Datasheet IS89C52-40PQI, IS89C52-40PQ, IS89C52-24WI, IS89C52-24W, IS89C52-24PQI Datasheet (ISSI)

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IS89C52
IS89C52
ISSI
ISSI
®
®
CMOS SINGLE CHIP 8-BIT MICROCONTROLLER with 8-Kbytes of FLASH
FEATURES
• 80C51 based architecture
• 8-Kbytes of on-chip Reprogrammable Flash Memory
• 256 x 8 RAM
• Three 16-bit Timer/Counters
• Full duplex serial channel
• Boolean processor
• Four 8-bit I/O ports, 32 I/O lines
• Memory addressing capability – 64K ROM and 64K RAM
• Program memory lock – Lock bits (3)
• Power save modes: – Idle and power-down
• Eight interrupt sources
• Most instructions execute in 0.3 µs
• CMOS and TTL compatible
• Maximum speed: 40 MHz @ Vcc = 5V
• Industrial temperature available
• Packages available: – 40-pin DIP – 44-pin PLCC – 44-pin PQFP
NOVEMBER 1998
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The ISSI IS89C52 is a high-performance microcontroller fabricated using high-density CMOS technology. The CMOS IS89C52 is functionally compatible with the industry standard 80C51 microcontrollers.
The IS89C52 is designed with 8-Kbytes of Flash memory, 258 x 8 RAM; 32 programmable I/O lines; a serial I/O port for either multiprocessor communications, I/O expansion or full duplex UART; three 16-bit timer/counters; an eight-source, two-priority-level, nested interrupt structure; and an on-chip oscillator and clock circuit. The IS89C52 can be expanded using standard TTL compatible memory.
40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21
VCC P0.0/AD0 P0.1/AD1 P0.2/AD2 P0.3/AD3 P0.4/AD4 P0.5/AD5 P0.6/AD6 P0.7/AD7 EA/VPP ALE/PROG PSEN P2.7/A15 P2.6/A14 P2.5/A13 P2.4/A12 P2.3/A11 P2.2/A10 P2.1/A9 P2.0/A8
T2/P1.0
T2EX/P1.1
P1.2 P1.3 P1.4 P1.5 P1.6 P1.7 RST
RxD/P3.0
TxD/P3.1 INT0/P3.2 INT1/P3.3
T0/P3.4 T1/P3.5
WR/P3.6
RD/P3.7
XTAL2 XTAL1
GND
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
Figure 1. IS89C52 Pin Configuration: 40-pin PDIP
ISSI reserves the right to make changes to its products at any time without notice in order to improve design and supply the best possible product. We assume no responsibility for any errors which may appear in this publication. © Copyright 1998, Integrated Silicon Solution, Inc.
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IS89C52
INDEX
P1.5
®
ISSI
P1.4
P1.3
P1.2
P1.1/T2EX
P1.0/T2NCVCC
4365 2144
7
P0.0/AD0
P0.1/AD1
P0.2/AD2
43 42 41 40
P0.3/AD3
39
P0.4/AD4 P1.6 P1.7 RST
RxD/P3.0
NC
TxD/P3.1 INT0/P3.2 INT1/P3.3
T0/P3.4 T1/P3.5
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
18 19 20 21 22 23 24
XTAL2
RD/P3.7
WR/P3.6
Figure 2. IS89C52 Pin Configuration: 44-pin PLCC
TOP VIEW
GND
XTAL1
NC
25 26 27 28
A8/P2.0
A9/P2.1
A10/P2.2
38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 30 29
A11/P2.3
A12/P2.4
P0.5/AD5 P0.6/AD6 P0.7/AD7 EA/VPP NC ALE/PROG PSEN P2.7/A15 P2.6/A14 P2.5/A13
2
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P1.5 P1.6 P1.7 RST
RxD/P3.0
NC
TxD/P3.1 INT0/P3.2 INT1/P3.3
T0/P3.4 T1/P3.5
P1.4
P1.3
P1.2
P1.1/T2EX
P1.0/T2NCV
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
CC
P0.0/AD0
38
37 36 35 3444 43 42 41 40 39
19 20 21 22
P0.1/AD1
P0.2/AD2
P0.3/AD3
33 32 31 30 29 29 27 26 25 24 23
P0.4/AD4 P0.5/AD5 P0.6/AD6 P0.7/AD7 EA NC ALE PSEN P2.7/A15 P2.6/A14 P2.5/A13
XTAL2
RD/P3.7
WR/P3.6
XTAL1
Figure 3. IS89C52 Pin Configuration: 44-pin PQFP
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GND
NC
A8/P2.0
A9/P2.1
A10/P2.2
A11/P2.3
A12/P2.4
3
IS89C52
®
ISSI
Vcc
GND
RAM ADDR
REGISTER
B
REGISTER
P2.0-P2.7
P2
DRIVERS
ADDRESS DECODER
& 256
BYTES RAM
STACK POINT
PCON SCON TMOD TCON
T2CON TH0 TL0 TH1
TL1 TH2 TL2 RCAP2H
RCAP2L SBUF IE IP
INTERRUPT BLOCK
SERIAL PORT BLOCK
TIMER BLOCK
P2
LATCH
ACC
LATCH
TMP2
P0.0-P0.7
P0
DRIVERS
P0
ALU
ADDRESS
DECODER
8K FLASH
TMP1
&
3 LOCK BITS
&
32 BYTES
ENCRYPTION
INCREMENTER
PROGRAM
ADDRESS
REGISTER
PROGRAM
COUNTER
PC
PSEN
ALE/PROG
RST
EA/VPP
TIMING
AND
CONTROL
OSCILLATOR
REGISTER
INSTRUCTION
XTAL2XTAL1
PSW
P3
LATCH
P3
DRIVERS
P3.0-P3.7
Figure 4. IS89C52 Block Diagram
P1
LATCH
P1
DRIVERS
P1.0-P1.7
BUFFER
DPTR
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IS89C52
Table 1. Detailed Pin Description Symbol PDIP PLCC PQFP I/O Name and Function
ALE/
PROG
EA
/VPP 31 35 29 I External Access enable: EA must be externally held low to
P0.0-P0.7 39-32 43-36 37-30 I/O Port 0: Port 0 is an 8-bit open-drain, bidirectional I/O port. Port
P1.0-P1.7 1-8 2-9 40-44 I/O Port 1: Port 1 is an 8-bit bidirectional I/O port with internal
P2.0-P2.7 21-28 24-31 18-25 I/O Port 2: Port 2 is an 8-bit bidirectional I/O port with internal
30 33 27 I/O Address Latch Enable: Output pulse for latching the low byte
of the address during an address to the external memory. In normal operation, ALE is emitted at a constant rate of 1/6 the oscillator frequency, and can be used for external timing or clocking. Note that one ALE pulse is skipped during each access to external data memory. This pin is also the Program Pulse input (
enable the device to fetch code from external program memory locations 0000H to FFFFH. If EA is held high, the device executes from internal program memory unless the program counter contains an address greater than 0FFFH. This also receives the 12V programming enable voltage (VPP) during Flash programming.
0 pins that have 1s written to them float and can be used as high­impedance inputs. Port 0 is also the multiplexed low-order address and data bus during accesses to external program and data memory. In this application, it uses strong internal pullups when emitting 1s.
Port 0 also receives the code bytes during programmable memory programming and outputs the code bytes during program verification. External pullups are required during pro­gram verification.
1-3 pullups. Port 1 pins that have 1s written to them are pulled high
by the internal pullups and can be used as inputs. As inputs, Port 1 pins that are externally pulled low will source current because of the internal pullups. (See DC Characteristics: IIL). The Port 1 output buffers can sink/source four TTL inputs.
Port 1 also receives the low-order address byte during Flash programming and verification.
1240IT2(P1.0): Timer/Counter 2 external count input. 2341IT2EX(P1.1): Timer/Counter 2 trigger input.
pullups. Port 2 pins that have 1s written to them are pulled high by the internal pullups and can be used as inputs. As inputs, Port 2 pins that are externally pulled low will source current because of the internal pullups. (See DC Characteristics: IIL). Port 2 emits the high order address byte during fetches from external program memory and during accesses to external data memory that used 16-bit addresses (MOVX @ DPTR). In this application, Port 2 uses strong internal pullups when emitting 1s. During accesses to external data memory that use 8-bit addresses (MOVX @ Ri [i = 0, 1]), Port 2 emits the contents of the P2 Special Function Register.
Port 2 also receives the high-order bits and some control signals during Flash programming and verification. P2.6 and P2.7 are the control signals while the chip programs and erases.
PROG
) during Flash programming.
ISSI
®
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IS89C52
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Table 1. Detailed Pin Description Symbol PDIP PLCC PQFP I/O Name and Function
P3.0-P3.7 10-17 11, 13-19 5, 7-13 I/O Port 3: Port 3 is an 8-bit bidirectional I/O port with internal
10 11 5 I RxD (P3.0): Serial input port. 11 13 7 O TxD (P3.1): Serial output port. 12 14 8 I 13 15 9 I 14 16 10 I T0 (P3.4): Timer 0 external input. 15 17 11 I T1 (P3.5): Timer 1 external input. 16 18 12 O 17 19 13 O
PSEN
RST 9 10 4 I Reset: A high on this pin for two machine cycles while the
29 32 26 O Program Store Enable: The read strobe to external program
(continued)
pullups. Port 3 pins that have 1s written to them are pulled high by the internal pullups and can be used as inputs. As inputs, Port 3 pins that are externally pulled low will source current because of the internal pullups. (See DC Characteristics: IIL).
Port 3 also serves the special features of the IS89C52, as listed below:
INT0INT0
INT0
(P3.2): External interrupt 0.
INT0INT0 INT1INT1
INT1
(P3.3): External interrupt 1.
INT1INT1
WRWR
WR
(P3.6): External data memory write strobe.
WRWR RDRD
RD
(P3.7): External data memory read strobe.
RDRD
memory. When the device is executing code from the external program memory, except that two access to external data memory. fetches from internal program memory.
oscillator is running, resets the device. An internal MOS resistor to GND permits a power-on reset using only an external capacitor connected to Vcc.
PSEN
is activated twice each machine cycle
PSEN
activations are skipped during each
PSEN
is not activated during
XTAL 1 19 21 15 I Crystal 1: Input to the inverting oscillator amplifier and input
to the internal clock generator circuits. XTAL 2 18 20 14 O Crystal 2: Output from the inverting oscillator amplifier. GND 20 22 16 I Ground: 0V reference. Vcc 40 44 38 I Power Supply: This is the power supply voltage for operation.
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IS89C52
OPERATING DESCRIPTION
®
ISSI
The detail description of the IS89C52 included in this description are:
• Memory Map and Registers
• Timer/Counters
• Serial Interface
• Interrupt System
• Other Information
• Flash Memory
MEMORY MAP AND REGISTERS Memory
The IS89C52 has separate address spaces for program and data memory. The program and data memory can be up to 64K bytes long. The lower 8K program memory can reside on-chip. Figure 5 shows a map of the IS89C52 program and data memory.
The IS89C52 has 256 bytes of on-chip RAM, plus numbers of special function registers. The lower 128 bytes can be accessed either by direct addressing or by indirect
addressing. Figure 6 shows internal data memory organization and SFR Memory Map.
The lower 128 bytes of RAM can be divided into three segments as listed below and shown in Figure 7.
1.
Register Banks 0-3:
locations 00H through 1FH (32
bytes). The device after reset defaults to register bank
0. To use the other register banks, the user must select them in software. Each register bank contains eight 1-byte registers R0-R7. Reset initializes the stack point to location 07H, and is incremented once to start from 08H, which is the first register of the second register bank.
2.
Bit Addressable Area:
16 bytes have been assigned for this segment 20H-2FH. Each one of the 128 bits of this segment can be directly addressed (0-7FH). Each of the 16 bytes in this segment can also be addressed as a byte.
3.
Scratch Pad Area:
30H-7FH are available to the user as data RAM. However, if the data pointer has been initialized to this area, enough bytes should be left aside to prevent SP data destruction.
FFFFH:
64K
EA = 0
External
PSEN
Program Memory
(Read Only)
1FFFH:
8K
0000
FFH:
EA = 1
Internal
Data Memory
(Read/Write)
External
Internal
00
Figure 5. IS89C52 Program and Data Memory Structure
FFFFH:
0000
RD WR
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IS89C52
SPECIAL FUNCTION REGISTERS
®
ISSI
The Special Function Registers (SFR's) are located in upper 128 Bytes direct addressing area. The SFR Memory Map in Figure 6 shows that.
Not all of the addresses are occupied. Unoccupied addresses are not implemented on the chip. Read accesses to these addresses in general return random data, and write accesses have no effect.
User software should not write 1s to these unimplemented locations, since they may be used in future microcontrollers to invoke new features. In that case, the reset or inactive values of the new bits will always be 0, and their active values will be 1.
Upper
128
Lower
128
FFH
80H
7FH
Accessible by Indirect
Addressing
Only
Accessible
by Direct
and Indirect
Addressing
0
Accessible
by Direct
Addressing
Special
Function
Registers
FFH
80H
Ports, Status and Control Bits, Timer, Registers, Stack Pointer, Accumulator (Etc.)
The functions of the SFRs are outlined in the following sections, and detailed in Table 2.
Accumulator (ACC)
ACC is the Accumulator register. The mnemonics for Accumulator-specific instructions, however, refer to the Accumulator simply as A.
B Register (B)
The B register is used during multiply and divide operations. For other instructions it can be treated as another scratch pad register.
Program Status Word (PSW). The PSW register contains program status information.
F8
B
F0 E8
ACC
E0 D8
PSW
D0
T2CON
C8 C0 B8 B0 A8 A0 98 90 88 80
Addressable
IP
P3
IE
P2
SCON
P1
TCON
P0
Bit
SBUF
TMOD
SP
RCAP2L
TL0
DPL
RCAP2H
TL1
DPH
TL2
TH0
TH2
TH1
PCON
FF F7 EF E7 DF D7 CF C7 BF B7 AF A7 9F 97 8F 87
Figure 6. Internal Data Memory and SFR Memory Map
8 BYTES
78 70 68 60 58 50 48 40 38 30 28
0 ...
20 18 10 08 00
BANK3
BANK2 BANK 1 BANK 0
...7F
7F 77 6F 67 5F 57 4F 47 3F 37 2F
ADDRESSABLE
27 1F 17 0F 07
SCRATCH
PAD
AREA
BIT
SEGMENT
REGISTER
BANKS
Figure 7. Lower 128 Bytes of Internal RAM
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IS89C52
SPECIAL FUNCTION REGISTERS
(Continued)
®
ISSI
Stack Pointer (SP)
The Stack Pointer Register is eight bits wide. It is incremented before data is stored during PUSH and CALL executions. While the stack may reside anywhere in on­chip RAM, the Stack Pointer is initialized to 07H after a reset. This causes the stack to begin at location 08H.
Data Pointer (DPTR)
The Data Pointer consists of a high byte (DPH) and a low byte (DPL). Its function is to hold a 16-bit address. It may be manipulated as a 16-bit register or as two independent 8-bit registers.
Ports 0 To 3
P0, P1, P2, and P3 are the SFR latches of Ports 0, 1, 2, and 3, respectively.
Serial Data Buffer (SBUF)
The Serial Data Buffer is actually two separate registers, a transmit buffer and a receive buffer register. When data is moved to SBUF, it goes to the transmit buffer, where it is held for serial transmission. (Moving a byte to SBUF initiates the transmission.) When data is moved from SBUF, it comes from the receive buffer.
Timer Registers
Register pairs (TH0, TL0) and (TH1, TL1) are the 16-bit Counter registers for Timer/Counters 0 and 1, respectively.
Capture Registers
The register pair (RCAP2H, RCAP2L) are the Capture registers for the Timer 2 Capture Mode. In this mode, in response to a transition at the IS89C52's T2EX pin, TH2 and TL2 are copied into RCAP2H and RCAP2L. Timer 2 also has a 16-bit auto-reload mode, and RCAP2H and RCAP2L hold the reload value for this mode.
Control Registers
Special Function Registers IP, IE, TMOD, TCON, SCON, and PCON contain control and status bits for the interrupt system, the Timer/Counters, and the serial port. They are described in later sections of this chapter.
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IS89C52
ISSI
Table 2. Special Function Registers
Symbol Description Direct Address Bit Address, Symbol, or Alternative Port Function Reset Value
(1)
ACC
(1)
B
Accumulator E0H E7 E6 E5 E4 E3 E2 E1 E0 00H
B register F0H F7 F6 F5 F4 F3 F2 F1 F0 00H DPH Data pointer (DPTR) high 83H 00H DPL Data pointer (DPTR) low 82H 00H
AF AE AD AC AB AA A9 A8
(1)
IE
Interrupt enable A8H EA ES ET1 EX1 ET0 EX0 0XX00000B
BF BE BD BC BB BA B9 B8
(1)
IP
Interrupt priority B8H PS PT1 PX1 PT0 PX0 XXX00000B
87 86 85 84 83 82 81 80
(1)
P0
Port 0 80H P0.7 P0.6 P0.5 P0.4 P0.3 P0.2 P0.1 P0.0 FFH
AD7 AD6 AD5 AD4 AD3 AD2 AD1 AD0
97 96 95 94 93 92 91 90
(1)
P1
Port 1 90H P1.7 P1.6 P1.5 P1.4 P1.3 P1.2 P1.1 P1.0 FFH
A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0
(1)
P2
Port 2 A0H P2.7 P2.6 P2.5 P2.4 P2.3 P2.2 P2.1 P2.0 FFH
AD15 AD14 AD13 AD12 AD11 AD10 AD9 AD8
B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 B0
(1)
P3
Port 3 B0H P3.7 P3.6 P3.5 P3.4 P3.3 P3.2 P3.1 P3.0 FFH
RD WR
T1 T0
INT1 INT0
TXD RXD
PCON Power control 87H SMOD GF1 GF0 PD IDL 0XXX0000B
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
(1)
PSW
Program status word D0H CY AC F0 RS1 RS0 OV P 00H
SBUF Serial data buffer 99H XXXXXXXXB
9F 9E 9D 9C 9B 9A 99 98
(1)
SCON
Serial controller 98H SM0 SM1 SM2 REN TB8 RB8 TI RI 00H
SP Stack pointer 81H 07H
8F 8E 8D 8C 8B 8A 89 88
(1)
TCON TMOD Timer mode 89H GATE C/
Timer control 88H TF1 TR1 TF0 TR0 IE1 IT1 IE0 IT0 00H
T
M1 M0 GATE C/TM1 M0 00H TH0 Timer high 0 8CH 00H TH1 Timer high 1 8DH 00H TL0 Timer low 0 8AH 00H TL1 Timer low 1 8BH 00H RCAP2H RCAP2L TL2
Notes:
(2)
Capture high CAH 00H
(2)
(2)
1. Denotes bit addressable.
2. SFRs are added to the 80C51 SFRs.
Capture low CBH 00H
Timer low 2 CCH 00H
®
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IS89C52
The detail description of each bit is as follows:
®
ISSI
PSW:
Program Status Word. Bit Addressable.
76543210
CY AC F0 RS1 RS0 OV P
Register Description:
CY PSW.7 Carry flag. AC PSW.6 Auxiliary carry flag. F0 PSW.5 Flag 0 available to the user for general
purpose. RS1 PSW.4 Register bank selector bit 1. RS0 PSW.3 Register bank selector bit 0.
(1)
(1)
OV PSW.2 Overflow flag. — PSW.1 Usable as a general purpose flag P PSW.0 Parity flag. Set/Clear by hardware each
instruction cycle to indicate an odd/even
number of “1” bits in the accumulator.
Note:
1. The value presented by RS0 and RS1 selects the corre­sponding register bank.
RS1 RS0 Register Bank Address
0 0 0 00H-07H 0 1 1 08H-0FH 1 0 2 10H-17H 1 1 3 18H-1FH
PCON:
Power Control Register. Not Bit Addressable.
76543210
SMOD GF1 GF0 PD IDL Register Description:
SMOD Double baud rate bit. If Timer 1 is used to generate
baud rate and SMOD=1, the baud rate is doubled
when the serial port is used in modes 1, 2, or 3. — Not implemented, reserve for future use. — Not implemented, reserve for future use. — Not implemented, reserve for future use. GF1 General purpose flag bit. GF0 General purpose flag bit. PD Power-down bit. Setting this bit activates power-
down mode. IDL Idle mode bit. Setting this bit activates idle mode.
If 1s are written to PD and IDL at the same time,
PD takes precedence.
Note:
1. User software should not write 1s to reserved bits. These bits may be used in future products to invoke new features.
(1)
(1)
(1)
IE:
Interrupt Enable Register. Bit Addressable.
76543210
EA ES ET1 EX1 ET0 EX0
Register Description:
EA IE.7 Disable all interrupts. If EA=0, no
interrupt will be acknowledged. If EA=1, each interrupt source is individually enabled or disabled by setting or clearing its enable bit.
IE.6 Not implemented, reserve for future
IE.5 Not implemented, reserve for future
ES IE.4 Enable or disable the serial port
ET1 IE.3 Enable or disable the Timer 1 overflow
EX1 IE.2 Enable or disable External Interrupt 1. ET0 IE.1 Enable or disable the Timer 0 overflow
EX0 IE.0 Enable or disable External Interrupt 0.
Note: To use any of the interrupts in the 80C51 Family, the
following three steps must be taken:
1. Set the EA (enable all) bit in the IE register to 1.
2. Set the coresponding individual interrupt enable bit in the IE register to 1.
3. Begin the interrupt service routine at the corresponding Vector Address of that interrupt (see below).
Interrupt Source Vector Address
IE0 0003H
TF0 000BH
IE1 0013H
TF1 001BH
RI & TI 0023H
4. In addition, for external interrupts, pins
(P3.2 and P3.3) must be set to 1, and depending on whether the interrupt is to be level or transition acti­vated, bits IT0 or IT1 in the TCON register may need to be set to 0 or 1. ITX = 0 level activated (X = 0, 1) ITX = 1 transition activated
User software should not write 1s to reserved bits. These
5. bits may be used in future products to invoke new features.
(5)
use.
(5)
use.
interrupt.
interrupt.
interrupt.
INT0
and
INT1
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IS89C52
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IP:
Interrupt Priority Register. Bit Addressable.
76543210
PS PT1 PX1 PT0 PX0
Register Description:
IP.7 Not implemented, reserve for future use — IP.6 Not implemented, reserve for future use — IP.5 Not implemented, reserve for future use PS IP.4 Defines Serial Port interrupt priority level PT1 IP.3 Defines Timer 1 interrupt priority level PX1 IP.2 Defines External Interrupt 1 priority level PT0 IP.1 Defines Timer 0 interrupt priority level PX0 IP.0 Defines External Interrupt 0 priority level
Notes:
1. In order to assign higher priority to an interrupt the coresponding bit in the IP register must be set to 1. While an interrupt service is in progress, it cannot be interrupted by a lower or same level interrupt.
2. Priority within level is only to resolve simultaneous requests of the same priority level. From high-to-low, interrupt sources are listed below:
IE0 TF0 IE1 TF1 RI or TI TF2 or EXF2
User software should not write 1s to reserved bits. These
3. bits may be used in future products to invoke new features.
TCON:
Timer/Counter Control Register. Bit Addressable
76543210
TF1 TR1 TF0 TR0 IE1 IT1 IE0 IT0
Register Description:
(3)
TF1 TCON.7 Timer 1 overflow flag. Set by hardware
(3)
(3)
TR1 TCON.6 Timer 1 run control bit. Set/Cleared by
TF0 TCON.5 Timer 0 overflow flag. Set by hardware
TR0 TCON.4 Timer 0 run control bit. Set/Cleared by
IE1 TCON.3 External Interrupt 1 edge flag. Set by
IT1 TCON.2 Interrupt 1 type control bit. Set/Cleared
IE0 TCON.1 External Interrupt 0 edge flag. Set by
IT0 TCON.0 Interrupt 0 type control bit. Set/Cleared
when the Timer/Counter 1 overflows. Cleared by hardware as processor vectors to the interrupt service routine.
software to turn Timer/Counter 1 ON/ OFF.
when the Timer/Counter 0 overflows. Cleared by hardware as processor vectors to the interrupt service routine.
software to turn Timer/Counter 0 ON/ OFF.
hardware when the External Interrupt edge is detected. Cleared by hardware when interrupt is processed.
by software specify falling edge/low level triggered External Interrupt.
hardware when the External Interrupt edge is detected. Cleared by hardware when interrupt is processed.
by software specify falling edge/low level triggered External Interrupt.
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TMOD:
Timer/Counter Mode Control Register. Not Bit Addressable.
Timer 1 Timer 0
GATE C/
TT
T
M1 M0 GATE C/
TT
GATE When TRx (in TCON) is set and GATE=1, TIMER/
COUNTERx will run only while (hardware control). When GATE=0, TIMER/ COUNTERx will run only while TRx=1 (software control).
C/
T
Timer or Counter selector. Cleared for Timer
operation (input from internal system clock). Set
for Counter operation (input from Tx input pin). M1 Mode selector bit. M0 Mode selector bit.
Note 1:
M1 M0 Operating Mode
0 0 Mode 0. (13-bit Timer) 0 1 Mode 1. (16-bit Timer/Counter) 1 0 Mode 2. (8-bit auto-load Timer/Counter) 1 1 Mode 3. (Splits Timer 0 into TL0 and
TH0. TL0 is an 8-bit Timer/Counter controller by the standard Timer 0 control bits. TH0 is an 8-bit Timer and is controlled by Timer 1 control bits.)
1 1 Mode 3. (Timer/Counter 1 stopped).
(1)
(1)
TT
T
M1 M0
TT
INTx
pin is high
SCON:
Serial Port Control Register. Bit Addressable.
76543210
SM0 SM1 SM2 REN TB8 RB8 TI RI
Register Description:
SM0 SCON.7 Serial port mode specifier. SM1 SCON.6 Serial port mode specifier. SM2 SCON.5 Enable the multiprocessor com-
munication feature in mode 2 and 3. In mode 2 or 3, if SM2 is set to 1 then RI will not be activated if the received 9th data bit (RB8) is 0. In mode 1, if SM2=1 then RI will not be activated if valid stop bit was not received. In mode 0, SM2 should be 0.
REN SCON.4 Set/Cleared by software to Enable/
Disable reception.
TB8 SCON.3 The 9th bit that will be transmitted in
mode 2 and 3. Set/Cleared by software.
RB8 SCON.2 In modes 2 and 3, RB8 is the 9th data
bit that was received. In mode 1, if SM2=0, RB8 is the stop bit that was received. In mode 0, RB8 is not used.
TI SCON.1 Transmit interrupt flag. Set by hardware
at the end of the eighth bit time in mode 0, or at the beginning of the stop bit in the other modes. Must be cleared by software.
RI SCON.0 Receive interrupt flag. Set by hardware
at the end of the eighth bit time in mode 0, or halfway through the stop bit time in the other modes (except see SM2). Must be cleared by software.
(1)
(1)
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Note 1:
SM0 SM1 MODE Description Baud Rate
0 0 0 Shift register Fosc/12 0 1 1 8-bit UART Variable 1 0 2 9-bit UART Fosc/64 or
Fosc/32
1 1 3 9-bit UART Variable
13
IS89C52
T2CON:
Timer/Counter 2 Control Register. Bit Addressable.
76543210
TF2 EXF2 RCLK TCLK EXEN2 TR2 C/
T2T2
T2
T2T2
Register Description:
TF2 T2CON.7 Timer 2 overflow flag set by hardware
and cleared by software. TF2 cannot be set when either RCLK = 1 or TCLK = 1.
EXF2 T2CON.6 Timer 2 external flag set when either a
capture or reload is caused by a negative transition on T2EX, and EXEN2 = 1. When Timer 2 interrupt is enabled, EXF2 = 1 causes the CPU to vector to the Timer 2 interrupt routine. EXF2 must be cleared by software.
RCLK T2CON.5 Receive clock flag. When set, causes
the Serial Port to use Timer 2 overflow pulses for its receive clock in modes 1 and 3. RCLK = 0 causes Timer 1 overflow to be used for the receive clock.
TLCK T2CON.4 Transmit clock flag. When set, causes
the Serial Port to use Timer 2 overflow pulses for its transmit clock in modes 1 and 3. TCLK = 0 causes Timer 1 overflows to be used for the transmit clock.
EXEN2 T2CON.3 Timer 2 external enable flag.
When set, allows a capture or reload to occur as a result of negative transition on T2EX if Timer 2 is not being used to clock the Serial Port, EXEN2 = 0 causes Timer 2 to ignore events at T2EX.
CP/
RL2RL2
RL2
RL2RL2
ISSI
TR2 T2CON.2 Software START/STOP control for
Timer 2. A logic 1 starts the Timer.
C/T2T2CON.1 Timer or Counter select.
0 = Internal Timer. 1 = External Event Counter (triggered by falling edge).
CP/
RL2
Note:
1. Timer 2 Operating Modes
RCLK + TCLK CP/
0 0 1 16-Bit Auto-Reload 0 1 1 16-Bit Capture 1 X 1 Baud Rate Generator X X 0 (Off)
T2CON.0 Capture/Reload flag. When set, captures occur on negative transitions at T2EX if EXEN2 = 1. When cleared, auto-reloads occur either with Timer 2 overflows or negative transitions at T2EX when EXEN2 = 1. When either RCLK = 1 or TCLK = 1, this bit is ignored and the Timer is forced to auto-reload on Timer 2 overflow.
RL2RL2
RL2
TR2 MODE
RL2RL2
®
14
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IS89C52
TIMER/COUNTERS
®
ISSI
The IS89C52 has two 16-bit Timer/Counter registers: Timer 0 and Timer 1. All two can be configured to operate either as Timers or event Counters.
As a Timer, the register is incremented every machine cycle. Thus, the register counts machine cycles. Since a machine cycle consists of 12 oscillator periods, the count rate is 1/12 of the oscillator frequency.
As a Counter, the register is incremented in response to a 1-to-0 transition at its corresponding external input pin, T0 and T1. The external input is sampled during S5P2 of every machine cycle. When the samples show a high in one cycle and a low in the next cycle, the count is incremented. The new count value appears in the register during S3P1 of the cycle following the one in which the transition was detected. Since two machine cycles (24 oscillator periods) are required to recognize a 1-to-0 transition, the maximum count rate is 1/24 of the oscillator frequency. There are no restrictions on the duty cycle of the external input signal, but it should be held for at least one full machine cycle to ensure that a given level is sampled at least once before it changes.
In addition to the Timer or Counter functions, Timer 0 and Timer 1 have four operating modes: 13-bit timer, 16-bit timer, 8-bit auto-reload, split timer. Timer 2 in the IS89C52 has three modes of operation: Capture, Auto-Reoload, and Baud Rate Generator.
Timer 0 and Timer 1
The Timer or Counter function is selected by control bits C/T in the Special Function Regiser TMOD. These two Timer/Counters have four operating modes, which are selected by bit pairs (M1, M0) in TMOD. Modes 0, 1, and 2 are the same for both Timer/Counters, but Mode 3 is different. The four modes are described in the following sections.
Mode 0:
Both Timers in Mode 0 are 8-bit Counters with a divide-by-32 prescaler. Figure 8 shows the Mode 0 operation as it applies to Timer 1.
In this mode, the Timer register is configured as a 13-bit register. As the count rolls over from all 1s to all 0s, it sets the Timer interrupt flag TF1. The counted input is enabled to the Timer when TR1 = 1 and either GATE = 0 or GATE = 1 allows the Timer to be controlled by external input
INT1
, to facilitate pulse width measurements. TR1 is a control bit in the Special Function Register TCON. Gate is in TMOD.
The 13-bit register consists of all eight bits of TH1 and the lower five bits of TL1. The upper three bits of TL1 are indeterminate and should be ignored. Setting the run flag (TR1) does not clear the registers.
Mode 0 operation is the same for Timer 0 as for Timer 1, except that TR0, TF0 and
INT0
replace the corresponding Timer 1 signals in Figure 8. There are two different GATE bits, one for Timer 1 (TMOD.7) and one for Timer 0 (TMOD.3).
INT1
= 1. Setting
ONE MACHINE
CYCLE
S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1
C/T = 0
C/T = 1
OSC
(XTAL2)
OSC
S1 S2 S3
P2
P1
DIVIDE 12
T1 PIN
GATE
INT1 PIN
P1 P2 P1 P2 P1 P2 P1 P2 P1 P2 P1 P2 P1 P2 P1 P2 P1P2P1P2 P1 P2P1 P2
TR1
Figure 8. Timer/Counter 1 Mode 0: 13-Bit Counter
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(5 BITS)
CONTROL
TL1
ONE MACHINE
CYCLE
TH1
(8 BITS)
TF1
INTERRUPT
15
IS89C52
®
ISSI
Mode 1:
Mode 1 is the same as Mode 0, except that the Timer register is run with all 16 bits. The clock is applied to the combined high and low timer registers (TL1/TH1). As clock pulses are received, the timer counts up: 0000H, 0001H, 0002H, etc. An overflow occurs on the FFFFH-to-0000H overflow flag. The timer continues to count. The overflow flag is the TF1 bit in TCON that is read or written by software (see Figure 9).
Mode 2:
Mode 2 configures the Timer register as an 8-bit Counter (TL1) with automatic reload, as shown in Figure 10. Overflow from TL1 not only sets TF1, but also reloads TL1 with the contents of TH1, which is preset by software. The reload leaves the TH1 unchanged. Mode 2 operation is the same for Timer/Counter 0.
TIMER
CLOCK
TL1
(8 BITS)
Mode 3:
Timer 1 in Mode 3 simply holds its count. The effect is the same as setting TR1 = 0. Timer 0 in Mode 3 establishes TL0 and TH0 as two separate counters. The logic for Mode 3 on Timer 0 is shown in Figure 11. TL0 uses the Timer 0 control bits: C/T, GATE, TR0,
INT0
, and TF0. TH0 is locked into a timer function (counting machine cycles) and over the use of TR1 and TF1 from Timer 1. Thus, TH0 now controls the Timer 1 interrupt.
Mode 3 is for applications requiring an extra 8-bit timer or counter. With Timer 0 in Mode 3, the IS89C52 can appear to have four Timer/Counters. When Timer 0 is in Mode 3, Timer 1 can be turned on and off by switching it out of and into its own Mode 3. In this case, Timer 1 can still be used by the serial port as a baud rate generator or in any application not requiring an interrupt.
TH1
(8 BITS)
TF1
OSC
DIVIDE 12
T1 PIN
GATE
INT0 PIN
Figure 9. Timer/Counter 1 Mode 1: 16-Bit Counter
C/T = 0
TL1
(8 BITS)
C/T = 1
CONTROL
TR1
TH1
(8 BITS)
RELOAD
OVERFLOW
FLAG
TF1
INTERRUPT
16
Figure 10. Timer/Counter 1 Mode 2: 8-Bit Auto-Reload
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®
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OSC
DIVIDE 12 1/12 FOSC
1/12 FOSC
T0 PIN
GATE
INT0 PIN
1/12 FOSC
C/T = 0
TL0
(8 BITS)
C/T = 1
TR0
TR1
CONTROL
TH0
(8 BITS)
CONTROL
Figure 11. Timer/Counter 0 Mode 3: Two 8-Bit Counters
TF0
TF1
INTERRUPT
INTERRUPT
Timer 2
This is a powerful addition to the other two just discussed. Five extra special function registers are added to accommodate Timer 2 which are: the timer registers, TL2 and TH2, the timer control register, T2CON, and the capture registers, RCAP2L and RCAP2H. Like Timers 0 and 1, it can operate either as a timer or as an event counter, depending on the value of bit C/T2 in the Special Function Register T2CON. Timer 2 has three operating modes: capture, auto-reload, and baud rate generator, which are selected by RCLK, TCLK, CP/
In the Capture Mode, the EXEN2 bit in T2CON selects two options. If EXEN2 = 0, then Timer 2 is a 16-bit timer or counter whose overflow sets bit TF2, the Timer 2 overflow bit, which can be used to generate an interrupt. If EXEN2 = 1, then Timer 2 performs the same way, but a 1-to-0 transition at external input T2EX also causes the current value in the Timer 2 registers, TL2 and TH2, to be captured
RL2
, and TR2.
into the RCAP2L and RCAP2H registers, respectively. In addition, the transition at T2EX sets the EXF2 bit in T2CON, and EXF2, like TF2, can generate an interrupt.
The Capture Mode is illustrated in Figure 12. In the auto-reload mode, the EXEN2 bit in T2CON also
selects two options. If EXEN2 = 0, then when Timer 2 rolls over it sets TF2 and also reloads the Timer 2 registers with the 16-bit value in the RCAP2L and RCAP2H registers, which are preset by software. If EXEN2 = 1, then Timer 2 performs the same way, but a 1-to-0 transition at external input T2EX also triggers the 16-bit reload and sets EXF2.
The auto-reload mode is illustrated in Figure 13. The baud rate generator mode is selected by RCLK = 1
and/or TCLK = 1. This mode is described in conjunction with the serial port (see Figure 14).
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
OSC
T2EX PIN
OSC
T2EX PIN
T2 PIN
DIVIDE 12
T2 PIN
DIVIDE 12
TRANSITION
DETECTOR
TRANSITION
DETECTOR
EXEN2
C/T2 = 0
C/T2 = 1
EXEN2
C/T2 = 0
C/T2 = 1
CONTROL
CONTROL
TR2
CAPTURE
TL2
(8 BITS)
RCAP2L
TH2
(8 BITS)
RCAP2H
Figure 12. Timer 2 In Capture Mode
CONTROL
CONTROL
TR2
RELOAD
TL2
(8 BITS)
RCAP2L
TH2
(8 BITS)
RCAP2H
TF2
EXF2
TF2
EXF2
TIMER 2
INTERRUPT
TIMER 2
INTERRUPT
Figure 13. Timer 2 in Auto-Reload Mode
NOTE: OSC FREQ.
IS DIV BY 2, NOT 12
OSC
T2EX PIN
T2 PIN
DIVIDE 2
TRANSITION
DETECTOR
EXEN2
C/T2 = 0
C/T2 = 1
CONTROL
CONTROL
TR2
EXF2
Figure 14. Timer 2 in Baud Rate Generator Mode
Note:
T2EX can be used as an additional external interrupt.
TL2
(8 BITS)
RCAP2L
TIMER 2
INTERRUPT
TH2
(8 BITS)
RCAP2H
RELOAD
"1"
TIMER 1
OVERFLOW
DIVIDE 2
"0"
"0"
"0""1"
"1"
SMOD
RCLK
DIVIDE 16
TCLK
DIVIDE 16
RX CLOCK
TX CLOCK
18
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
Timer Setup
Tables 3 through 6 give TMOD values that can be used to set up Timers in different modes.
It assumes that only one timer is used at a time. If Timers 0 and 1 must run simultaneously in any mode, the value in TMOD for Timer 0 must be ORed with the value shown for Timer 1 (Tables 5 and 6).
For example, if Timer 0 must run in Mode 1 GATE (external control), and Timer 1 must run in Mode 2 COUNTER, then the value that must be loaded into TMOD is 69H (09H from Table 3 ORed with 60H from Table 6).
Moreover, it is assumed that the user is not ready at this point to turn the timers on and will do so at another point in the program by setting bit TRx (in TCON) to 1.
Table 3. Timer/Counter 0 Used as a Timer
TMOD
Mode Timer 0 Internal External
Function Control
0 13-Bit Timer 00H 08H 1 16-Bit Timer 01H 09H 2 8-Bit Auto-Reload 02H 0AH 3 Two 8-Bit Timers 03H 0BH
(1)
Control
(2)
Table 5. Timer/Counter 1 Used as a Timer
TMOD
Mode Timer 1 Internal External
Function Control
(1)
Control
0 13-Bit Timer 00H 80H 1 16-Bit Timer 10H 90H 2 8-Bit Auto-Reload 20H A0H 3 Does Not Run 30H B0H
Table 6. Timer/Counter 1 Used as a Counter
TMOD
Mode Timer 1 Internal External
Function Control
(1)
Control
0 13-Bit Timer 40H C0H 1 16-Bit Timer 50H D0H 2 8-Bit Auto-Reload 60H E0H 3 Not Available
Notes:
1. The Timer is turned ON/OFF by setting/clearing bit TR1 in the software.
2. The Timer is turned ON/OFF by the 1-to-0 transition on
INT1
(P3.3) when TR1 = 1 (hardware control).
(2)
(2)
Table 4. Timer/Counter 0 Used as a Counter
TMOD
Mode Timer 0 Internal External
Function Control
(1)
Control 0 13-Bit Timer 04H 0CH 1 16-Bit Timer 05H 0DH 2 8-Bit Auto-Reload 06H 0EH 3 One 8-Bit Counter 07H 0FH
Notes:
1. The Timer is turned ON/OFF by setting/clearing bit TR0 in the software.
2. The Timer is turned ON/OFF by the 1 to 0 transition on
INT0
(P3.2) when TR0 = 1 (hardware control).
(2)
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IS89C52
®
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Timer/Counter 2 Set-Up
Except for the baud rate generator mode, the values given for T2C0N do not include the setting of the TR2 bit. Therefore, bit TR2 must be set separately to turn the Timer on.
Table 7. Timer/Counter 2 Used as a Timer
T2CON
Mode Internal External
Control
16-Bit Auto-Reload 00H 08H 16-Bit Capture 01H 09H Baud Rate Generator Receive 34H 36H
and Transmit Same Baud Rate Receive Only 24H 26H Transmit Only 14H 16H
Table 8. Timer/Counter 2 Used as a Counter
Mode Internal External
Control
16-Bit Auto-Reload 02H 0AH 16-Bit Capture 03H 0BH
Notes:
1. Capture/Reload occurs only on Timer/Counter overflow.
2. Capture/Reload occurs on Timer/Counter overflow and a 1-to-0 transition on T2EX (P1.1) pin except when Timer 2 is used in the baud rate generating mode.
(1)
TMOD
(1)
Control
Control
(2)
(2)
SERIAL INTERFACE
The Serial port is full duplex, which means it can transmit and receive simultaneously. It is also receive-buffered, which means it can begin receiving a second byte before a previously received byte has been read from the receive register. (However, if the first byte still has not been read when reception of the second byte is complete, one of the bytes will be lost.) The serial port receive and transmit registers are both accessed at Special Function Register SBUF. Writing to SBUF loads the transmit register, and reading SBUF accesses a physically separate receive register.
The serial port can operate in the following four modes:
Mode 0:
Serial data enters and exits through RXD. TXD outputs the shift clock. Eight data bits are transmitted/received, with the LSB first. The baud rate is fixed at 1/12 the oscillator frequency (see Figure 15).
Mode 1:
Ten bits are transmitted (through TXD) or received (through RXD): a start bit (0), eight data bits (LSB first), and a stop bit (1). On receive, the stop bit goes into RB8 in Special Function Register SCON. The baud rate is variable (see Figure 16).
Mode 2:
Eleven bits are transmitted (through TXD) or received (through RXD): a start bit (0), eight data bits (LSB first), a programmable ninth data bit, and a stop bit (1). On transmit, the ninth data bit (TB8 in SCON) can be assigned the value of 0 or 1. Or, for example, the parity bit (P, in the PSW) can be moved into TB8. On receive, the ninth data bit goes into RB8 in Special Function Register SCON, while the stop bit is ignored. The baud rate is programmable to either 1/32 or 1/64 the oscillator frequency (see Figure 17).
20
Mode 3:
Eleven bits are transmitted (through TXD) or received (through RXD): a start bit (0), eight data bits (LSB first), a programmable ninth data bit, and a stop bit (1). In fact, Mode 3 is the same as Mode 2 in all respects except the baud rate, which is variable in Mode 3 (see Figure 18).
In all four modes, transmission is initiated by any instruction that uses SBUF as a destination register. Reception is initiated in Mode 0 by the condition RI = 0 and REN = 1. Reception is initiated in the other modes by the incoming start bit if REN = 1.
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®
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Multiprocessor Communications
Modes 2 and 3 have a special provision for multiprocessor communications. In these modes, nine data bits are received, followed by a stop bit. The ninth bit goes into RB8; then comes a stop bit. The port can be programmed such that when the stop bit is received, the serial port interrupt is activated only if RB8 = 1. This feature is enabled by setting bit SM2 in SCON.
The following example shows how to use the serial interrupt for multiprocessor communications. When the master processor must transmit a block of data to one of several slaves, it first sends out an address byte that identifies the target slave. An address byte differs from a data byte in that the ninth bit is 1 in an address byte and 0 in a data byte. With SM2 = 1, no slave is interrupted by a data byte. An address byte, however, interrupts all slaves, so that each slave can examine the received byte and see if it is being addressed. The addressed slave clears its SM2 bit and prepares to receive the data bytes that follows. The slaves that are not addressed set their SM2 bits and ignore the data bytes.
SM2 has no effect in Mode 0 but can be used to check the validity of the stop bit in Mode 1. In a Mode 1 reception, if SM2 = 1, the receive interrupt is not activated unless a valid stop bit is received.
Baud Rates
The baud rate in Mode 0 is fixed as shown in the following equation.
Using the Timer 1 to Generate Baud Rates
When Timer 1 is the baud rate generator, the baud rates in Modes 1 and 3 are determined by the Timer 1 overflow rate and the value of SMOD according to the following equation.
Mode 1, 3 2 Baud Rate =
SMOD
32
(Timer 1 Overflow Rate)
X
The Timer 1 interrupt should be disabled in this application. The Timer itself can be configured for either timer or counter operation in any of its three running modes. In the most typical applications, it is configured for timer operation in auto-reload mode (high nibble of TMOD = 0010B). In this case, the baud rate is given by the following formula.
Mode 1,3 2 Baud Rate
=
SMOD
32 12x [256 – (TH1)]
Oscillator Frequency
X
Programmers can achieve very low baud rates with Timer 1 by leaving the Timer 1 interrupt enabled, configuring the Timer to run as a 16-bit timer (high nibble of TMOD = 0001B), and using the Timer 1 interrupt to do a 16-bit software reload.
Table 9 lists commonly used baud rates and how they can be obtained from Timer 1.
Oscillator Frequency
Mode 0 Baud Rate =
12
The baud rate in Mode 2 depends on the value of the SMOD bit in Special Function Register PCON. If SMOD = 0 (the value on reset), the baud rate is 1/64 of the oscillator frequency. If SMOD = 1, the baud rate is 1/32 of the oscillator frequency, as shown in the following equation.
SMOD
Mode 2 Baud Rate =
2
x (Oscillator Frequency)
64
In the IS89C52, these baud rates can be determined by Timer 1, Timer 2, or both (one for transmit and the other for receive).
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Using Timer 2 to Generate Baud Rates
In the IS89C52, setting TCLK and/or RCLK in T2CON selects Timer 2 as the baud rate generator. Under these conditions, the baud rates for transmit and receive can be simultaneously different. Setting RCLK and/or TCLK puts Timer 2 into its baud rate generator mode, as shown in Figure 14.
The baud rate generator mode is similar to the auto-reload mode, in that a rollover in TH2 reloads the Timer 2 registers with the 16-bit value in the RCAP2H and RCAP2L registers, which are preset by software.
In this case, the baud rates in Mode 1 and 3 are determined by the Timer 2 overflow rate according to the following equation.
Modes 1, 3 Baud Rate =
Timer 2 can be configured for either timer or counter operation. In the most typical applications, it is configured for timer operation (C/T2 = 0). Normally, a timer increments every machine cycle (thus, at 1/12 the oscillator frequency), but timer operation is a different for Timer 2 when it is used as a baud rate generator. As a baud rate generator, Timer 2 increments every state time (thus at 1/2 the oscillator frequency). In this case, the baud rate is given by the following formula.
Timer 2 Overflow Rate
16
Where (RCAP2H, RCAP2L) is the content of RCAP2H and RCAP2L taken as a 16-bit unsigned integer.
Figure 13 shows Timer 2 as a baud rate generator. This figure is valid only if RCLK + TCLK = 1 in T2CON. A rollover in TH2 does not set TF2 and does no generate an interrupt. Therefore, the Timer 2 interrupt does not have to be disabled when Timer 2 is in the baud rate generator mode. If EXEN2 is set, a 1-to-0 transition in T2EX sets EXF2 but does not cause a reload from (RCAP2H, RCAP2L) to (TH2, TL2). Thus, when Timer 2 is used as a baud rate generator, T2EX can be used as an extra external interrupt.
When Timer 2 is running (TR2 = 1) as a timer in the baud rate generator mode, programmers should not read from or write to TH2 or TL2. Under these conditions, Timer 2 is incremented every state time, and the results of a read or write may not be accurate. The RCAP registers may be read, but should not be written to, because a write might overlap a reload and cause write and/or reload errors. Turn Timer 2 off (clear TR2) before accessing the Timer 2 or RCAP registers, in this case.
Modes 1, 3 Oscillator Frequency Baud Rate
Table 9. Commonly Used Baud Rates Generated by Timer 1
Baud Rate fOSC SMOD C/
Mode 0 Max: 1 MHz 12 MHz X X X X
Mode 2 Max: 375K 12 MHz 1 X X X
Modes 1, 3: 62.5K 12 MHz 1 0 2 FFH
=
32x [65536 – (RCAP2H, RCAP2L)]
Timer 1
TT
T
TT
19.2K 11.059 MHz 1 0 2 FDH
9.6K 11.059 MHz 0 0 2 FDH
4.8K 11.059 MHz 0 0 2 FAH
2.4K 11.059 MHz 0 0 2 F4H
1.2K 11.059 MHz 0 0 2 E8H
137.5 11.986 MHz 0 0 2 1DH 110 6 MHz 0 0 2 72H 110 12 MHz 0 0 1 FEEBH
Mode Reload Value
22
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More About Mode 0
Serial data enters and exits through RXD. TXD outputs the shift clock. Eight data bits are transmitted/received, with the LSB first. The baud rate is fixed at 1/12 the oscillator frequency.
Figure 15 shows a simplified functional diagram of the serial port in Mode 0 and associated timing.
Transmission is initiated by any instruction that uses SBUF as a destination register. The "write to SBUF" signal at S6P2 also loads a 1 into the ninth position of the transmit shift register and tells the TX Control block to begin a transmission. The internal timing is such that one full machine cycle will elapse between "write to SBUF" and activation of SEND.
SEND transfer the output of the shift register to the alternate output function line of P3.0, and also transfers SHIFT CLOCK to the alternate output function line of P3.1. SHIFT CLOCK is low during S3, S4, and S5 of every machine cycle, and high during S6, S1, and S2. At S6P2 of every machine cycle in which SEND is active, the contents of the transmit shift register are shifted one position to the right.
As data bits shift out to the right, 0s come in from the left. When the MSB of the data byte is at the output position of the shift register, the 1 that was initially loaded into the ninth position is just to the left of the MSB, and all positions to the left of that contain 0s. This condition flags the TX Control block to do one last shift, then deactivate SEND and set TI. Both of these actions occur at S1P1 of the tenth machine cycle after "write to SBUF."
Reception is initiated by the condition REN = 1 and RI = 0. At S6P2 of the next machine cycle, the RX Control unit writes the bits 11111110 to the receive shift register and activates RECEIVE in the next clock phase.
RECEIVE enables SHIFT CLOCK to the alternate output function line of P3.1. SHIFT CLOCK makes transitions at S3P1 and S6P1 of every machine cycle. At S6P2 of every machine cycle in which RECEIVE is active, the contents of the receive shift register are shifted on position to the left. The value that comes in from the right is the value that was sampled at the P3.0 pin at S5P2 of the same machine cycle.
As data bits come in from the right, 1s shift out to the left. When the 0 that was initially loaded into the right-most position arrives at the left-most position in the shift register, it flags the RX Control block to do one last shift and load SBUF. At S1P1 of the tenth machine cycle after the write to SCON that cleared RI, RECEIVE is cleared and RI is set.
More About Mode 1
Ten bits are transmitted (through TXD), or received (through RXD): a start bit (0), eight data bits (LSB first), and a stop bit (1). On receive, the stop bit goes into RB8 in SCON. In the IS89C52 the baud rate is determined by the Timer 1 overflow rate.
Figure 16 shows a simplified functional diagram of the serial port in Mode 1 and associated timings for transmit and receive.
Transmission is initiated by any instruction that uses SBUF as a destination register.
The "write to SBUF" signal also loads a 1 into the ninth bit position of the transmit shift register and flags the TX control unit that a transmission is requested. Transmission actually commences at S1P1 of the machine cycle following the next rollover in the divide-by-16 counter. Thus, the bit times are synchronized to the divide-by-16 counter, not to the "write to SBUF" signal.
The transmission begins when SEND is activated, which puts the start bit at TXD. One bit time later, DATA is activated, which enables the output bit of the transmit shift register to TXD. The first shift pulse occurs one bit time after that.
As data bits shift out to the right, 0s are clocked in from the left. When the MSB of the data byte is at the output position of the shift register, the 1 that was initially loaded into the ninth position is just to the left of the MSB, and all positions to the left of that contain 0s. This condition flags the TX Control unit to do one last shift, then deactivate SEND and set TI. This occurs at the tenth divide-by-16 rollover after "write to SBUF".
Reception is initiated by a 1-to-0 transition detected at RXD. For this purpose, RXD is sampled at a rate of 16 times the established baud rate. When a transition is detected, the divide-by-16 counter is immediately reset, and 1FFH is written into the input shift register. Resetting the divide-by-16 counter aligns its rollovers with the boundaries of the incoming bit times.
The 16 states of the counter divide each bit time into 16th. At the seventh, eighth, and ninth counter states of each bit time, the bit detector samples the value of RXD. The value accepted is the value that was seen in at least two of the three samples. This is done to reject noise. In order to reject false bits, if the value accepted during the first bit time is not 0, the receive circuits are reset and the unit continues looking for another 1-to-0 transition. If the start bit is valid, it is shifted into the input shift register, and reception of the rest of the frame proceeds.
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
As data bits come in from the right, 1s shift to the left. When the start bit arrives at the leftmost position in the shift register, (which is a 9-bit register in Mode 1), it flags the RX Control block to do one last shift, load SBUF and RB8, and set RI. The signal to load SBUF and RB8 and to set RI is generated if, and only if, the following conditions are met at the time the final shift pulse is generated.
1) RI = 0 and
2) Either SM2 = 0, or the received stop bit =1 If either of these two conditions is not met, the received
frame is irretrievably lost. If both conditions are met, the stop bit goes into RB8, the eight data bits go into SBUF, and RI is activated. At this time, whether or not the above conditions are met, the unit continues looking for a 1-to-0 transition in RXD.
More About Modes 2 and 3
Eleven bits are transmitted (through TXD), or received (through RXD): a start bit (0), eight data bits (LSB first), a programmable ninth data bit, and a stop bit (1). On transmit, the ninth data bit (TB8) can be assigned the value of 0 or 1. On receive, the ninth data bit goes into RB8 in SCON. The baud rate is programmable to either 1/32 or 1/64 of the oscillator frequency in Mode 2. Mode 3 may have a variable baud rate generated from Timer 1.
Figures 17 and 18 show a functional diagram of the serial port in Modes 2 and 3. The receive portion is exactly the same as in Mode 1. The transmit portion differs from Mode 1 only in the ninth bit of the transmit shift register.
Transmission is initiated by any instruction that uses SBUF as a destination register. The "write to SBUF" signal also loads TB8 into the ninth bit position of the transmit shift register and flags the TX Control unit that a transmission is requested. Transmission commences at S1P1 of the machine cycle following the next rollover in the divide-by­16 counter. Thus, the bit times are synchronized to the divide-by-16 counter, not to the "write to SBUF" signal.
The transmission begins when SEND is activated, which puts the start bit at TXD. One bit timer later, DATA is activated, which enables the output bit of the transmit shift register to TXD. The first shift pulse occurs one bit time after that. The first shift clocks a 1 (the stop bit) into the ninth bit position of the shift register. Thereafter, only 0s are clocked in. Thus, as data bits shift out to the right, 0s are clocked in from the left. When TB8 is at the output position of the shift register, then the stop bit is just to the left of TB8, and all positions to the left of that contain 0s. This condition flags the TX Control unit to do one last shift, then deactivate SEND and set TI. This occurs at the eleventh divide-by-16 rollover after "write to SBUF".
Reception is initiated by a 1-to-0 transition detected at RXD. For this purpose, RXD is sampled at a rate of 16 times the established baud rate. When a transition is detected, the divide-by-16 counter is immediately reset, and 1FFH is written to the input shift register.
At the seventh, eighth, and ninth counter states of each bit time, the bit detector samples the value of RXD. The value accepted is the value that was seen in at least two of the three samples. If the value accepted during the first bit time is not 0, the receive circuits are reset and the unit continues looking for another 1-to-0 transition. If the start bit proves valid, it is shifted into the input shift register, and reception of the rest of the frame proceeds.
As data bits come in from the right, 1s shift out to the left. When the start bit arrives at the leftmost position in the shift register (which in Modes 2 and 3 is a 9-bit register), it flags the RX Control block to do one last shift, load SBUF and RB8, and set RI. The signal to load SBUF and RB8 and to set RI is generated if, and only if, the following conditions are met at the time the final shift pulse is generated:
1) RI = 0, and
2) Either SM2 = 0 or the received ninth data bit = 1 If either of these conditions is not met, the received frame
is irretrievably lost, and RI is not set. If both conditions are met, the received ninth data bit goes into RB8, and the first eight data bits go into SBUF. One bit time later, whether the above conditions were met or not, the unit continues looking for a 1-to-0 transition at the RXD input.
Note that the value of the received stop bit is irrelevant to SBUF, RB8, or RI.
Table 10. Serial Port Setup
Mode SCON SM2Variation
0 10H 1 50H 2 90H 3 D0H 0NA 1 70H 2 B0H 3 F0H
Single Processor
Environment
(SM2 = 0)
Multiprocessor
Environment
(SM2 = 1)
24
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IS89C52
S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1
ALE
SEND
SHIFT
SHIFT
TI
RXD (D
OUT
)
TXD (SHIFT CLOCK)
WRITE TO SBUF
S6P2
S5P2
S6P1
S3P1
D0 D1 D2 D3 D5 D6 D7
D4
RI
RECEIVE
RXD (D
IN
)
TXD (SHIFT CLOCK)
WRITE TO SCON (CLEAR RI)
D0
D1 D2
D3 D5 D6 D7
D4
TRANSMIT
RECEIVE
WRITE
TO
SBUF
®
ISSI
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
S
Q
D
CL
ZERO DETECTOR
SBUF
SHIFT
RXD P3.0 ALT OUTPUT FUNCTION
REN
START
S6
INTERRUPT
RI
TX CLOCK
SERIAL
PORT
RX CLOCK START
TX CONTROL
RI
RX CONTROL
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 0
INPUT SHIFT REG.
LOAD SBUF
SBUF
READ SBUF
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
SHIFT SEND
RECEIVE
SHIFT
SHIFT
SHIFT
CLOCK
TXD P3.1 ALT OUTPUT FUNCTION
RXD P3.0 ALT INPUT FUNCTION
Figure 15. Serial Port Mode 0
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IS89C52
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ISSI
TIMER 1
OVERFLOW
÷ 2
SMOD
= 0
TCLK
RCLK
SMOD
= 1
"0" "1"
"0"
TIMER 2
OVERFLOW
"1"
SAMPLE
RXD
WRITE
TO
SBUF
÷ 16
1-TO-0
TRANSITION
DETECTOR
TB8
S
Q
D
CL
START RX CLOCK
÷ 16
RX CLOCK START
BIT
DETECTOR
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
SBUF
ZERO DETECTOR
SHIFT
TX CONTROL
TI
RI
RX CONTROL
INPUT SHIFT REG.
LOAD
SBUF
DATA
SEND
LOAD
SBUF
SHIFT
1FFH
(9 BITS)
TXD
SERIAL PORT INTERRUPT
SHIFT
TX CLOCK
WRITE TO SBUF
SEND
DATA
SHIFT
TXD
RECEIVE
S1P1
START
BIT
TI
RX
CLOCK
RXD
BIT DETECTOR SAMPLE TIMES
SHIFT
RI
READ
SBUF
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
D0 D1 D2 D3 D5 D6
÷ 16 RESET
START
D0 D1 D2 D3 D5 D6
BIT
D4
D4
Figure 16. Serial Port Mode 1
SBUF
TRANSMIT
D7
STOP BIT
D7
STOP BIT
26
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
PHASE 2 CLOCK
(1/2 f
OSC)
MODE 2
÷ 2
(SMOD IS PCON. 7)
RXD
SMOD 1
SMOD 0
SAMPLE
WRITE
TO
SBUF
÷ 16
1-TO-0
TRANSITION
DETECTOR
TB8
S
D
CL
START TX CLOCK
÷ 16
START
BIT
DETECTOR
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
Q
ZERO DETECTOR
STOP BIT GEN
TX CONTROL
TI
RI
RX
CLOCK
RX CONTROL
LOAD
SBUF
SBUF
SHIFT
DATA
SEND
SERIAL PORT INTERRUPT
LOAD SBUF
SHIFT
1FFH
INPUT SHIFT REG.
(9 BITS)
TXD
SHIFT
WRITE TO SBUF
DATA
SHIFT
RECEIVE
TX
CLOCK
SEND S1P1
START
BIT
TI
STOP BIT GEN
RX
CLOCK
RXD
BIT DETECTOR SAMPLE TIMES
SHIFT
RI
READ
SBUF
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
D0 D1 D2 D3 D5 D6
÷ 16 RESET
START
D0 D1 D2 D3 D5 D6
BIT
D4
SBUF
TRANSMIT
D7 TB8
D4
STOP BITTXD
RB8
D7
STOP
BIT
Figure 17. Serial Port Mode 2
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IS89C52
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TIMER 1
OVERFLOW
÷ 2
SMOD
= 0
RCLK
TCLK
SMOD
= 1
"0" "1"
"0"
TIMER 2
OVERFLOW
"1"
SAMPLE
RXD
WRITE
TO
SBUF
÷ 16
1-TO-0
TRANSITION
DETECTOR
TB8
S
Q
D
CL
START TX CLOCK
÷ 16
RX CLOCK START
BIT
DETECTOR
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
SBUF
ZERO DETECTOR
TI
RI
LOAD
SBUF
SHIFT
INPUT SHIFT REG.
TX CONTROL
RX CONTROL
DATA
SEND
LOAD
SBUF
SHIFT
1FFH
(9 BITS)
SERIAL PORT INTERRUPT
SHIFT
TXD
WRITE TO SBUF
SEND
DATA
SHIFT
RECEIVE
TX
CLOCK
S1P1
START
BIT
TI
STOP BIT GEN
RX
CLOCK
RXD
BIT DETECTOR SAMPLE TIMES
SHIFT
RI
READ SBUF
IS89C52 INTERNAL BUS
D0 D1 D2 D3 D5 D6
÷ 16 RESET
START
D0 D1 D2 D3 D5 D6
BIT
D4
SBUF
TRANSMIT
TB8D7
STOP BITTXD
D4
RB8
D7
STOP
BIT
28
Figure 18. Serial Port Mode 3
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IS89C52
INTERRUPT SYSTEM
®
ISSI
The IS89C52 provides six interrupt sources: two external interrupts, two timer interrupts, and a serial port interrupt. These are shown in Figure 19.
The External Interrupts
INT0
and
INT1
can each be either level-activated or transition-activated, depending on bits IT0 and IT1 in Register TCON. The flags that actually generate these interrupts are the IE0 and IE1 bits in TCON. When the service routine is vectored, hardware clears the flag that generated an external interrupt only if the interrupt was transition-activated. If the interrupt was level-activated, then the external requesting source (rather than the on-chip hardware) controls the request flag.
The Timer 0 and Timer 1 Interrupts are generated by TF0 and TF1, which are set by a rollover in their respective Timer/Counter registers (except for Timer 0 in Mode 3). When a timer interrupt is generated, the on-chip hardware clears the flag that generated it when the service routine is vectored to.
The Serial Port Interrupt is generated by the logical OR of RI and TI. Neither of these flags is cleared by hardware
when the service routine is vectored to. In fact, the service routine normally must determine whether RI or TI generated the interrupt, and the bit must be cleared in software.
In the IS89C52, the Timer 2 Interrupt is generated by the logical OR of TF2 and EXF2. Neither of these flags is cleared by hardware when the service routine is vectored to. In fact, the service routine may have to determine whether TF2 or EXF2 generated the interrupt, and the bit must be cleared in software.
All of the bits that generate interrupts can be set or cleared by software, with the same result as though they had been set or cleared by hardware. That is, interrupts can be generated and pending interrupts can be canceled in software.
Each of these interrupt sources can be individually enabled or disabled by setting or clearing a bit in Special Function Register IE (interrupt enable) at address 0A8H. As well as individual enable bits for each interrupt source, there is a global enable/disable bit that is cleared to disable all interrupts or set to turn on interrupts (see SFR IE).
INT0
INT1
T2EX
TCON.1
EXTERNAL
INT RQST 0
TCON.5
TIMER/COUNTER 0
TCON.3
EXTERNAL
INT RQST 1
TCON.7
TIMER/COUNTER 1
INTERNAL
SERIAL
PORT
TIMER/
COUNTER 2
SCON.0
RI
SCON.1
TI
T2CON.7
TF2
T2CON.6
EXF2
IE0
TF0
IE1
TF1
IE.0
EX0 IE.1
ET0 IE.2
EX1 IE.3
ET1 IE.4
ES IE.5 IP.5
IE.7
IP.0
PX0 IP.1
PT0 IP.2
PX1 IP.3
PT1 IP.4
PS
PT2ET2 EA
POLLING
HARDWARE
SOURCE
I.D.
SOURCE
I.D.
HIGH PRIORITY
INTERRUPT
REQUEST
VECTOR
LOW PRIORITY
INTERRUPT
REQUEST
VECTOR
Figure 19. Interrupt System
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IS89C52
Priority Level Structure
Each interrupt source can also be individually programmed to one of two priority levels by setting or clearing a bit in Special Function Register IP (interrupt priority) at address 0B8H. IP is cleared after a system reset to place all interrupts at the lower priority level by default. A low­priority interrupt can be interrupted by a high-priority interrupt but not by another low-priority interrupt. A high­priority interrupt can not be interrupted by any other interrupt source.
If two requests of different priority levels are received simultaneously, the request of higher priority level is serviced. If requests of the same priority level are received simultaneously, an internal polling sequence determines which request is serviced. Thus, within each priority level there is a second priority structure determined by the polling sequence, as follows:
Source Priority Within Level
1. IE0 (Highest)
2. TF0
3. IE1
4. TF1
5. RI + TI (Lowest)
Note that the "priority within level" structure is only used to resolve
How Interrupts Are Handled
The interrupt flags are sampled at S5P2 of every machine cycle. The samples are polled during the following machine cycle (the Timer 2 interrupt cycle is different, as described in the Response Timer Section). If one of the flags was in a set condition at S5P2 of the preceding cycle, the polling
simultaneous requests of the same priority level
cycle will find it and the interrupt system will generate an LCALL to the appropriate service routine, provided this hardware generated LCALL is not blocked by any of the following conditions:
1. An interrupt of equal or higher priority level is already in progress.
2. The current (polling) cycle is not the final cycle in the execution of the instruction in progress.
3. The instruction in progress is RETI or any write to the IE or IP registers.
Any of these three conditions will block the generation of the LCALL to the interrupt service routine. Condition 2 ensures that the instruction in progress will be completed before vectoring to any service routine. Condition 3 ensures that if the instruction in progress is RETI or any access to IE or IP, then at least one more instruction will be executed before any interrupt is vectored to.
The polling cycle is repeated with each machine cycle, and the values polled are the values that were present at S5P2 of the previous machine cycle. If an active interrupt flag is not being serviced because of one of the above conditions and is not still active when the blocking condition is removed, the denied interrupt will not be serviced. In other words, the fact that the interrupt flag was once active but
.
not serviced is not remembered. Every polling cycle is new. The polling cycle/LCALL sequence is illustrated in Figure 20.
Note that if an interrupt of higher priority level goes active prior to S5P2 of the machine cycle labeled C3 in Figure 20, then in accordance with the above rules it will be serviced during C5 and C6, without any instruction of the lower priority routine having been executed.
®
ISSI
30
INTERRUPT
GOES ACTIVE
E
C1
S5P2
INTERRUPT LATCHED
S6
INTERRUPTS
ARE POLLED
LONG CALL TO
INTERRUPT
VECTOR ADDRESS
Figure 20. Interrupt Response Timing Diagram
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C4C3C2
C5
INTERRUPT
ROUTINE
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
Thus, the processor acknowledges an interrupt request by executing a hardware-generated LCALL to the appropriate servicing routine. In some cases it also clears the flag that generated the interrupt, and in other cases it does not. It never clears the Serial Port or Timer 2 flags. This must be done in the user's software. The processor clears an external interrupt flag (IE0 or IE1) only if it was transition­activated. The hardware-generated LCALL pushes the contents of the Program Counter onto the stack (but it does not save the PSW) and reloads the PC with an address that depends on the source of the interrupt being serviced, as shown in the following table.
Interrupt Interrupt Cleared by Vector
Source Request Bits Hardware Address
INT0
Timer 0 TF0 Yes 000BH
INT1
Timer 1 TF1 Yes 001BH
Serial Port RI, TI No 0023H
Timer 2 TF2, EXF2 No 002BH System RST 0000H
Reset
Execution proceeds from that location until the RETI instruction is encountered. The RETI instruction informs the processor that this interrupt routine is no longer in progress, then pops the top two bytes from the stack and reloads the Program Counter. Execution of the interrupted program continues from where it left off.
Note that a simple RET instruction would also have returned execution to the interrupted program, but it would have left the interrupt control system thinking an interrupt was still in progress.
Interrupt Flag Bit Position
External 0 IE0 TCON.1 External 1 IE1 TCON.3 Timer 1 TF1 TCON.7 Timer 0 TF0 TCON.5 Serial Port TI SCON.1 Serial Port RI SCON.0 Timer 2 TF2 T2CON.7 Timer 2 EXF2 T2CON.6
IE0 No (level) 0003H
Yes (trans.)
IE1 No (level) 0013H
Yes (trans.)
SFR Register and
When an interrupt is accepted, the following action occurs:
1. The current instruction completes operation.
2. The PC is saved on the stack.
3. The current interrupt status is saved internally.
4. Interrupts are blocked at the level of the interrupts.
5. The PC is loaded with the vector address of the ISR (interrupts service routine).
6. The ISR executes.
The ISR executes and takes action in response to the interrupt. The ISR finishes with RETI (return from interrupt) instruction. This retrieves the old value of the PC from the stack and restores the old interrupt status. Execution of the main program continues where it left off.
External Interrupts
The external sources can be programmed to be level­activated or transition-activated by setting or clearing bit IT1 or IT0 in Register TCON. If ITx= 0, external interrupt x is triggered by a detected low at the external interrupt x is edge-triggered. In this mode if successive samples of the cycle and a low in the next cycle, interrupt request flag IEx in TCON is set. Flag bit IEx then requests the interrupt.
Since the external interrupt pins are sampled once each machine cycle, an input high or low should hold for at least 12 oscillator periods to ensure sampling. If the external interrupt is transition-activated, the external source has to hold the request pin high for at least one machine cycle, and then hold it low for at least one machine cycle to ensure that the transition is seen so that interrupt request flag IEx will be set. IEx will be automatically cleared by the CPU when the service routine is called.
If the external interrupt is level-activated, the external source has to hold the request active until the requested interrupt is actually generated. Then the external source must deactivate the request before the interrupt service routine is completed, or else another interrupt will be generated.
INTx
INTx
pin. If ITx = 1,
pin show a high in one
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
Response Time
The
INT0
and
INT1
levels are inverted and latched into the interrupt flags IE0 and IE1 at S5P2 of every machine cycle. Similarly, the Timer 2 flag EXF2 and the Serial Port flags RI and TI are set at S5P2. The values are not actually polled by the circuitry until the next machine cycle.
The Timer 0 and Timer 1 flags, TF0 and TF1, are set at S5P2 of the cycle in which the timers overflow. The values are then polled by the circuitry in the next cycle. However, the Timer 2 flag TF2 is set at S2P2 and is polled in the same cycle in which the timer overflows.
If a request is active and conditions are right for it to be acknowledged, a hardware subroutine call to the requested service routine will be the next instruction executed. The call itself takes two cycles. Thus, a minimum of three complete machine cycles elapsed between activation of an external interrupt request and the beginning of execution of the first instruction of the service routine. Figure 19 shows response timings.
A longer response time results if the request is blocked by one of the three previously listed conditions. If an interrupt of equal or higher priority level is already in progress, the additional wait time depends on the nature of the other interrupt's service routine. If the instruction in progress is not in its final cycle, the additional wait time cannot be more than three cycles, since the longest instructions (MUL and DIV) are only four cycles long. If the instruction in progress is RETI or an access to IE or IP, the additional wait time cannot be more than five cycles (a maximum of one more cycle to complete the instruction in progress, plus four cycles to complete the next instruction if the instruction is MUL or DIV).
Single-Step Operation
The IS89C52 interrupt structure allows single-step execution with very little software overhead. As previously noted, an interrupt request will not be serviced while an interrupt of equal priority level is still in progress, nor will it be serviced after RETI until at least one other instruction has been executed. Thus, once an interrupt routine has been entered, it cannot be re-entered until at least one instruction of the interrupted program is executed. One way to use this feature for single-step operation is to program one of the external interrupts (for example, to be level-activated. The service routine for the interrupt will terminate with the following code:
JNB P3.2,$ ;Wait Here Till JB P3.2,$ ;Now Wait Here Till it Goes Low RETI ;Go Back and Execute One
Instruction
If the
INT0
pin, which is also the P3.2 pin, is held normally low, the CPU will go right into the External Interrupt 0 routine and stay there until INT0 is pulsed (from low-to­high-to-low). Then it will execute RETI, go back to the task program, execute one instruction, and immediately re­enter the External Interrupt 0 routine to await the next pulsing of P3.2. One step of the task program is executed each time P3.2 is pulsed.
INT0
Goes High
INT0
)
Thus, in a single-interrupt system, the response time is always more than three cycles and less than nine cycles.
32
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
OTHER INFORMATION Reset
The reset input is the RST pin, which is the input to a Schmitt Trigger.
A reset is accomplished by holding the RST pin high for at least two machine cycles (24 oscillator periods),
oscillator is running
internal reset, with the timing shown in Figure 21. The external reset signal is asynchronous to the internal
clock. The RST pin is sampled during State 5 Phase 2 of every machine cycle. The port pins will maintain their current activities for 19 oscillator periods after a logic 1 has been sampled at the RST pin; that is, for 19 to 31 oscillator periods after the external reset signal has been applied to the RST pin.
The internal reset algorithm writes 0s to all the SFRs except the port latches, the Stack Pointer, and SBUF. The port latches are initialized to FFH, the Stack Pointer to 07H, and SBUF is indeterminate. Table 9 lists the SFRs and their reset values.
Then internal RAM is not affected by reset. On power-up the RAM content is indeterminate.
. The CPU responds by generating an
while the
Table 11. Reset Values of the SFR's
SFR Name Reset Value
PC 0000H
ACC 00H
B 00H
PSW 00H
SP 07H DPTR 0000H P0-P3 FFH
IP XX000000B IE 0X000000B
TMOD 00H
TCON 00H
T2CON 00H
TH0 00H
TL0 00H
TH1 00H
TL1 00H
TH2 00H
TL2 00H
RCAP2H 00H
RCAP2L 00H
SCON 00H
SBUF Indeterminate
PCON 0XXX0000B
12 OSC. PERIODS
S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4 S5 S6 S1 S2 S3 S4
RST
SAMPLE
RST
ALE
PSEN
P0
INST
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ADDR
11 OSC. PERIODS
INST INST INST
SAMPLE RST
ADDR ADDR ADDR
Figure 21. Reset Timing
19 OSC. PERIODS
INTERNAL RESET SIGNAL
INST
ADDR
33
IS89C52
Power-on Reset
For the IS89C52, the external resistor can be removed because the RST pin has an internal pulldown. The capacitor value can then be reduced to 1 µF (see Figure 22).
When power is turned on, the circuit holds the RST pin high for an amount of time that depends on the value of the capacitor and the rate at which it charges. To ensure a good reset, the RST pin must be high long enough to allow the oscillator time to start-up (normally a few msec) plus two machine cycles.
Note that the port pins will be in a random state until the oscillator has start and the internal reset algorithm has written 1s to them.
With this circuit, reducing VCC quickly to 0 causes the RST pin voltage to momentarily fall below 0V. However, this voltage is internally limited and will not harm the device.
Vcc
1.0 µF
Figure 22. Power-On Reset Circuit
+
IS89C52
RST
GND
®
ISSI
Vcc
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IS89C52
OSC
CLOCK
GEN
PD
XTAL 2 XTAL 1
IDL
CPU
INTERRUPT, SERIAL PORT, TIMER BLOCKS
Power-Saving Modes of Operation
The IS89C52 has two power-reducing modes. Idle and Power-down. The input through which backup power is supplied during these operations is Vcc. Figure 23 shows the internal circuitry which implements these features. In the Idle mode (IDL = 1), the oscillator continues to run and the Interrupt, Serial Port, and Timer blocks continue to be clocked, but the clock signal is gated off to the CPU. In Power-down (PD = 1), the oscillator is frozen. The Idle and Power-down modes are activated by setting bits in Special Function Register PCON.
®
ISSI
Idle Mode
An instruction that sets PCON.0 is the last instruction executed before the Idle mode begins. In the Idle mode, the internal clock signal is gated off to the CPU, but not to the Interrupt, Timer, and Serial Port functions. The CPU status is preserved in its entirety; the Stack Pointer, Program Counter, Program Status Word, Accumulator, and all other registers maintain their data during Idle. The port pins hold the logical states they had at the time Idle was activated. ALE and
PSEN
hold at logic high levels.
There are two ways to terminate the Idle. Activation of any enabled interrupt will cause PCON.0 to be cleared by hardware, terminating the Idle mode. The interrupt will be serviced, and following RETI the next instruction to be executed will be the one following the instruction that put the device into Idle.
The flag bits GF0 and GF1 can be used to indicate whether an interrupt occurred during normal operation or during an Idle. For example, an instruction that activates Idle can also set one or both flag bits. When Idle is terminated by an interrupt, the interrupt service routine can examine the flag bits.
The other way of terminating the Idle mode is with a hardware reset. Since the clock oscillator is still running, the hardware reset must be held active for only two machine cycles (24 oscillator periods) to complete the reset.
Figure 23. Idle and Power-Down Hardware
Power-down Mode
An instruction that sets PCON.1 is the last instruction executed before Power-down mode begins. In the Power­down mode, the on-chip oscillator stops. With the clock frozen, all functions are stopped, but the on-chip RAM and Special function Registers are held. The port pins output the values held by their respective SFRs. ALE and
PSEN
output lows. In the Power-down mode of operation, Vcc can be reduced
to as low as 2V. However, Vcc must not be reduced before the Power-down mode is invoked, and Vcc must be restored to its normal operating level before the Power-down mode is terminated. The reset that terminates Power-down also frees the oscillator. The reset should not be activated before Vcc is restored to its normal operating level and must be held active long enough to allow the oscillator to restart and stabilize (normally less than 10 msec).
The only exit from Power-down is a hardware reset. Reset redefines all the SFRs but does not change the on-chip RAM.
The signal at the RST pin clears the IDL bit directly and asynchronously. At this time, the CPU resumes program execution from where it left off; that is, at the instruction following the one that invoked the Idle Mode. As shown in Figure 22, two or three machine cycles of program execution may take place before the internal reset algorithm takes control. On-chip hardware inhibits access to the internal RAM during his time, but access to the port pins is not inhibited. To eliminate the possibility of unexpected outputs at the port pins, the instruction following the one that invokes Idle should not write to a port pin or to external data RAM.
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IS89C52
Table 12. Status of the External Pins During Idle and Power-down Modes.
®
ISSI
Mode Memory ALE
PSENPSEN
PSEN
PSENPSEN
PORT 0 PORT 1 PORT 2 PORT 3
Idle Internal 1 1 Data Data Data Data
Idle External 1 1 Float Data Address Data Power-down Internal 0 0 Data Data Data Data Power-down External 0 0 Float Data Data Data
On-Chip Oscillators
The on-chip oscillator circuitry of the IS89C52 is a single stage inverter, intended for use as a crystal-controlled, positive reactance oscillator. In this application the crystal is operated in its fundamental response mode as an inductive reactance in parallel resonance with capacitance external to the crystal (Figure 24). Examples of how to drive the clock with external oscillator are shown in Figure 25.
The crystal specifications and capacitance values (C1 and C2 in Figure 24) are not critical. 20 pF to 30 pF can be used in these positions at a 12 MHz to 24 MHz frequency with good quality crystals. (For ranges greater than 24 MHz refer to Figure 26.) A ceramic resonator can be used in place of the crystal in cost-sensitive applications. When a ceramic resonator is used, C1 and C2 are normally selected to be of somewhat higher values. The manufacturer of the ceramic resonator should be consulted for recommendation on the values of these capacitors.
C2
C1
Figure 21. Oscillator Connections
XTAL2
XTAL1
GND
NC
EXTERNAL
OSCILLATOR
SIGNAL
XTAL2
XTAL1
GND
Figure 22. External Clock Drive Configuration
36
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
XTAL2 XTAL1
R
C1
Figure 26. Oscillator Connections for High Speed (> 24 MHz)
Note:
When the frequency is higher than 24 MHz, please refer to Table 11 for recommended values of C1, C2, and R.
Table 13. Recommended Value for C1, C2, R
Frequency Range
3.5 MHz - 24 MHz 30 MHz - 40 MHz
C1 20 pF-30 pF 3 pF-10 pF C2 20 pF-30 pF 3 pF-10 pF R Not Apply 6.2K-10K
C2
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IS89C52
Program Memory Lock System
The program lock system, when programmed, protects the code against software piracy. The IS89C52 has a three-level program lock system (see Table 14). The lock­bits are programmed in the same manner as the program memory.
The detailed lock-bits features are listed in Table 14.
Table 14. Program Lock Bits
LB1 LB2 LB3 Protection Type
1 UUU No Program Lock Features enabled. 2PUUMOVC instructions executed from external program memory are diabled
form fetching code bytes from internal memory, EA is sampled and latched on Reset and further programming of the Flash is disabled.
3PPUSame as 2, also verify is disabled. 4 PPP Same as 3, also external execution is disabled.
®
ISSI
FLASH MEMORY Programming the IS89C52
The IS89C52 is normally shipped with the on-chip Flash memory array in the erased state (i.e., contents = FFH) and ready to be programmed. The IS89C52 is programmed byte-by-byte in programming mode. Before the on-chip flash code memory can be re-programmed, the entire memory array must be erased electrically.
Table 15. Flash Programming Mode
Mode RST
Program Code Data H L 12V L H H H Verify Code Data H L H H L L H H Program Lock Bit 1 H L 12V H H H H Program Lock Bit 2 H L 12V H H L L Program Lock Bit 3 H L 12V H L H L Read Signature Byte H L H H L L L L Chip Erase H L 12V H L L L
PSENPSEN
PSEN
PSENPSEN
ALE/
PROGPROG
PROG
PROGPROG
Programming Interface
Every code byte in the Flash array can be written and the entire array can be erased using the appropriate combination of control signals. The write operation cycles is self-timed once initiated, will automatically time itself to completion. The programming interface is shown in Table 15 and Figures 27 and 28.
EAEA
EA
/VPP P2.6 P2.7 P3.6 P3.7
EAEA
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
CONTROL
SIGNALS
3.5-12 MHz
+ 5V
Vcc
P0
ALE
EA
RST
A0-A7
A11-A8
IS89LV52
P1
P2.0-P2.3
P2.6
P2.7
P3.6
P3.7
XTAL2
XTAL1 GND
PSEN
Figure 27. Programming the Flash Memory
PGM DATA
PROG
V
PP
V
IH
CONTROL
SIGNALS
3.5-12 MHz
+ 5V
Vcc
P0
ALE
EA
RST
A0-A7
A12-A8
IS89LV52
P1
P2.0-P2.4
P2.6
P2.7
P3.6
P3.7
XTAL2
XTAL1 GND
PSEN
Figure 28. Verifying the Flash Memory
PGM DATA (USE 10K PULLUPS)
V
IH
V
IH
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
Programming Algorithm
Before programming the IS89C52, the control signals, the address, data should be setup according to the programming mode table and programming interface. To program the IS89C52, the following sequence should be followed:
1. Insert the desired memory location on the address bus.
2. Insert the appropriate data byte on the data bus.
3. Active the correct combination of control signals.
4. Raise EA / VPP to 12V.
5. Pulse ALE / Flash array, Encryption array or the lock bits.
6. Set EA / VPP to 5 V and verify data. If the data is correct then execute step 7, otherwise execute steps 1-6.
7. Repeat steps 1 through 6, changing the address and data for the entire array or until the end of the object file is reached.
PROG
once to program a byte in the
Program Verify
If lock bits LB1, LB2 and LB3 have not been programmed, the programmed code data can be read back via the address and data lines for verification. The lock bits cannot be verified directly. Verification of lock bits is achieved by observing that their features are enabled.
To verify the data after all addresses are programmed completely, power down the IS89C52 and then reapply power. The programmed data can then be verified by applying the verify signals to the device.
Erasing Chip
All Flash memory cells must be programmed to '00' (include encryption array and lock bits) before the chip is erased. The entire Flash array is erased electrically by using the proper combination of control signals and by holding ALE/
PROG
low for tGLGHE duration (See Table 16. Flash Programming and Verification Characteristics for tGLGHE value.) After the chip is erased, the code array and lock bits are written with all “1”s. If any Flash memory cell is not '1' (including lock bits), repeat the chip erase again. The chip erase operation must be executed successfully before the code memory can be re-programmed.
Reading the Signature Bytes
The signature bytes are read by the same procedure as a normal verification of locations 030H, 031H and 032H, except that P3.6 and P3.7 need to be pulled to a logic low. The values returned are:
Signature
Location Value
(030H) D5H indicates manufactured
by ISSI (031H) 51H indicates IS89C52 (032H) FFH indicates programming
voltage is 12V
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IS89C52
FLASH PROGRAMMING AND VERIFICATION CHARACTERISTICS AND WAVEFORMS
®
ISSI
Table 16. Flash Programming and Verification Characteristics
(1)
Symbol Parameter Min Max Unit
VPP Programming Supply Voltage 11.5 12.5 V 1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 3.5 12 MHz tAVGL Address Setup to tGHAX Address Hold after tDVGL Data Setup to tGHDX Data Hold after
PROG
Low 48 tCLCL
PROG
PROG
Low 48 tCLCL
PROG
48 tCLCL
48 tCLCL tEHSH COND ENABLE to VPPH 48 tCLCL tSHGL VPPH Setup to tGHSL VPPH Hold after tGLGH tGHGL
PROG
Pulse Width 120 µs
PROG
High to
PROG
Low 10 µs
PROG
PROG
Low 10 µs
10 µs
tAVQV Address to Data Valid 48 tCLCL tELQV COND ENABLE to Data Valid 48 tCLCL tEHQZ Data Float after COND DISABLE 48 tCLCL tGLGHE Erase
PROG
Pulse Width 200 ms tELPL COND DISABLE to Power Low 0 ns tPLPH Power Off Time 10 µs tPHEH Power On to VPPL 10 ms tEHVH VPPL to COND ENABLE 0 ns
Notes:
A = 21°C to 27°C, Vcc = 5.0V ± 10%.
1. T
2. COND ENABLE and COND DISABLE are generated and depend on the control signals on pins P2.6,
P2.7, P3.6 and P3.7. The signals set the device in to and out of different processing conditions, such as programming condition, erasing condition, and verify condition.
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
P2.3-P2.0 P1.7-P1.0
tAVGL
P0.7-P0.0
tDVGL
EA/VPP
tSHGL
25 PULSE
tGLGH
V
tGHDX
PPH
VPPL
tGHSL
(1)
ALE/PROG
tEHSH
P2.6, P2.7 P3.6, P3.7
Notes:
1. One pulse for the main code array, 25 pulses for the encryption array and lock bits.
2. This verify condition is using at main code verification.
3. Power off waveform not shown.
DON'T
CARE
PROGRAMMING COND.
Figure 29. Flash Memory Programming and Verification Timing Waveform
tGHGL
tELQV tELQZ
VERIFY COND.
ADDRESSADDRESS
tAVQVtGHAX
DATA
OUTDATAIN
0V
DON'T
(2)
CARE
Vcc
0V
tPLPH
VPPH
tELPL
0V
0V
0V
tPHEH
VPPL
P2.3-P2.0 P1.7-P1.0
P0.7-P0.0
EA/VPP
tGHSL
tSHGL
ALE/PROG
0V
tGLGHE
tEHSH
P2.6, P2.7 P3.6, P3.7
DON'T CARE
Figure 30. Flash Memory Erase Timing Waveform
Note:
1. The power off and power on waveform can be used in programming or erasing.
tEHVH
0V
VERIFY COND.ERASE COND.
ADDRESS
tAVQV
OUT
DATA
tELQV
tEHQZ
DON'T
CARE
0V
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IS89C52
®
ISSI
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
(1)
Symbol Parameter Value Unit
VTERM Terminal Voltage with Respect to GND TBIAS Temperature Under Bias
(3)
(2)
–2.0 to +7.0 V
–40 to +85 °C TSTG Storage Temperature –65 to +125 °C PT Power Dissipation 1.5 W
Note:
1. Stress greater than those listed under ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS may cause
permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect reliability.
2. Minimum DC input voltage is –0.5V. During transitions, inputs may undershoot to –
2.0V for periods less than 20 ns. Maximum DC voltage on output pins is Vcc + 0.5V which may overshoot to Vcc + 2.0V for periods less than 20 ns.
3. Operating temperature is for commercial products only defined by this specification.
OPERATING RANGE
(1)
Range Ambient Temperature VCC Oscillator Frequency
Commercial 0°C to +70°C 5V ± 10% 3.5 to 40 MHz Industrial –40°C to +85°C 5V ± 10% 3.5 to 40 MHz
Note:
1. Operating ranges define those limits between which the functionality of the device is guaranteed.
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IS89C52
ISSI
DC CHARACTERISTICS
(Over Operating Range; GND = 0V)
Symbol Parameter Test conditions Min Max Unit
VIL Input low voltage (All except EA) –0.5 0.2Vcc – 0.1 V
VIL1 Input low voltage (EA) –0.5 0.2Vcc – 0.3 V
VIH Input high voltage 0.2Vcc + 0.9 Vcc + 0.5 V
(All except XTAL 1, RST)
VIH1 Input high voltage (XTAL 1) 0.7Vcc Vcc + 0.5 V
VSCH+ RST positive schmitt-trigger 0.7Vcc Vcc + 0.5 V
threshold voltage
VSCH RST negative schmitt-trigger 0 0.2Vcc V
threshold voltage
(1)
VOL
VOL1
(1)
Output low voltage Iol = 100 µA 0.3 V (Ports 1, 2, 3) IOL = 1.6 mA 0.45 V
IOL = 3.5 mA 1.0 V Output low voltage IOL = 200 µA 0.3 V (Port 0, ALE,
PSEN
)IOL = 3.2 mA 0.45 V
®
IOL = 7.0 mA 1.0 V
VOH Output high voltage IOH = –10 µA 0.9Vcc V
(Ports 1, 2, 3, ALE,
PSEN
) Vcc = 4.5V-5.5V
IOL = –25 µA 0.75Vcc V
IOL = –60 µA 2.4 V
VOH1 Output high voltage IOH = –80 µA 0.9Vcc V
(Port 0, ALE,
PSEN
) Vcc = 4.5V-5.5V
IOH = –300 µA 0.75Vcc V
IOH = –800 µA 2.4 V
IIL Logical 0 input current (Ports 1, 2, 3) VIN = 0.45V –80 µA ILI Input leakage current (Port 0) 0.45V < VIN < Vcc –10 +10 µA
ITL Logical 1-to-0 transition current VIN = 2.0V –650 µA
(Ports 1, 2, 3)
RRST RST pulldown resister 50 300 K
Note:
1. Under steady state (non-transient) conditions, IOL must be externally limited as follows: Maximum I Maximum I
Maximum total I
If IOL exceeds the test condition, VOL may exceed the related specification. Pins are not guaranteed to sink greater than the listed test conditions.
OL per port pin: 10 mA OL per 8-bit port
Port 0: 26 mA Ports 1, 2, 3: 15 mA
OL for all output pins: 71 mA
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IS89C52
ISSI
POWER SUPPLY CHARACTERISTICS
Symbol Parameter Test conditions Min Max Unit
Icc Power supply current
Active mode 12 MHz 20 mA
Idle mode 12 MHz 5 mA
Power-down mode VCC = 5V 50 µA
Note:
1. See Figures 31, 32, 33, and 34 for Icc test conditiions.
(1)
Vcc = 5.0V
16 MHz 26 mA 20 MHz 32 mA 24 MHz 38 mA 32 MHz 50 mA 40 MHz 62 mA
16 MHz 6 mA 20 MHz 7.6 mA 24 MHz 9 mA 32 MHz 12 mA 40 MHz 15 mA
®
NC
CLOCK
SIGNAL
Vcc
Vcc
RST Vcc
XTAL2 XTAL1
GND
P0
EA
Icc
Vcc
NC
CLOCK
SIGNAL
RST Vcc
XTAL2 XTAL1
GND
Figure 31. Active Mode Figure 32. Idle Mode
Vcc
Icc
RST Vcc
Vcc
NC
XTAL2 XTAL1
GND
P0
EA
Vcc
Icc
Vcc
P0
EA
Figure 33. Power-down Mode
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IS89C52
Vcc – 0.5V
0.45V
0.7Vcc
0.2Vcc – 0.1
t
CHCL
t
CLCX
t
CLCL
t
CHCX
t
CLCH
®
ISSI
Note:
1. Clock signal waveform for Icc tests in active and idle mode (tCLCH = tCHCL = 5 ns)
Figure 34. Icc Test Conditions
AC CHARACTERISTICS
(Over Operating Range; GND = 0V; CL for Port 0, ALE and
PSEN
Outputs = 100 pF; CL for Other Outputs = 80 pF)
EXTERNAL MEMORY CHARACTERISTICS
24 MHz 40 MHz Variable Oscillator
Clock Clock (3.5 - 40 MHz)
Symbol Parameter Min Max Min Max Min Max Unit
1/tCLCL Oscillator frequency 3.5 40 MHz tLHLL ALE pulse width 68 35 2tCLCL–15 ns tAVLL Address valid to ALE low 26 10 tCLCL–15 ns tLLAX Address hold after ALE low 31 15 tCLCL–10 ns tLLIV ALE low to valid instr in 147 80 4tCLCL–20 ns tLLPL ALE low to tPLPH tPLIV tPXIX Input instr hold after tPXIZ Input instr float after tAVIV Address to valid instr in 188 105 5tCLCL–20 ns tPLAZ tRLRH tWLWH tRLDV tRHDX Data hold after tRHDZ Data float after tLLDV ALE low to valid data in 282 165 7tCLCL–10 ns tAVDV Address to valid data in 323 190 8tCLCL–10 ns tLLWL ALE low to RD or WR low 105 145 55 95 3tCLCL–20 3tCLCL+20 ns tAVWL Address to RD or WR low 146 80 4tCLCL–20 ns tQVWX Data valid to WR transition 26 10 tCLCL –15 ns tWHQX Data hold after tRLAZ tWHLH
PSEN PSEN
PSEN RD
pulse width 230 130 6tCLCL–20 ns
WR
pulse width 230 130 6tCLCL–20 ns
RD
low to valid data in 157 90 4tCLCL–10 ns
RD
low to address float 0 0 0 ns
RD
or WR high to ALE high 26 57 10 40 tCLCL–15 tCLCL+15 ns
PSEN
low 31 15 tCLCL–10 ns pulse width 110 60 3tCLCL–15 ns low to valid instr in 105 55 3tCLCL–20 ns
PSEN PSEN
low to address float 10 10 10 ns
RD RD
WR
0— 0— 0 ns
—37 —20 tCLCL–5 ns
0— 0— 0 ns
—78 —45 2tCLCL–5 ns
31 15 tCLCL–10 ns
46
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IS89C52
SERIAL PORT TIMING: SHIFT REGISTER MODE
24 MHz 40 MHz Variable Oscillator
Clock Clock (3.5-40 MHz)
Symbol Parameter Min Max Min Max Min Max Unit
tXLXL Serial port clock cycle time 490 510 290 310 12tCLCL–10 12tCLCL+10 ns tQVXH Output data setup to 406 240 10tCLCL–10 ns
clock rising edge
tXHQX Output data hold after 73 40 2tCLCL–10 ns
clock rising edge
tXHDX Input data hold after 0 0 0 ns
clock rising edge
tXHDV Clock rising edge to 417 250 10tCLCL ns
input data valid
EXTERNAL CLOCK DRIVE CHARACTERISTICS
Symbol Parameter Min Max Unit
1/tCLCL Oscillator Frequency 3.5 40 MHz tCHCX High time 10 ns tCLCX Low time 10 ns tCLCH Rise time 10 ns tCHCL Fall time 10 ns
®
ISSI
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IS89C52
TIMING WAVEFORMS
ALE
PSEN
t
AVLL
t
LHLL
t
LLPL
t
LLAX
t
PLAZ
t
PLPH
t
PLIV
t
PXIX
t
PXIZ
®
ISSI
PORT 0
PORT 2
ALE
PSEN
RD
PORT 0
A7-A0 INSTR IN A7-A0
t
LLIV
t
AVIV
A15-A8 A15-A8
Figure 35. External Program Memory Read Cycle
t
WHLH
t
LLDV
t
LLWL
t
AVLL
A7-A0 FROM RI OR DPL INSTR INA7-A0 FROM PCL
t
t
LLAX
RLAZ
t
RLDV
t
RLRH
t
RHDX
DATA IN
t
RHDZ
48
PORT 2
t
AVWL
t
AVDV
A15-A8 FROM DPH A15-A8 FROM PCH
Figure 36. External Data Memory Read Cycle
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IS89C52
ALE
PSEN
t
LLWL
t
WLWH
t
WHLH
®
ISSI
WR
PORT 0
PORT 2
INSTRUCTION
ALE
CLOCK
OUT
DATA
DATA
IN
t
AVLL
t
LLAX
A7-A0 FROM RI OR DPL INSTR INA7-A0 FROM PCL
t
AVWL
A15-A8 FROM DPH A15-A8 FROM PCH
t
QVWX
DATA OUT
t
WHQX
Figure 37. External Data Memory Write Cycle
t
XLXL
t
t
QVXH
t
XHDV
VALID VALID VALID VALID VALID VALID VALID VALID
XHQX
t
XHDX
786543210
76543210
SET TI
SET RI
Figure 38. Shift Register Mode Timing Waveform
Vcc – 0.5V
0.45V
0.7Vcc
0.2Vcc – 0.1
t
CHCL
Figure 39. External Clock Drive Waveform
Vcc - 0.5V
0.45V
Note:
1. AC inputs during testing are driven at VCC – 0.5V for logic “1” and 0.45V for logic “0”. Timing measurements are made at V
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Figure 40. AC Test Point
IH min for logic “1” and max for logic “0”.
t
CLCX
0.2Vcc + 0.9V
0.2Vcc - 0.1V
t
CLCL
t
CHCX
t
CLCH
49
IS89C52
®
ISSI
ORDERING INFORMATION Commercial Range: 0°C to +70°C
Speed Order Part Number Package
12 MHz IS89C52-12PL PLCC – Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier
IS89C52-12W 600-mil Plastic DIP IS89C52-12PQ PQFP
24 MHz IS89C52-24PL PLCC – Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier
IS89C52-24W 600-mil Plastic DIP IS89C52-24PQ PQFP
40 MHz IS89C52-40PL PLCC – Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier
IS89C52-40W 600-mil Plastic DIP IS89C52-40PQ PQFP
ORDERING INFORMATION Industrial Range: –40°C to +85°C
Speed Order Part Number Package
12 MHz IS89C52-12PLI PLCC – Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier
IS89C52-12WI 600-mil Plastic DIP IS89C52-12PQI PQFP
24 MHz IS89C52-24PLI PLCC – Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier
IS89C52-24WI 600-mil Plastic DIP IS89C52-24PQI PQFP
40 MHz IS89C52-40PLI PLCC – Plastic Leaded Chip Carrier
IS89C52-40WI 600-mil Plastic DIP IS89C52-40PQI PQFP
Integrated Silicon Solution, Inc.
2231 Lawson Lane
Santa Clara, CA 95054
Fax: (408) 588-0806
Toll Free: 1-800-379-4774
http://www.issi.com
ISSI
®
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