\subsection{FPGA to Hardware interface} To make the Hardware work with the FPGA's 3.3V I/O, level shifter have been installed, and a FPGA module was built. This module maps the I/O Pins in a similar way to the ATMega 2560 used in examples before. The bidirectional 5V<->3.3V logic level converters have been obtained on amazon, and are not well documented. Their functionality is tested and verified in both directions, which can be seen in figures \ref{fig:3v35v} and \ref{fig:5v3v3}. The schematic was determined through measurements with a multimeter, and the schematic in Figure \ref{fig:schem_lvlshift} shows similar resistor values in the same configuration \cite{lvlshift}. \begin{figure}[H] \begin{tikzpicture} \begin{axis}[ ylabel=Lane Voltage, xlabel=Time, grid=both, xmin=-1.151135531135531e-06, xmax=5.488864468864469e-06, minor tick num=5, width=\textwidth, height=0.5\textheight] \addplot table [x=t, y=c1, col sep=comma, mark=none] {meas/20200301shift3v35v.csv}; \addplot table [x=t, y=c2, col sep=comma, mark=none] {meas/20200301shift3v35v.csv}; \legend{LV-Side,HV-Side} \end{axis} \end{tikzpicture} \caption{3.3V to 5V conversion using the level shifter} \label{fig:3v35v} \end{figure} The in Figure \ref{fig:3v35v} shown output on the HV side corresponds with the schematics in Figure \ref{fig:schem_lvlshift}, where one can see, that the resistor R2 is loading the bus capacitance to a 5V high state. \begin{figure}[H] \begin{tikzpicture} \begin{axis}[ ylabel=Lane Voltage, xlabel=Time, grid=both, xmin=-7.427469135802469e-07, xmax=3.567253086419753e-06, minor tick num=5, width=\textwidth, height=0.5\textheight] \addplot table [x=t, y=c1, col sep=comma, mark=none] {meas/20200301shift5v3v3.csv}; \addplot table [x=t, y=c2, col sep=comma, mark=none] {meas/20200301shift5v3v3.csv}; \legend{LV-Side,HV-Side} \end{axis} \end{tikzpicture} \caption{5V to 3.3V conversion using the level shifter} \label{fig:5v3v3} \end{figure} \begin{figure}[H] \centering \includegraphics[height=.4\textheight, angle=0]{pics/bidirectonal-mosfet-level-shifter.png} \caption{The internal schematics of the level shifter\cite{lvlshift}} \label{fig:schem_lvlshift} \end{figure} \subsubsection{Measurement error} During an attempt to measure wether the level shifters in the final module were working, a measurement between the LV and the HV side showed only a difference of 0.7V. After some troubleshooting, it was found, that the Analog Discovery has clamping diodes against the 3.3V rail shown in figure \ref{fig:ad2_diode}. These diodes produce the 0.7V offset and prevent the parallel bus from rising to 5V when a digial I/O pin of the Analog Discovery 2 is connected to the bus. \cite{DB3S406F0L}. \begin{figure}[H] \centering \includegraphics[height=.4\textheight, angle=0]{pics/ad2_dio.png} \caption{The internal clamping diodes of the Analog Discovery 2\cite{ad2}} \label{fig:ad2_diode} \end{figure} \subsubsection{Final Module} The final module can be seen in figure \ref{fig:fpga_mod} without the FPGA attached. The blue modules below are the level shifters. \begin{figure}[H] \centering \includegraphics[width=\textwidth, angle=0]{pics/fpga_int} \caption{The final FPGA interface module with the level shifters} \label{fig:fpga_mod} \end{figure}