NSC COP87L88RDV-XE, COP87L88RDN-XE Datasheet

COP87L88GD/RD Family 8-Bit CMOS OTP Microcontrollers with 16k or 32k Memory and 8-Channel A/D with Prescaler
General Description
The COP87L88GD/RD OTP (One Time Programmable) Family microcontrollers are highly integratet COP8
Fea­ture core devices with 16k or 32k memory and advanced features including anA/DConverter. These multi-chip CMOS devices are suited for applications requiring a full featured controller with an 8-bit A/D converter, and as pre-production devices for a masked ROM design. Pin and software com­patible 16k ROM versions are available (COP888GD), as well as a range of COP8 software and hardware develop­ment tools.
Family features include an 8-bit memory mapped architec­ture, 10 MHz CKI (-XE=crystal oscillator) with 1µs instruc­tion cycle, three multi-function 16-bit timer/counters, MICROWIRE/PLUS
serial I/O, one 8-bit/8-channel A/D converter with prescaler and both differential and single ended modes, two power saving HALT/IDLE modes, MIWU, idle timer, high current outputs, software selectable I/O op­tions, WATCHDOG
timer and Clock Monitor, 2.7V to 5.5V
operation, program code security, and 44 pin package. Devices included in this datasheet are:
Device Memory (bytes) RAM (bytes) I/O Pins Packages Temperature
COP87L88GD 16k EPROM 256 40 44 PLCC -40 to +85˚C COP87L88RD 32k EPROM 256 40 44 PLCC -40 to +85˚C
Key Features
n 8-channel A/D converter with prescaler and both
differential and single ended modes
n Idle Timer with 5 selectable Wake-Up periods n Three 16-bit timers, each with two 16-bit registers
supporting: — Processor Independent PWM mode — External Event counter mode — Input Capture mode
n 16 or 32 kbytes on-board OTP EPROM with security
feature
n 256 bytes on-board RAM
Additional Peripheral Features
n Multi-Input Wakeup (MIWU) with optional interrupts (8) n WATCHDOG and clock monitor logic n MICROWIRE/PLUS serial I/O
I/O Features
n Memory mapped I/O n Software selectable I/O options (TRI-STATE
®
Output, Push-Pull Output, Weak Pull Up Input, High Impedance Input)
n Schmitt trigger inputs on ports G and L n Package:
— 44 PLCC with 40 I/O pins
CPU/Instruction Set Features
n 1 µs instruction cycle time n Twelve multi-source vectored interrupts servicing
— External Interrupt — Idle Timer T0 — Three Timers (each with 2 Interrupts) — MICROWIRE/PLUS — Multi-Input Wake Up — Software Trap — Default VIS (default interrupt)
n Versatile and easy to use instruction set n 8-bit Stack Pointer (SP) – stack in RAM n Two 8-bit Register Indirect Data Memory Pointers (B
and X)
Fully Static CMOS
n Two power saving modes: HALT and IDLE n Single supply operation: 2.7V to 5.5V n Temperature range: −40˚C to +85˚C
Development Support
n Emulation device for COP888GD n Real time emulation and full program debug offered by
MetaLink Development System
TRI-STATE®is a registered trademark ofNational Semiconductor Corporation. MICROWIRE/PLUS
, COP8™, MICROWIRE™and WATCHDOG™are trademarks of National Semiconductor Corporation.
iceMASTER
®
is a registered trademark of MetaLink Corporation.
September 1999
COP87L88GD/RD Family 8-Bit CMOS OTP Microcontrollers with 16k or 32k Memory and
8-Channel A/D with Prescaler
© 1999 National Semiconductor Corporation DS012526 www.national.com
Block Diagram
Connection Diagrams
DS012526-1
FIGURE 1. Block Diagram
Plastic Chip Carrier
DS012526-2
Note: -X Crystal Oscillator
-E Halt Mode Enabled
Top View
Order Number COP87L88RDV-XE,
or COP87L88GDV-XE
See NS Plastic Chip Package Number V44A
FIGURE 2. Connection Diagrams
www.national.com 2
Connection Diagrams (Continued)
Pinouts for 40- and 44-Pin Packages
Port Type Alt. Fun Alt. Fun 44-Pin Package
L0 I/O MIWU 17 L1 I/O MIWU 18 L2 I/O MIWU 19 L3 I/O MIWU 20 L4 I/O MIWU T2A 25 L5 I/O MIWU T2B 26 L6 I/O MIWU T3A 27 L7 I/O MIWU T3B 28 G0 I/O INT 39 G1 WDOUT 40 G2 I/O T1B 41 G3 I/O T1A 42 G4 I/O SO 3 G5 I/O SK 4 G6 I SI 5 G7 I/CKO HALT Restart 6 D0 O 29 D1 O 30 D2 O 31 D3 O 32 D4 O 33 D5 O 34 D6 O 35 D7 O 36 I0 I ACH0 9 I1 I ACH1 10 I2 I ACH2 11 I3 I ACH3 12 I4 I ACH4 13 I5 I ACH5 14 I6 I ACH6 15 I7 I ACH7 16 C0 I/O 43 C1 I/O 44 C2 I/O 1 C3 I/O 2 C4 I/O 21 C5 I/O 22 C6 I/O 23 C7 I/O 24 V
CC
8 GND 37 CKI 7 RESET
38
www.national.com3
Absolute Maximum Ratings (Note 1)
Supply Voltage (V
CC
)7V
Voltage at Any Pin −0.3V to V
CC
+ 0.3V
Total Current into V
CC
Pin
(Source) 100 mA
Total Current out of GND Pin
(Sink) 110 mA
Storage Temperature Range −65˚C to +140˚C
Note 1:
Absolute maximum ratings indicate limits beyond which damage to the device may occur. DC and AC electrical specifications are not ensured when operating the device at absolute maximum ratings.
DC Electrical Characteristics
−40˚C TA≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified
Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Units
Operating Voltage 2.7 5.5 V Power Supply Ripple (Note 3) Peak-to-Peak 0.1 V
CC
V
Supply Current (Note 4)
CKI=10 MHz V
CC
=
5.5V, t
c
=
1µs 20 mA
CKI=4 MHz V
CC
=
4.0V, t
c
=
2.5 µs 10 mA
HALT Current (Note 5) V
CC
=
5.5V, CKI=0 MHz 12 µA
V
CC
=
4.0V, CKI=0 MHz 10 µA
IDLE Current (Note 4)
CKI=10 MHz V
CC
=
5.5V, t
c
=
1 µs 1.2 mA
CKI=4 MHz V
CC
=
4.0V, t
c
=
2.5 µs 1 mA Input Levels RESET , CKI
Logic High 0.8 V
CC
V
Logic Low 0.2 V
CC
V
All Other Inputs (L0-L7, G0-G6, C0-C7, I0-I7)
Logic High 0.7 V
CC
V
Logic Low 0.2 V
CC
V
Hi-Z Input Leakage V
CC
=
5.5V −2 +2 µA
Input Pullup Current V
CC
=
5.5V, V
IN
=
0V −40 −250 µA
G and L Port Input Hysteresis (Note 9) 0.35 V
CC
V Output Current Levels D Outputs
Source V
CC
=
4.5V, V
OH
=
3.3V −0.4 mA
Sink (Note 6) V
CC
=
4.5V, V
OL
=
1V 10 mA
All Others
Source (Weak Pull-Up Mode) V
CC
=
4.5V, V
OH
=
2.7V −10 −100 µA
Source (Push-Pull Mode) V
CC
=
4.5V, V
OH
=
3.3V −0.4 mA
Sink (Push-Pull Mode) V
CC
=
4.5V, V
OL
=
0.4V 1.6 mA
TRI-STATE Leakage V
CC
=
5.5V −2 +2 µA
Allowable Sink/Source Current per Pin
D Outputs (Sink) 15 mA All others 3mA
Maximum Input Current Room Temp
±
100 mA without Latchup (Notes 7, 9) RAM Retention Voltage, V
r
500 ns Rise 2 V
and Fall Time (min) Input Capacitance 7pF Load Capacitance on D2 1000 pF
www.national.com 4
AC Electrical Characteristics
−40˚C TA≤ +85˚C unless otherwise specified
Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Units
Instruction Cycle Time (t
c
)
Crystal, Resonator, 4.5V V
CC
5.5V 1.0 DC µs
R/C Oscillator 4.5V V
CC
5.5V 3.0 DC µs
CKI Clock Duty Cycle (Note 9) f
r
=
Max 40 60
%
Rise Time (Note 9) f
r
=
10 MHz Ext Clock 5 ns
Fall Time (Note 9) f
r
=
10 MHz Ext Clock 5 ns
Inputs
t
SETUP
4.5V VCC≤ 5.5V 200 ns
t
HOLD
4.5V VCC≤ 5.5V 60 ns
Output Propagation Delay (Note 8) R
L
=
2.2k, C
L
=
100 pF
t
PD1,tPD0
SO, SK 4.5V VCC≤ 5.5V 0.7 µs All Others 4.5V V
CC
5.5V 1.0 µs
MICROWIRE
Setup Time (t
UWS
) (Note 9) 20 ns
MICROWIRE Hold Time (t
UWH
) (Note 9) 56 ns
MICROWIRE Output Propagation Delay (t
UPD
) 220 ns
Input Pulse Width (Note 9)
Interrupt Input High Time 1.0 t
c
Interrupt Input Low Time 1.0 t
c
Timer 1, 2, 3 Input High Time 1.0 t
c
Timer 1, 2, 3 Input Low Time 1.0 t
c
Reset Pulse Width 1.0 µs
Note 2: t
c
=
Instruction Cycle Time
Note 3: Maximum rate of voltage change must be
<
0.5 V/ms.
Note 4: Supply and IDLE currents are measured with CKI driven with a square wave Oscillator, CKO driven 180˚ out of phase with CKI, inputs connected to V
CC
and outputs driven low but not connected to a load. Note 5: The HALT mode will stop CKI from oscillating in the RC and the Crystal configurations by bringing CKI high. Measurement of I
DD
HALTis done with device neither sourcing nor sinking current; with L, C, G0, and G2–G5 programmed as low outputs and not driving a load; all outputs programmed low and not driving a load; all inputs tied to V
CC
; clock monitor and comparator disabled. Parameter refers to HALT mode entered via setting bit 7 of the G Port data register. Part will pull up
CKI during HALT in crystal clock mode. Note 6: The user must guarantee that D2 pin does not source more than 10 mA during RESET. If D2 sources more than 10 mA during reset, the device will go into
programming mode. Note 7: Pins G6 and RESET are designed with a high voltage input network. These pins allow input voltages
>
VCCand the pins will have sink current to VCCwhen biased at voltages>VCC(the pins do not have source current when biased at a voltage below VCC). The effective resistance to VCCis 750(typical). These two pins will not latch up. The voltage at the pins must be limited to
<
14V.WARNING: Voltages in excess of 14V will cause damage to the pins. This warning excludes
ESD transients.
Note 8: The output propagation delay is referenced to the end of the instruction cycle where the output change occurs. Note 9: Parameter characterized but not tested.
www.national.com5
A/D Converter Specifications
V
CC
=
5V
±
10%,(VSS–0.050V) Any Input (VCC+ 0.050V)
Parameter Conditions Min Typ Max Units
Resolution 8 Bits Absolute Accuracy
±
2 LSB
Non-Linearity Deviation from the Best Straight Line
±
1 LSB
Differential Non-Linearity
±
1 LSB
Common Mode Input Range (Note 12) GND V
CC
V
DC Common Mode Error
±
1/2 LSB Off Channel Leakage Current 1 2 µA On Channel Leakage Current 1 2 µA A/D Clock Frequency (Note 11) 0.1 1.67 MHz Converison Time (Note 10) 17 A/D Clock Cycles Internal Reference Resistance s Tum-on Time (Note 13)
Note 10: Conversion Time includes 7 A/D clock cycles sample and hold time. Note 11: See Prescaler description. Note 12: For V
IN
(−)
>
=
V
IN
(+) the digital output code will be 0000 0000. Two on-chip diodes are tied to each analog input. The diodes will forward conduct for ana-
log input voltages below ground or above the V
CC
supply. Be careful, during testing at low VCClevels (4.5V), as high level analog inputs (5V) can cause this input diode to conduct — especially at elevated temperatures, and cause errors for analog inputs near full-scale. The spec allows 50 mV forward bias of either diode. This means that as long as the analog V
IN
does not exceed the supply voltage by more than 50 mV, the output code will be correct. To achieve an absolute 0 VDCto 5
V
DC
input voltage range will therefore require a minimum supply voltage of 4.950 VDCover temperature variations, initial tolerance and loading.
Note 13: Time or internal reference reistance to turn on and settle after coming out of HALT or IDLE mode.
DS012526-4
FIGURE 3. MICROWIRE/PLUS Timing
www.national.com 6
Typical Performance Characteristics (−55˚C T
A
=
+125˚C)
DS012526-22 DS012526-23
DS012526-24 DS012526-25
DS012526-26
www.national.com7
Pin Descriptions
VCCand GND are the power supply pins. All VCCand GND pins must be connected.
CKI is the clock input. This can come from an R/C generated oscillator, or a crystal oscillator (in conjunction with CKO). See Oscillator Description section.
RESET is the master reset input. See Reset Description sec­tion.
The device contains three bidirectional 8-bit I/O ports (C, G and L), where each individual bit may be independently con­figured as an input (Schmitt Trigger inputs on ports Land G), output or TRI-STATE under program control. Three data memory address locations are allocated for each of these I/O ports. Each I/O port has two associated 8-bit memory mapped registers, the CONFIGURATION register and the output DATAregister.A memory mapped address is also re­served for the input pins of each I/O port. (See the memory map for the various addresses associated with the I/O ports.)
Figure 4
shows the I/O port configurations. The DATA and CONFIGURATION registers allow for each port bit to be in­dividually configured under software control as shown below:
CONFIGURATION DATA Port Set-Up
Register Register
0 0 Hi-Z Input
(TRI-STATE Output) 0 1 Input with Weak Pull-Up 1 0 Push-Pull Zero Output 1 1 Push-Pull One Output
PORT L is an 8-bit I/O port. All L-pins have Schmitt triggers on the inputs.
Port L supports Multi-Input Wake Up on all eight pins. L4 and L5 are used for the timer input functions T2A and T2B. L6 and L7 are used for the timer input functions T3A and T3B.
Port L has the following alternate features:
L7 MIWU or T3B L6 MIWU or T3A L5 MIWU or T2B L4 MIWU or T2A L3 MIWU L2 MIWU L1 MIWU L0 MIWU
Port G is an 8-bit port with 5 I/O pins (G0, G2–G5), an input pin (G6), and a dedicated output pin (G7). Pins G0 and G2–G6 all have Schmitt Triggers on their inputs. Pin G1 serves as the dedicated WDOUT WATCHDOGoutput, while pin G7 is either input or output depending on the oscillator mask option selected. With the crystal oscillator option se­lected, G7 serves as the dedicated output pin for the CKO clock output. With the single-pin R/C oscillator mask option selected, G7 serves as a general purpose input pin but is also used to bring the device out of HALTmode with a low to high transition on G7. There are two registers associated with the G Port, a data register and a configuration register. Therefore, each of the 5 I/O bits (G0, G2–G5) can be indi­vidually configured under software control.
configuration registers for G6 and G7 are used for special purpose functions as outlined on the next page. Reading the G6 and G7 data bits will return zeros.
Note that the chip will be placed in the HALTmode by writing a “1” to bit 7 of the Port G Data Register. Similarly the chip will be placed in the IDLE mode by writing a “1” to bit 6 of the Port G Data Register.
Writing a “1” to bit 6 of the Port G Configuration Register en­ables the MICROWIRE/PLUS to operate with the alternate phase of the SK clock. The G7 configuration bit, if set high, enables the clock start up delay after HALT when the R/C clock configuration is used.
Config Reg. Data Reg.
G7 CLKDLY HALT G6 Alternate SK IDLE
Port G has the following alternate features:
G6 SI (MICROWIRE Serial Data Input) G5 SK (MICROWIRE Serial Clock) G4 SO (MICROWIRE Serial Data Output) G3 T1A (Timer T1 I/O) G2 T1B (Timer T1 Capture Input) G0 INTR (External Interrupt Input)
Port G has the following dedicated functions:
G7 CKO Oscillator dedicated output or general purpose
input
G1 WDOUT WATCHDOG and/or Clock Monitor dedi-
cated output
Port C is an 8-bit I/O port. The 40-pin device does not have a full complement of Port C pins. The unavailable pins are not terminated. A read operation for these unterminated pins will return unpredicatable values.
Port I is an 8-bit Hi-Z input port, and also provides theanalog inputs to the A/D converter. The 28-pin device does not have a full complement of Port I pins. The unavailable pins are not terminated (i.e. they are floating). A read operation from these unterminated pins will return unpredictable values. The user should ensure that the software takes this into ac­count by either masking out these inputs, or else restricting the accesses to bit operations only. If unterminated, Port I pins will draw power only when addressed.
Port D is an 8-bit output port that is preset high whenRESET goes low. The user can tie two or more D port outputs (ex­cept D2) together in order to get a higher drive.
DS012526-5
FIGURE 4. I/O Port Configurations
www.national.com 8
Pin Descriptions (Continued)
Note: Care must be exercised with the D2 pin operation. At RESET, the ex-
ternal loads on this pin must ensure that the output voltages stay above 0.8 V
CC
to prevent the chip from entering special modes. Also
keep the external loading on D2 to
<
1000 pF.
Functional Description
The architecture of the device is modified Harvard architec­ture. With the Harvard architecture, the control store pro­gram memory (ROM) is separated from the data store memory (RAM). Both ROM and RAM have their own sepa­rate addressing space with separate address buses. The ar­chitecture, though based on Harvard architecture, permits transfer of data from ROM to RAM.
CPU REGISTERS
The CPU can do an 8-bit addition, subtraction, logical orshift operation in one instruction (t
c
) cycle time. There are six CPU registers: A is the 8-bit Accumulator Register PC is the 15-bit Program Counter Register
PU is the upper 7 bits of the program counter (PC) PL is the lower 8 bits of the program counter (PC)
B is an 8-bit RAM address pointer, which can be optionally post auto incremented or decremented.
X is an 8-bit alternate RAM address pointer, which can be optionally post auto incremented or decremented.
S is the 8-bit Data SegmentAddress Register used to extend the lower half of the address range (00 to 7F) into 256 data segments of 128 bytes each.
All the CPU registers are memory mapped with the excep­tion of the Accumulator (A) and the Program Counter (PC).
PROGRAM MEMORY
The program memory consists of 16 or 32 kbytes of OTP EPROM. These bytes may hold program instructions or con­stant data (data tables for the LAID instruction, jump vectors for the JID instruction, and interrupt vectors for the VIS in­struction). The program memory is addressed by the 15-bit program counter (PC). All interrupts in the devices vector to program memory location 0FF Hex.
The device can be configured to inhibit external reads of the program memory. This is done by programming the Security Byte.
SECURITY FEATURE
The program memory array has an associated Security Byte that is located outside of the program address range. This byte can be addressed only from programming mode by a programmer tool.
Security is an optional feature and can only be assertedafter the memory array has been programmed and verified. A se­cured part will read all 00(hex) by a programmer. The part will fail Blank Check and will fail Verify operations. A Read operation will fill the programmer’s memory with 00(hex). The Security Byte itself is always readable with a value of 00(hex) if unsecure and FF(hex) if secure.
DATA MEMORY
The data memory address space includes the on-chip RAM and data registers, the I/O registers (Configuration, Data and Pin), the control registers, the MICROWIRE/PLUS SIO shift register, and the various registers, and counters associated with the timers (with the exception of the IDLE timer). Data memory is addressed directly by the instruction or indirectly by the B, X, SP pointers and S register.
The data memory consists of 256 bytes of RAM. Sixteen bytes of RAM are mapped as “registers” at addresses 0F0 to 0FF Hex. These registers can be loaded immediately, and also decremented and tested with the DRSZ (decrement register and skip if zero) instruction. The memory pointer registers X, SP,B and S are memory mapped into this space at address locations 0FC to 0FF Hex respectively, with the other registers being available for general usage.
The instruction set permits any bit in memory to be set, reset or tested. All I/O and registers (except A and PC) are memory mapped; therefore, I/O bits and register bits can be directly and individually set, reset and tested. The accumula­tor (A) bits can also be directly and individually tested.
Note: RAM contents are undefined upon power-up.
Data Memory Segment RAM Extension
Data memory address 0FF is used as a memory mapped lo­cation for the Data Segment Address Register (S).
The data store memory is either addressed directly by a single byte address within the instruction, or indirectly rela­tive to the reference of the B, X, or SP pointers (each con­tains a single-byte address).This single-byte address allows an addressing range of 256 locations from 00 to FF hex. The upper bit of this single-byte address divides the data store memory into two separate sections as outlined previously. With the exception of the RAM register memory from ad­dress locations 00F0 to 00FF, all RAM memory is memory mapped with the upper bit of the single-byte address being equal to zero. This allows the upper bit of the single-byte ad­dress to determine whether or not the base address range (from 0000 to 00FF) is extended. If this upper bit equals one (representing address range 0080 to 00FF), then address extension does not take place. Alternatively, if this upper bit equals zero, then the data segment extension register S is used to extend the base address range (from 0000 to 007F) from XX00 to XX7F, where XX represents the 8 bits from the S register. Thus the 128-byte data segment extensions are located from addresses 0100 to 017F for data segment 1, 0200 to 027F for data segment 2, etc., up to FF00 to FF7F for data segment 255. The base address range from 0000 to 007F represents data segment 0.
Figure 5
illustrates how the S register data memory exten­sion is used in extending the lower half of the base address range (00 to 7F hex) into 256 data segments of 128 bytes each, with a total addressing range of 32 kbytes from XX00 to XX7F. This organization allows a total of 256 data seg­ments of 128 bytes each with an additional upper base seg­ment of 128 bytes. Furthermore, all addressing modes are available for all data segments. The S register must be changed under program control to move from one data seg­ment (128 bytes) to another. However, the upper base seg­ment (containing the 16 memory registers, I/O registers, control registers, etc.) is always available regardless of the contents of the S register, since the upper base segment (address range 0080 to 00FF) is independent of data seg­ment extension.
www.national.com9
Data Memory Segment RAM Extension
(Continued)
The 128 bytes of RAM contained in the base segment are split between the lower and upper base segments. The first 112bytes of RAM are resident from address 0000 to 006F in the lower base segment, while the remaining 16 bytes of RAM represent the 16 data memory registers located at ad­dresses 00F0 to 00FF of the upper base segment. No RAM is located at the upper sixteen addresses (0070 to 007F) of the lower base segment.
Additional RAM beyond these initial 128 bytes, however, will always be memory mapped in groups of 128 bytes (or less) at the data segment address extensions (XX00 to XX7F) of the lower base segment. The additional 128 bytes of RAM are memory mapped at address locations 0100 to 017F hex.
Reset
The RESET input when pulled low initializes the microcon­troller. Initialization will occur whenever the RESET input is pulled low. Upon initialization, the data and configuration registers for ports L, G and C are cleared, resulting in these Ports being initialized to the TRI-STATE mode. Pin G1 of the G Port is an exception (as noted below) since pin G1 is dedi­cated as the WATCHDOGand/or Clock Monitor error output pin. Port D is set high. The PC, PSW, ICNTRL, CNTRL, T2CNTRL and T3CNTRL control registers are cleared. The Comparator Select Register is cleared. The S register is ini­tialized to zero. The Multi-Input Wakeupregisters WKEN and WKEDG are cleared. Wakeup register WKPND is unknown. The stack pointer, SP, is initialized to 6F hex.
The device comes out of reset with both the WATCHDOG logic and the Clock Monitor detector armed, with the WATCHDOG service window bits set and the Clock Monitor
bit set. The WATCHDOG and Clock Monitor circuits are in­hibited during reset. The WATCHDOG service window bits being initialized high default to the maximum WATCHDOG service window of 64k t
C
clock cycles. The Clock Monitor bit being initialized high will cause a Clock Monitor error follow­ing reset if the clock has not reached the minimum specified frequency at the termination of reset. A Clock Monitor error will cause an active low error output on pin G1. This error output will continue until 16 t
C
–32 tCclock cycles following the clock frequency reaching the minimum specified value, at which time the G1 output will enter the TRI-STATE mode.
The external RC network shown in
Figure 6
should be used to ensure that the RESET pin is held low until the powersup­ply to the chip stabilizes.
Oscillator Circuits
The chip can be driven by a clock input on the CKI input pin which can be between DC and 10 MHz. The CKO output clock is on pin G7 (crystal configuration). The CKI input fre­quency is divided down by 10 to produce the instruction cycle clock (1/t
c
).
Note: External clocks with frequencies above about 4 MHz require the user
to drive the CKO (G7) pin with a signal 180 degrees out of phase with CKI.
Figure 7
shows the Crystal and R/C oscillator diagrams.
CRYSTAL OSCILLATOR
CKI and CKO can be connected to make a closed loop crys­tal (or resonator) controlled oscillator.
Table 1
shows the component values required for various
standard crystal values.
R/C OSCILLATOR
By selecting CKI as a single pin oscillator input, a single pin R/C oscillator circuit can be connected to it. CKO is available as a general purpose input, and/or HALT restart input.
Note: Use of the R/C oscillator option will result in higher electromagnetic
emissions.
Table 2
shows the variation in the oscillator frequencies as
functions of the component (R and C) values.
DS012526-6
*
Reads as all ones.
FIGURE 5. RAM Organization
DS012526-7
RC>5 x Power Supply Rise Time
FIGURE 6. Recommended Reset Circuit
www.national.com 10
Oscillator Circuits (Continued)
TABLE 1. Crystal Oscillator Configuration, T
A
=
25˚C
R1 R2 C1 C2 CKI Freq Conditions
(k)(MΩ) (pF) (pF) (MHz)
0 1 30 30–36 10 V
CC
=
5V
0 1 30 30–36 4 V
CC
=
5V
0 1 200 100–150 0.455 V
CC
=
5V
TABLE 2. RC Oscillator Configuration, T
A
=
25˚C
R C CKI Freq Instr. Cycle Conditions
(k) (pF) (MHz) (µs)
3.3 82 2.2 to 2.7 3.7 to 4.6 V
CC
=
5V
5.6 100 1.1 to 1.3 7.4 to 9.0 V
CC
=
5V
6.8 100 0.9 to 1.1 8.8 to 10.8 V
CC
=
5V
Note 14: 3k R 200k
50 pF C 200 pF
CONTROL REGISTERS
CNTRL Register (Address X'00EE)
T1C3 T1C2 T1C1 T1C0 MSEL IEDG SL1 SL0 Bit 7 Bit 0
T1C3 Timer T1 mode control bit T1C2 Timer T1 mode control bit T1C1 Timer T1 mode control bit T1C0 Timer T1 Start/Stop control in timer
modes 1 and 2, T1 Underflow Interrupt Pending Flag in timer mode 3
MSEL Selects G5 and G4 as MICROWIRE/PLUS
signals SK and SO respectively
IEDG External interrupt edge polarity select
(0 = Rising edge, 1 = Falling edge)
SL1 & SL0 Select the MICROWIRE/PLUS clock divide
by (00 = 2, 01 = 4, 1x = 8)
PSW Register (Address X'00EF)
HC C T1PNDA T1ENA EXPND BUSY EXEN GIE
Bit 7 Bit 0
The PSW register contains the following select bits:
HC Half Carry Flag C Carry Flag T1PNDA Timer T1 Interrupt Pending Flag (Autoreload
RA in mode 1, T1 Underflow in Mode 2, T1A capture edge in mode 3)
T1ENA Timer T1 Interrupt Enable for Timer Underflow
or T1A Input capture edge EXPND External interrupt pending BUSY MICROWIRE/PLUS busy shifting flag EXEN Enable external interrupt GIE Global interrupt enable (enables interrupts)
The Half-Carry flag is also affected by all the instructions that affect the Carry flag. The SC (Set Carry) and R/C (Reset Carry) instructions will respectively set or clear both the carry flags. In addition to the SC and R/C instructions, ADC, SUBC, RRC and RLC instructions affect the Carry and Half Carry flags.
ICNTRL Register (Address X'00E8)
Reserved LPEN T0PND T0EN µWPND µWEN T1PNDB T1ENB Bit 7 Bit 0
The ICNTRL register contains the following bits:
Reserved This bit is reserved and should to zero LPEN L Port Interrupt Enable (Multi-Input Wakeup/
Interrupt) T0PND Timer T0 Interrupt pending T0EN Timer T0 Interrupt Enable (Bit 12 toggle) µWPND MICROWIRE/PLUS interrupt pending µWEN Enable MICROWIRE/PLUS interrupt T1PNDB Timer T1 Interrupt Pending Flag for T1B cap-
ture edge T1ENB Timer T1 Interrupt Enable for T1B Input cap-
ture edge
T2CNTRL Register (Address X'00C6)
T2C3 T2C2 T2C1 T2C0 T2PNDA T2ENA T2PNDB T2ENB Bit 7 Bit 0
The T2CNTRL control register contains the following bits:
T2C3 Timer T2 mode control bit T2C2 Timer T2 mode control bit T2C1 Timer T2 mode control bit T2C0 Timer T2 Start/Stop control in timer
modes 1 and 2, T2 Underflow Interrupt Pend-
ing Flag in timer mode 3 T2PNDA Timer T2 Interrupt Pending Flag (Autoreload
RA in mode 1, T2 Underflow in mode 2, T2A
capture edge in mode 3) T2ENA Timer T2 Interrupt Enable for Timer Underflow
or T2A Input capture edge T2PNDB Timer T2 Interrupt Pending Flag for T2B cap-
ture edge
DS012526-8
DS012526-9
FIGURE 7. Crystal and R/C Oscillator Diagrams
www.national.com11
CONTROL REGISTERS (Continued)
T2ENB Timer T2 Interrupt Enable for Timer Underflow
or T2B Input capture edge
T3CNTRL Register (Address X'00B6)
T3C3 T3C2 T3C1 T3C0 T3PNDA T3ENA T3PNDB T3ENB Bit 7 Bit 0
The T3CNTRL control register contains the following bits:
T3C3 Timer T3 mode control bit T3C2 Timer T3 mode control bit T3C1 Timer T3 mode control bit T3C0 Timer T3 Start/Stop control in timer
modes 1 and 2, T3 Underflow Interrupt Pend­ing Flag in timer mode 3
T3PNDA Timer T3 Interrupt Pending Flag (Autoreload
RA in mode 1, T3 Underflow in mode 2, T3A capture edge in mode 3)
T3ENA Timer T3 Interrupt Enable for Timer Underflow
or T3A Input capture edge
T3PNDB Timer T3 Interrupt Pending Flag for T3B cap-
ture edge
T3ENB Timer T3 Interrupt Enable for Timer Underflow
or T3B Input capture edge
Timers
The device contains a very versatile set of timers (T0, T1, T2, T3). All timers and associated autoreload/capture regis­ters power up containing random data.
TIMER T0 (IDLE TIMER)
The device supports applications that require maintaining real time and low power with the IDLE mode. This IDLE mode support is furnished by the IDLE timer T0, which is a 16-bit timer. The Timer T0 runs continuously at the fixed rate of the instruction cycle clock, t
c
. The user cannot read or
write to the IDLE Timer T0, which is a count down timer. The Timer T0 supports the following functions:
j
Exit out of the Idle Mode (See Idle Mode description)
j
WATCHDOG logic (See WATCHDOG description)
j
Start up delay out of the HALT mode
Figure 8
is a functional block diagram showing the structure
of the IDLE Timer and its associated interrupt logic.
Bits 11 through 15 of the ITMR register can be selected for triggering the IDLE Timer interrupt. Each time the selected bit underflows (every 4k, 8k, 16k, 32k or 64k instruction cycles), the IDLE Timer interrupt pending bit T0PND is set, thus generating an interrupt (if enabled), and bit 6 of the Port G data register is reset, thus causing an exit from the IDLE mode if the device is in that mode.
In order for an interrupt to be generated, the IDLE Timer in­terrupt enable bit T0EN must be set, and the GIE (Global In­terrupt Enable) bit must also be set. The T0PND flag and T0EN bit are bits 5 and 4 of the ICNTRL register, respec­tively.The interrupt can be used for any purpose. Typically, it is used to perform a task upon exit from the IDLE mode. For more information on the IDLE mode, refer to the PowerSave Modes section.
The Idle Timer period is selected by bits 0–2 of the ITMR register Bits 3–7 of the ITMR Register are reserved and should not be used as software flags.
TABLE 3. Idle Timer Window Length
ITSEL2 ITSEL1 ITSEL0 Idle Timer Period
(Instruction Cycles)
0 0 0 4,096 0 0 1 8,192 0 1 0 16,384 0 1 1 32,768 1 X X 65,536
ITMR Register (Address X’0xCF)
Reserved ITSEL2 ITSEL1 ITSEL0
Bit 7 Bit 0
Any time the IDLE Timer period is changed there is the pos­sibility of generating a spurious IDLE Timer interrupt by set­ting the T0PND bit. The user is advised to disable IDLE Timer interrupts prior to changing the value of the ITSEL bits of the ITMR Register and then clear the T0PND bit before at­tempting to synchronize operation to the IDLE Timer.
www.national.com 12
Loading...
+ 27 hidden pages