TIAs are the most powerful type of time measurement instruments. In addition to the functions provided
by traditional “frequency counters”, “time interval counters” and “universal counters”, TIAs include new
functions, run at a much higher rate, provide a continuous measurement capability, and report results
together with their time of occurrence. These capabilities give you much more insight into the dynamic
nature of your signal and much higher throughput.
This difference in capability is similar to the difference between voltmeters and oscilloscopes.
Although both voltmeters and scopes measure the voltage of a signal, the scope provides much faster
sampling and displays the results vs. time. For example, the voltmeter may be able to make 1000
measurements per second, which you can log with a computer. You may also log the time of occurrence
of each measurement and display a plot of
voltage vs. time. This plot looks a lot like an oscilloscope
display but it only works for signals with very slow voltage variations. The scope on the other hand
can sample the voltage at gigahertz rates and displays a plot of these samples vs. time. It therefore
provides much more insight into the variations in the signal.
The BI200 TIA can make 4 million measurements per second. Each of these measurements can be an
instantaneous frequency measurement, a time interval measurement, or any of one of 10 measurement
functions. For time measurements, each of the measurements has a 3 ps resolution. For frequency
measurements, each measurement would provide 5 digits of resolution. As the measurement rate is
decreased, the frequency resolution is improved.
Models
| Model | Max Freq. (All Func.) | Max Freq. (Freq. Func.) | Time Resolution | Freq. Resolution | Meas. Rate | Min. Pulse Width | Interface | Datasheet |
| BI200 | 2 GHz | N/A | 3 ps | 12 Digits/s | 4 MSa/s | 200 ps | PCIe |  |
BI201 | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | PCIe | Request |
| BI220 | 400 MHz | 2.5 GHz | 8 ps | 12 Digits/s | 1 MSa/s | 1 ns | PCI |  |
BI221 | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | TBD | PXI | Request |
Max Freq. (All Func.) - This is the maximum frequency for all measurement functions without prescaling (frequency division)
Max Freq. (Freq. Func.) - This is the maximum frequency for the frequency-type functions (1C1E) when using the prescaler for
products with a prescaler (frequency division). See the datasheet for details.
Time Resolution - The single-shot time resolution of the hardware.
Freq. Resolution - The resolution for Frequency Average and Period Average functions is dependent on the single-shot
time resolution and the duration of the measurement (effective gate time). It is easier to specify it as a number of digits per second.
For example, 12 digits/s means that you will get 12 digits of frequency resolution with a 1 second gate time, or 9 digits in 1 millisecond.
If the signal input is 1 MHz, 9 digits of resolution translates to 0.001 Hz resolution.
Meas. Rate - The maximum number of measurements per second that the instrument can take. This is due to the recovery time of the
measurement circuits. Time interval analyzers (as opposed to traditional counters) still count the pulses (events) of the input signals
during this recovery time, but no timetags are produced. For example, if the input frequency is 100 MHz and the instrument has a
measurement rate of 4 MSa/s then a measurement can be made as often as every 25 cycles of the input.
Min. Pulse Width - The minimum pulse width for the input signal.
Interface - The computer bus interface