The ADN432 is a specialized integrated circuit designed by . It functions as a differential line receiver, translating low-voltage differential signals back into standard LVTTL/LVCMOS logic levels.
Because it operates on a 3.3V power supply and uses the LVDS standard, it generates very little heat—a massive plus for compact, fanless designs.
By utilizing —where two wires carry the signal in opposite polarities—the ADN432 effectively cancels out common-mode noise. This makes it ideal for environments where electrical "noise" is high, such as industrial factory floors or dense server rooms. Key Technical Specifications
Transferring raw data from MRI or CT scan sensors to processing units without introducing digital artifacts.
Standard single-ended signaling (like TTL) struggles at high speeds because it creates large voltage swings, which lead to high power consumption and significant EMI. The ADN432 solves this by:
One of its best safety features is the internal fail-safe circuit. If the inputs are open, shorted, or terminated but undriven, the receiver outputs a stable "high" state, preventing the system from processing "garbage" data. Why Use the ADN432 Over Standard TTL?