INTERSIL ISL12022MIBZ-T

ISL12022M
Features
The ISL12022M device is a low power real time clock
(RTC) with an embedded temperature sensor and
crystal. Device functions include oscillator compensation,
clock/calendar, power fail and low battery monitors,
brownout indicator, one-time, periodic or polled alarms,
intelligent battery backup switching, Battery Reseal™
function and 128 bytes of battery-backed user SRAM.
The device is offered in a 20 Ld SOIC module that
contains the RTC and an embedded 32.768kHz quartz
crystal. The calibrated oscillator provides less than
±5ppm drift over the full -40°C to +85°C temperature
range.
• Embedded 32.768kHz Quartz Crystal in the Package
The RTC tracks time with separate registers for hours,
minutes, and seconds. The calendar registers track date,
month, year and day of the week and are accurate
through 2099, with automatic leap year correction.
• 20 Ld SOIC Package (for DFN version, refer to the
ISL12020M)
• Calendar
• On-chip Oscillator Temperature Compensation
• 10-bit Digital Temperature Sensor Output
• 15 Selectable Frequency Outputs
• Interrupt for Alarm or 15 Selectable Frequency
Outputs
• Automatic Backup to Battery or Supercapacitor
• VDD and Battery Status Monitors
• Battery Reseal™ Function to Extend Battery Shelf
Life
• Power Status Brownout Monitor
Daylight Savings time adjustment is done automatically,
using parameters entered by the user. Power fail and
battery monitors offer user-selectable trip levels. The
time stamp function records the time and date of
switchover from VDD to VBAT power, and also from VBAT
to VDD power.
• Time Stamp for Battery Switchover
Related Literature*(see page 30)
• Utility Meters
• See AN1549 “Addressing Power Issues in Real Time
Clock Applications”
• 128 Bytes Battery-Backed User SRAM
• I2C-Bus™
• RoHS Compliant
Applications*(see page 30)
• POS Equipment
• Printers and Copiers
• Digital Cameras
SCHOTTKY DIODE
BAT54
BATTERY
3.0V
C2
0.1µF
1 NC
2 NC
NC 20
NC 19
3 NC
4 NC
NC 18
NC 17
5 NC
6 GND
NC 16
GND 15
7 VBAT
VDD 14
8 GND IRQ/FOUT 13
9 NC
10 NC
3.3V
C1
0.1µF
R1 R2 R3
10k 10k 10k
VDD
SCL 12
SDA 11
SCL MCU
INTERFACE
SDA
ISL12022M
GND
IRQ/FOUT
June 4, 2010
FN6668.7
Performance Curve
1
FOUT FREQUENCY ERROR (ppm)
Typical Application Circuit
5
OSCILLATOR ERROR vs TEMPERATURE
4
3
2
1
0
VBAT = 5.5V
-1
VDD = 2.7V
-2
-3
VDD = 3.3V
-4
-5
-40
-20
0
20
40
TEMPERATURE (°C)
60
80
CAUTION: These devices are sensitive to electrostatic discharge; follow proper IC Handling Procedures.
1-888-INTERSIL or 1-888-468-3774 | Intersil (and design) is a registered trademark of Intersil Americas Inc.
I2C Bus is a registered trademark owned by NXP Semiconductors Netherlands, B.V.
Copyright Intersil Americas Inc. 2008, 2009, 2010. All Rights Reserved.
All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.
ISL12022M
Low Power RTC with Battery Backed SRAM,
Integrated ±5ppm Temperature Compensation and
Auto Daylight Saving
ISL12022M
Block Diagram
SDA
SDA
BUFFER
SCL
SCL
BUFFER
SECONDS
I2C
INTERFACE
CONTROL
LOGIC
REGISTERS
MINUTES
HOURS
DAY OF WEEK
CRYSTAL
OSCILLATOR
RTC
DIVIDER
DATE
MONTH
VDD
POR
FREQUENCY
OUT
ALARM
VTRIP
+
-
TEMPERATURE
SENSOR
GND
CONTROL
REGISTERS
USER
SRAM
SWITCH
INTERNAL
SUPPLY
VBAT
YEAR
IRQ/FOUT
FREQUENCY
CONTROL
Pin Configuration
ISL12022M
(20 LD SOIC)
TOP VIEW
NC
1
20
NC
NC
2
19
NC
NC
3
18
NC
NC
4
17
NC
NC
5
16
NC
GND
6
15
GND
VBAT
7
14
VDD
GND
8
13
IRQ/FOUT
NC
9
12
SCL
NC
10
11
SDA
Pin Descriptions
PIN
NUMBER
SYMBOL
DESCRIPTION
1, 2, 3, 4, 5,
9, 10, 16,
17, 18, 19,
20
NC
No Connection. Do not connect to a signal or supply voltage.
7
VBAT
Backup Supply. This input provides a backup supply voltage to the device. VBAT supplies power to
the device in the event that the VDD supply fails. This pin can be connected to a battery, a
supercapacitor or tied to ground if not used. See the Battery Monitor parameter in the “DC Operating
Characteristics-RTC” table on page 4. This pin should be tied to ground if not used.
11
SDA
Serial Data. SDA is a bi-directional pin used to transfer data into and out of the device. It has an
open drain output and may be OR’ed with other open drain or open collector outputs. The input buffer
is always active (not gated) in normal mode.
An open drain output requires the use of a pull-up resistor. The output circuitry controls the fall time
of the output signal with the use of a slope controlled pull-down. The circuit is designed for 400kHz
I2C interface speeds. It is disabled when the backup power supply on the VBAT pin is activated.
2
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Pin Descriptions (Continued)
PIN
NUMBER
SYMBOL
DESCRIPTION
12
SCL
Serial Clock. The SCL input is used to clock all serial data into and out of the device. The input buffer
on this pin is always active (not gated). It is disabled when the backup power supply on the VBAT pin
is activated to minimize power consumption.
13
IRQ/FOUT
Interrupt Output/Frequency Output (Default 32.768kHz frequency output). This dual function pin
can be used as an interrupt or frequency output pin. The IRQ/FOUT mode is selected via the frequency
out control bits of the control/status register. Interrupt Mode. The pin provides an interrupt signal
output. This signal notifies a host processor that an alarm has occurred and requests action. It is an
open drain active low output. Frequency Output Mode. The pin outputs a clock signal, which is
related to the crystal frequency. The frequency output is user selectable and enabled via the I2C bus.
It is an open drain output. The output is open drain and requires a pull-up resistor.
14
6, 8, 15
VDD
GND
Power Supply. Chip power supply and ground pins. The device will operate with a power supply from
VDD = 2.7V to 5.5VDC. A 0.1µF capacitor is recommended on the VDD pin to ground.
Ordering Information
PART NUMBER
(Note 3)
PART
MARKING
VDD RANGE
(V)
TEMP RANGE
(°C)
ISL12022MIBZ
2.7 to 5.5
-40 to +85
20 Ld SOIC
ISL12022MIBZ-T (Notes 1, 2) ISL12022MIBZ
2.7 to 5.5
-40 to +85
20 Ld SOIC (Tape and Reel) M20.3
ISL12022MIBZ (Note 2)
PACKAGE
(RoHS COMPLIANT)
PKG.
DWG. #
M20.3
1. Please refer to TB347 for details on reel specifications.
2. These Intersil plastic packaged products employ special material sets, molding compounds and 100% matte tin plate plus
anneal (e3) termination finish. These products do contain Pb but they are RoHS compliant by exemption 7 (lead in high melt
temp solder for internal connections) and exemption 5 (lead in piezoelectric elements). These Intersil RoHS compliant
products are compatible with both SnPb and Pb-free soldering operations. These Intersil RoHS compliant products are MSL
classified at Pb-free peak reflow temperatures that meet or exceed the Pb-free requirements of IPC/JEDEC J STD-020.
3. For Moisture Sensitivity Level (MSL), please see device information page for ISL12022M. For more information on MSL please
see techbrief TB363.
3
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Table of Contents
Typical Application Circuit ................................. 1
Performance Curve ............................................ 1
Block Diagram ................................................... 2
Pin Descriptions ................................................ 2
Absolute Maximum Ratings .............................. 5
Thermal Information ........................................ 5
Electrical Specifications .................................... 5
I2C Interface Specifications .............................. 6
SDA vs SCL Timing............................................. 8
Symbol Table ..................................................... 8
Typical Performance Curves ............................. 9
Addresses [07h to 0Fh] .................................. 15
Interrupt Control Register (INT) ...................... 16
Power Supply Control Register (PWR_VDD) ....... 17
Battery Voltage Trip Voltage Register (PWR_VBAT)..... 17
Initial AT and DT Setting Register (ITRO).......... 17
ALPHA Register (ALPHA)................................. 19
BETA Register (BETA) ................................... 19
Final Analog Trimming Register (FATR)............. 20
Final Digital Trimming Register (FDTR) ............. 20
ALARM Registers (10h to 15h)......................... 20
Time Stamp VDD to Battery Registers (TSV2B)......... 21
Time Stamp Battery to VDD Registers (TSB2V)......... 21
DST Control Registers (DSTCR) ....................... 22
TEMP Registers (TEMP)................................... 23
NPPM Registers (NPPM) .................................. 23
XT0 Registers (XT0)....................................... 23
ALPHA Hot Register (ALPHAH) ......................... 24
User Registers (Accessed by Using Slave Address
1010111x) ................................................... 24
General Description ......................................... 10
Addresses [00h to 7Fh] .................................. 24
Functional Description..................................... 11
I2C Serial Interface ......................................... 24
Power Control Operation .................................
Normal Mode (VDD) to Battery Backup Mode (VBAT)...
Battery Backup Mode (VBAT) to Normal Mode (VDD)...
Power Failure Detection ..................................
Brownout Detection ........................................
Battery Level Monitor......................................
11
11
11
11
11
11
Protocol Conventions ...................................... 24
Device Addressing........................................... 25
Write Operation .............................................. 26
Read Operation ............................................... 26
Real Time Clock Operation............................... 12
Application Section ......................................... 26
Single Event and Interrupt ..............................
Frequency Output Mode ..................................
General Purpose User SRAM ............................
I2C Serial Interface ........................................
Oscillator Compensation..................................
Battery Backup Details ...................................
Layout Considerations ....................................
Measuring Oscillator Accuracy .........................
Temperature Compensation Operation..............
Daylight Savings Time (DST) Example..............
12
12
12
12
12
26
26
27
27
28
Register Descriptions ...................................... 12
Revision History .............................................. 29
Real Time Clock Registers ............................... 14
Products.......................................................... 30
Addresses [00h to 06h]................................... 14
M20.3 ............................................................. 31
Control and Status Registers (CSR) ................. 15
4
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Thermal Information
Voltage on VDD, VBAT and IRQ/FOUT pins
(Respect to Ground) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to 6.0V
Voltage on SCL and SDA pins
(Respect to Ground) . . . . . . . . . . . -0.3V to VDD + 0.3V
ESD Rating
Human Body Model
(Per MIL-STD-883 Method 3014) . . . . . . . . . . . >3kV
Machine Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .>300V
Charged Device Model . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . >2200V
Latch-up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Class II Level A,
passed at +85°C ambient with the Level A latch-up
criteria of 100mA or 1.5*VMAX input
Thermal Resistance (Typical)
20 Lead SOIC (Notes 4, 5)
θJA (°C/W)
θJC (°C/W)
70
35
Storage Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -40°C to +85°C
Pb-Free Reflow Profile (Note 6) . . . . . . . . . .see link below
http://www.intersil.com/pbfree/Pb-FreeReflow.asp
CAUTION: Do not operate at or near the maximum ratings listed for extended periods of time. Exposure to such conditions may adversely impact
product reliability and result in failures not covered by warranty.
NOTES:
4. θJA is measured with the component mounted on a high effective thermal conductivity test board in free air. See Tech Brief
TB379 for details.
5. For θJC, the “case temp” location is on top of the package and measured in the center of the package between pins 6 and 15.
6. The ISL12022M Oscillator Initial Accuracy can change after solder reflow attachment. The amount of change will depend on
the reflow temperature and length of exposure. A general rule is to use only one reflow cycle and keep the temperature and
time as short as possible. Changes on the order of ±1ppm to ±3ppm can be expected with typical reflow profiles.
DC Operating Characteristics RTC Test Conditions: VDD = +2.7 to +5.5V, TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise
stated. Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range,
-40°C to +85°C.
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
(Note 7) (Note 8) (Note 7) UNITS
NOTES
VDD
Main Power Supply
(Note 15)
2.7
5.5
V
VBAT
Battery Supply Voltage
(Note 15)
1.8
5.5
V
9
IDD1
Supply Current. (I2C Not Active,
VDD = 5V
4.1
7
µA
10, 11
VDD = 3V
3.5
6
µA
10, 11
Temperature Conversion Not
Active, FOUT Not Active)
IDD2
Supply Current. (I2C Active,
Temperature Conversion Not
Active, Fout Not Active)
VDD = 5V
200
500
µA
10, 11
IDD3
Supply Current. (I2C Not Active,
Temperature Conversion Active,
FOUT Not Active)
VDD = 5V
120
400
µA
10, 11
IBAT
Battery Supply Current
VDD = 0V, VBAT = 3V,
TA = +25°C
1.0
1.6
µA
10
VDD = 0V, VBAT = 3V
1.0
5.0
µA
10
IBATLKG
Battery Input Leakage
VDD = 5.5V, VBAT = 1.8V
100
nA
ILI
Input Leakage Current on SCL
VIL = 0V, VIH = VDD
-1.0
±0.1
1.0
µA
ILO
I/O Leakage Current on SDA
VIL = 0V, VIH = VDD
-1.0
±0.1
1.0
µA
VBATM
Battery Level Monitor Threshold
-100
+100
mV
VPBM
Brownout Level Monitor Threshold
-100
+100
mV
VTRIP
VBAT Mode Threshold
(Note 15)
2.0
2.2
2.4
V
VTRIPHYS VTRIP Hysteresis
30
mV
13
VBATHYS VBAT Hysteresis
50
mV
13
6
ΔFoutT
Oscillator Stability vs Temperature
VDD = 3.3V
-5
+5
ppm
ΔFoutV
Oscillator Stability vs Voltage
2.7V ≤ VDD ≤ 5.5V
-3
+3
ppm
ΔFoutI
Oscillator Initial Accuracy
VDD = 3.3V
-3
+3
ppm
6
Temp
Temperature Sensor Accuracy
VDD = VBAT = 3.3V
°C
13
5
±2
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
DC Operating Characteristics RTC Test Conditions: VDD = +2.7 to +5.5V, TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise
stated. Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature range,
-40°C to +85°C. (Continued)
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
(Note 7) (Note 8) (Note 7) UNITS
NOTES
IRQ/FOUT (OPEN DRAIN OUTPUT)
Output Low Voltage
VOL
Power-Down Timing
SYMBOL
VDDSR-
VDD = 5V, IOL = 3mA
0.4
V
VDD = 2.7V, IOL = 1mA
0.4
V
Test Conditions: VDD = +2.7 to +5.5V, Temperature = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise
stated.
PARAMETER
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
(Note 7) (Note 8) (Note 7) UNITS
VDD Negative Slew Rate
10
V/ms
NOTES
12
I2C Interface Specifications Test Conditions: VDD = +2.7 to +5.5V, Temperature = -40°C to +85°C,
unless otherwise specified. Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature
range, -40°C to +85°C.
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
(Note 7)
TYP
MAX
(Note 8) (Note 7) UNITS
VIL
SDA and SCL Input Buffer
LOW Voltage
-0.3
0.3 x
VDD
V
VIH
SDA and SCL Input Buffer
HIGH Voltage
0.7 x VDD
VDD +
0.3
V
Hysteresis
SDA and SCL Input Buffer
Hysteresis
0.05 x
VDD
VOL
SDA Output Buffer LOW
Voltage, Sinking 3mA
VDD = 5V, IOL = 3mA
CPIN
SDA and SCL Pin Capacitance TA = +25°C, f = 1MHz,
VDD = 5V, VIN = 0V,
VOUT = 0V
fSCL
SCL Frequency
0
0.02
V
0.4
V
10
pF
400
kHz
tIN
Pulse Width Suppression
Time at SDA and SCL Inputs
Any pulse narrower than
the max spec is
suppressed.
50
ns
tAA
SCL Falling Edge to SDA
Output Data Valid
SCL falling edge crossing
30% of VDD, until SDA
exits the 30% to 70% of
VDD window.
900
ns
tBUF
Time the Bus Must be Free
Before the Start of a New
Transmission
SDA crossing 70% of
VDD during a STOP
condition, to SDA
crossing 70% of VDD
during the following
START condition.
1300
ns
tLOW
Clock LOW Time
Measured at the 30% of
VDD crossing.
1300
ns
tHIGH
Clock HIGH Time
Measured at the 70% of
VDD crossing.
600
ns
START Condition Setup Time
SCL rising edge to SDA
falling edge. Both
crossing 70% of VDD.
600
ns
tSU:STA
6
NOTES
13, 14
13, 14
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
I2C Interface Specifications Test Conditions: VDD = +2.7 to +5.5V, Temperature = -40°C to +85°C,
unless otherwise specified. Boldface limits apply over the operating temperature
range, -40°C to +85°C. (Continued)
SYMBOL
PARAMETER
TEST CONDITIONS
MIN
(Note 7)
TYP
MAX
(Note 8) (Note 7) UNITS
NOTES
tHD:STA
START Condition Hold Time
From SDA falling edge
crossing 30% of VDD to
SCL falling edge crossing
70% of VDD.
600
ns
tSU:DAT
Input Data Setup Time
From SDA exiting the
30% to 70% of VDD
window, to SCL rising
edge crossing 30% of
VDD.
100
ns
tHD:DAT
Input Data Hold Time
From SCL falling edge
crossing 30% of VDD to
SDA entering the 30% to
70% of VDD window.
20
tSU:STO
STOP Condition Setup Time
From SCL rising edge
crossing 70% of VDD, to
SDA rising edge crossing
30% of VDD.
600
ns
tHD:STO
STOP Condition Hold Time
From SDA rising edge to
SCL falling edge. Both
crossing 70% of VDD.
600
ns
tDH
Output Data Hold Time
From SCL falling edge
crossing 30% of VDD,
until SDA enters the
30% to 70% of VDD
window.
0
ns
tR
SDA and SCL Rise Time
From 30% to 70% of
VDD.
20 + 0.1 x
Cb
300
ns
13, 14
tF
SDA and SCL Fall Time
From 70% to 30% of
VDD.
20 + 0.1 x
Cb
300
ns
13, 14
Cb
Capacitive Loading of SDA or
SCL
Total on-chip and
off-chip
10
400
pF
13, 14
RPU
SDA and SCL Bus Pull-up
Resistor Off-chip
Maximum is determined
by tR and tF.
For Cb = 400pF, max is
about 2kΩ~2.5kΩ.
For Cb = 40pF, max is
about 15kΩ~20kΩ
kΩ
13, 14
900
1
ns
NOTES:
7. Parameters with MIN and/or MAX limits are 100% tested at +25°C, unless otherwise specified. Temperature limits
established by characterization and are not production tested.
8. Specified at +25°C.
9. Temperature Conversion is inactive below VBAT = 2.7V. Device operation is not guaranteed at VBAT <1.8V.
10. IRQ/FOUT inactive.
11. VDD > VBAT +VBATHYS
12. In order to ensure proper timekeeping, the VDD SR- specification must be followed.
13. Limits should be considered typical and are not production tested.
14. These are I2C specific parameters and are not tested, however, they are used to set conditions for testing devices to validate
specification.
15. Minimum VDD and/or VBAT of 1V to sustain the SRAM. The value is based on characterization and it is not tested.
7
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
SDA vs SCL Timing
tHIGH
tF
SCL
tSU:STA
SDA
(INPUT TIMING)
tLOW
tR
tSU:DAT
tHD:DAT
tHD:STA
tSU:STO
tAA
tDH
tBUF
SDA
(OUTPUT TIMING)
Symbol Table
EQUIVALENT AC OUTPUT LOAD CIRCUIT FOR VDD = 5V
5.0V
1533Ω
SDA
AND
IRQ/FOUT
INPUTS
OUTPUTS
Must be steady
Will be steady
May change
from LOW
to HIGH
Will change
from LOW
to HIGH
May change
from HIGH
to LOW
Will change
from HIGH
to LOW
Don’t Care:
Changes Allowed
Changing:
State Not Known
N/A
Center Line is
High Impedance
FOR VOL= 0.4V
AND IOL = 3mA
100pF
FIGURE 1. STANDARD OUTPUT LOAD FOR TESTING
THE DEVICE WITH VDD = 5.0V
8
WAVEFORM
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Temperature is +25°C unless otherwise specified.
1050
1600
1000
1400
IBAT (nA)
VBAT CURRENT (nA)
Typical Performance Curves
950
900
1200
VBAT = 5.5V
1000
VBAT = 3.0V
800
850
800
1.8
2.3
2.8
3.3
3.8
4.3
4.8
600
-40
5.3
VBAT = 1.8V
-20
VBAT VOLTAGE (V)
0
20
40
60
80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
FIGURE 2. IBAT vs VBAT (VDD = 0V)
FIGURE 3. IBAT vs TEMPERATURE (VDD = 0V)
4.4
6
4.2
VDD = 5.5V
IDD1 (µA)
IDD1 (µA)
5
4
VDD = 2.7V
3
4.0
3.8
3.6
3.4
VDD = 3.3V
3.2
2
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
80
3.0
2.7
3.2
3.7
FIGURE 4. IDD1 vs TEMPERATURE
4.7
5.2
FIGURE 5. IDD1 vs VDD
5
6
4
3
1
0
VBAT = 5.5V
5
2
VBAT = 5.5V
-1
VDD = 2.7V
-2
-3
IDD (µA)
FOUT FREQUENCY ERROR (ppm)
4.2
VDD (V)
TEMPERATURE (°C)
VDD = 3.3V
4
VDD = 2.7V
3
VDD = 3.3V
-4
-5
-40
-20
0
20
40
TEMPERATURE (°C)
60
80
FIGURE 6. OSCILLATOR ERROR vs TEMPERATURE
9
2
0.01
0.1
1
10
100
1k
FREQUENCY OUTPUT (Hz)
10k
1M
FIGURE 7. FOUT vs IDD
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Typical Performance Curves
Temperature is +25°C unless otherwise specified. (Continued)
110
100
5.0
4.5
4.0
FOUT = 64Hz
3.5
2.5
-40
80
70
60
50
VDD = 3.0V
40
FOUT = 1Hz
3.0
VBAT = 5.5V
90
FOUT = 32kHz
IBAT (µA)
SUPPLY CURRENT (µA)
5.5
VDD = 1.8V
30
-20
0
20
40
60
20
-40
80
-20
FIGURE 8. IDD vs TEMPERATURE, 3 DIFFERENT FOUT
VDD = 3.3V
80
70
60
VDD = 2.7V
-20
0
20
40
60
80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
FIGURE 10. IDD WITH TSE = 1 vs TEMPERATURE
General Description
The ISL12022M device is a low power real time clock
(RTC) with embedded temperature sensor and crystal.
It contains crystal frequency compensation circuitry
over the operating temperature range good to ±5ppm
accuracy. It also contains a clock/calendar with Daylight
Savings Time (DST) adjustment, power fail and low
battery monitors, brownout indicator, 1 periodic or
polled alarm, intelligent battery backup switching and
128 Bytes of battery-backed user SRAM.
The oscillator uses an internal 32.768kHz crystal. The
real time clock tracks time with separate registers for
hours, minutes and seconds. The device has calendar
registers for date, month, year and day of the week. The
calendar is accurate through 2099, with automatic leap
year correction. In addition, the ISL12022M can be
programmed for automatic Daylight Saving Time (DST)
adjustment by entering local DST information.
The ISL12022M’s alarm can be set to any clock/calendar
value for a match. For example, every minute, every
Tuesday or at 5:23 AM on March 21. The alarm status is
10
FREQUENCY CHANGE (ppm)
VBAT = 5.5V
90
IDD (µA)
40
60
80
80
100
40
-40
20
FIGURE 9. IBAT WITH TSE = 1, BTSE = 1 vs
TEMPERATURE
110
50
0
TEMPERATURE (°C)
TEMPERATURE (°C)
60
32ppm
40
20
62.5ppm
0ppm
0
-20
-40
-61.5ppm
-31ppm
-60
-80
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
80
TEMPERATURE (°C)
FIGURE 11. OSCILLATOR CHANGE vs TEMPERATURE
AT DIFFERENT AGING SETTINGS (IATR)
(BETA SET FOR 1ppm STEPS)
available by checking the Status Register, or the device
can be configured to provide a hardware interrupt via the
IRQ/FOUT pin. There is a repeat mode for the alarm
allowing a periodic interrupt every minute, every hour,
every day, etc.
The device also offers a backup power input pin. This
VBAT pin allows the device to be backed up by battery or
supercapacitor with automatic switchover from VDD to
VBAT. The ISL12022M device is specified for VDD = 2.7V
to 5.5V and the clock/calendar portion of the device
remains fully operational in battery backup mode down
to 1.8V (Standby Mode). The VBAT level is monitored and
reported against preselected levels. The first report is
registered when the VBAT level falls below 85% of
nominal level; the second level is set for 75%. Battery
levels are stored in PWR_VBAT registers.
The ISL12022M offers a “Brownout” alarm once the VDD
falls below a pre-selected trip level. This allows system
Micro to save vital information to memory before
complete power loss. There are six VDD levels that
could be selected for initiation of the Brownout alarm.
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Functional Description
Power Control Operation
VDD
The power control circuit accepts a VDD and a VBAT
input. Many types of batteries can be used with Intersil
RTC products. For example, 3.0V or 3.6V Lithium
batteries are appropriate, and battery sizes are available
that can power the ISL12022M for up to 10 years.
Another option is to use a supercapacitor for applications
where VDD is interrupted for up to a month. See the
“Application Section” on page 26 for more information.
Normal Mode (VDD) to Battery Backup Mode
(VBAT)
To transition from the VDD to VBAT mode, both of the
following conditions must be met:
Condition 1:
VDD < VBAT - VBATHYS
where VBATHYS ≈ 50mV
VBAT
3.0V
VTRIP
2.2V
VTRIP
VTRIP + VTRIPHYS
FIGURE 13. BATTERY SWITCHOVER WHEN VBAT >
VTRIP
The device Time Stamps the switchover from VDD to
VBAT and VBAT to VDD, and the time is stored in tSV2B
and tSB2V registers respectively. If multiple VDD
power-down sequences occur before the status is read,
the earliest VDD to VBAT power-down time is stored and
the most recent VBAT to VDD time is stored.
Temperature conversion and compensation can be
enabled in battery backup mode. Bit BTSE in the BETA
register controls this operation, as described in “BETA
Register (BETA)” on page 19.
Condition 2:
VDD < VTRIP
where VTRIP ≈ 2.2V
Power Failure Detection
Battery Backup Mode (VBAT) to Normal
Mode (VDD)
The ISL12022M device will switch from the VBAT to VDD
mode when one of the following conditions occurs:
Condition 1:
Condition 2:
VDD > VTRIP + VTRIPHYS
where VTRIPHYS ≈ 30mV
These power control situations are illustrated in
Figures 12 and 13.
The I2C bus is deactivated in battery backup mode to
reduce power consumption. Aside from this, all RTC
functions are operational during battery backup mode.
Except for SCL and SDA, all the inputs and outputs of
the ISL12022M are active during battery backup mode
unless disabled via the control register.
BATTERY BACKUP
MODE
VTRIP
2.2V
VBAT
1.8V
VBAT + VBATHYS
VBAT - VBATHYS
FIGURE 12. BATTERY SWITCHOVER WHEN
VBAT < VTRIP
11
The ISL12022M provides a Real Time Clock Failure Bit
(RTCF) to detect total power failure. It allows users to
determine if the device has powered up after having lost
all power to the device (both VDD and VBAT).
Brownout Detection
The ISL12022M monitors the VDD level continuously and
provides warning if the VDD level drops below prescribed
levels. There are six (6) levels that can be selected for
the trip level. These values are 85% below popular VDD
levels. The LVDD bit in the Status Register will be set to
“1” when brownout is detected. Note that the I2C serial
bus remains active unless the Battery VTRIP levels are
reached.
VDD > VBAT + VBATHYS
where VBATHYS ≈ 50mV
VDD
BATTERY BACKUP
MODE
Battery Level Monitor
The ISL12022M has a built-in warning feature once the
backup battery level drops first to 85% and then to 75%
of the battery’s nominal VBAT level. When the battery
voltage drops to between 85% and 75%, the LBAT85 bit
is set in the status register. When the level drops below
75%, both LBAT85 and LBAT75 bits are set in the status
register.
The battery level monitor is not functional in battery
backup mode. In order to read the monitor bits after
powering up VDD, instigate a battery level measurement
by setting the TSE bit to "1" (BETA register), and then
read the bits.
There is a Battery Time Stamp Function available. Once
the VDD is low enough to enable switchover to the
battery, the RTC time/date are written into the TSV2B
register. This information can be read from the TSV2B
registers to discover the point in time of the VDD
power-down. If there are multiple power-down cycles
before reading these registers, the first values stored in
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
these registers will be retained. These registers will hold
the original power-down value until they are cleared by
setting CLRTS = 1 to clear the registers.
The normal power switching of the ISL12022M is
designed to switch into battery backup mode only if the
VDD power is lost. This will ensure that the device can
accept a wide range of backup voltages from many types
of sources while reliably switching into backup mode.
Frequency Output Mode
The ISL12022M has the option to provide a clock output
signal using the IRQ/FOUT open drain output pin. The
frequency output mode is set by using the FO bits to
select 15 possible output frequency values from 1/32Hz
to 32kHz. The frequency output can be enabled/disabled
during Battery Backup mode using the FOBATB bit.
General Purpose User SRAM
Note that the ISL12022M is not guaranteed to operate
with VBAT < 1.8V. If the battery voltage is expected to
drop lower than this minimum, correct operation of the
device, (especially after a VDD power-down cycle) is not
guaranteed.
The ISL12022M provides 128 bytes of user SRAM. The
SRAM will continue to operate in battery backup mode.
However, it should be noted that the I2C bus is disabled
in battery backup mode.
The minimum VBAT to insure SRAM is stable is 1.0V.
Below that, the SRAM may be corrupted when VDD
power resumes.
The ISL12022M has an I2C serial bus interface that
provides access to the control and status registers and
the user SRAM. The I2C serial interface is compatible
with other industry I2C serial bus protocols using a
bi-directional data signal (SDA) and a clock signal (SCL).
Real Time Clock Operation
The Real Time Clock (RTC) uses an integrated 32.768kHz
quartz crystal to maintain an accurate internal
representation of second, minute, hour, day of week,
date, month, and year. The RTC also has leap-year
correction. The clock also corrects for months having
fewer than 31 days and has a bit that controls 24-hour or
AM/PM format. When the ISL12022M powers up after the
loss of both VDD and VBAT, the clock will not begin
incrementing until at least one byte is written to the clock
register.
Single Event and Interrupt
The alarm mode is enabled via the MSB bit. Choosing
single event or interrupt alarm mode is selected via the
IM bit. Note that when the frequency output function is
enabled, the alarm function is disabled.
The standard alarm allows for alarms of time, date,
day of the week, month, and year. When a time alarm
occurs in single event mode, the IRQ/FOUT pin will be
pulled low and the alarm status bit (ALM) will be set
to “1”.
The pulsed interrupt mode allows for repetitive or
recurring alarm functionality. Hence, once the alarm is
set, the device will continue to alarm for each occurring
match of the alarm and present time. Thus, it will alarm
as often as every minute (if only the nth second is set) or
as infrequently as once a year (if at least the nth month
is set). During pulsed interrupt mode, the IRQ/FOUT pin
will be pulled low for 250ms and the alarm status bit
(ALM) will be set to “1”.
The ALM bit can be reset by the user or cleared
automatically using the auto reset mode (see ARST bit).
The alarm function can be enabled/disabled during
battery backup mode using the FOBATB bit. For more
information on the alarm, please see “ALARM Registers
(10h to 15h)” on page 20.
I2C Serial Interface
Oscillator Compensation
The ISL12022M provides both initial timing correction
and temperature correction due to variation of the
crystal oscillator. Analog and digital trimming control is
provided for initial adjustment, and a temperature
compensation function is provided to automatically
correct for temperature drift of the crystal. Initial values
for the initial AT and DT settings (ITR0), temperature
coefficient (ALPHA), crystal capacitance (BETA), as well
as the crystal turn-over temperature (XTO), are preset
internally and recalled to RAM registers on power-up.
These values can be overwritten by the user
although this is not suggested as the resulting
temperature compensation performance will be
compromised. The compensation function can be
enabled/disabled at any time and can be used in battery
mode as well.
Register Descriptions
The battery-backed registers are accessible following a
slave byte of “1101111x” and reads or writes to
addresses [00h:2Fh]. The defined addresses and default
values are described in the Table 1. The battery backed
general purpose SRAM has a different slave address
(1010111x), so it is not possible to read/write that
section of memory while accessing the registers.
REGISTER ACCESS
The contents of the registers can be modified by
performing a byte or a page write operation directly to
any register address.
The registers are divided into 8 sections. They are:
1. Real Time Clock (7 bytes): Address 00h to 06h.
2. Control and Status (9 bytes): Address 07h to 0Fh.
3. Alarm (6 bytes): Address 10h to 15h.
4. Time Stamp for Battery Status (5 bytes): Address
16h to 1Ah.
12
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
A register can be read by performing a random read at
any address at any time. This returns the contents of
that register location. Additional registers are read by
performing a sequential read. For the RTC and Alarm
registers, the read instruction latches all clock registers
into a buffer, so an update of the clock does not change
the time being read. At the end of a read, the master
supplies a stop condition to end the operation and free
the bus. After a read, the address remains at the
previous address +1 so the user can execute a current
address read and continue reading the next register.
When the previous address is 2Fh, the next address will
wrap around to 00h.
5. Time Stamp for VDD Status (5 bytes): Address 1Bh
to 1Fh.
6. Day Light Saving Time (8 bytes): 20h to 27h.
7. TEMP (2 bytes): 28h to 29h.
8. Crystal Net PPM Correction, NPPM (2 bytes): 2Ah,
2Bh
9. Crystal Turnover Temperature, XT0 (1 byte): 2Ch
10. Crystal ALPHA at high temperature, ALPHA_H (1
byte): 2Dh
11. Scratch Pad (2 bytes): Address 2Eh and 2Fh
Write capability is allowable into the RTC registers (00h
to 06h) only when the WRTC bit (bit 6 of address 08h) is
set to “1”. A multi-byte read or write operation should be
limited to one section per operation for best RTC time
keeping performance.
It is not necessary to set the WRTC bit prior to writing
into the control and status, alarm, and user SRAM
registers.
TABLE 1. REGISTER MEMORY MAP (YELLOW SHADING INDICATES READ-ONLY BITS)
BIT
REG
NAME
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
00h
SC
0
SC22
SC21
SC20
SC13
SC12
SC11
SC10
0 to 59
00h
01h
MN
0
MN22
MN21
MN20
MN13
MN12
MN11
MN10
0 to 59
00h
02h
HR
MIL
0
HR21
HR20
HR13
HR12
HR11
HR10
0 to 23
00h
DT
0
0
DT21
DT20
DT13
DT12
DT11
DT10
1 to 31
01h
04h
MO
0
0
0
MO20
MO13
MO12
MO11
MO10
1 to 12
01h
05h
YR
YR23
YR22
YR21
YR20
YR13
YR12
YR11
YR10
0 to 99
00h
06h
DW
0
0
0
0
0
DW2
DW1
DW0
0 to 6
00h
07h
SR
BUSY
OSCF
DSTADJ
ALM
LVDD
LBAT85
LBAT75
RTCF
N/A
01h
08h
INT
ARST
WRTC
IM
FOBATB
FO3
FO2
FO1
FO0
N/A
01h
09h
PWR_VDD
CLRTS
D
D
D
D
VDDTrip2
VDDTrip1
VDDTrip0
N/A
00h
0Ah
PWR_VBAT
D
RESEALB
VB85Tp2
VB85Tp1
VB85Tp0
VB75Tp2
VB75Tp1
VB75Tp0
N/A
00h
ITRO
IDTR01
IDTR00
IATR05
IATR04
IATR03
IATR02
IATR01
IATR00
N/A
XXh
0Ch
ALPHA
D
ALPHA6
ALPHA5
ALPHA4
ALPHA3
ALPHA2
ALPHA1
ALPHA0
N/A
XXh
0Dh
BETA
TSE
BTSE
BTSR
BETA4
BETA3
BETA2
BETA1
BETA0
N/A
XXh
0Eh
FATR
0
0
FFATR5
FATR4
FATR3
FATR2
FATR1
FATR0
N/A
00h
0Fh
FDTR
0
0
0
FDTR4
FDTR3
FDTR2
FDTR1
FDTR0
N/A
00h
10h
SCA0
ESCA0
SCA022
SCA021
SCA020
SCA013
SCA012
SCA011
SCA010
00 to 59
00h
11h
MNA0
EMNA0
MNA022
MNA021
MNA020
MNA013
MNA012
MNA011
MNA010
00 to 59
00h
HRA0
EHRA0
D
HRA021
HRA020
HRA013
HRA012
HRA011
HRA010
0 to 23
00h
DTA0
EDTA0
D
DTA021
DTA020
DTA013
DTA012
DTA011
DTA010
01 to 31
00h
14h
MOA0
EMOA00
D
D
MOA020
MOA013
MOA012
MOA011
MOA010
01 to 12
00h
15h
DWA0
EDWA0
D
D
D
D
DWA02
DWA01
DWA00
0 to 6
00h
ADDR. SECTION
03h
0Bh
12h
13h
RTC
CSR
ALARM
13
RANGE DEFAULT
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
TABLE 1. REGISTER MEMORY MAP (YELLOW SHADING INDICATES READ-ONLY BITS) (Continued)
BIT
REG
NAME
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
16h
VSC
0
VSC22
VSC21
VSC20
VSC13
VSC12
VSC11
VSC10
0 to 59
00h
17h
VMN
0
VMN22
VMN21
VMN20
VMN13
VMN12
VMN11
VMN10
0 to 59
00h
VHR
VMIL
0
VHR21
VHR20
VHR13
VHR12
VHR11
VHR10
0 to 23
00h
19h
VDT
0
0
VDT21
VDT20
VDT13
VDT12
VDT11
VDT10
1 to 31
00h
1Ah
VMO
0
0
0
VMO20
VMO13
VMO12
VMO11
VMO10
1 to 12
00h
1Bh
BSC
0
BSC22
BSC21
BSC20
BSC13
BSC12
BSC11
BSC10
0 to 59
00h
1Ch
BMN
0
BMN22
BMN21
BMN20
BMN13
BMN12
BMN11
BMN10
0 to 59
00h
BHR
BMIL
0
BHR21
BHR20
BHR13
BHR12
BHR11
BHR10
0 to 23
00h
1Eh
BDT
0
0
BDT21
BDT20
BDT13
BDT12
BDT11
BDT10
1 to 31
00h
1Fh
BMO
0
0
0
BMO20
BMO13
BMO12
BMO11
BMO10
1 to 12
00h
20h
DstMoFd
DSTE
D
D
DstMoFd20 DstMoFd13 DstMoFd12 DstMoFd11 DstMoFd10
1 to 12
00h
21h
DstDwFd
D
DstDwFdE
DstWkFd12 DstWkFd11 DstWkFd10 DstDwFd12 DstDwFd11 DstDwFd10
0 to 6
00h
22h
DstDtFd
D
D
DstDtFd21
DstDtFd20
DstDtFd13
DstDtFd12
DstDtFd11
DstDtFd10
1 to 31
00h
DstHrFd
D
D
DstHrFd21
DstHrFd20
DstHrFd13
DstHrFd12
DstHrFd11
DstHrFd10
0 to 23
00h
DstMoRv
D
D
D
DstMoRv20 DstMoRv13 DstMoR12v DstMoRv11 DstMoRv10
01 to 12
00h
25h
DstDwRv
D
DstDwRvE
0 to 6
00h
26h
DstDtRv
D
D
DstDtRv21
DstDtRv20
DstDtRv13
DstDtRv12
DstDtRv11
DstDtRv10
01 to 31
00h
27h
DstHrRv
D
D
DstHrRv21
DstHrRv20
DstHrRv13
DstHrRv12
DstHrRv11
DstHrRv10
0 to 23
00h
TK0L
TK07
TK06
TK05
TK04
TK03
TK02
TK01
TK00
00 to FF
00h
TK0M
0
0
0
0
0
0
TK09
TK08
00 to 03
00h
NPPML
NPPM7
NPPM6
NPPM5
NPPM4
NPPM3
NPPM2
NPPM1
NPPM0
00 to FF
00h
NPPMH
0
0
0
0
0
NPPM10
NPPM9
NPPM8
00 to 07
00h
ADDR. SECTION
18h
1Dh
23h
24h
28h
29h
2Ah
2Bh
TSV2B
TSB2V
DSTCR
TEMP
NPPM
DstWkrv12 DstWkRv11 DstWkRv10 DstDwRv12 DstDwRv11 DstDwRv10
RANGE DEFAULT
2Ch
XT0
XT0
D
D
D
XT4
XT3
XT2
XT1
XT0
00 to FF
XXh
2Dh
ALPHAH
ALPHAH
D
ALP_H6
ALP_H5
ALP_H4
ALP_H3
ALP_H2
ALP_H1
ALP_H0
00 to 7F
XXh
2Eh
GPM
GPM1
GPM17
GPM16
GPM15
GPM14
GPM13
GPM12
GPM11
GPM10
00 to FF
00h
GPM2
GPM27
GPM26
GPM25
GPM24
GPM23
GPM22
GPM21
GPM20
00 to FF
00h
2Fh
Real Time Clock Registers
Addresses [00h to 06h]
RTC REGISTERS (SC, MN, HR, DT, MO, YR, DW)
These registers depict BCD representations of the time.
As such, SC (Seconds) and MN (Minutes) range from 0 to
59, HR (Hour) can either be a 12-hour or 24-hour mode,
DT (Date) is 1 to 31, MO (Month) is 1 to 12, YR (Year) is
0 to 99, and DW (Day of the Week) is 0 to 6.
The DW register provides a Day of the Week status and
uses three bits (DW2 to DW0) to represent the seven
days of the week. The counter advances in the cycle
0-1-2-3-4-5-6-0-1-2-… The assignment of a numerical
value to a specific day of the week is arbitrary and may
14
be decided by the system software designer. The default
value is defined as “0”.
24-HOUR TIME
If the MIL bit of the HR register is “1”, the RTC uses a
24-hour format. If the MIL bit is “0”, the RTC uses a
12-hour format and HR21 bit functions as an AM/PM
indicator with a “1” representing PM. The clock defaults
to 12-hour format time with HR21 = “0”.
LEAP YEARS
Leap years add the day February 29 and are defined as
those years that are divisible by 4. Years divisible by 100
are not leap years, unless they are also divisible by 400.
This means that the year 2000 is a leap year and the
year 2100 is not. The ISL12022M does not correct for the
leap year in the year 2100.
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Control and Status Registers
(CSR)
LOW VDD INDICATOR BIT (LVDD)
Addresses [07h to 0Fh]
The Control and Status Registers consist of the Status
Register, Interrupt and Alarm Register, Analog Trimming
and Digital Trimming Registers.
STATUS REGISTER (SR)
The Status Register is located in the memory map at
address 07h. This is a volatile register that provides
either control or status of RTC failure (RTCF), Battery
Level Monitor (LBAT85, LBAT75), alarm trigger, Daylight
Saving Time, crystal oscillator enable and temperature
conversion in progress bit.
TABLE 2. STATUS REGISTER (SR)
ADDR
7
6
5
4
3
07h
BUSY
OSCF
DSTDJ
ALM
LVDD
2
1
0
LBAT85 LBAT75 RTCF
BUSY BIT (BUSY)
Busy Bit indicates temperature sensing is in progress. In
this mode, Alpha, Beta and ITRO registers are disabled
and cannot be accessed.
OSCILLATOR FAIL BIT (OSCF)
Oscillator Fail Bit indicates that the oscillator has
stopped.
DAYLIGHT SAVING TIME CHANGE BIT (DSTADJ)
DSTADJ is the Daylight Saving Time Adjusted Bit. It
indicates the daylight saving time forward adjustment
has happened. If a DST Forward event happens,
DSTADJ will be set to “1”. The DSTADJ bit will stay high
when DSTFD event happens, and will be reset to “0”
when the DST Reverse event happens.
DSTADJ can be set to “1” for instances where the RTC
device is initialized during the DST Forward period. The
DSTE bit must be enabled when the RTC time is more
than one hour before the DST Forward or DST Reverse
event time setting, or the DST event correction will not
happen.
DSTADJ is reset to “0” upon power-up. It will reset to “0”
when the DSTE bit in Register 15h is set to “0” (DST
disabled), but no time adjustment will happen.
ALARM BIT (ALM)
This bit announces if the alarm matches the real time
clock. If there is a match, the respective bit is set to “1”.
This bit can be manually reset to “0” by the user or
automatically reset by enabling the auto-reset bit (see
ARST bit). A write to this bit in the SR can only set it to
“0”, not “1”. An alarm bit that is set by an alarm
occurring during an SR read operation will remain set
after the read operation is complete.
15
This bit indicates when VDD has dropped below the
pre-selected trip level (Brownout Mode). The trip points
for the brownout levels are selected by three bits: VDD
Trip2, VDD Trip1 and VDD Trip0 in PWR_ VDD registers.
The LVDD detection is only enabled in VDD mode and
the detection happens in real time. The LVDD bit is set
whenever the VDD has dropped below the pre-selected
trip level, and self clears whenever the VDD is above the
pre-selected trip level.
LOW BATTERY INDICATOR 85% BIT (LBAT85)
In Normal Mode (VDD), this bit indicates when the
battery level has dropped below the pre-selected trip
levels. The trip points are selected by three bits:
VB85Tp2, VB85Tp1 and VB85Tp0 in the PWR_VBAT
registers. The LBAT85 detection happens automatically
once every minute when seconds register reaches 59.
The detection can also be manually triggered by setting
the TSE bit in BETA register to “1”. The LBAT85 bit is set
when the VBAT has dropped below the pre-selected trip
level, and will self clear when the VBAT is above the
pre-selected trip level at the next detection cycle either
by manual or automatic trigger.
In Battery Mode (VBAT), this bit indicates the device has
entered into battery mode by polling once every 10
minutes. The LBAT85 detection happens automatically
once when the minute register reaches x9h or x0h
minutes.
Example - When the LBAT85 is Set To “1” In
Battery Mode:
The minute the register changes to 19h when the device
is in battery mode, the LBAT85 is set to “1” the next time
the device switches back to Normal Mode.
Example - When the LBAT85 Remains at “0” In
Battery Mode:
If the device enters into battery mode after the minute
register reaches 20h and switches back to Normal Mode
before the minute register reaches 29h, then the LBAT85
bit will remain at “0” the next time the device switches
back to Normal Mode.
LOW BATTERY INDICATOR 75% BIT (LBAT75)
In Normal Mode (VDD), this bit indicates when the
battery level has dropped below the pre-selected trip
levels. The trip points are selected by three bits:
VB75Tp2, VB75Tp1 and VB75Tp0 in the PWR_VBAT
registers. The LBAT75 detection happens automatically
once every minute when seconds register reaches 59.
The detection can also be manually triggered by setting
the TSE bit in BETA register to “1”. The LBAT75 bit is set
when the VBAT has dropped below the pre-selected trip
level, and will self clear when the VBAT is above the
pre-selected trip level at the next detection cycle either
by manual or automatic trigger.
In Battery Mode (VBAT), this bit indicates the device has
entered into battery mode by polling once every
10 minutes. The LBAT85 detection happens
automatically once when the minute register reaches x9h
or x0h minutes.
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Example - When the LBAT75 is Set to “1” in Battery
Mode:
The minute register changes to 30h when the device is in
battery mode, the LBAT75 is set to “1” the next time the
device switches back to Normal Mode.
Example - When the LBAT75 Remains at “0” in
Battery Mode:
If the device enters into battery mode after the minute
register reaches 49h and switches back to Normal Mode
before minute register reaches 50h, then the LBAT75 bit
will remain at “0” the next time the device switches
back to Normal Mode.
REAL TIME CLOCK FAIL BIT (RTCF)
This bit is set to a “1” after a total power failure. This is a
read only bit that is set by hardware (ISL12022M
internally) when the device powers up after having lost
all power (defined as VDD = 0V and VBAT = 0V). The bit
is set regardless of whether VDD or VBAT is applied first.
The loss of only one of the supplies does not set the RTCF
bit to “1”. The first valid write to the RTC section after a
complete power failure resets the RTCF bit to “0” (writing
one byte is sufficient).
Interrupt Control Register (INT)
TABLE 3. INTERRUPT CONTROL REGISTER (INT)
ADDR
7
6
5
4
08h
ARST
WRTC
IM
3
2
1
0
FOBATB FO3 FO2 FO1 FO0
AUTOMATIC RESET BIT (ARST)
This bit enables/disables the automatic reset of the ALM,
LVDD, LBAT85, and LBAT75 status bits only. When ARST
bit is set to “1”, these status bits are reset to “0” after a
valid read of the respective status register (with a valid
STOP condition). When the ARST is cleared to “0”, the
user must manually reset the ALM, LVDD, LBAT85, and
LBAT75 bits.
TABLE 4.
IM BIT
INTERRUPT/ALARM FREQUENCY
0
Single Time Event Set By Alarm
1
Repetitive/Recurring Time Event Set By
Alarm
FREQUENCY OUTPUT AND INTERRUPT BIT
(FOBATB)
This bit enables/disables the IRQ/FOUT pin during
battery backup mode (i.e. VBAT power source active).
When the FOBATB is set to “1”, the IRQ/FOUT pin is
disabled during battery backup mode. This means that
both the frequency output and alarm output functions
are disabled. When the FOBATB is cleared to “0”, the
IRQ/FOUT pin is enabled during battery backup mode.
Note that the open drain IRQ/FOUT pin will need a
pull-up to the battery voltage to operate in battery
backup mode.
FREQUENCY OUT CONTROL BITS (FO <3:0>)
These bits enable/disable the frequency output function
and select the output frequency at the IRQ/FOUT pin.
See Table 5 for frequency selection. Default for the
ISL12022M is
FO<3:0> = 1h, or 32.768kHz output (FOUT is ON).
When the frequency mode is enabled, it will override
the alarm mode at the IRQ/FOUT pin.
TABLE 5. FREQUENCY SELECTION OF IRQ/FOUT PIN
FREQUENCY,
FOUT
UNITS
FO3
FO2
FO1
FO0
0
Hz
0
0
0
0
32768
Hz
0
0
0
1
4096
Hz
0
0
1
0
1024
Hz
0
0
1
1
64
Hz
0
1
0
0
WRITE RTC ENABLE BIT (WRTC)
32
Hz
0
1
0
1
The WRTC bit enables or disables write capability into the
RTC Timing Registers. The factory default setting of this
bit is “0”. Upon initialization or power-up, the WRTC must
be set to “1” to enable the RTC. Upon the completion of a
valid write (STOP), the RTC starts counting. The RTC
internal 1Hz signal is synchronized to the STOP condition
during a valid write cycle.
16
Hz
0
1
1
0
8
Hz
0
1
1
1
4
Hz
1
0
0
0
2
Hz
1
0
0
1
1
Hz
1
0
1
0
INTERRUPT/ALARM MODE BIT (IM)
1/2
Hz
1
0
1
1
This bit enables/disables the interrupt mode of the alarm
function. When the IM bit is set to “1”, the alarm will
operate in the interrupt mode, where an active low pulse
width of 250ms will appear at the IRQ/FOUT pin when
the RTC is triggered by the alarm, as defined by the
alarm registers (0Ch to 11h). When the IM bit is cleared
to “0”, the alarm will operate in standard mode, where
the IRQ/FOUT pin will be set low until the ALM status bit
is cleared to “0”.
1/4
Hz
1
1
0
0
1/8
Hz
1
1
0
1
1/16
Hz
1
1
1
0
1/32
Hz
1
1
1
1
16
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Power Supply Control Register (PWR_VDD)
CLEAR TIME STAMP BIT (CLRTS)
ADDR
09h
7
6
5
4
3
2
CLRTS
0
0
0
0
VDDTrip2
1
0
VDDTrip1 VDDTrip0
This bit clears Time Stamp VDD to Battery (TSV2B) and
Time Stamp Battery to VDD Registers (TSB2V). The
default setting is 0 (CLRTS = 0) and the Enabled setting
is 1 (CLRTS = 1).
VDD BROWNOUT TRIP VOLTAGE BITS
(VDDTRIP<2:0>)
These bits set the trip level for the VDD alarm, indicating
that VDD has dropped below a preset level. In this event,
the LVDD bit in the Status Register is set to “1”. See
Table 6.
TABLE 6. VDD TRIP LEVELS
VDDTrip2
VDDTrip1
VDDTrip0
TRIP
VOLTAGE
(V)
0
0
0
2.295
0
0
1
2.550
0
1
0
2.805
0
1
1
3.060
1
0
0
4.250
1
0
1
4.675
BATTERY LEVEL MONITOR TRIP BITS (VB85TP
<2:0>)
Three bits select the first alarm (85% of Nominal VBAT)
level for the battery voltage monitor. There are total of
7 levels that could be selected for the first alarm. Any of
the of levels could be selected as the first alarm with no
reference as to nominal Battery voltage level. See
Table 8.
TABLE 8. VB85T ALARM LEVEL
VB85Tp2
VB85Tp1
VB85Tp0
BATTERY ALARM
TRIP LEVEL
(V)
0
0
0
2.125
0
0
1
2.295
0
1
0
2.550
0
1
1
2.805
1
0
0
3.060
1
0
1
4.250
1
1
0
4.675
BATTERY LEVEL MONITOR TRIP BITS (VB75TP
<2:0>)
Three bits select the second alarm (75% of Nominal
VBAT) level for the battery voltage monitor. There are
total of 7 levels that could be selected for the second
alarm. Any of the of levels could be selected as the
second alarm with no reference as to nominal Battery
voltage level. See Table 9.
TABLE 9. BATTERY LEVEL MONITOR TRIP BITS
(VB75TP <2:0>)
Battery Voltage Trip Voltage Register
(PWR_VBAT)
This register controls the trip points for the two VBAT
alarms, with levels set to approximately 85% and 75% of
the nominal battery level.
VB75Tp2
VB75Tp1
VB75Tp0
BATTERY ALARM
TRIP LEVEL
(V)
0
0
0
1.875
TABLE 7.
0
0
1
2.025
0
1
0
2.250
0
1
1
2.475
1
0
0
2.700
1
0
1
3.750
1
1
0
4.125
ADDR
0Ah
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D RESEALB VB85 VB85 VB85 VB75 VB75 VB75
Tp2 Tp1 Tp0 Tp2 Tp1 Tp0
RESEAL BIT (RESEALB)
This is the Reseal bit for actively disconnecting the VBAT
pin from the internal circuitry. Setting this bit allows the
device to disconnect the battery and eliminate standby
current drain while the device is unused. Once VDD is
powered up, this bit is reset and the VBAT pin is then
connected to the internal circuitry.
The application for this bit involves placing the chip on a
board with a battery and testing the board. Once the
board is tested and ready to ship, it is desirable to
disconnect the battery to keep it fresh until the board or
unit is placed into final use. Setting RESEALB = “1”
initiates the battery disconnect, and after VDD power is
cycled down and up again, the RESEAL bit is cleared
to “0”.
17
Initial AT and DT Setting Register (ITRO)
These bits are used to trim the initial error (at room
temperature) of the crystal. Both Digital Trimming (DT)
and Analog Trimming (AT) methods are available. The
digital trimming uses clock pulse skipping and insertion
for frequency adjustment. Analog trimming uses load
capacitance adjustment to pull the oscillator frequency. A
range of +62.5ppm to -61.5ppm is possible with
combined digital and analog trimming.
Initial values for the ITR0 register are preset internally
and recalled to RAM registers on power-up. These
values are pre-set in device production and are
READ-ONLY. They cannot be overwritten by the
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
user. If an application requires adjustment of the
IATR bits outside the preset values, the user
should contact Intersil.
TABLE 12. IATRO TRIMMING RANGE (Continued)
IATR05 IATR04 IATR03 IATR02 IATR01 IATR00
TRIMMING
RANGE
AGING AND INITIAL TRIM DIGITAL TRIMMING
BITS (IDTR0<1:0>)
0
0
1
1
0
1
+19
0
0
1
1
1
0
+18
These bits allow ±30.5ppm initial trimming range for the
crystal frequency. This is meant to be a coarse
adjustment if the range needed is outside that of the
IATR control. See Table 10. The IDTR0 register should
only be changed while the TSE (Temp Sense Enable) bit
is “0”.
0
0
1
1
1
1
+17
0
1
0
0
0
0
+16
0
1
0
0
0
1
+15
0
1
0
0
1
0
+14
0
1
0
0
1
1
+13
0
1
0
1
0
0
+12
The ISL12022M has a preset Initial Digital Trimming
value corresponding to the crystal in the module. This
value is recalled on initial power-up and is
READ-ONLY. It cannot be overwritten by the user.
0
1
0
1
0
1
+11
0
1
0
1
1
0
+10
0
1
0
1
1
1
+9
0
1
1
0
0
0
+8
0
1
1
0
0
1
+7
0
1
1
0
1
0
+6
0
1
1
0
1
1
+5
Default/Disabled
0
1
1
1
0
0
+4
+30.5ppm
0
1
1
1
0
1
+3
0
1
1
1
1
0
+2
0
1
1
1
1
1
+1
1
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
1
-1
1
0
0
0
1
0
-2
1
0
0
0
1
1
-3
1
0
0
1
0
0
-4
1
0
0
1
0
1
-5
1
0
0
1
1
0
-6
1
0
0
1
1
1
-7
1
0
1
0
0
0
-8
1
0
1
0
0
1
-9
1
0
1
0
1
0
-10
1
0
1
0
1
1
-11
1
0
1
1
0
0
-12
1
0
1
1
0
1
-13
1
0
1
1
1
0
-14
1
0
1
1
1
1
-15
1
1
0
0
0
0
-16
1
1
0
0
0
1
-17
1
1
0
0
1
0
-18
1
1
0
0
1
1
-19
1
1
0
1
0
0
-20
1
1
0
1
0
1
-21
1
1
0
1
1
0
-22
1
1
0
1
1
1
-23
1
1
1
0
0
0
-24
1
1
1
0
0
1
-25
1
1
1
0
1
0
-26
1
1
1
0
1
1
-27
1
1
1
1
0
0
-28
1
1
1
1
0
1
-29
1
1
1
1
1
0
-30
1
1
1
1
1
1
-31
TABLE 10. IDTR0 TRIMMING RANGE
IDTR01
IDTR00
0
0
0
1
TRIMMING RANGE
1
0
0ppm
1
1
-30.5ppm
AGING AND INITIAL ANALOG TRIMMING BITS
(IATR0<5:0>)
The Initial Analog Trimming Register allows +32ppm to
-31ppm adjustment in 1ppm/bit increments. This
enables fine frequency adjustment for trimming initial
crystal accuracy error or to correct for aging drift.
The ISL12022M has a preset Initial Analog Trimming
value corresponding to the crystal in the module. This
value is recalled on initial power-up, is preset in
device production and is READ-ONLY. It cannot be
overwritten by the user.
TABLE 11. INITIAL AT AND DT SETTING REGISTER
ADDR
0Bh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
IDTR01 IDTR00 IATR05 IATR04 IATR03 IATR02 IATR01 IATR00
TABLE 12. IATRO TRIMMING RANGE
TRIMMING
IATR05 IATR04 IATR03 IATR02 IATR01 IATR00
RANGE
0
0
0
0
0
0
+32
0
0
0
0
0
1
+31
0
0
0
0
1
0
+30
0
0
0
0
1
1
+29
0
0
0
1
0
0
+28
0
0
0
1
0
1
+27
0
0
0
1
1
0
+26
0
0
0
1
1
1
+25
0
0
1
0
0
0
+24
0
0
1
0
0
1
+23
0
0
1
0
1
0
+22
0
0
1
0
1
1
+21
0
0
1
1
0
0
+20
18
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
ALPHA Register (ALPHA)
battery mode. The BTSE is disabled when the battery
voltage is lower than 2.7V. No temperature
compensation will take place with VBAT<2.7V.
TABLE 13. ALPHA REGISTER
ADD
R
7
0Ch
D
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ALPHA6 ALPHA5 ALPHA4 ALPHA3 ALPHA2 ALPHA1 ALPHA0
The ALPHA variable is 8 bits and is defined as the
temperature coefficient of crystal from -40°C to T0, or
the ALPHA Cold (there is an Alpha Hot register that
must be programmed as well). It is normally given in
units of ppm/°C2, with a typical value of -0.034. The
ISL12022M device uses a scaled version of the absolute
value of this coefficient in order to get an integer value.
Therefore, ALPHA <7:0> is defined as the (|Actual
ALPHA Value| x 2048) and converted to binary. For
example, a crystal with Alpha of -0.034ppm/°C2 is first
scaled (|2048*(-0.034)| = 70d) and then converted to
a binary number of 01000110b.
The practical range of Actual ALPHA values is from
-0.020 to -0.060.
The ISL12022M has a preset ALPHA value
corresponding to the crystal in the module. This value
is recalled on initial power-up and is preset in
device production. It is READ ONLY and cannot
be overwritten by the user.
BETA Register (BETA)
TABLE 14.
ADDR
0Dh
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TSE BTSE BTSR BETA4 BETA3 BETA2 BETA1 BETA0
The BETA register has special Write properties. Only the
TSE, BTSE and BTSR bits can be written; the BETA bits
are READ-ONLY. A write to both bytes in this register will
only change the 3 MSB’s (TSE, BTSE, BTSR), and the
5 LSB’s will remain the same as set at the factory.
TEMPERATURE SENSOR ENABLED BIT (TSE)
This bit enables the Temperature Sensing operation,
including the temperature sensor, A/D converter and
FATR/FDTR register adjustment. The default mode after
power-up is disabled: (TSE = 0). To enable the operation,
TSE should be set to 1. (TSE = 1). When temp sense is
disabled, the initial values for IATR and IDTR registers
are used for frequency control.
When TSE is set to 1, the temperature conversion cycle
begins and will end when two temperature conversions
are completed. The average of the two conversions is in
the TEMP registers.
TEMP SENSOR CONVERSION IN BATTERY MODE
BIT (BTSE)
This bit enables the Temperature Sensing and Correction
in battery mode. BTSE = 0 (default) no conversion, Temp
Sensing or Compensation in battery mode. BTSE = 1
indicates Temp Sensing and Compensation enabled in
19
FREQUENCY OF TEMPERATURE SENSING AND
CORRECTION BIT (BTSR)
This bit controls the frequency of Temp Sensing and
Correction. BTSR = 0 default mode is every 10 minutes,
BTSR = 1 is every 1.0 minute. Note that BTSE has to be
enabled in both cases. See Table 15.
TABLE 15. FREQUENCY OF TEMPERATURE SENSING
AND CORRECTION BIT
BTSE
BTSR
TC PERIOD IN
BATTERY MODE
0
0
OFF
0
1
OFF
1
0
10 Minutes
1
1
1 Minute
The temperature measurement conversion time is the
same for battery mode as for VDD mode, approximately
22ms. The battery mode current will increase during
this conversion time to typically 68µA. The average
increase in battery current is much lower than this due
to the small duty cycle of the ON-time versus OFF-time
for the conversion.
To figure the average increase in battery current, we take
the change in current times the duty cycle. For the
1 minute temperature period, the average current is
expressed in Equation 1:
0.022s
ΔI BAT = ------------------ × 68μA = 250nA
60s
(EQ. 1)
For the 10 minute temperature period the average
current is expressed in Equation 2:
0.022s
ΔI BAT = ------------------ × 68μA = 25nA
600s
(EQ. 2)
If the application has a stable temperature environment
that doesn’t change quickly, the 10 minute option will
work well and the backup battery lifetime impact is
minimized. If quick temperature variations are expected
(multiple cycles of more than 10° within an hour), then
the 1 minute option should be considered and the slightly
higher battery current figured into overall battery life.
GAIN FACTOR OF AT BIT (BETA<4:0>)
Beta is specified to take care of the Cm variations of the
crystal. Most crystals specify Cm around 2.2fF. For
example, if Cm > 2.2fF, the actual AT steps may reduce
from 1ppm/step to approximately 0.80ppm/step. Beta
is then used to adjust for this variation and restore the
step size to 1ppm/step.
BETA values are limited in the range from 01000 to
11111, as shown in Table 16. To use Table 16, the device
is tested at two AT settings as follows:
BETA VALUES = (AT(max) - AT (min))/63, where:
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
AT(max) = FOUT in ppm (at AT = 00H) and
Final Digital Trimming Register (FDTR)
AT(min) = FOUT in ppm (at AT = 3FH).
This Register shows the final setting of DT after
temperature correction. It is read-only; the user cannot
overwrite a value to this register. The value is accessible
as a means of monitoring the temperature compensation
function. The corresponding clock adjustment values are
shown in Table 19. The FDTR setting has both positive
and negative settings to adjust for any offset in the
crystal.
The BETA VALUES result is indexed in the right hand
column and the resulting Beta factor (for the register) is
in the same row in the left column.
The ISL12022M has a preset BETA value corresponding
to the crystal in the module. This value is recalled on
initial power-up and is preset in device production.
It is READ ONLY and cannot be overwritten by the
user.
TABLE 16. BETA VALUES
BETA<4:0>
AT STEP ADJUSTMENT
01000
0.5000
00111
0.5625
00110
0.6250
00101
0.6875
00100
0.7500
00011
0.8125
00010
0.8750
00001
0.9375
00000
1.0000
10000
1.0625
10001
1.1250
10010
1.1875
10011
1.2500
10100
1.3125
10101
1.3750
10110
1.4375
10111
1.5000
11000
1.5625
11001
1.6250
11010
1.6875
11011
1.7500
11100
1.8125
11101
1.8750
11110
1.9375
11111
2.0000
This register shows the final setting of AT after
temperature correction. It is read-only; the user cannot
overwrite a value to this register. This value is accessible
as a means of monitoring the temperature compensation
function. See Table 17 and Table 18 (for values).
TABLE 17. FINAL ANALOG TRIMMING REGISTER
7
6
0Eh
0
0
5
4
3
2
1
0
FATR5 FATR4 FATR3 FATR2 FATR1 FATR0
20
TABLE 18. FINAL DIGITAL TRIMMING REGISTER
ADDR
7
6
5
0Fh
0
0
0
4
3
2
1
0
FDTR4 FDTR3 FDTR2 FDTR1 FDTR0
TABLE 19. CLOCK ADJUSTMENT VALUES FOR FINAL
DIGITAL TRIMMING REGISTER
Final Analog Trimming Register (FATR)
ADDR
.
ppm
ADJUSTMENT
FDTR<2:0>
DECIMAL
00000
0
0
00001
1
30.5
00010
2
61
00011
3
91.5
00100
4
122
00101
5
152.5
00110
6
183
00111
7
213.5
01000
8
244
01001
9
274.5
01010
10
305
10000
0
0
10001
-1
-30.5
10010
-2
-61
10011
-3
-91.5
10100
-4
-122
10101
-5
-152.5
10110
-6
-183
10111
-7
-213.5
11000
-8
-244
11001
-9
-274.5
11010
-10
-305
ALARM Registers (10h to 15h)
The alarm register bytes are set up identical to the RTC
register bytes, except that the MSB of each byte
functions as an enable bit (enable = “1”). These enable
bits specify which alarm registers (seconds, minutes,
etc.) are used to make the comparison. Note that there
is no alarm byte for year.
The alarm function works as a comparison between the
alarm registers and the RTC registers. As the RTC
advances, the alarm will be triggered once a match
occurs between the alarm registers and the RTC
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
registers. Any one alarm register, multiple registers, or
all registers can be enabled for a match.
Example 2
There are two alarm operation modes: Single Event and
periodic Interrupt Mode:
• Interrupts at one minute intervals when the seconds
register is at 30 seconds.
• Single Event Mode is enabled by setting the bit 7
on any of the Alarm registers (ESCA0... EDWA0) to
“1”, the IM bit to “0”, and disabling the frequency
output. This mode permits a one-time match
between the Alarm registers and the RTC registers.
Once this match occurs, the ALM bit is set to “1” and
the IRQ/FOUT output will be pulled low and will
remain low until the ALM bit is reset. This can be
done manually or by using the auto-reset feature.
• Set Alarm registers as follows:
• Interrupt Mode is enabled by setting the bit 7 on
any of the Alarm registers (ESCA0... EDWA0) to “1”,
the IM bit to “1”, and disabling the frequency output.
The IRQ/FOUT output will now be pulsed each time
an alarm occurs. This means that once the interrupt
mode alarm is set, it will continue to alarm for each
occurring match of the alarm and present time. This
mode is convenient for hourly or daily hardware
interrupts in microcontroller applications such as
security cameras or utility meter reading.
To clear a single event alarm, the ALM bit in the status
register must be set to “0” with a write. Note that if the
ARST bit is set to 1 (address 08h, bit 7), the ALM bit will
automatically be cleared when the status register is read.
Following are examples of both Single Event and periodic
Interrupt Mode alarms.
Example 1
• Alarm set with single interrupt (IM = “0”)
• A single alarm will occur on January 1 at 11:30 a.m.
• Set Alarm registers as follows:
BIT
ALARM
REGISTER 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 HEX
DESCRIPTION
SCA0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
00h Seconds disabled
MNA0
1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0
B0h Minutes set to
30, enabled
HRA0
1 0 0 1 0 0 0 1
91h Hours set to 11,
enabled
DTA0
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
81h Date set to 1,
enabled
MOA0
1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
81h Month set to 1,
enabled
DWA0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
00h Day of week
disabled
After these registers are set, an alarm will be generated
when the RTC advances to exactly 11:30 a.m. on
January 1 (after seconds changes from 59 to 00) by
setting the ALM bit in the status register to “1” and also
bringing the IRQ/FOUT output low.
21
• Pulsed interrupt once per minute (IM = “1”)
BIT
ALARM
REGISTER 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 HEX
DESCRIPTION
SCA0
1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 B0h Seconds set to 30,
enabled
MNA0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h Minutes disabled
HRA0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h Hours disabled
DTA0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h Date disabled
MOA0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h Month disabled
DWA0
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00h Day of week disabled
Once the registers are set, the following waveform will be
seen at IRQ/FOUT:
RTC AND ALARM REGISTERS ARE BOTH “30s”
60s
FIGURE 14. IRQ/FOUT WAVEFORM
Note that the status register ALM bit will be set each time
the alarm is triggered, but does not need to be read or
cleared.
Time Stamp VDD to Battery Registers
(TSV2B)
The TSV2B Register bytes are identical to the RTC
register bytes, except they do not extend beyond the
Month. The Time Stamp captures the FIRST VDD to
Battery Voltage transition time, and will not update upon
subsequent events until cleared (only the first event is
captured before clearing). Set CLRTS = 1 to clear this
register (Add 09h, PWR_VDD register).
Note that the time stamp registers are cleared to all “0”,
including the month and day, which is different from the
RTC and alarm registers (those registers default to 01h).
This is the indicator that no time stamping has occurred
since the last clear or initial power-up. Once a time
stamp occurs, there will be a non-zero time stamp.
Time Stamp Battery to VDD Registers
(TSB2V)
The Time Stamp Battery to VDD Register bytes are
identical to the RTC register bytes, except they do not
extend beyond Month. The Time Stamp captures the
LAST transition of VBAT to VDD (only the last event of a
series of power-up/power-down events is retained). Set
CLRTS = 1 to clear this register (Add 09h, PWR_VDD
register).
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
DST Control Registers (DSTCR)
8 bytes of control registers have been assigned for the
Daylight Savings Time (DST) functions. DST beginning
(set Forward) time is controlled by the registers
DstMoFd, DstDwFd, DstDtFd, and DstHrFd. DST ending
time (set Backward or Reverse) is controlled by DstMoRv,
DstDwRv, DstDtRv and DstHrRv.
Tables 20 and 21 describe the structure and functions of
the DSTCR.
must have the correct Day of Week entered in the RTC
registers for the Day/Week correction to work properly.
• Bits 0, 1, 2 contain the Day of the week information
which sets the Day of the Week that DST starts. Note
that Day of the week counts from 0 to 6, like the RTC
registers. The default for the DST Forward Day of the
Week is 00h (normally Sunday).
DST forward is controlled by the following DST Registers:
• Bits 3, 4, 5 contain the Week of the Month information
that sets the week that DST starts. The range is from
1 to 5, and Week 7 is used to indicate the last week of
the month. The default for the DST Forward Week of
the Month is 00h.
DST Enable
DST Date Forward
DSTE is the DST Enabling Bit located in bit 7 of register
20h (DstMoFdxx). Set DSTE = 1 will enable the DSTE
function. Upon powering up for the first time (including
battery), the DSTE bit defaults to “0”. When DSTE is set
to “1” the RTC time must be at least one hour before the
scheduled DST time change for the correction to take
place. When DSTE is set to “0”, the DSTADJ bit in the
Status Register automatically resets to “0”.
DstDtfd controls which Date DST begins. The format for
the Date is the same as for the RTC register, from 1 to
31. The default value for DST forward date is 00h.
DstDtFd is only effective if DstDwFdE = 0.
DST FORWARD REGISTERS (20H TO 23H)
DST Month Forward
DstMoFd sets the Month that DST starts. The format is
the same as for the RTC register month, from 1 to 12.
The default value for the DST begin month is 00h.
DST Hour Forward
DstHrFd controls the hour that DST begins. The RTC hour
and DstHrFd registers have the same formats except
there is no Military bit for DST hour. The user sets the
DST hour with the same format as used for the RTC hour
(AM/PM or MIL) but without the MIL bit, and the DST will
still advance as if the MIL bit were there. The default
value for DST hour Forward is 00h.
DST REVERSE REGISTERS (24H TO 27H)
DST Day/Week Forward
DstDwFd contains both the Day of the Week and the
Week of the Month data for DST Forward control. DST
can be controlled either by actual date or by setting both
the Week of the month and the Day of the Week.
DstDwFdE sets the priority of the Day/Week over the
Date. For DstDwFdE = 1, Day/Week is the priority. You
DST end (reverse) is controlled by the following DST
Registers:
DST Month Reverse
DstMoRv sets the Month that DST ends. The format is
the same as for the RTC register month, from 1 to 12.
The default value for the DST end month is October
(10h).
TABLE 20. DST FORWARD REGISTERS
ADDRESS
FUNCTION
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Month
Forward
DSTE
0
0
MoFd20
MoFd13
MoFd12
MoFd11
MoFd10
20h
21h
Day Forward
0
DwFdE
WkFd12
WkFd11
WkFd10
DwFd12
DwFd11
DwFd10
22h
Date
Forward
0
0
DtFd21
DtFd20
DtFd13
DtFd12
DtFd11
DtFd10
Hour
Forward
0
0
HrFd21
HrFd20
HrFd13
HrFd12
HrFd11
HrFd10
23h
TABLE 21. DST REVERSE REGISTERS
ADDRESS
NAME
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Month
Reverse
0
0
0
MoRv20
MoRv13
MoRv12
MoRv11
MoRv10
24h
25h
Day Reverse
0
DwRvE
WkRv12
WkRv11
WkRv10
DwRv12
DwRv11
DwRv10
26h
Date Reverse
0
0
DtRv21
DtRv20
DtRv13
DtRv12
DtRv11
DtRv10
27h
Hour Reverse
0
0
HrRv21
HrRv20
HrRv13
HrRv12
HrRv11
HrRv10
22
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
DST Day/Week Reverse
NPPM Registers (NPPM)
DstDwRv contains both the Day of the Week and the
Week of the Month data for DST Reverse control. DST
can be controlled either by actual date or by setting both
the Week of the month and the Day of the Week.
DstDwRvE sets the priority of the Day/Week over the
Date. For DstDwRvE = 1, Day/Week is the priority. You
must have the correct Day of Week entered in the RTC
registers for the Day/Week correction to work properly.
The NPPM value is exactly 2x the net correction, in ppm,
required to bring the oscillator to 0ppm error. The value
is the combination of oscillator Initial Correction (IPPM)
and crystal temperature dependent correction (CPPM).
• Bits 0,1,2 contain the Day of the week information
which sets the Day of the Week that DST ends. Note
that Day of the week counts from 0 to 6, like the RTC
registers. The default for the DST Reverse Day of the
Week is 00h (normally Sunday).
• Bits 3, 4, 5 contain the Week of the Month information
that sets the week that DST ends. The range is from
1 to 5, and Week 7 is used to indicate the last week of
the month. The default for the DST Reverse Week of
the Month is 00h.
IPPM is used to compensate the oscillator offset at room
temperature and is controlled by the ITR0 and BETA
registers. This value is normally set during room
temperature testing.
The CPPM compensates the oscillator frequency
fluctuation over-temperature. It is determined by the
temperature (T), crystal curvature parameter (ALPHA),
and crystal turnover temperature (XT0). T is the result of
the temp sensor/ADC conversion, whose decimal result is
2x the actual temperature in Kelvin. ALPHA is from either
the ALPHA (cold) or ALPHAH (hot) register depending on
T, and XT0 is from the XT0 register.
NPPM is governed by Equations 4 and 5:
NPPM = IPPM(ITR0, BETA) + ALPHA x (T-T0)2
DST Date Reverse
DstDtRv controls which Date DST ends. The format for
the Date is the same as for the RTC register, from
1 to 31. The default value for DST Date Reverse is 00h.
The DstDtRv is only effective if the DwRvE = 0.
NPPM = IPPM + CPPM
2
ALPHA • ( T – T0 )
NPPM = IPPM + ---------------------------------------------------4096
(EQ. 4)
where
ALPHA = α • 2048
DST Hour Reverse
DstHrRv controls the hour that DST ends. The RTC hour
and DstHrFd registers have the same formats except
there is no Military bit for DST hour. The user sets the
DST hour with the same format as used for the RTC hour
(AM/PM or MIL) but without the MIL bit, and the DST will
still advance as if the MIL bit were there. The default
value for DST hour Reverse is 00h.
T is the reading of the ADC, result is 2 x temperature in
degrees Kelvin.
TEMP Registers (TEMP)
NPPM = 2*(BETA*FATR - (FDTR-16)
The temperature sensor produces an analog voltage
output which is input to an A/D converter and produces a
10-bit temperature value in degrees Kelvin. TK07:00 are
the LSBs of the code, and TK09:08 are the MSBs of the
code. The temperature result is actually the average of
two successive temperature measurements to produce
greater resolution for the temperature control. The
output code can be converted to °C by first converting
from binary to decimal, dividing by 2, and then
subtracting 273d.
XT0 Registers (XT0)
(EQ. 3)
Temperature in °C = [(TK <9:0>)/2] - 273
The practical range for the temp sensor register output is
from 446d to 726d, or -50°C to +90°C. The temperature
compensation function is only guaranteed over -40°C to
+85°C. The TSE bit must be set to “1” to enable
temperature sensing.
TABLE 22.
TEMP
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
TK0L
TK07 TK06 TK05 TK04 TK03 TK02 TK01 TK00
TK0M
0
0
0
0
23
0
0
T = ( 2 • 298 ) + XT0
(EQ. 5)
or T = 596 + XT0
Note that NPPM can also be predicted from the FATR and
FDTR register by the relationship (all values in decimal):
TURNOVER TEMPERATURE (XT<3:0>)
The apex of the Alpha curve occurs at a point called the
turnover temperature, or XT0. Crystals normally have a
turnover temperature between +20°C and +30°C, with
most occurring near +25°C.
TABLE 23. TURNOVER TEMPERATURE
ADDR
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
2Ch
0
0
0
XT4
XT3
XT2
XT1
XT0
The ISL12022M has a preset Turnover temperature
corresponding to the crystal in the module. This value is
recalled on initial power-up and is preset in device
production. It is READ ONLY and cannot be
overwritten by the user.
Table 24 shows the values available, with a range from
+17.5°C to +32.5°C in +0.5°C increments. The default
value is 00000b or +25°C.
TK09 TK08
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
version, a scaled version of the absolute value of this
coefficient is used in order to get an integer value.
Therefore, ALP_H <7:0> is defined as the (|Actual
Alpha Hot Value| x 2048) and converted to binary. For
example, a crystal with Alpha Hot of -0.034ppm/°C2 is
first scaled (|2048*(-0.034)| = 70d) and then
converted to a binary number of 01000110b.
TABLE 24. XT0 VALUES
XT<4:0>
TURNOVER
TEMPERATURE
01111
32.5
01110
32.0
01101
31.5
01100
31
01011
30.5
01010
30
01001
29.5
01000
29.0
00111
28.5
00110
28.0
00101
27.5
00100
27.0
00011
26.5
00010
26.0
00001
25.5
00000
25.0
10000
25.0
10001
24.5
10010
24.0
10011
23.5
10100
23.0
10101
22.5
10110
22.0
10111
21.5
11000
21.0
11001
20.5
All communication over the I2C interface is conducted by
sending the MSB of each byte of data first.
11010
20.0
Protocol Conventions
11011
19.5
11100
19.0
11101
18.5
11110
18.0
Data states on the SDA line can change only during SCL
LOW periods. SDA state changes during SCL HIGH are
reserved for indicating START and STOP conditions (see
Figure 15). On power-up of the ISL12022M, the SDA pin
is in the input mode.
11111
17.5
The practical range of Actual ALPHAH values is from
-0.020 to -0.060.
The ISL12022M has a preset ALPHAH value
corresponding to the crystal in the module. This value is
recalled on initial power-up and is preset in device
production. It is READ ONLY and cannot be
overwritten by the user.
User Registers (Accessed by
Using Slave Address
1010111x)
Addresses [00h to 7Fh]
These registers are 128 bytes of battery-backed user
SRAM. The separate I2C slave address must be used to
read and write to these registers.
I2C Serial Interface
The ISL12022M supports a bi-directional bus oriented
protocol. The protocol defines any device that sends data
onto the bus as a transmitter and the receiving device as
the receiver. The device controlling the transfer is the
master and the device being controlled is the slave. The
master always initiates data transfers and provides the
clock for both transmit and receive operations.
Therefore, the ISL12022M operates as a slave device in
all applications.
ALPHA Hot Register (ALPHAH)
TABLE 25. ALPHAH REGISTER
ADDR
7
2Dh
D
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ALP_H6 ALP_H5 ALP_H4 ALP_H3 ALP_H2 ALP_H1 ALP_H0
The ALPHA Hot variable is 7 bits and is defined as the
temperature coefficient of Crystal from the XT0 value to
+85°C (both Alpha Hot and Alpha Cold must be
programmed to provide full temperature
compensation). It is normally given in units of ppm/°C2,
with a typical value of -0.034. Like the ALPHA Cold
24
All I2C interface operations must begin with a START
condition, which is a HIGH to LOW transition of SDA
while SCL is HIGH. The ISL12022M continuously
monitors the SDA and SCL lines for the START condition
and does not respond to any command until this
condition is met (see Figure 15). A START condition is
ignored during the power-up sequence.
All I2C interface operations must be terminated by a
STOP condition, which is a LOW to HIGH transition of
SDA while SCL is HIGH (see Figure 15). A STOP condition
at the end of a read operation or at the end of a write
operation to memory only places the device in its
standby mode.
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
SCL
SDA
DATA
STABLE
START
DATA
DATA
CHANGE STABLE
STOP
FIGURE 15. VALID DATA CHANGES, START AND STOP CONDITIONS
SCL FROM
MASTER
1
8
9
SDA OUTPUT FROM
TRANSMITTER
HIGH IMPEDANCE
HIGH
SDA OUTPUT
FROM RECEIVER
START
ACK
FIGURE 16. ACKNOWLEDGE RESPONSE FROM RECEIVER
SIGNALS FROM
THE MASTER
SIGNAL AT SDA
S
T
A IDENTIFICATION
BYTE
R
T
WRITE
1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0
SIGNALS FROM
THE ISL12022M
ADDRESS
BYTE
S
T
O
P
DATA
BYTE
0 0 0 0
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
FIGURE 17. BYTE WRITE SEQUENCE (SLAVE ADDRESS FOR CSR SHOWN)
An acknowledge (ACK) is a software convention used to
indicate a successful data transfer. The transmitting
device, either master or slave, releases the SDA bus
after transmitting eight bits. During the ninth clock cycle,
the receiver pulls the SDA line LOW to acknowledge the
reception of the eight bits of data (see Figure 16).
The ISL12022M responds with an ACK after recognition
of a START condition followed by a valid Identification
Byte, and once again, after successful receipt of an
Address Byte. The ISL12022M also responds with an ACK
after receiving a Data Byte of a write operation. The
master must respond with an ACK after receiving a Data
Byte of a read operation.
Device Addressing
Following a start condition, the master must output a
Slave Address Byte. The 7 MSBs are the device
identifiers. These bits are “1101111” for the RTC
registers and “1010111” for the User SRAM.
25
The last bit of the Slave Address Byte defines a read or
write operation to be performed. When this R/W bit is a
“1”, a read operation is selected. A “0” selects a write
operation (refer to Figure 18).
After loading the entire Slave Address Byte from the SDA
bus, the ISL12022M compares the device identifier and
device select bits with “1101111” or “1010111”. Upon a
correct compare, the device outputs an acknowledge on
the SDA line.
Following the Slave Byte is a one byte word address. The
word address is either supplied by the master device or
obtained from an internal counter. On power-up, the
internal address counter is set to address 00h, so a
current address read starts at address 00h. When
required, as part of a random read, the master must
supply the 1 Word Address Bytes, as shown in Figure 20.
In a random read operation, the slave byte in the
“dummy write” portion must match the slave byte in the
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
“read” section. For a random read of the Control/Status
Registers, the slave byte must be “1101111x” in both
places.
SLAVE
ADDRESS BYTE
1
1
0
1
1
1
1
R/
A7
A6
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
WORD
ADDRESS
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
D2
D1
D0
DATA BYTE
FIGURE 18. SLAVE ADDRESS, WORD ADDRESS, AND
DATA BYTES
Write Operation
A Write operation requires a START condition, followed by
a valid Identification Byte, a valid Address Byte, a Data
Byte, and a STOP condition. After each of the three
bytes, the ISL12022M responds with an ACK. At this
time, the I2C interface enters a standby state.
Read Operation
A Read operation consists of a three byte instruction,
followed by one or more Data Bytes (see Figure 20).
The master initiates the operation issuing the following
sequence: a START, the Identification byte with the R/W
bit set to “0”, an Address Byte, a second START, and a
second Identification byte with the R/W bit set to “1”.
After each of the three bytes, the ISL12022M responds
with an ACK. Then the ISL12022M transmits Data Bytes
as long as the master responds with an ACK during the
SCL cycle following the eighth bit of each byte. The
master terminates the read operation (issuing a STOP
condition) following the last bit of the last Data Byte
(see Figure 20).
The Data Bytes are from the memory location indicated
by an internal pointer. This pointer’s initial value is
determined by the Address Byte in the Read operation
instruction, and increments by one during transmission
of each Data Byte. After reaching the memory location
2Fh, the pointer “rolls over” to 00h, and the device
continues to output data for each ACK received.
Application Section
Battery Backup Details
The ISL12022M has automatic switchover to battery
backup when the VDD drops below the VBAT mode
threshold. A wide variety of backup sources can be used,
including standard and rechargeable lithium,
supercapacitors, or regulated secondary sources. The
serial interface is disabled in battery backup, while the
oscillator and RTC registers are operational. The SRAM
register contents are powered to preserve their contents
as well.
The input voltage range for VBAT is 1.8V to 5.5V, but
keep in mind the temperature compensation only
operates for VBAT > 2.7V. Note that the device is not
guaranteed to operate with a VBAT < 1.8V, so the battery
should be changed before discharging to that level. It is
26
strongly advised to monitor the low battery indicators in
the status registers and take action to replace discharged
batteries.
If a supercapacitor is used, it is possible that it may
discharge to below 1.8V during prolonged power-down.
Once powered up, the device may lose serial bus
communications until both VDD and VBAT are powered
down together. To avoid that situation, including
situations where a battery may discharge deeply, the
circuit in Figure 19 can be used.
VDD = 2.7V
TO 5.5V
ISL12022M
VDD
JBAT
VBAT
CIN
0.1µF
CBAT
0.1µF
DBAT
BAT43W
+ VBAT = 1.8V
TO 3.2V
GND
FIGURE 19. SUGGESTED BATTERY BACKUP CIRCUIT
The diode, DBAT will add a small drop to the battery
voltage but will protect the circuit should battery voltage
drop below 1.8V. The jumper is added as a safeguard
should the battery ever need to be disconnected from the
circuit.
The VDD negative slew rate should be limited to below
the data sheet spec (10V/ms) otherwise battery
switchover can be delayed, resulting in SRAM contents
corruption and oscillator operation interruption.
Some applications will require separate supplies for the
RTC VDD and the I2C pull-ups. This is not advised, as it
may compromise the operation of the I2C bus. For
applications that do require serial bus communication
with the RTC VDD powered down, the SDA pin must be
pulled low during the time the RTC VDD ramps down to
0V. Otherwise, the device may lose serial bus
communications once VDD is powered up, and will return
to normal operation ONLY once VDD and VBAT are both
powered down together.
Layout Considerations
The ISL12022M contains a quarts crystal and requires
special handling during PC board assembly. Excessive
shock and vibrations should be avoided, especially with
automated handling equipment. Ultrasound cleaning is
not advisable as it subjects the crystal to resonance and
possible failure. See also Note 6 on page 5 in the
specifications tables, which pertains to solder reflow
effects on oscillator accuracy.
The part of the package that has NC pins from pin 1 to 5
and from pin 16 to 20 contains the crystal. Low
frequency RTC crystals are known to pick up noise very
easily if layout precautions are not followed, even
embedded within a plastic package. Most instances of
erratic clocking or large accuracy errors can be traced to
the susceptibility of the oscillator circuit to interference
from adjacent high speed clock or data lines. Careful
layout of the RTC circuit will avoid noise pickup and
insure accurate clocking.
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
SIGNALS
FROM THE
MASTER
S
T
A
R
T
SIGNAL AT
SDA
IDENTIFICATION
BYTE WITH
R/W = 0
S
T IDENTIFICATION
A
BYTE WITH
R
R/W = 1
T
ADDRESS
BYTE
S
T
O
P
A
C
K
1 1 0 1 1 1 1 1
1 1 0 1 1 1 1 0
A
C
K
SIGNALS FROM
THE SLAVE
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
FIRST READ
DATA BYTE
LAST READ
DATA BYTE
FIGURE 20. READ SEQUENCE (CSR SLAVE ADDRESS SHOWN)
Figure 21 shows a suggested layout for the ISL12022M
device. The following main precautions should be
followed:
• Do not run the serial bus lines or any high speed logic
lines in the vicinity of pins 1 and 20, or under the
package. These logic level lines can induce noise in
the oscillator circuit, causing misclocking.
• Add a ground trace around the device with one end
terminated at the chip ground. This guard ring will
provide termination for emitted noise in the vicinity of
the RTC device
• Be sure to ground pins 6 and 15 as well as pin 8 as
these all insure the integrity of the device ground
• Add a 0.1µF decoupling capacitor at the device VDD
pin, especially when using the 32.768kHz FOUT
function.
The best way to run clock lines around the RTC is to stay
outside of the ground ring by at least a few millimeters.
Also, use the VBAT and VDD as guard ring lines as well,
they can isolate clock lines from the oscillator section. In
addition, if the IRQ/FOUT pin is used as a clock, it should
be routed away from the RTC device as well.
GROUND
RING
FOUT
SCL
SDA
FIGURE 21. SUGGESTED LAYOUT FOR THE
ISL12022M
27
Measuring Oscillator Accuracy
The best way to analyze the ISL12022M frequency
accuracy is to set the IRQ/FOUT pin for a specific
frequency, and look at the output of that pin on a high
accuracy frequency counter (at least 7 digits accuracy).
Note that the IRQ/FOUT is an drain output and will
require a pull-up resistor.
Using the 1.0Hz output frequency is the most convenient
as the ppm error is expressed in Equation 6:
ppm error = F OUT – 1 • 1e6
(EQ. 6)
Other frequencies may be used for measurement but the
error calculation becomes more complex. Use the FOUT
output and a frequency counter for the most accurate
results. Also, when the proper layout guidelines above
are observed, the oscillator should start-up in most
circuits in less than one second.
Temperature Compensation Operation
The ISL12022M temperature compensation feature
needs to be enabled by the user. This must be done in a
specific order as follows.
1. Read register 0Dh, the BETA register. This register
contains the 5-bit BETA trimmed value, which is
automatically loaded on initial power-up. Mask off
the 5 LSB’s of the value just read.
2. Bit 7 of the BETA register is the master enable
control for temperature sense operation. Set this to
“1” to allow continuous temperature frequency
correction. Frequency correction will then happen
every 60 seconds with VDD applied.
3. Bits 5 and 6 of the BETA register control
temperature compensation in battery backup mode
(see Table 15). Set the values for the operation
desired.
4. Write back to register 0Dh making sure not to
change the 5 LSB values, and include the desired
compensation control bits.
Note that every time the BETA register is written with the
TSE bit = 1, a temperature compensation cycle is
instigated and a new correction value will be loaded into
the FATR/FDTR registers (if the temperature changed
since the last conversion).
Also note that registers 0Bh and 0Ch, the ITR0 and
ALPHA registers, are READ-ONLY, and cannot be written
to. Also the value for BETA is locked and cannot be
changed with a write. However, It is still a good idea to
do the bit masking when doing TSE bit changes.
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Daylight Savings Time (DST) Example
DST involves setting the forward and back times and
allowing the RTC device to automatically advance the
time or set the time back. This can be done for current
year, and future years. Many regions have DST rules that
use standard months, weeks and time of the day, which
permit a pre-programmed, permanent setting.
Table 26 shows an example setup for the ISL12022M.
TABLE 26. DST EXAMPLE
VARIABLE
Month Forward and
DST Enable
VALUE
April
REGISTER
VALUE
15h
84h
Week and Day Forward 1st Week and 16h
and select Day/Week, Sunday
not Date
48h
Date Forward
not used
17h
00h
Hour Forward
2am
18h
02h
Month Reverse
October
19h
10h
Week and Day Reverse Last Week
and select Day/Week, and Sunday
not Date
1Ah
78h
Date Reverse
not used
1Bh
00h
Hour Reverse
2am
1Ch
02h
28
The Enable bit (DSTE) is in the Month forward register,
so the BCD value for that register is altered with the
additional bit. The Week and Day values along with
Week/Day vs Date select bit is in the Week/Day register,
so that value is also not straight BCD. Hour and Month
are normal BCD, but the Hour doesn’t use the MIL bit
since Military time PM values are already discretely
different from AM/PM time PM values. The DST reverse
setting utilizes the option to select the last week of the
month for October, which could have 4 or 5 weeks but
needs to have the time change on the last Sunday.
Note that the DSTADJ bit in the status register monitors
whether the DST forward adjustment has happened.
When it is “1”, DST forward has taken place. When it is
“0”, then either DST reverse has happened, or it has
been reset either by initial power-up or if the DSTE bit
has been set to “0”.
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Revision History
The revision history provided is for informational purposes only and is believed to be accurate, but not warranted. Please go to
web to make sure you have the latest Rev.
DATE
REVISION
CHANGE
5/27/10
FN6668.6
Added CDM to “ESD Rating” on page 5
Added “Related Literature*(see page 30)” on page 1
1/20/10
FN6668.6
Updated Note 2 in Ordering Information table from “These Intersil Pb-free plastic packaged
products employ special Pb-free material sets, molding compounds/die attach materials, and
100% matte tin plate plus anneal (e3 termination finish, which is RoHS compliant and
compatible with both SnPb and Pb-free soldering operations). Intersil Pb-free products are
MSL classified at Pb-free peak reflow temperatures that meet or exceed the Pb-free
requirements of IPC/JEDEC J STD-020.” to “These Intersil plastic packaged products employ
special material sets, molding compounds and 100% matte tin plate plus anneal (e3)
termination finish. These products do contain Pb but they are RoHS compliant by exemption 7
(lead in high melt temp solder for internal connections) and exemption 5 (lead in piezoelectric
elements). These Intersil RoHS compliant products are compatible with both SnPb and Pb-free
soldering operations. These Intersil RoHS compliant products are MSL classified at Pb-free peak
reflow temperatures that meet or exceed the Pb-free requirements of IPC/JEDEC J STD-020.”
Changed "Pb-Free" on page 1 and page 3 under package to: "RoHS Compliant"
10/26/09
FN6668.6
Added "Default 32.768kHz frequency output" right behind
"Interrupt Output/Frequency Output" in IRQ/Fout pin description.
Added Typical Application Circuit to Page 1.
Converted to New Intersil Template
Updated ordering information by numbering all notes, setting up links, added MSL
(Moisture Sensitivity Level) note.
Updated word "Pinout" to "Pin Configuration".
Pin Descriptions updated by adding descriptive text taken from page 9. Deleted Text Pin
Descriptions that were on page 9.
Pb-free reflow link now shown in blue. Updated Notes in Electrical Spec Table to follow flow of
numbers when referenced.
Added "boldface limits..." text in Electrical Spec Conditions to indicate Min and Max over-temp.
Bolded all over-temp Min and Max values.
Added Revision History and Products information with links.
Added Table of Contents.
In Features (removed):
1. Real Time Clock (I believe the title say we are RTC and register
map tells the list the things we keep track of).
2. Customer Programmable Day Light Saving (Many people are using
SW based day light saving).
3. Combine Alarm and Fout to "Interrupt for Alarm or 15 selectable
Frequency Outputs".
4. Combine Battery and VDD monitor to "VDD and Battery Status Monitors".
5. Remove Oscillator Failure Detection.
6. Shorten Time stamp for battery to "Time Stamp for Battery Switch Over".
7. Remove all sub-bullets for each feature to save space
In Application (removed):
1. Medical Devices, Vending Machine, and Security System.
Under thermal information, added theta Jc value of 35C/W. As this is special package with
offset die, added note 5 to read "For θJC, the “case temp” location is on top of the package and
measured in the center of the package between pins 6 and 15."
29
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Revision History
The revision history provided is for informational purposes only and is believed to be accurate, but not warranted. Please go to
web to make sure you have the latest Rev. (Continued)
DATE
REVISION
CHANGE
07/22/09
FN6668.5
Corrected date from July 10, 2008 to July 10, 2009 and repost. No rev, no formal review
necessary per M Casino.
07/10/09
FN6668.5
Refer to following link for detailed list of changes:
http://intranet.intrepid.intersil.com/Windchill/wtcore/jsp/isil/ViewIsilPart.jsp?oid=VR%3Aext
.isil.part.mcol.MCOL%3A114266645
12/18/08
FN6668.4
Changed Storage Temperature on page 3 from:
"-65°C to +165°C" to "-40°C to +85°C"
12/15/08
FN6668.3
Added spec to datasheet - Delta FoutI on page 3.
Added Tape and Reel Reference Note to Ordering Information.
12/09/08
FN6668.2
Updated the following parameters in the spec table on page 3:
1. Changed Max for IDD1@5V from 6.5 to 7, and IDD1 @3V from 5.5 to 6.
2. Removed ÄATLSB (AT Sensitivity per LSB) from spec table.
11/03/08
FN6668.1
Complete overhaul of data sheet. Changed web destination to YES; ready for formal review in
support of POQ
Revised with final specs and text. Changes include:
Added text and equations for Ibat for temp sense ON, and for relative accuracy for 1m vs 10m
interval
Added text clarifying that no compensation at Vbat<2.7V
Revised entire Daylights savings time section
Added Application Example for DST
Added requirement for Vbat>1.8V in Vbat note.
Added apps circuit to survive Vbat<1.8V
Corrected All occurrences of Alpha tables
Corrected equations in NPPM section
BOLD and shade the COMPENSATON registers in the big table to indicate READ ONLY, add note
at top of table. Add READ ONLY statements to IATR, ALPHA, BETA, XT0, ALPHAH
Fixed blank bits in register tables and in text.
Register table: Change default values for compensation to xx's, they are different with each
device.
Added Datasheet curves
Add statement to Apps section on crystal handling similar to Maxim's
Updated Pb-free note according to lead finish (Order Info)
3/21/08
FN6668.1
**8/11 - Vaulted NO to the web. Datasheet being updated by Jim Pflasterer with additional
edits. This version is NOT a released version**
- Removed the "VDD" from the title on the first page. Updated File info and MCOL properties
page too.
- Global change for VBAT and VDD throughout document. Made the "BAT" and "DD" subscript.
- Included Battery Reseal Function in Features and Description on page 1
- Note 3 page 5, lower case "i" as in "inactive"
- Included symbol "Temp" for temp sensor accuracy in DC table on page 3
- First paragraph of DST Forward Registers had incorrect address stated (changed from 15h to
20h)
- Corrected register 20h on Page 20, added the DSTE bit to column 7
-EQ2, page 20, corrected to "NPPM = IPPM+ALPHA(T-XT0)2/4096"
02/29/08
FN6668.0
Initial Release with FN6668 making this a Rev 0.
Products
Intersil Corporation is a leader in the design and manufacture of high-performance analog semiconductors. The
Company's products address some of the industry's fastest growing markets, such as, flat panel displays, cell phones,
handheld products, and notebooks. Intersil's product families address power management and analog signal
processing functions. Go to www.intersil.com/products for a complete list of Intersil product families.
*For a complete listing of Applications, Related Documentation and Related Parts, please see the respective device
information page on intersil.com: ISL12022M
To report errors or suggestions for this datasheet, please go to www.intersil.com/askourstaff
FITs are available from our website at http://rel.intersil.com/reports/search.php
30
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010
ISL12022M
Small Outline Plastic Packages (SOIC)
M20.3 (JEDEC MS-013-AC ISSUE C)
20 LEAD WIDE BODY SMALL OUTLINE PLASTIC PACKAGE
N
INDEX
AREA
H
M
0.25(0.010)
B M
INCHES
E
-B-
1
2
3
L
SEATING PLANE
-A-
A
D
h x 45°
-C-
e
A1
B
SYMBOL
MIN
MAX
MIN
MAX
NOTES
A
0.0926
0.1043
2.35
2.65
-
A1
0.0040
0.0118
0.10
0.30
-
B
0.014
0.019
0.35
0.49
9
C
0.0091
0.0125
0.23
0.32
-
D
0.4961
0.5118
12.60
13.00
3
E
0.2914
0.2992
7.40
7.60
4
e
α
C
0.10(0.004)
M C A M B S
0.25(0.010)
0.050 BSC
1.27 BSC
-
H
0.394
0.419
10.00
10.65
-
h
0.010
0.029
0.25
0.75
5
L
0.016
0.050
0.40
1.27
6
N
α
NOTES:
MILLIMETERS
20
0°
20
8°
0°
1. Symbols are defined in the “MO Series Symbol List” in
Section 2.2 of Publication Number 95.
7
8°
Rev. 2 6/05
2. Dimensioning and tolerancing per ANSI Y14.5M-1982.
3. Dimension “D” does not include mold flash, protrusions
or gate burrs. Mold flash, protrusion and gate burrs shall
not exceed 0.15mm (0.006 inch) per side.
4. Dimension “E” does not include interlead flash or
protrusions. Interlead flash and protrusions shall not
exceed 0.25mm (0.010 inch) per side.
5. The chamfer on the body is optional. If it is not present,
a visual index feature must be located within the
crosshatched area.
6. “L” is the length of terminal for soldering to a substrate.
7. “N” is the number of terminal positions.
8. Terminal numbers are shown for reference only.
9. The lead width “B”, as measured 0.36mm (0.014 inch) or
greater above the seating plane, shall not exceed a
maximum value of 0.61mm (0.024 inch)
10. Controlling dimension: MILLIMETER. Converted inch
dimensions are not necessarily exact.
For additional products, see www.intersil.com/product_tree
Intersil products are manufactured, assembled and tested utilizing ISO9000 quality systems as noted
in the quality certifications found at www.intersil.com/design/quality
Intersil products are sold by description only. Intersil Corporation reserves the right to make changes in circuit design, software and/or specifications
at any time without notice. Accordingly, the reader is cautioned to verify that data sheets are current before placing orders. Information furnished by
Intersil is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is assumed by Intersil or its subsidiaries for its use; nor for any
infringements of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is granted by implication or otherwise under any
patent or patent rights of Intersil or its subsidiaries.
For information regarding Intersil Corporation and its products, see www.intersil.com
31
FN6668.7
June 4, 2010