The STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line family incorporates the high-
performance ARM
®
Cortex™-M3 32-bit RISC core operating at a 36 MHz frequency, highspeed embedded memories (Flash memory up to 1 Mbyte and SRAM of 80 Kbytes), and an
extensive range of enhanced I/Os and peripherals connected to two APB buses. All devices
offer one 12-bit ADC, ten general-purpose 16-bit timers, as well as standard and advanced
communication interfaces: up to two I
2
Cs, three SPIs and five USARTs.
The STM32F101xx XL-density access line family operates in the –40 to +85 °C temperature
range, from a 2.0 to 3.6 V power supply. A comprehensive set of power-saving mode allows
the design of low-power applications.
These features make the STM32F101xx XL-density access line microcontroller family
suitable for a wide range of applications such as medical and handheld equipment, PC
peripherals and gaming, GPS platforms, industrial applications, PLC, printers, scanners
alarm systems , power meters, and video intercom.
10/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGDescription
2.1 Device overview
The STM32F101xx XL-density access line family offers devices in 3 different package types:
from 64 pins to 144 pins. Depending on the device chosen, different sets of peripherals are
included, the description below gives an overview of the complete range of peripherals
proposed in this family.
●
Figure 1 shows the general block diagram of the device family.
Table 2.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG features and peripheral counts
PeripheralsSTM32F101RxSTM32F101VxSTM32F101Zx
Flash memory768 KB1 MB768 KB1 MB768 KB1 MB
SRAM in Kbytes808080
FSMCNoYesYes
Timers
General-purpose10
Basic2
SPI3
Communication
interfaces
2
C2
I
USART5
GPIOs5180112
12-bit ADC
Number of channels
12-bit DAC
Number of channels
2
16
2
16
2
2
CPU frequency36 MHz
Operating voltage2.0 to 3.6 V
Operating temperatures
PackageLQFP64LQFP100
1. For the LQFP100 package, only FSMC Bank1 and Bank2 are available. Bank1 can only support a
multiplexed NOR/PSRAM memory using the NE1 Chip Select. Bank2 can only support a 16- or 8-bit NAND
Flash memory using the NCE2 Chip Select. The interrupt line cannot be used since Port G is not available
in this package.
Ambient temperature: –40 to +85 °C (see Ta bl e 1 0)
Junction temperature: –40 to +105 °C (see Ta bl e 1 0 )
(1)
LQFP144
2
16
Doc ID 17143 Rev 211/108
DescriptionSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
Figure 1.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line block diagram
TRACECLK
TRACED[0:3]
as AS
NJTRST
JTDI
JTCK/SWCLK
JTMS/SWDIO
JTDO
as AF
A[25:0]
D[15:0]
CLK
NOE
NWE
NE[4:1]
NBL[1:0]
NWAIT
NL
as AF
112AF
PA[15:0]
PB[15:0]
PC[15:0]
PD[15:0]
PE[15:0]
PF[15:0]
PG[15:0]
2 channels as AF
1 channel as AF
1 channel as AF
MOSI, MISO, SCK,
NSSas AF
RX, TX, CTS, RTSas AF
ADC_IN[0:15]
V
REF–
V
REF+
TPIU
Trace/trig
SW/JTAG
MPU
Cortex-M3 CPU
F
: 36 MHz
max
NVIC
GP DMA1
7 channels
GP DMA2
5 channels
EXT.IT
WKUP
GPIO port A
GPIO port B
GPIO port C
GPIO port D
GPIO port E
GPIO port F
GPIO port G
TIM9
TIM10
TIM11
SPI1
USART1
Temp. sensor
12-bit ADC
@ V
DDA
ETM
FSMC
IF
Pbus
Dbus
System
Ibus
APB2: Fmax = 24/36 MHz
Trace
controller
Bus matrix
AHB2
APB2
SRAM
80 Kbyte
AHB2
APB1
obl
Flash 512 Kbyte
Flash
interface
obl
Flash 512 Kbyte
Flash
interface
Reset &
clock
control
WWDG
TIM6
TIM7
64 bit
64 bit
@V
RC 8 MHz
RC 40 kHz
PCLK1
PCLK2
HCLK
FCLK
PLL
DDA
POR
Reset
Int
= 24/36 MHz
max
APB1: F
V
DD
Volt. reg.
3.3 V to 1.8 V
Supply
supervision
POR / PDR
IWDG
Standby
interface
XTAL 32kHz
RTC
AWU
Backup interface
TIM2
TIM12
TIM13
TIM14
USART 2
USART 3
UART4
UART5
12bit DAC1
IFIF
IF
12bit DAC 2
@V
@V
DD
Power
@V
DDA
PVD
@V
XTAL OSC
4-16 MHz
V
@
BAT
Backup
reg
TIM3
TIM4
TIM5
SPI2
SPI3
I2C1
I2C2
DDA
DD
V
SS
NRST
V
DDA
V
SSA
OSC_IN
OSC_OUT
V
=1.8 V to 3.6 V
BAT
OSC32_IN
OSC32_OUT
TAMPER-RTC/
ALARM/SECOND OUT
4 channelsas AF
4 channelsas AF
4 channelsas AF
4 channelsas AF
2 channelsas AF
1 channel as AF
1 channel as AF
RX, TX, CTS, RTS
CK, as AF
RX, TX, CTS, RT S,
CK, as AF
RX,TX as AF
RX,TX as AF
MOSI, MISOSCK, NSSas AF
MOSI, MISO
SCK, NSS as AF
SCL, SDA, SMBA as AF
SCL, SDA, SMBA as AF
DAC_OUT1 as AF
DAC_OUT2 as AF
V
REF+
,
ai15830
1. TA = –40 °C to +85 °C (junction temperature up to 105 °C).
2. AF = alternate function on I/O port pin.
12/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGDescription
(3%/3#
-(Z
/3#?).
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,3%/3#
K(Z
(3)2#
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K(Z
TOINDEPENDENTWATCHDOG)7$'
0,,
XXX
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,3%
,3)
(3)
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0,,8402%
X
!("
0RESCALER
0,,#,+
(3)
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0RESCALER
!$##,+
0#,+
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0,,#,+
TO!("BUSCORE
MEMORYAND$-!
TO!$#
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(3)
(3)
(3%
PERIPHERALS
TO!0"
0ERIPHERAL#LOCK
%NABLE
%NABLE
0ERIPHERAL#LOCK
!0"
0RESCALER
0#,+
TO!0"PERIPHERALS
0ERIPHERAL#LOCK
%NABLE
-(ZMAX
-(Z
-(ZMAX
-(ZMAX
TO24#
0,,32#
37
-#/
#33
TO#ORTEX3YSTEMTIMER
#LOCK
%NABLE
393#,+
MAX
24##,+
24#3%,;=
4)-X#,+
)7$'#,+
393#,+
&#,+#ORTEX
FREERUNNINGCLOCK
4)-
TO4)-
AND
TO&3-#
&3-##,+
0ERIPHERALCLOCK
ENABLE
AI
)F!0"PRESCALERX
ELSEX
(IGHSPEEDINTERNALCLOCKSIGNAL
,OWSPEEDEXTERNALCLOCKSIGNAL
,OWSPEEDINTERNALCLOCKSIGNAL
0ERIPHERAL#LOCK
%NABLE
4)-X#,+
4)-
TO4)-4)-
AND4)-
)F!0"PRESCALERX
ELSEX
&,)4&#,+
TO&LASHPROGRAMMING
INTERFACE
Figure 2.Clock tree
1. When the HSI is used as a PLL clock input, the maximum system clock frequency that can be achieved is
36 MHz.
2. To have an ADC conversion time of 1 µs, APB2 must be at 14 MHz or 28 MHz.
Doc ID 17143 Rev 213/108
DescriptionSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
2.2 Full compatibility throughout the family
The STM32F101xx is a complete family whose members are fully pin-to-pin, software and
feature compatible. In the reference manual, the STM32F101x4 and STM32F101x6 are
identified as low-density devices, the STM32F101x8 and STM32F101xB are referred to as
medium-density devices, the STM32F101xC, STM32F101xD, STM32F101xE are referred
to as high-density devices, and the STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG are referred to as
XL-density devices.
Low-, high-density and XL-density devices are an extension of the STM32F101x8/B
medium-density devices, they are specified in the STM32F101x4/6, STM32F101xC/D/E and
STM32F101xF/G datasheets, respectively.
Low-density devices feature lower Flash memory and RAM capacities, less timers and
peripherals. High-density devices have higher Flash memory and RAM densities, and
additional peripherals like FSMC and DAC. XL-density devices bring greater Flash and RAM
capacities, and more features, namely an MPU, a higher number of timers and a dual bank
Flash memory, while remaining fully compatible with the other members of the family.
The STM32F101x4, STM32F101x6, STM32F101xC, STM32F101xD, STM32F101xE,
STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG are a drop-in replacement for the STM32F101x8/B
devices, allowing the user to try different memory densities and providing a greater degree
of freedom during the development cycle.
Moreover, the STM32F101xx access line family is fully compatible with all existing
STM32F103xx performance line and STM32F102xx USB access line devices.
Table 3.STM32F101xx family
Pinout
144
100
64
48
36
1. For orderable part numbers that do not show the A internal code after the temperature range code (6), the reference
datasheet for electrical characteristics is that of the STM32F101x8/B medium-density devices.
2.3.1 ARM® Cortex™-M3 core with embedded Flash and SRAM
The ARM Cortex™-M3 processor is the latest generation of ARM processors for embedded
systems. It has been developed to provide a low-cost platform that meets the needs of MCU
implementation, with a reduced pin count and low-power consumption, while delivering
outstanding computational performance and an advanced system response to interrupts.
The ARM Cortex™-M3 32-bit RISC processor features exceptional code-efficiency,
delivering the high-performance expected from an ARM core in the memory size usually
associated with 8- and 16-bit devices.
The STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line family having an embedded ARM core,
is therefore compatible with all ARM tools and software.
Figure 1 shows the general block diagram of the device family.
2.3.2 Memory protection unit
The memory protection unit (MPU) is used to separate the processing of tasks from the data
protection. The MPU can manage up to 8 protection areas that can all be further divided up
into 8 subareas. The protection area sizes are between 32 bytes and the whole 4 gigabytes
of addressable memory.
The memory protection unit is especially helpful for applications where some critical or
certified code has to be protected against the misbehavior of other tasks. It is usually
managed by an RTOS (real-time operating system). If a program accesses a memory
location that is prohibited by the MPU, the RTOS can detect it and take action. In an RTOS
environment, the kernel can dynamically update the MPU area setting, based on the
process to be executed.
The MPU is optional and can be bypassed for applications that do not need it.
2.3.3 Embedded Flash memory
768 Kbytes to 1 Mbyte of embedded Flash are available for storing programs and data. The
Flash memory is organized as two banks. The first bank has a size of 512 Kbytes. The
second bank is either 256 or 512 Kbytes depending on the device. This gives the device the
capability of writing to one bank while executing code from the other bank (read-while-write
capability).
2.3.4 CRC (cyclic redundancy check) calculation unit
The CRC (cyclic redundancy check) calculation unit is used to get a CRC code from a 32-bit
data word and a fixed generator polynomial.
Among other applications, CRC-based techniques are used to verify data transmission or
storage integrity. In the scope of the EN/IEC 60335-1 standard, they offer a means of
verifying the Flash memory integrity. The CRC calculation unit helps compute a signature of
the software during runtime, to be compared with a reference signature generated at linktime and stored at a given memory location.
Doc ID 17143 Rev 215/108
DescriptionSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
2.3.5 Embedded SRAM
80 Kbytes of embedded SRAM accessed (read/write) at CPU clock speed with 0 wait states.
2.3.6 FSMC (flexible static memory controller)
The FSMC is embedded in the STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line family. It has
four Chip Select outputs supporting the following modes: PC Card/Compact Flash, SRAM,
PSRAM, NOR and NAND.
Functionality overview:
●The three FSMC interrupt lines are ORed in order to be connected to the NVIC
●Write FIFO
●Code execution from external memory except for NAND Flash and PC Card
●The targeted frequency is HCLK/2, so external access is at 18 MHz when HCLK is at
36 MHz
2.3.7 LCD parallel interface
The FSMC can be configured to interface seamlessly with most graphic LCD controllers. It
supports the Intel 8080 and Motorola 6800 modes, and is flexible enough to adapt to
specific LCD interfaces. This LCD parallel interface capability makes it easy to build costeffective graphic applications using LCD modules with embedded controllers or highperformance solutions using external controllers with dedicated acceleration.
2.3.8 Nested vectored interrupt controller (NVIC)
The STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line embeds a nested vectored interrupt
controller able to handle up to 60maskable interrupt channels (not including the 16 interrupt
lines of Cortex™-M3) and 16 priority levels.
●Interrupt entry vector table address passed directly to the core
●Closely coupled NVIC core interface
●Allows early processing of interrupts
●Processing of late arriving higher priority interrupts
●Support for tail-chaining
●Processor state automatically saved
●Interrupt entry restored on interrupt exit with no instruction overhead
This hardware block provides flexible interrupt management features with minimal interrupt
latency.
2.3.9 External interrupt/event controller (EXTI)
The external interrupt/event controller consists of 19 edge detector lines used to generate
interrupt/event requests. Each line can be independently configured to select the trigger
event (rising edge, falling edge, both) and can be masked independently. A pending register
maintains the status of the interrupt requests. The EXTI can detect an external line with a
pulse width shorter than the Internal APB2 clock period. Up to 112 GPIOs can be connected
to the 16 external interrupt lines.
16/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGDescription
2.3.10 Clocks and startup
System clock selection is performed on startup, however the internal RC 8 MHz oscillator is
selected as default CPU clock on reset. An external 4-16 MHz clock can be selected, in
which case it is monitored for failure. If failure is detected, the system automatically switches
back to the internal RC oscillator. A software interrupt is generated if enabled. Similarly, full
interrupt management of the PLL clock is available when necessary (for example with failure
of an indirectly used external oscillator).
Several prescalers are used to configure the AHB frequency, the high-speed APB (APB2)
domain and the low-speed APB (APB1) domain. The maximum frequency of the AHB and
APB domains is 36 MHz. See Figure 2 for details on the clock tree.
2.3.11 Boot modes
At startup, boot pins are used to select one of three boot options:
●Boot from user Flash: you have an option to boot from any of two memory banks. By
default, boot from Flash memory bank 1 is selected. You can choose to boot from Flash
memory bank 2 by setting a bit in the option bytes.
●Boot from system memory
●Boot from embedded SRAM
The bootloader is located in system memory. It is used to reprogram the Flash memory by
using USART1.
2.3.12 Power supply schemes
●V
●V
●V
For more details on how to connect power pins, refer to Figure 9: Power supply scheme.
= 2.0 to 3.6 V: external power supply for I/Os and the internal regulator.
DD
Provided externally through V
, V
SSA
= 2.0 to 3.6 V: external analog power supplies for ADC, DAC, Reset blocks,
DDA
RCs and PLL (minimum voltage to be applied to V
used). V
= 1.8 to 3.6 V: power supply for RTC, external clock 32 kHz oscillator and backup
BAT
DDA
and V
registers (through power switch) when V
2.3.13 Power supply supervisor
The device has an integrated power-on reset (POR)/power-down reset (PDR) circuitry. It is
always active, and ensures proper operation starting from/down to 2 V. The device remains
in reset mode when V
external reset circuit.
The device features an embedded programmable voltage detector (PVD) that monitors the
V
DD/VDDA
generated when V
than the V
message and/or put the MCU into a safe state. The PVD is enabled by software. Refer to
Table 12: Embedded reset and power control block characteristics for the values of
V
POR/PDR
power supply and compares it to the V
DD/VDDA
threshold. The interrupt service routine can then generate a warning
PVD
and V
PVD
pins.
DD
must be connected to VDD and VSS, respectively.
SSA
DD
is below a specified threshold, V
DD
drops below the V
PVD
.
is 2.4 V when the ADC or DAC is
DDA
is not present.
POR/PDR
threshold. An interrupt can be
PVD
, without the need for an
threshold and/or when VDD/V
is higher
DDA
Doc ID 17143 Rev 217/108
DescriptionSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
2.3.14 Voltage regulator
The regulator has three operation modes: main (MR), low power (LPR) and power down.
●MR is used in the nominal regulation mode (Run)
●LPR is used in the Stop modes.
●Power down is used in Standby mode: the regulator output is in high impedance: the
kernel circuitry is powered down, inducing zero consumption (but the contents of the
registers and SRAM are lost)
This regulator is always enabled after reset. It is disabled in Standby mode.
2.3.15 Low-power modes
The STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line supports three low-power modes to
achieve the best compromise between low power consumption, short startup time and
available wakeup sources:
●Sleep mode
In Sleep mode, only the CPU is stopped. All peripherals continue to operate and can
wake up the CPU when an interrupt/event occurs.
●Stop mode
Stop mode achieves the lowest power consumption while retaining the content of
SRAM and registers. All clocks in the 1.8 V domain are stopped, the PLL, the HSI RC
and the HSE crystal oscillators are disabled. The voltage regulator can also be put
either in normal or in low power mode.
The device can be woken up from Stop mode by any of the EXTI line. The EXTI line
source can be one of the 16 external lines, the PVD output or the RTC alarm.
●Standby mode
The Standby mode is used to achieve the lowest power consumption. The internal
voltage regulator is switched off so that the entire 1.8 V domain is powered off. The
PLL, the HSI RC and the HSE crystal oscillators are also switched off. After entering
Standby mode, SRAM and register contents are lost except for registers in the Backup
domain and Standby circuitry.
The device exits Standby mode when an external reset (NRST pin), a IWDG reset, a
rising edge on the WKUP pin, or an RTC alarm occurs.
Note:The RTC, the IWDG, and the corresponding clock sources are not stopped by entering Stop
or Standby mode.
2.3.16 DMA
The flexible 12-channel general-purpose DMAs (7 channels for DMA1 and 5 channels for
DMA2) are able to manage memory-to-memory, peripheral-to-memory and memory-toperipheral transfers.
The two DMA controllers support circular buffer management, removing the need for user
code intervention when the controller reaches the end of the buffer.
18/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
Each channel is connected to dedicated hardware DMA requests, with support for software
trigger on each channel. Configuration is made by software and transfer sizes between
source and destination are independent.
DMA can be used with the main peripherals: SPI, I
2
C, USART, general-purpose and basic
timers TIMx, DAC and ADC.
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGDescription
2.3.17 RTC (real-time clock) and backup registers
The RTC and the backup registers are supplied through a switch that takes power either on
V
supply when present or through the V
DD
registers used to store 84 bytes of user application data when V
pin. The backup registers are forty-two 16-bit
BAT
power is not present.
DD
They are not reset by a system or power reset, and they are not reset when the device
wakes up from the Standby mode.
The real-time clock provides a set of continuously running counters which can be used with
suitable software to provide a clock calendar function, and provides an alarm interrupt and a
periodic interrupt. It is clocked by a 32.768 kHz external crystal, resonator or oscillator, the
internal low power RC oscillator or the high speed external clock divided by 128. The
internal low-speed RC has a typical frequency of 40 kHz. The RTC can be calibrated using
an external 512 Hz output to compensate for any natural quartz deviation. The RTC features
a 32-bit programmable counter for long term measurement using the Compare register to
generate an alarm. A 20-bit prescaler is used for the time base clock and is by default
configured to generate a time base of 1 second from a clock at 32.768 kHz.
2.3.18 Timers and watchdogs
The XL-density STM32F101xx access line devices include up to ten general-purpose
timers, two basic timers, two watchdog timers and a SysTick timer.
Table 4: STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG timer feature comparison compares the
features of the general-purpose and basic timers.
Table 4.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG timer feature comparison
Timer
TIM2, TIM3,
TIM4, TIM5
TIM9, TIM1216-bitUp
TIM10, TIM11,
TIM13, TIM14
TIM6, TIM716-bitUp
Counter
resolution
16-bit
16-bitUp
Counter
type
Up, down,
up/down
Prescaler factor
Any integer between
1 and 65536
Any integer between
1 and 65536
Any integer between
1 and 65536
Any integer between
1 and 65536
DMA
request
generation
Ye s4No
No2No
No1No
Ye s0No
General-purpose timers (TIMx)
There are 10 synchronizable general-purpose timers embedded in the STM32F101xF and
STM32F101xG XL-density access line devices (see Ta bl e 4 for differences).
●TIM2, TIM3, TIM4, TIM5
There are up to 4 synchronizable general-purpose timers (TIM2, TIM3, TIM4 and TIM5)
embedded in the STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line devices.
These timers are based on a 16-bit auto-reload up/down counter, a 16-bit prescaler
and feature 4 independent channels each for input capture/output compare, PWM or
Capture/compare
channels
Complementary
outputs
Doc ID 17143 Rev 219/108
DescriptionSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
one-pulse mode output. This gives up to 16 input captures / output compares / PWMs
on the largest packages.
Their counter can be frozen in debug mode. Any of the general-purpose timers can be
used to generate PWM outputs. They all have independent DMA request generation.
These timers are capable of handling quadrature (incremental) encoder signals and the
digital outputs from 1 to 3 hall-effect sensors.
●TIM10, TIM11 and TIM9
These timers are based on a 16-bit auto-reload upcounter and a 16-bit prescaler.
TIM10 and TIM11 feature one independent channel, whereas TIM9 has two
independent channels for input capture/output compare, PWM or one-pulse mode
output. They can be synchronized with the TIM2, TIM3, TIM4, TIM5 full-featured
general-purpose timers. They can also be used as simple time bases.
●TIM13, TIM14 and TIM12
These timers are based on a 16-bit auto-reload upcounter and a 16-bit prescaler.
TIM13 and TIM14 feature one independent channel, whereas TIM12 has two
independent channels for input capture/output compare, PWM or one-pulse mode
output. They can be synchronized with the TIM2, TIM3, TIM4, TIM5 full-featured
general-purpose timers. They can also be used as simple time bases.
Basic timers TIM6 and TIM7
These timers are mainly used for DAC trigger generation. They can also be used as a
generic 16-bit time base.
Independent watchdog
The independent watchdog is based on a 12-bit downcounter and 8-bit prescaler. It is
clocked from an independent 40 kHz internal RC and as it operates independently from the
main clock, it can operate in Stop and Standby modes. It can be used either as a watchdog
to reset the device when a problem occurs, or as a free running timer for application timeout
management. It is hardware or software configurable through the option bytes. The counter
can be frozen in debug mode.
Window watchdog
The window watchdog is based on a 7-bit downcounter that can be set as free running. It
can be used as a watchdog to reset the device when a problem occurs. It is clocked from the
main clock. It has an early warning interrupt capability and the counter can be frozen in
debug mode.
SysTick timer
This timer is dedicated to real-time operating systems, but could also be used as a standard
down counter. It features:
●A 24-bit down counter
●Autoreload capability
●Maskable system interrupt generation when the counter reaches 0.
●Programmable clock source
20/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGDescription
2.3.19 I²C bus
Up to two I²C bus interfaces can operate in multi-master and slave modes. They support
standard and fast modes.
They support 7/10-bit addressing mode and 7-bit dual addressing mode (as slave). A
hardware CRC generation/verification is embedded.
They can be served by DMA and they support SMBus 2.0/PMBus.
The STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line embeds three universal
synchronous/asynchronous receiver transmitters (USART1, USART2 and USART3) and
two universal asynchronous receiver transmitters (UART4 and UART5).
These five interfaces provide asynchronous communication, IrDA SIR ENDEC support,
multiprocessor communication mode, single-wire half-duplex communication mode and
have LIN Master/Slave capability. The five interfaces are able to communicate at speeds of
up to 2.25 Mbit/s.
USART1, USART2 and USART3 also provide hardware management of the CTS and RTS
signals, Smart Card mode (ISO 7816 compliant) and SPI-like communication capability. All
interfaces can be served by the DMA controller except for UART5.
2.3.21 Serial peripheral interface (SPI)
Up to three SPIs are able to communicate up to 18 Mbits/s in slave and master modes in
full-duplex and simplex communication modes. The 3-bit prescaler gives 8 master mode
frequencies and the frame is configurable to 8 bits or 16 bits. The hardware CRC
generation/verification supports basic SD Card/MMC modes.
All SPIs can be served by the DMA controller.
2.3.22 GPIOs (general-purpose inputs/outputs)
Each of the GPIO pins can be configured by software as output (push-pull or open-drain), as
input (with or without pull-up or pull-down) or as peripheral alternate function. Most of the
GPIO pins are shared with digital or analog alternate functions. All GPIOs are high currentcapable except for analog inputs.
The I/Os alternate function configuration can be locked if needed following a specific
sequence in order to avoid spurious writing to the I/Os registers.
2.3.23 ADC (analog to digital converter)
A 12-bit analog-to-digital converter is embedded into STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG
access line devices. It has up to 16 external channels, performing conversions in single-shot
or scan modes. In scan mode, automatic conversion is performed on a selected group of
analog inputs.
The ADC can be served by the DMA controller.
An analog watchdog feature allows very precise monitoring of the converted voltage of one,
some or all selected channels. An interrupt is generated when the converted voltage is
outside the programmed thresholds.
Doc ID 17143 Rev 221/108
DescriptionSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
The events generated by the general-purpose timers (TIMx) can be internally connected to
the ADC start trigger and injection trigger, respectively, to allow the application to
synchronize A/D conversion and timers.
2.3.24 DAC (digital-to-analog converter)
The two 12-bit buffered DAC channels can be used to convert two digital signals into two
analog voltage signal outputs. The chosen design structure is composed of integrated
resistor strings and an amplifier in inverting configuration.
This dual digital Interface supports the following features:
●two DAC converters: one for each output channel
●8-bit or 12-bit monotonic output
●left or right data alignment in 12-bit mode
●synchronized update capability
●noise-wave generation
●triangular-wave generation
●dual DAC channel independent or simultaneous conversions
●DMA capability for each channel
●external triggers for conversion
●input voltage reference V
Seven DAC trigger inputs are used in the STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG access line
family. The DAC channels are triggered through the timer update outputs that are also
connected to different DMA channels.
REF+
2.3.25 Temperature sensor
The temperature sensor has to generate a voltage that varies linearly with temperature. The
conversion range is between 2 V < V
connected to the ADC_IN16 input channel which is used to convert the sensor output
voltage into a digital value.
2.3.26 Serial wire JTAG debug port (SWJ-DP)
The ARM SWJ-DP Interface is embedded, and is a combined JTAG and serial wire debug
port that enables either a serial wire debug or a JTAG probe to be connected to the target.
The JTAG TMS and TCK pins are shared respectively with SWDIO and SWCLK and a
specific sequence on the TMS pin is used to switch between JTAG-DP and SW-DP.
2.3.27 Embedded Trace Macrocell™
The ARM® Embedded Trace Macrocell provides a greater visibility of the instruction and
data flow inside the CPU core by streaming compressed data at a very high rate from the
STM32F10xxx through a small number of ETM pins to an external hardware trace port
analyzer (TPA) device. The TPA is connected to a host computer using Ethernet, or any
other high-speed channel. Real-time instruction and data flow activity can be recorded and
then formatted for display on the host computer running debugger software. TPA hardware
is commercially available from common development tool vendors. It operates with third
party debugger software tools.
< 3.6 V. The temperature sensor is internally
DDA
22/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGPinouts and pin descriptions
Figure 4.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG LQFP100 pinout
24/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGPinouts and pin descriptions
64 63 62 61 60 59 58 57 56 55 54 53 52 51 50 49
48
47
46
45
44
43
42
41
40
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
17 18 19 20 21 22 23 2429 30 31 3225 26 27 28
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
V
BAT
PC13-TAMPER-RTC
PC14-OSC32_IN
PC15-OSC32_OUT
PD0-OSC_IN
PD1-OSC_OUT
NRST
PC0
PC1
PC2
PC3
V
SSA
V
DDA
PA 0- W K UP
PA 1
PA 2
V
DD_3
V
SS_3
PB9
PB8
BOOT0
PB7
PB6
PB5
PB4
PB3
PD2
PC12
PC11
PC10
PA 1 5
PA 14
V
DD_2
V
SS_2
PA 1 3
PA 1 2
PA 1 1
PA 1 0
PA 9
PA 8
PC9
PC8
PC7
PC6
PB15
PB14
PB13
PB12
PA 3
V
SS_4
V
DD_4
PA 4
PA 5
PA 6
PA 7
PC4
PC5
PB0
PB1
PB2
PB10
PB11
V
SS_1
V
DD_1
LQFP64
ai14392
Figure 5.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG LQFP64 pinout
Table 5.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG pin definitions
Pins
LQFP64
LQFP144
LQFP100
Pin name
(1)
(2)
Typ e
Main
function
(after reset)
I / O level
(3)
Alternate functions
DefaultRemap
(4)
1-1PE2I/O FTPE2TRACECLK / FSMC_A23
2-2PE3I/O FTPE3TRACED0 / FSMC_A19
3-3PE4I/O FTPE4TRACED1 / FSMC_A20
4-4PE5I/O FTPE5TRACED2 / FSMC_A21TIM9_CH1
5-5PE6I/O FTPE6TRACED3 / FSMC_A22TIM9_CH2
616V
BAT
727PC13-TAMPER-RTC
838PC14-OSC32_IN
949PC15-OSC32_OUT
SV
(5)
I/OPC13
(5)
I/OPC14
(5)
I/OPC15
BAT
(6)
(6)
(6)
TAMPER-RTC
OSC32_IN
OSC32_OUT
10--PF0I/O FTPF0FSMC_A0
11--PF1I/O FTPF1FSMC_A1
12--PF2I/O FTPF2FSMC_A2
13--PF3I/O FTPF3FSMC_A3
14--PF4I/O FTPF4FSMC_A4
15--PF5I/O FTPF5FSMC_A5
16-10V
17-11V
SS_5
DD_5
SV
SV
SS_5
DD_5
Doc ID 17143 Rev 225/108
Pinouts and pin descriptionsSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
Table 5.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG pin definitions (continued)
Pins
LQFP144
LQFP64
(2)
Pin name
(1)
Typ e
LQFP100
Main
function
(after reset)
I / O level
(3)
Alternate functions
DefaultRemap
18--PF6I/OPF6FSMC_NIORDTIM10_CH1
19--PF7I/OPF7FSMC_NREGTIM11_CH1
20--PF8I/OPF8FSMC_NIOWRTIM3_CH1
21--PF9I/OPF9FSMC_CDTIM14_CH1
22--PF10I/OPF10FSMC_INTR
23512OSC_INIOSC_IN
24613OSC_OUTOOSC_OUT
25714NRSTI/ONRST
26815PC0I/OPC0ADC_IN10
27916PC1I/OPC1ADC_IN11
28 10 17PC2I/OPC2ADC_IN12
29 11 18PC3I/OPC3ADC_IN13
30 12 19V
31-20V
32-21V
33 13 22V
SSA
REF-
REF+
DDA
34 14 23PA0-WKUPI/OPA0
35 15 24PA1I/OPA1
36 16 25PA2I/OPA2
37 17 26PA3I/OPA3
SV
SV
SV
SV
SSA
REF-
REF+
DDA
USART2_RX
WKUP/ USART2_CTS
ADC_IN0 / TIM5_CH1/
TIM2_CH1_ETR
USART2_RTS
ADC_IN1 / TIM5_CH2
TIM2_CH2
USART2_TX
TIM5_CH3 / ADC_IN2/
TIM2_CH3
(7)
(7)
(7)
(7)
/
(7)
(7)
/
/ TIM9_CH1
/ TIM5_CH4/
ADC_IN3 / TIM2_CH4
(7)
(7)
/
TIM9_CH2
38 18 27V
39 19 28V
SS_4
DD_4
40 20 29PA4I/OPA4
41 21 30PA5I/OPA5
42 22 31PA6I/OPA6
SV
SV
SS_4
DD_4
SPI1_NSS/ DAC_OUT1 /
ADC_IN4 / USART2_CK
SPI1_SCK / DAC_OUT2 /
ADC_IN5
SPI1_MISO / ADC_IN6 /
TIM3_CH1
(7)
/ TIM13_CH1
(7)
(4)
/
26/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGPinouts and pin descriptions
Table 5.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG pin definitions (continued)
Pins
Pin name
LQFP64
LQFP144
LQFP100
43 23 32PA7I/OPA7
(2)
(1)
Typ e
Main
function
(3)
(after reset)
I / O level
SPI1_MOSI / ADC_IN7 /
TIM3_CH2
44 24 33PC4I/OPC4ADC_IN14
45 25 34PC5I/OPC5ADC_IN15
46 26 35PB0I/OPB0ADC_IN8 / TIM3_CH3
47 27 36PB1I/OPB1ADC_IN9 / TIM3_CH4
48 28 37
PB2I/O FT PB2/BOOT1
49--PF11I/O FTPF11FSMC_NIOS16
50--PF12I/O FTPF12FSMC_A6
51--V
52--V
SS_6
DD_6
53--PF13I/O
SV
SV
FT
SS_6
DD_6
PF13FSMC_A7
54--PF14I/O FTPF14FSMC_A8
55--PF15I/O
FT
PF15FSMC_A9
56--PG0I/O FTPG0FSMC_A10
57--PG1I/O
FT
PG1FSMC_A11
58-38PE7I/O FTPE7FSMC_D4
59-39PE8I/O FTPE8FSMC_D5
60-40PE9I/O FTPE9FSMC_D6
61--V
62--V
SS_7
DD_7
SV
SV
SS_7
DD_7
63-41PE10I/O FTPE10FSMC_D7
64-42PE11I/O FTPE11FSMC_D8
65-43PE12I/O FTPE12FSMC_D9
66-44PE13I/O FTPE13FSMC_D10
67-45PE14I/O FTPE14FSMC_D11
68-46PE15I/O FTPE15FSMC_D12
69 29 47PB10I/O FTPB10I2C2_SCL / USART3_TX
70 30 48PB11I/O FTPB11I2C2_SDA / USART3_RX
71 31 49V
72 32 50V
SS_1
DD_1
73 33 51PB12I/O FTPB12
SV
SV
SS_1
DD_1
SPI2_NSS
USART3_CK
Alternate functions
DefaultRemap
(7)
/ TIM14_CH1
(7)
(7)
(7)
(7)
(7)
/ I2C2_SMBA /
(7)
(4)
TIM2_CH3
TIM2_CH4
Doc ID 17143 Rev 227/108
Pinouts and pin descriptionsSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
Table 5.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG pin definitions (continued)
Pins
LQFP144
LQFP64
Pin name
LQFP100
(2)
(1)
Typ e
Main
function
(after reset)
I / O level
74 34 52PB13I/O FTPB13
75 35 53PB14I/O FTPB14
(3)
USART3_RTS
Alternate functions
DefaultRemap
(7)
(7)
(7)
/
(7)
/
/
SPI2_SCK
USART3_CTS
SPI2_MISO
TIM12_CH1
76 36 54PB15I/O FTPB15SPI2_MOSI
(7)
/ TIM12_CH2
77-55PD8I/O FTPD8FSMC_D13USART3_TX
78-56PD9I/O FTPD9FSMC_D14USART3_RX
79-57PD10I/O FTPD10FSMC_D15USART3_CK
80-58PD11I/O FTPD11FSMC_A16USART3_CTS
81-59PD12I/O FTPD12FSMC_A17
82-60PD13I/O FTPD13FSMC_A18TIM4_CH2
83--V
84--V
SS_8
DD_8
SV
SV
SS_8
DD_8
85-61PD14I/O FTPD14FSMC_D0TIM4_CH3
86-62PD15I/O FTPD15FSMC_D1TIM4_CH4
87--PG2I/O FTPG2FSMC_A12
88--PG3I/O FTPG3FSMC_A13
89--PG4I/O FTPG4FSMC_A14
90--PG5I/O FTPG5FSMC_A15
91--PG6I/O FTPG6FSMC_INT2
92--PG7I/O FTPG7FSMC_INT3
93--PG8I/O FTPG8
94--V
95--V
SS_9
DD_9
SV
SV
SS_9
DD_9
96 37 63PC6I/O FTPC6TIM3_CH1
97 38 64PC7I/O FTPC7TIM3_CH2
98 39 65PC8I/O FTPC8TIM3_CH3
99 40 66PC9I/O FTPC9TIM3_CH4
100 41 67PA8I/O FTPA8USART1_CK / MCO
101 42 68PA9I/O FTPA9USART1_TX
102 43 69PA10I/O FTPA10USART1_RX
(7)
(7)
103 44 70PA11I/O FTPA11USART1_CTS
(4)
TIM4_CH1 /
USART3_RTS
28/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
STM32F101xF, STM32F101xGPinouts and pin descriptions
Table 5.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG pin definitions (continued)
Pins
LQFP144
LQFP64
Pin name
LQFP100
(2)
(1)
Typ e
Main
function
(3)
(after reset)
I / O level
104 45 71PA12I/O FTPA12USART1_RTS
105 46 72PA13I/O FT JTMS-SWDIO
106 -73Not connected
107 47 74
108 48 75
109 49 76
110 50 77
111 51 78
112 52 79
113 53 80
114 581
115 682
116 54 83
117 -84
118 -85
119 -86
120 --
121 --
122 -87
123 -88
124 --
125 --
126 --
127 --
128 --
129 --
130 --
131 --
132 --
V
SS_2
V
DD_2
PA 1 4I / O FT
SV
SV
SS_2
DD_2
JTCK-
SWCLK
PA15I/O FTJTDISPI3_NSS
PC10I/O FTPC10UART4_TX
PC11I/O FTPC11UART4_RX
PC12I/O FTPC12UART5_TX
PD0I/O FTOSC_IN
PD1I/O FT OSC_OUT
(8)
(8)
PD2I/O FTPD2TIM3_ETR / UART5_RX
PD3I/O FTPD3FSMC_CLK
PD4I/O FTPD4FSMC_NOE
PD5I/O FTPD5FSMC_NWE
V
SS_10
V
DD_10
SV
SV
SS_10
DD_10
PD6I/O FTPD6FSMC_NWAIT
PD7I/O FTPD7FSMC_NE1 /
PG9I/O FTPG9FSMC_NE2 /
PG10I/O FTPG10
PG11I/O FTPG11
FSMC_NCE4_1
FSMC_NCE4_2
PG12I/O FTPG12FSMC_NE4
PG13I/O FTPG13FSMC_A24
PG14I/O FTPG14FSMC_A25
V
SS_11
V
DD_11
SV
SV
SS_11
DD_11
PG15I/O FTPG15
Alternate functions
DefaultRemap
FSMC_D2
FSMC_D3
(9)
(9)
FSMC_NCE2USART2_CK
FSMC_NCE3
FSMC_NE3 /
(4)
TIM2_CH1_ETR/
PA15 /
USART3_TX
USART3_RX
USART3_CK
USART2_CTS
USART2_RTS
USART2_TX
USART2_RX
PA 1 3
PA 1 4
SPI1_NSS
Doc ID 17143 Rev 229/108
Pinouts and pin descriptionsSTM32F101xF, STM32F101xG
Table 5.STM32F101xF and STM32F101xG pin definitions (continued)
Pins
LQFP64
LQFP144
133 55 89
134 56 90
(2)
Pin name
(1)
Typ e
LQFP100
Main
function
(after reset)
I / O level
(3)
PB3I/O FTJTDOSPI3_SCK
PB4I/O FTNJTRSTSPI3_MISO
Alternate functions
DefaultRemap
135 57 91PB5I/OPB5I2C1_SMBA/ SPI3_MOSI
136 58 92PB6I/O FTPB6I2C1_SCL / TIM4_CH1
137 59 93PB7I/O FTPB7
I2C1_SDA / FSMC_NADV /
TIM4_CH2
(7)
(7)
138 60 94BOOT0IBOOT0
139 61 95PB8I/O FTPB8TIM4_CH3
140 62 96PB9I/O FTPB9TIM4_CH4
141 -97PE0I/O FTPE0TIM4_ETR
(7)
(7)
(7)
/ FSMC_NBL0
142 -98PE1I/O FTPE1FSMC_NBL1
143 63 99V
144 64 100V
SS_3
DD_3
1. I = input, O = output, S = supply.
2. FT = 5 V tolerant.
3. Function availability depends on the chosen device.
4. If several peripherals share the same I/O pin, to avoid conflict between these alternate functions only one peripheral should
be enabled at a time through the peripheral clock enable bit (in the corresponding RCC peripheral clock enable register).
5. PC13, PC14 and PC15 are supplied through the power switch. Since the switch only sinks a limited amount of current
(3 mA), the use of GPIOs PC13 to PC15 in output mode is limited: the speed should not exceed 2 MHz with a maximum
load of 30 pF and these IOs must not be used as a current source (e.g. to drive an LED).
6. Main function after the first backup domain power-up. Later on, it depends on the contents of the Backup registers even
after reset (because these registers are not reset by the main reset). For details on how to manage these IOs, refer to the
Battery backup domain and BKP register description sections in the STM32F10xxx reference manual, available from the
STMicroelectronics website: www.st.com.
7. This alternate function can be remapped by software to some other port pins (if available on the used package). For more
details, refer to the Alternate function I/O and debug configuration section in the STM32F10xxx reference manual,
available from the STMicroelectronics website: www.st.com.
8. For the LQFP64 package, the pins number 5 and 6 are configured as OSC_IN/OSC_OUT after reset, however the
functionality of PD0 and PD1 can be remapped by software on these pins. For the LQFP100 and LQFP144 packages, PD0
and PD1 are available by default, so there is no need for remapping. For more details, refer to Alternate function I/O and
debug configuration section in the STM32F10xxx reference manual
9. For devices delivered in LQFP64 packages, the FSMC function is not available.
SV
SV
SS_3
DD_3
(4)
TIM2_CH2 /
TRACESWO
SPI1_SCK
TIM3_CH1
PB4 /
SPI1_MISO
TIM3_CH2 /
SPI1_MOSI
USART1_TX
USART1_RX
I2C1_SCL
I2C1_SDA
PB3
30/108 Doc ID 17143 Rev 2
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