace the 10 MHz clock with the TCXO for more  
accurate DDS timing.  
When the DDS is programmed an update signal must be sent to it before it  
will begin operating as programmed. The source for this update signal is  
either immediate (DDS starts outputting the programmed frequency as  
soon as software programs it) or one of the eight PXI triggers. When one  
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of the PXI trigger lines is used as the source for the update, frequency  
generation will not start until a rising edge occurs on the PXI trigger  
selected.  
Note NI-Sync software defaults to an immediate update. If a PXI trigger is used instead,  
the user must specify the update signal source before setting any of the other DDS  
properties.  
When more then one NI PXIe-6672 is used in a multiple chassis setup, the  
DDS frequency of both boards can be synchronized. The DDS system  
clock is phase locked to PXI_CLK10, when two or more chassis share a  
common 10 MHz clock, the DDS outputs will also be phase locked (refer  
to the Using the PXI_CLK10 PLL section for information on how to ensure  
that two or more chassis have close PXI_CLK10 phase alignment). To fully  
synchronize the DDS outputs a common update signal source must be used  
and routed to the selected PXI trigger. A synchronous route to PXI_CLK10  
provides the best results. Refer to the Routing Signals section for details on  
routing trigger signals.  
The NI PXIe-6672 DDS can adjust the phase of the generated clock by up  
to 5 ns. This may be used to tighten the synchronization between two or  
more DDS devices in a multi-chassis setup, or to compensate for delays  
caused by different cable lengths.  
PXI_CLK10 and TCXO  
The NI PXIe-6672 features a precision 10 MHz TCXO. The frequency  
accuracy of this clock is several orders of magnitude greater than the  
frequency accuracy of the native 10 MHz PXI backplane clock  
(PXI_CLK10).  
The TCXO contains circuitry to measure the temperature of the oscillator.  
It uses the temperature to adjust its frequency output according to the  
crystal’s known frequency variation across its operating temperature range.  
An NI PXIe-6672 module in the System Timing Slot of a PXI Express  
chassis can replace the native PXI 10 MHz backplane frequency reference  
clock (PXI_CLK10) with the more stable and accurate output of the  
TCXO. All other PXI modules in the chassis that reference the 10 MHz  
backplane clock benefit from this more accurate frequency reference.  
Furthermore, the DDS chip on the NI PXIe-6672 references its output to  
the backplane clock and also takes advantage of the superior TCXO  
accuracy. The TCXO does not automatically replace the native 10 MHz  
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clock; this feature must be explicitly enabled in software. The TCXO  
output also can be routed out to the CLKOUT connector.  
In addition to replacing the native backplane clock directly, the TCXO can  
phase lock to an external frequency source. This operation is discussed in  
detail in the Using the PXI_CLK10 PLL section.  
Routing Signals  
The NI PXIe-6672 has versatile trigger routing capabilities. It can  
route signals to and from the front panel, the PXI triggers, and the PXI star  
triggers.  
The CLKIN SMB input on the NI PXIe-6672 may be used for PXI_CLK10  
replacement by either routing a 10 MHz signal directly from the CLKIN  
input to PXI_CLK10_IN, or by using the CLKIN input as a phase lock  
reference for the TCXO. When phase locking the TCXO to CLKIN,  
CLKIN may be any multiple of 1 MHz to 105 MHz. In addition, CLKIN is  
a valid source for PXI_Star.  
The CLKOUT SMB on the NI PXIe-6672 may also be used to route the  
TCXO, PXI_CLK10, or DDS Clock.  
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Figures 3-3 and 3-4 summarize the routing features of the NI PXIe-6672.  
The remainder of this chapter details the capabilities and constraints of  
the routing architecture.  
28  
*PXI_STAR<0..16>,  
Selection  
Selection  
Circuitry  
PFI 0  
PXI_STAR 0  
PXI_TRIG<0..7>,  
PFI<0..5>, and  
Circuitry  
SOURCE*  
Software Trigger are  
routed to SOURCE  
of each Selection  
Circuitry block.  
Selection  
Circuitry  
Selection  
Circuitry  
PFI 1  
CLKIN  
PXI_STAR 1  
Selection  
Circuitry  
Selection  
Circuitry  
PFI 5  
PXI_STAR 16  
PXI_TRIG 0  
3
SYNCHRONIZATION  
CLOCKS for PFI<0..5>  
Selection  
Circuitry  
PFI 0  
DDS  
Selection  
Circuitry  
PXI_TRIG 1  
÷2N  
÷2M  
PXI_CLK10  
PFI 0  
Selection  
Circuitry  
PXI_TRIG 7  
SYNCHRONIZATION  
CLOCKS for  
PXI_STAR<0..16> and  
PXI_TRIG<0..7>  
DDS  
÷2N  
÷2M  
3
PXI_CLK10  
Figure 3-3. High-Level Schematic of NI PXIe-6672 Signal Routing Architecture  
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Figure 3-4 provides a more detailed view of the Selection Circuitry  
referenced in Figure 3-3.  
CLKIN*  
PFI<0..5>  
PXI_TRIG<0..7>  
PXI_STAR<0..16>  
Software Trigger  
GND  
CLK  
CLK/N  
CLK/M  
* CLKIN only valid for PXI_STAR  
Figure 3-4. Signal Selection Circuitry Diagram  
Determining Sources and Destinations  
All signal routing operations can be characterized by a source (input) and  
a destination. In addition, synchronous routing operations must also define  
a third signal known as the synchronization clock. Refer to the Choosing  
the Type of Routing section for more information on synchronous versus  
asynchronous routing.  
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Table 3-4 summarizes the sources and destinations of the NI PXIe-6672.  
The destinations are listed in the horizontal heading row, and the sources  
are listed in the column at the far left. A in a cell indicates that the source  
and destination combination defined by that cell is a valid routing  
combination.  
Table 3-4. Sources and Destinations for NI PXIe-6672 Signal Routing Operations  
Destinations  
Front Panel  
Backplane  
Onboard  
CLKOUT  
PFI <0..5>  
PXI_  
CLK10_IN  
PXI_Star  
Trigger  
<0..16>  
PXI TRIG  
<0..7>  
TCXO  
Reference  
PLL  
*
*
*
CLKIN  
PFI <0..5>  
PXI_ CLK10  
PXI_STAR  
<0..16>  
PXI TRIG  
<0..7>  
*
*
*
TCXO  
DDS  
Global  
Software  
Trigger  
*
Can be accomplished in two stages by routing source to PXI_CLK10_IN, replacing PXI_CLK10 with PXI_CLK10_IN  
(occurs automatically in most chassis), and then routing PXI_CLK10 to the destination. The source must be 10 MHz.  
Routing PXI_CLK10 or DDS to PFI, PXI_Star, or PXI_Trigger is accomplished by setting PXI_CLK10 or DDS to be the  
synchronization clock (NI-Sync Property Node) and then routing the synchronization clock as the source.  
Using Front Panel PFIs As Inputs  
The front-panel PFIs can receive external signals from 0 to +5 V. They can  
be terminated programmatically with 50 Ω resistances to match the cable  
impedance and minimize reflections.  
Note Terminating the signals with a 50 Ω resistance is recommended when the source is  
another NI PXIe-6672 or any other source with a 50 Ω output.  
The voltage thresholds for the front-panel PFI inputs are programmable.  
The input signal is generated by comparing the input voltage on the  
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PFI connectors to the voltage output of software-programmable DACs.  
The thresholds for the PFI lines are individually programmable, which is  
useful if you are importing signals from multiple sources with different  
voltage swings. The front panel PFI inputs can be routed to any PXI_Star  
triggers, PXI triggers, or other front panel PFI outputs.  
Using Front Panel PFIs As Outputs  
The front panel PFI outputs are +3.3 V drivers with 50 Ω output  
impedance. The outputs can drive 50 Ω loads, such as a 50 Ω coaxial cable  
with a 50 Ω receiver. This cable configuration is the recommended setup to  
minimize reflections. With this configuration, the receiver sees a single  
+1.6 V step—a +3.3 V step split across the 50 Ω resistors at the source and  
the destination.  
You also can drive a 50 Ω cable with a high-impedance load. The  
destination sees a single step to +3.3 V, but the source sees a reflection.  
This cable configuration is acceptable for low-frequency signals or short  
cables. You can select the signal source from the front panel triggers  
(PFI <0..5>), the PXI star triggers, the PXI triggers, or the synchronization  
clock (PXI_CLK10, the DDS clock, or PFI 0). The synchronization clock  
concept is explained in more detail in the Choosing the Type of Routing  
section.  
You can independently select the output signal source for each PFI line  
from one of the following sources:  
Another PFI <0..5>  
PXI triggers <0..7> (PXI_TRIG <0..7>)  
PXI_STAR <0..16>  
Global software trigger  
PFI synchronization clock  
The PFI synchronization clock may be any of the following signals:  
DDS clock  
PXI_CLK10  
PFI 0 Input  
Any of the previously listed signals divided by the first frequency  
divider (2n, up to 512)  
Any of the previously listed signals divided by the second frequency  
divider (2m, up to 512)  
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Refer to the Choosing the Type of Routing section for more information on  
the synchronization clock.  
Note The PFI synchronization clock is the same for all routing operations in which  
PFI <0..5> is defined as the output, although the divide-down ratio for this clock (full rate,  
first divider, second divider) may be chosen on a per route basis.  
Using the PXI Triggers  
The PXI triggers go to all the slots in the chassis. All modules receive the  
same PXI triggers, so PXI trigger 0 is the same for Slot 2 as it is for Slot 3,  
and so on. This feature makes the PXI triggers convenient in situations  
where you want, for instance, to start an acquisition on several devices at  
the same time because all modules will receive the same trigger.  
The frequency on the PXI triggers should not exceed 20 MHz to preserve  
signal integrity. The signals do not reach each slot at precisely the same  
time. A difference of several nanoseconds between slots can occur in an  
eight-slot chassis. However, this delay is not a problem for many  
applications. You can route signals to the PXI triggers from PFI <0..5>,  
from the PXI star triggers, or from other PXI triggers. You also can route  
PXI_CLK10 or the DDS clock to a PXI trigger line (PXI_TRIG <0..7>)  
using the synchronization clock.  
You can independently select the output signal source for each PXI trigger  
line from one of the following sources:  
PFI <0..5>  
Another PXI trigger <0..7> (PXI_TRIG <0..7>)  
PXI_STAR <0..16>  
Global software trigger  
PXI_Trig/PXI_Star synchronization clock  
The PXI_Trig/PXI_Star synchronization clock may be any of the following  
signals:  
DDS clock  
PXI_CLK10  
PFI 0 Input  
Any of the previously listed signals divided by the first frequency  
divider (2n, up to 512)  
Any of the previously listed signals divided by the second frequency  
divider (2m, up to 512)  
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Refer to the Choosing the Type of Routing section for more information  
about the synchronization clock.  
Note The PXI_Trig/PXI_Star synchronization clock is the same for all routing operations  
in which PXI_TRIG <0..7> or PXI_STAR <0..16> is defined as the output, although the  
divide-down ratio for this clock (full rate, first divider, second divider) may be chosen on  
a per route basis.  
Using the PXI Star Triggers  
There are up to 17 PXI star triggers per chassis. Each trigger line  
is a dedicated connection between the System Timing Slot and one other  
slot. The PXI Specification, Revision 2.1, requires that the propagation  
delay along each star trigger line be matched to within 1 ns. A typical upper  
limit for the skew in most NI PXI chassis is 500 ps. The low skew of the  
PXI star trigger bus is useful for applications that require triggers to arrive  
at several modules nearly simultaneously.  
The star trigger lines are bidirectional, so signals can be sent to System  
Timing Slot from a module in another slot or from System Timing Slot to  
the other module.  
You can independently select the output signal source for each PXI star  
trigger line from one of the following sources:  
PFI <0..5>  
PXI triggers <0..7> (PXI_TRIG <0..7>)  
Another PXI star trigger line (PXI_STAR <0..16>)  
Global software trigger  
PXI_Trig/PXI_Star synchronization clock  
CLKIN  
Refer to the Using the PXI Triggers section for more information on the  
PXI_Trig/PXI_Star synchronization clock.  
Choosing the Type of Routing  
The NI PXIe-6672 routes signals in one of two ways: asynchronously or  
synchronously. The following sections describe the two routing types and  
the considerations for choosing each type.  
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Asynchronous Routing  
Asynchronous routing is the most straightforward method of routing  
signals. Any asynchronous route can be defined in terms of two signal  
locations: a source and a destination. A digital pulse or train comes in on  
the source and is propagated to the destination. When the source signal  
goes from low to high, this rising edge is transferred to the destination after  
a propagation delay through the module. Figure 3-5 illustrates an  
asynchronous routing operation.  
Propagation Delay  
tpd  
Trigger Input  
Trigger Output  
Some delay is always associated with an asynchronous route, and this  
delay varies among NI PXIe-6672 modules, depending on variations in  
temperature and chassis voltage. Typical delay times in the NI PXIe-6672  
for asynchronous routes between various sources and destinations are  
given in Appendix A, Specifications.  
Asynchronous routing works well if the total system delays are not too long  
for the application. Propagation delay could be caused by the following  
reasons:  
Output delay on the source  
Propagation delay of the signal across the backplane(s) and cable(s)  
Propagation delay of the signal through the NI PXIe-6672  
Time for the receiver to recognize the signal  
Both the source and the destination of an asynchronous routing operation  
on the NI PXIe-6672 can be any of the following lines:  
Any front panel PFI pin (PFI <0..5)  
Any PXI star trigger line (PXI_STAR <0..16>)  
Any PXI trigger line (PXI_TRIG <0..7>)  
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Synchronous Routing  
A synchronous routing operation is defined in terms of three signal  
locations: a source, a destination, and a synchronization clock. A digital  
signal comes in on the source and is propagated to the destination after  
the edge has been realigned with the synchronization clock.  
Unlike asynchronous routing, the output of a synchronous routing  
operation does not directly follow the input after a propagation delay.  
Instead, the output waits for the next rising edge of the clock before it  
follows the input. Thus, the output is said to be “synchronous” with this  
clock.  
Figure 3-6 shows a timing diagram that illustrates synchronous routing.  
Setup Hold  
Time Time  
tsetup  
thold  
Trigger Input  
Synchronization  
Clock  
Clock to Output  
Time, tCtoQ  
Trigger Output  
Figure 3-6. Synchronous Routing Operation  
Synchronous routing can send triggers to several places in the same clock  
cycle or send the trigger to those same places after a deterministic skew of  
a known number of clock cycles. If a signal arrives at two chassis within  
the same clock cycle, each NI PXIe-6672 realigns the signal with the  
synchronization clock and distributes it to the modules in each chassis at  
the same time. Synchronous routing can thus remove uncertainty about  
when triggers are received. If the delays through the system are such that  
an asynchronous trigger might arrive near the edge of the receiver clock,  
the receiver might see the signal in the first clock cycle, or it might see it in  
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the second clock cycle. However, by synchronizing the signal, you can  
eliminate the ambiguity, and the signal will always be seen in the second  
clock cycle.  
One useful feature of synchronous routing is that the signal can be  
propagated on either the rising or falling edge of the synchronization clock.  
In addition, the polarity of the destination signal can be inverted, which is  
useful when handling active-low digital signals.  
Possible sources for synchronous routing include the following sources:  
Any front panel PFI pin  
Any PXI star trigger line (PXI_STAR <0..16>)  
Any PXI trigger line (PXI_TRIG <0..7>)  
Global software trigger  
The synchronization clock itself  
Note The possible destinations for a synchronous route are identical to those for an  
asynchronous route. The destinations include any front panel PFI pin, any PXI star trigger  
line, or any PXI trigger line.  
The synchronization clock for a synchronous route can be any of the  
following signals:  
10 MHz PXI backplane clock signal  
DDS clock on the NI PXIe-6672  
Front panel PFI 0 Input  
One of two “divided copies” of any of the previously listed three  
signals. The NI PXIe-6672 includes two clock-divider circuits that can  
divide the synchronization clock signals by any power of 2 up to 512.  
Refer to Figures 3-3 and 3-4 for an illustration of how the NI PXIe-6672  
performs synchronous routing operations.  
Generating a Single Pulse (Global Software Trigger)  
The global software trigger is a single pulse with programmable delay that  
is fired on a software command. This signal is always routed synchronously  
with a clock. Therefore, asynchronous routing is not supported when the  
The software trigger can be delayed by up to 15 clock cycles on a per route  
basis. This feature is useful if a single pulse must be sent to several  
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destinations with significantly different propagation delays. By delaying  
the pulse on the routes with shorter paths, you can compensate for the  
propagation delay. An example of such a situation would be when a trigger  
pulse must arrive nearly simultaneously at the local backplane and the  
backplane of another chassis separated by 50 m of coaxial cable.  
Using the PXI_CLK10 PLL  
A module in System Timing Slot of a PXI Express chassis can replace the  
PXI_CLK10 reference clock. The NI PXIe-6672 offers three options for  
this replacement. This section describes each option.  
The first option is to replace PXI_CLK10 directly with the TCXO  
output on the NI PXIe-6672. This oscillator is a more stable and  
accurate reference than the native backplane clock.  
The second option is to route a 10 MHz clock directly from CLKIN on  
the front panel to PXI_CLK10_IN, which is the pin on the backplane  
that will replace PXI_CLK10. There is a delay through the module, as  
well as a distribution delay on the backplane. These delays tend to  
be similar for chassis of the same model, so routing the same clock  
to a pair of chassis usually matches PXI_CLK10 to within a few  
nanoseconds.  
The third option is to employ the NI PXIe-6672 PLL circuitry for the  
TCXO. As in option 1, the output of the TCXO replaces the native  
10 MHz signal. However, this scheme also requires an input signal  
on CLKIN. This signal must be a stable clock, and its frequency must  
be a multiple of 1 MHz (5 MHz or 13 MHz, for example) between  
1 MHz and 105 MHz. The PLL feedback circuit generates a voltage  
proportional to the phase difference between the reference input on  
PXI_CLK10 and the output of the TCXO. This PLL voltage output  
then tunes the output frequency of the TCXO. As long as the incoming  
signal is a stable 1 MHz frequency multiple, the PLL circuit quickly  
locks the TCXO to the reference, eliminating all phase drift between  
the two signals.  
Using the PLL provides several advantages over the other two options for  
replacing the PXI backplane clock:  
CLKIN is not required to be 10 MHz. If you have a stable reference  
that is a multiple of 1 MHz, such as 13 or 5 MHz, you can  
frequency-lock the chassis to it.  
If CLKIN stops or becomes disconnected, PXI_CLK10 is still present  
in the chassis.  
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If CLKIN is 10 MHz, the NI PXIe-6672 can compensate for  
distribution delays in the backplane. The feedback in the PLL comes  
from PXI_CLK10. This PLL makes it possible for the NI PXIe-6672  
to align clock edges at CLKIN with the edges of PXI_CLK10 that the  
modules receive. If you split an external (accurate) 10 MHz reference  
and route it to two chassis, they can both lock to it. The result is a  
tighter synchronization of PXI_CLK10 on the chassis.  
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Calibration  
This chapter discusses the calibration of the NI PXIe-6672.  
Calibration consists of verifying the measurement accuracy of a device  
and correcting for any measurement error. The NI PXIe-6672 is factory  
calibrated before shipment at approximately 25 °C to the levels indicated  
in Appendix A, Specifications. The associated calibration constants—the  
corrections that were needed to meet specifications—are stored in the  
onboard nonvolatile memory (EEPROM). The driver software uses these  
stored values.  
Factory Calibration  
The factory calibration of the NI PXIe-6672 involves calculating and  
storing four calibration constants. These values control the accuracy of  
four features of the device, which are discussed in the following sections.  
TCXO Frequency  
PXI_CLK10 Phase  
The TCXO frequency can be varied over a small range. The output  
frequency of the TCXO is adjusted using this constant to meet the  
specification listed in Appendix A, Specifications. This calibration  
applies only to the NI PXIe-6672.  
When using the PLL to lock PXI_CLK10 to an external reference clock, the  
phase between the clocks can be adjusted. The time between rising edges  
of PXI_CLK10 and the input clock is minimized using this constant.  
DDS Start Trigger Phase  
To start the DDS reliably, the DDS start trigger must arrive within a certain  
window of time. The phase of the DDS start trigger is controlled by this  
constant to meet the setup and hold-time requirements of the DDS.  
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DDS Initial Phase  
The phase of the DDS output is adjusted using this constant so that the  
DDS outputs from multiple NI PXIe-6672 modules are aligned.  
Additional Information  
Refer to ni.com/calibration for additional information on  
NI calibration services.  
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Specifications  
CLKIN Characteristics  
CLKIN fundamental  
frequency range1 .................................... 1 MHz to 105 MHz,  
sine or square wave  
Input impedance..................................... 50 Ω, nominal  
Input coupling ........................................ AC  
Voltage range  
DC................................................... 20 V  
AC................................................... 400 mVp-p to 5 Vp-p  
Absolute maximum input voltage2......... 26 V, max  
CLKIN to PXI_CLK10_IN delay  
without PLL ........................................... 14 ns to 14.7 ns, typical  
CLKIN to PXI_CLK10 delay  
with PLL ................................................ 1 ns, max  
CLKIN frequency accuracy requirement  
For PLL and TCXO ........................ 5.0 ppm  
For replacing PXI_CLK10  
(no PLL).......................................... 100 ppm3  
1
2
CLKIN fundamental frequency can be any multiple of 1 MHz within the range specified when the PLL is engaged and  
PXI_CLK10 is locking to it. The frequency must be 10 MHz when replacing PXI_CLK10 without the PLL.  
Stresses beyond those listed can cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to absolute maximum rated conditions for  
extended periods of time can affect device reliability. Functional operation of the device outside the conditions indicated in  
the operational parts of the specification is not implied.  
3
This is a requirement of the PXI specification.  
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Specifications  
Jitter added to CLKIN  
Without PLL....................................0.5 psrms, 10 Hz to 100 kHz,  
typical  
With PLL.........................................0.6 psrms, 10 Hz to 100 kHz,  
typical  
Duty cycle distortion of CLKIN to  
PXI_CLK10_IN without PLL ................ 1%, max  
Required input duty cycle  
when using PLL......................................45 to 55%  
CLKOUT Characteristics  
Output frequency  
From PXI_CLK10...........................10 MHz  
From TCXO.....................................10 MHz  
From DDS .......................................1 MHz1 to 105 MHz  
Duty cycle...............................................43 to 55%2  
Output impedance...................................50 Ω, nominal  
Output coupling ......................................AC  
Amplitude, software configurable to two voltage levels  
(low and high drive)  
Open Load  
Low Drive  
High Drive  
Square Wave  
2.0 Vp-p, typical  
5.0 Vp-p, typical  
50 Ω Load  
Low Drive  
High Drive  
Square Wave  
1.0 Vp-p, typical  
2.5 Vp-p, typical  
1
2
The lower limit is load dependent because of the AC coupling. This limit is less than 1 MHz for high-impedance loads.  
The duty cycle specification covers both DDS range and TCXO.  
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Appendix A  
Specifications  
Square wave rise/fall time (10 to 90%)  
Low drive........................................ 0.5 ns min,  
2.5 ns max  
High drive ....................................... 0.5 ns min,  
2.5 ns max  
PFI <0..5>  
Input Characteristics  
Frequency range..................................... DC to 105 MHz  
Input impedance..................................... 50 Ω, nominal, or 1 kΩ 10%,  
|| 35 pF, software-selectable  
Input coupling ........................................ DC  
Voltage level .......................................... 0 to 5 V  
Absolute maximum input voltage1......... 5.25 V, max  
Input threshold  
Voltage level................................... 0 to 4.3 V, software-selectable  
Voltage resolution........................... 16.8 mV (8 bits)  
Error................................................ 40 mV  
Hysteresis............................................... 50 mV  
Asynchronous delay, tpd  
PFI <0..5> to  
PXI_TRIG <0..7> output................ 19 to 26 ns, typical  
PFI <0..5> to  
PXI_STAR <0..12> output............. 10 to 19 ns, typical  
Synchronized trigger  
input setup time, tsetup2 ........................... 16.5 ns, typical  
Synchronized trigger  
input hold time, thold2.............................. –9.9 ns, typical  
1
Stresses beyond those listed can cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to absolute maximum rated conditions for  
extended periods of time can affect device reliability. Functional operation of the device outside the conditions indicated in  
the operational parts of the specifications is not implied.  
2
Relative to PXI_CLK10 at the backplane connector. When PLL is used to route CLKIN to PXI_CLK10_IN, CLKIN and  
PXI_CLK10 are phase locked with 1 ns max phase difference. Refer to the Synchronous Routing section of Chapter 3,  
Hardware Overview, for more details.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Appendix A  
Specifications  
Output Characteristics  
Frequency range .....................................DC to 105 MHz  
Output impedance...................................50 Ω, nominal  
Output coupling ......................................DC  
Voltage level...........................................0 to 1.6 V into 50 Ω;  
0 to 3.3 V into open circuit,  
typical  
Absolute maximum applied voltage1...... 5.25 V, max  
PXI_CLK10 synchronized trigger clock  
to out time, tCtoQ2 ....................................10.7 ns, typical  
Output-to-output skew, synchronous......500 ps, typical  
PXI_STAR Trigger Characteristics  
PXI_STAR <0..16> to  
PXI_STAR <0..16> output skew  
at NI PXIe-6672 backplane connector....300 ps3, typical  
Asynchronous delays, tpd  
PXI_STAR <0..16> to  
PFI <0..5> output.............................13 to 17 ns, typical  
PXI_STAR <0..16> to  
PXI_TRIG <0..7> output.................18 to 24 ns, typical  
1
Stresses beyond those listed can cause permanent damage to the device. Exposure to absolute maximum rated conditions for  
extended periods of time can affect device reliability. Functional operation of the device outside the conditions indicated in  
the operational parts of the specifications is not implied.  
2
3
Relative to PXI_CLK10 at backplane connector.  
This specification applies to all synchronous routes to the PXI_Star lines, as well as asynchronous routes from the PFI inputs  
to the PXI_Star lines.  
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Appendix A  
Specifications  
PXI Trigger Characteristics  
PXI_TRIG <0..7> to  
PXI_TRIG <0..7> output skew  
at NI PXIe-6672 backplane connector... 5 ns, typical  
Asynchronous delay, tpd  
PXI_TRIG <0..7> to  
PFI <0..5> output............................ 15 to 22 ns, typical  
TCXO Characteristics  
Frequency............................................... 10 MHz  
Initial accuracy....................................... 2.5 ppm  
Long-term stability (1 year)1.................. 1 ppm  
Temperature stability (0 to 55 °C)2........ 2 ppm  
DDS Characteristics  
Frequency range..................................... 1 Hz to 105 MHz  
Frequency resolution.............................. < 0.075 Hz  
Frequency accuracy................................ Equivalent to PXI_CLK10  
accuracy3  
Physical  
Chassis requirement ............................... One 3U PXI Express  
System Timing Slot  
Front panel connectors........................... SMB male, 50 Ω  
Front panel indicators............................. Two tricolor LEDs  
(green, red, and amber)  
1
Includes stability of TCXO and supporting circuitry.  
2
3
Includes temperature stability of TCXO and supporting circuitry.  
The DDS frequency inherits the relative frequency of PXI_CLK10. For example, if you route the TCXO to PXI_CLK10,  
the DDS output inherits the same relative frequency accuracy as the TCXO output.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Appendix A  
Specifications  
Recommended maximum cable length1  
PFI/CLKOUT, DC to 10 MHz........200 m  
CLKOUT High Gain, 105 MHz......80 m2  
PFI/CLKOUT Low Gain,  
105 MHz..........................................30 m3  
Weight ....................................................0.459 lb (208 g)  
Power Requirements  
+3.3 V .....................................................800 mA, max  
+12 V ......................................................700 mA, max  
Environment  
Maximum altitude...................................2,000 m (800 mbar)  
(at 25 °C ambient temperature)  
Pollution Degree.....................................2  
Indoor use only.  
Caution When required, clean the NI PXIe-6672 with a soft nonmetallic brush. Make sure  
that the device is completely dry and free from contaminants before returning it to service.  
Operating Environment  
Ambient temperature range ....................0 to 55 °C (Tested in accordance  
with IEC-60068-2-1 and  
IEC-60068-2-2. Meets  
MIL-PRF-28800F Class 3  
low temperature limit and  
MIL-PRF-28800F Class 2  
high temperature limit.)  
Relative humidity range..........................10% to 90%, noncondensing  
(Tested in accordance with  
IEC-60068-2-56.)  
1
Cable length measurements were made with an RG 58 cable. Maximum cable length performance will vary depending on the  
cable type used.  
2
3
Maximum cable length with a direct cable connection. Loss from a signal splitter would reduce maximum cable length.  
Maximum cable length with a direct cable connection. Loss from a signal splitter would reduce maximum cable length.  
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Appendix A  
Specifications  
Storage Environment  
Ambient temperature range.................... –40 to 71 °C (Tested in  
accordance with IEC-60068-2-1  
and IEC-60068-2-2. Meets  
MIL-PRF-28800F Class 3  
low temperature limit.)  
Relative humidity range......................... 5% to 95% noncondensing  
(Tested in accordance with  
IEC-60068-2-56.)  
Shock and Vibration  
Operational shock .................................. 30 g peak, half-sine, 11 ms pulse  
(Tested in accordance with  
IEC-60068-2-27. Meets  
MIL-PRF-28800F Class 2 limits.)  
Random vibration  
Operating ........................................ 5 to 500 Hz, 0.3 grms  
Nonoperating .................................. 5 to 500 Hz, 2.4 grms  
(Tested in accordance with  
IEC-60068-2-64. Nonoperating  
test profile exceeds the  
requirements of  
MIL-PRF-28800F, Class 3.)  
Note Specifications are subject to change without notice.  
Safety  
This product is designed to meet the requirements of the following  
standards of safety for electrical equipment for measurement, control, and  
laboratory use:  
• IEC 61010-1, EN 61010-1  
• UL 61010-1, CSA 61010-1  
Note For UL and other safety certifications, refer to the product label or visit ni.com/  
certification, search by model number or product line, and click the appropriate link  
in the Certification column.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Appendix A  
Specifications  
Electromagnetic Compatibility  
This product is designed to meet the requirements of the following  
standards of EMC for electrical equipment for measurement, control, and  
laboratory use:  
EN 61326 EMC requirements; Minimum Immunity  
EN 55011 Emissions; Group 1, Class A  
CE, C-Tick, ICES, and FCC Part 15 Emissions; Class A  
Note For EMC compliance, operate this device according to printed documentation.  
CE Compliance  
This product meets the essential requirements of applicable European  
Directives, as amended for CE marking, as follows:  
2006/95/EC; Low-Voltage Directive (safety)  
2004/108/EC; Electromagnetic Compatibility Directive (EMC)  
Note Refer to the Declaration of Conformity (DoC) for this product for any additional  
regulatory compliance information. To obtain the DoC for this product, visit ni.com/  
certification, search by model number or product line, and click the appropriate link  
in the Certification column.  
Environmental Management  
National Instruments is committed to designing and manufacturing  
products in an environmentally responsible manner. NI recognizes that  
eliminating certain hazardous substances from our products is beneficial  
not only to the environment but also to NI customers.  
For additional environmental information, refer to the NI and the  
Environment Web page at ni.com/environment. This page contains the  
environmental regulations and directives with which NI complies, as well  
as other environmental information not included in this document.  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
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Appendix A  
Specifications  
Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE)  
EU Customers At the end of their life cycle, all products must be sent to a WEEE recycling  
center. For more information about WEEE recycling centers and National Instruments  
WEEE initiatives, visit ni.com/environment/weee.htm.  
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RoHS  
ni.com/environment/rohs_china  
(For information about China RoHS compliance, go to  
.)  
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B
Technical Support and  
Professional Services  
Visit the following sections of the award-winning National Instruments  
Web site at ni.com for technical support and professional services:  
Support—Technical support resources at ni.com/support include  
the following:  
Self-Help Technical Resources—For answers and solutions,  
visit ni.com/support for software drivers and updates, a  
searchable KnowledgeBase, product manuals, step-by-step  
troubleshooting wizards, thousands of example programs,  
tutorials, application notes, instrument drivers, and so on.  
Registered users also receive access to the NI Discussion Forums  
at ni.com/forums. NI Applications Engineers make sure every  
question submitted online receives an answer.  
Standard Service Program Membership—This program  
entitles members to direct access to NI Applications Engineers  
via phone and email for one-to-one technical support as well as  
exclusive access to on demand training modules via the Services  
Resource Center. NI offers complementary membership for a full  
year after purchase, after which you may renew to continue your  
benefits.  
For information about other technical support options in your  
area, visit ni.com/services, or contact your local office at  
ni.com/contact.  
Training and Certification—Visit ni.com/training for  
self-paced training, eLearning virtual classrooms, interactive CDs,  
and Certification program information. You also can register for  
instructor-led, hands-on courses at locations around the world.  
System Integration—If you have time constraints, limited in-house  
technical resources, or other project challenges, National Instruments  
Alliance Partner members can help. To learn more, call your local  
NI office or visit ni.com/alliance.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
B-1  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 
                   
Appendix B  
Technical Support and Professional Services  
Declaration of Conformity (DoC)—A DoC is our claim of  
compliance with the Council of the European Communities using  
the manufacturer’s declaration of conformity. This system affords  
the user protection for electromagnetic compatibility (EMC) and  
product safety. You can obtain the DoC for your product by visiting  
ni.com/certification.  
Calibration Certificate—If your product supports calibration,  
you can obtain the calibration certificate for your product at  
ni.com/calibration.  
If you searched ni.com and could not find the answers you need, contact  
your local office or NI corporate headquarters. Phone numbers for our  
worldwide offices are listed at the front of this manual. You also can visit  
the Worldwide Offices section of ni.com/niglobal to access the branch  
office Web sites, which provide up-to-date contact information, support  
phone numbers, email addresses, and current events.  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
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Glossary  
Symbol  
Prefix  
pico  
Value  
10–12  
10–9  
10– 6  
10–3  
103  
p
n
nano  
micro  
milli  
kilo  
µ
m
k
M
mega  
106  
Symbols  
%
percent  
plus or minus  
positive of, or plus  
negative of, or minus  
per  
+
/
°
degree  
Ω
ohm  
A
accumulator  
A part where numbers are totaled or stored.  
application development environment  
ADE  
asynchronous  
A property of an event that occurs at an arbitrary time, without  
synchronization to a reference clock.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Glossary  
B
backplane  
An assembly, typically a printed circuit board (PCB), with connectors and  
signal paths that bus the connector pins.  
bus  
The group of conductors that interconnect individual circuitry in a  
computer. Typically, a bus is the expansion vehicle to which I/O or other  
devices are connected. An example of a PC bus is the PCI bus.  
C
C
Celsius  
CLKIN  
CLKIN is a signal connected to the SMB input pin of the same name.  
CLKIN can serve as PXI_CLK10_IN or be used as a phase lock reference  
for the OCXO.  
CLKOUT  
clock  
CLKOUT is the signal on the SMB output pin of the same name. Either  
the OCXO clock or PXI_CLK10 can be routed to CLKOUT.  
Hardware component that controls timing for reading from or writing to  
groups.  
CompactPCI  
A Eurocard configuration of the PCI bus for industrial applications.  
D
D/A  
digital-to-analog  
DAC  
digital-to-analog converter—an electronic device that converts a digital  
number into a corresponding analog voltage or current.  
DAQ  
Data acquisition—(1) collecting and measuring electrical signals from  
sensors, transducers, and test probes or fixtures and inputting them to a  
computer for processing; (2) collecting and measuring the same kinds of  
electrical signals with A/D and/or DIO devices plugged into a computer,  
and possibly generating control signals with D/A and/or DIO devices in the  
same computer.  
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Glossary  
DC  
direct current  
DDS  
direct digital synthesis—a method of creating a clock with a programmable  
frequency.  
E
EEPROM  
electrically erasable programmable read-only memory—ROM that can be  
erased with an electrical signal and reprogrammed.  
ESD  
electrostatic discharge  
F
frequency  
The basic unit of rate, measured in events or oscillations per second using  
a frequency counter or spectrum analyzer. Frequency is the reciprocal of  
the period of a signal.  
frequency tuning word  
front panel  
A number that specifies the frequency.  
The physical front panel of an instrument or other hardware .  
H
Hz  
hertz—the number of scans read or updates written per second.  
I
in.  
inch or inches  
J
jitter  
The rapid variation of a clock or sampling frequency from an ideal constant  
frequency.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Glossary  
L
LabVIEW  
A graphical programming language.  
LED  
light-emitting diode—a semiconductor light source.  
M
master  
The requesting or controlling device in a master/slave configuration.  
Measurement &  
Automation Explorer  
(MAX)  
A controlled centralized configuration environment that allows you to  
configure all of your National Instruments DAQ, GPIB, IMAQ, IVI,  
Motion, VISA, and VXI devices.  
N
NI-DAQ  
National Instruments driver software for DAQ hardware.  
O
oscillator  
A device that generates a fixed frequency signal. An oscillator most often  
generates signals by using oscillating crystals, but also may use tuned  
networks, lasers, or atomic clock sources. The most important  
specifications on oscillators are frequency accuracy, frequency stability,  
and phase noise.  
output impedance  
The measured resistance and capacitance between the output terminals of  
a circuit  
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Glossary  
P
PCI  
peripheral component interconnect—a high-performance expansion bus  
architecture originally developed by Intel to replace ISA and EISA. It is  
achieving widespread acceptance as a standard for PCs and work-stations;  
it offers a theoretical maximum transfer rate of 132 Mbytes/s.  
PCI Express  
peripheral component interconnect express—a high-performance  
expansion bus architecture that expands on and doubles the data transfer  
rates of original PCI. PCI Express is a two-way, serial connection that  
carries data in packets along two pairs of point-to-point data lanes,  
compared to the single parallel data bus of traditional PCI that routes data  
at a set rate. Initial bit rates for PCI Express reach 2.5Gb/s per lane  
direction, which equate to data transfer rates of approximately  
200 Mbytes/s.  
PFI  
programmable function interface  
phase-locked loop  
PLL  
precision  
The measure of the stability of an instrument and its capability to give the  
same measurement over and over again for the same input signal.  
propagation delay  
PXI  
The amount of time required for a signal to pass through a circuit.  
A rugged, open system for modular instrumentation based on CompactPCI,  
with special mechanical, electrical, and software features. The PXIbus  
standard was originally developed by National Instruments in 1997, and  
is now managed by the PXIbus Systems Alliance.  
PXI Express  
An open system for modular instrumentation based on PXI and  
CompactPCI Express. PXI Express enhances system timing and software  
frameworks while preserving backward compatibility with PXI. The  
system controller slot is capable of supporting up to a x16 PCI Express link,  
plus a x8 link, providing a total of 6 GB/s bandwidth to the PXI backplane,  
which is more than 45 times improvement upon PXI backplane throughput  
PXI star  
A special set of trigger lines in the PXI backplane for high-accuracy device  
synchronization with minimal latencies on each PXI slot.  
PXI_Trig/PXI_Star  
synchronization clock  
The clock signal that is used to synchronize the PXI triggers or PXI_STAR  
triggers on an NI PXIe-6672.  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Glossary  
S
s
seconds  
skew  
The actual time difference between two events that would ideally occur  
simultaneously. Inter-channel skew is an example of the time differences  
introduced by different characteristics of multiple channels. Skew can  
occur between channels on one module, or between channels on separate  
modules (intermodule skew).  
slave  
slot  
A computer or peripheral device controlled by another computer.  
The place in the computer or chassis in which a card or module can be  
installed.  
SMB  
sub miniature type B—a small coaxial signal connector that features a snap  
coupling for fast connection.  
synchronous  
A property of an event that is synchronized to a reference clock.  
T
tCtoQ  
thold  
tpd  
clock to output time  
hold time  
propagation delay time  
trigger signal  
TRIG  
trigger  
A digital signal that starts or times a hardware event (for example, starting  
a data acquisition operation).  
tsetup  
setup time  
V
V
volts  
VI  
virtual instrument  
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Index  
description, 3-5  
A
Access LED  
location (diagram), 3-3  
signal description (table), 3-6  
color explanation (table), 3-4  
overview, 3-4  
Active LED  
color explanation (table), 3-4  
overview, 3-4  
asynchronous routing  
overview, 3-16  
DDS, 3-7  
overview, 3-7  
PXI_CLK10 and TCXO, 3-8  
color  
Access LED color explanation (table), 3-4  
Active LED color explanation (table), 3-4  
configuring the device  
Access LED, 3-4  
Active LED, 3-4  
conventions used in the manual, vii  
B
block diagram  
routing architecture, 3-10  
C
cable configuration, 3-13  
calibration  
clock, 3-14  
additional information, 4-2  
DDS initial phase, 4-2  
DDS start trigger phase, 4-1  
factory calibration, 4-1  
PXI_CLK10 phase, 4-1  
TCXO frequency, 4-1  
front panel triggers as outputs, 3-13  
signal description (table), 3-6  
DDS initial phase calibration, 4-2  
DDS start trigger phase calibration, 4-1  
Declaration of Conformity (NI resources), B-2  
destinations, possible destinations (table), 3-12  
diagnostic tools (NI resources), B-1  
direct digital synthesis. See DDS  
calibration certificate (NI resources), B-2  
CE compliance, specifications, A-8  
changing the Active LED color (tip), 3-4  
CLKIN connector  
description, 3-5  
location (diagram), 3-3  
specifications, A-1  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 
 
Index  
documentation  
global software trigger  
conventions used in manual, vii  
generating a single pulse, 3-18  
using front panel PFIs as outputs, 3-13  
E
H
examples (NI resources), B-1  
block diagram, 3-2  
calibration, 4-1  
configuring, 2-2  
connector descriptions, 3-5  
installing, 2-1  
F
front panel  
See also CLKIN connector; CLKOUT  
connector; PFI synchronization clock;  
PFI  
I
installation  
category, 1-4  
software, 2-1  
instrument drivers (NI resources), B-1  
G
generating a clock  
DDS, 3-7  
overview, 3-7  
PXI_CLK10 and TCXO, 3-8  
generating a single pulse (trigger), 3-18  
getting started  
LED  
configuring the device, 2-2  
equipment, 1-1  
Active LED, 3-4  
light-emitting diode. See LED  
installing the hardware, 2-1  
installing the software, 2-1  
software programming choices, 1-2  
unpacking, 1-2  
M
maximum signal rating (caution), 3-5  
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N
services, B-1  
programming examples (NI resources), B-1  
PXI star trigger bus. See PXI_STAR <0..12>  
outputs, 3-13  
PXI trigger bus. See PXI_TRIG <0..7>  
PXI triggers  
front panel triggers as outputs, 3-13  
PXI_CLK10  
NI PXI-6653, parts locator diagram, 3-3  
NI PXI-665x  
configuration, 2-2  
connectors, 3-5  
functional overview, 3-5  
installation  
software, 2-1  
Active LED, 3-4  
clock generation, 3-8  
NI support and services, B-1  
DDS phase-lock, 3-6  
front panel triggers as outputs, 3-13  
using front panel PFIs as outputs, 3-13  
using the PXI triggers, 3-14  
using the PXI_CLK10 PLL, 3-19  
PXI_CLK10 and TCXO, 3-8  
PXI_CLK10 phase  
O
P
PFI  
calibration, 4-1  
PFI <0..5> connector  
PXI_CLK10_IN  
description, 3-5  
routing from the CLKIN connector, 3-5  
signal description (table), 3-6  
PXI_CLK10_OUT  
location (diagram), 3-3  
signal description (table), 3-6  
PFI <0..5> signals  
signal description (table), 3-6  
PXI_STAR <0..12>  
asynchronous routing, 3-16  
front panel PFIs as inputs, 3-12  
front panel triggers as outputs, 3-13  
specifications, A-3  
asynchronous routing, 3-16  
signal description (table), 3-6  
specifications, A-4  
using front panel PFIs as inputs, 3-12  
using front panel PFIs as outputs, 3-13  
PFI synchronization clock  
possible sources, 3-13  
using front panel PFIs as outputs, 3-13  
phase-locked loop. See PLL  
physical specifications, A-5  
PLL  
using front panel PFIs as outputs, 3-13  
using the PXI star triggers, 3-15  
using the PXI triggers, 3-14  
PXI_TRIG <0..7>  
asynchronous routing, 3-16  
signal description (table), 3-6  
specifications, A-5  
using front panel PFIs as outputs, 3-13  
using the PXI star triggers, 3-15  
using the PXI triggers, 3-14  
Active LED, 3-4  
routing from the CLKIN connector, 3-5  
using the PXI_CLK10 PLL, 3-19  
© National Instruments Corporation  
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Index  
PXI_Trig/PXI_Star synchronization clock  
specifications  
CE compliance, A-8  
using the PXI triggers, 3-14  
CLKIN characteristics, A-1  
CLKOUT characteristics, A-2  
DDS characteristics, A-5  
electromagnetic compatibility, A-8  
operating environment, A-6  
PFI <0..5>  
R
reflections, recommended cable  
configuration, 3-13  
related documentation, viii  
resistors, terminating signals (note), 3-12  
routing architecture (figure), 3-10  
routing signals  
input characteristics, A-3  
output characteristics, A-4  
physical, A-5  
power requirements, A-6  
PXI trigger characteristics, A-5  
PXI_STAR trigger characteristics, A-4  
safety, A-7  
generating a single pulse (trigger), 3-18  
(table), 3-12  
PXI star triggers, 3-15  
PXI triggers, 3-14  
types  
shock and vibration, A-7  
storage environment, A-7  
TCXO characteristics, A-5  
star triggers. See PXI_STAR <0..12>  
support, technical, B-1  
synchronization clock  
overview, 3-17  
synchronous routing  
S
safety specifications, A-7  
shock and vibration specifications, A-7  
signal descriptions (table), 3-6  
signal selection circuitry (figure), 3-11  
signal source, 3-11  
overview, 3-17  
possible sources and destinations, 3-18  
possible sources (table), 3-12  
single pulse generation, 3-18  
software  
installing, 2-1  
NI resources, B-1  
source  
clock generation, 3-8  
frequency calibration, 4-1  
overview, 3-8  
specifications, A-5  
technical support, B-1  
possible sources (table), 3-12  
signal, 3-11  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
I-4  
ni.com  
 
Index  
TCXO  
terminating signals with resistors (note), 3-12  
threshold, voltage, 3-12  
voltage thresholds, programming, 3-12  
trigger bus. See PXI_TRIG <0..7>  
troubleshooting (NI resources), B-1  
Web resources, B-1  
U
unpacking the device, 1-2  
© National Instruments Corporation  
I-5  
NI PXIe-6672 User Manual  
 

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