Dallas DS2755E+T High-accuracy battery fuel gauge with snapshot Datasheet

DS2755
High-Accuracy Battery
Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
www.maxim-ic.com
FEATURES
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ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
PIN CONFIGURATION
Snapshot Mode Allows Instantaneous Power
Measurement
Accurate Current Measurement for Coulomb
Counting (Current Accumulation)
- 2% ±4μV over ±64mV Input Range
- 2% ±200μA over ±3.2A Range Using a 20mΩ
Sense Resistor
Current Measurement
- 9-Bit Bidirectional Snapshot Measurement
- 12-Bit Bidirectional Average Updated Every
88ms
- 15-Bit Bidirectional Average Updated Every 2.8s
Voltage Measurement
- 9-Bit Snapshot Measurement
- 10-Bit Measurement Updated Every 4ms
Temperature Measurement
- 10-Bit Measurement, 0.125°C Resolution Using
Integrated Sensor
Host Alerted When Accumulated Current or
Temperature Exceeds User-Selectable Limits
96 Bytes of Lockable EEPROM
8 Bytes of General-Purpose SRAM
Dallas 1-Wire® Interface with Unique 64-Bit
Device Address with Standard 16kbps or
Overdrive 142kbps Timing
3mm Dimension of 8-Pin TSSOP Package Allows
Mounting on Side of Thin Prismatic Li+ and
Li+/Polymer Cells
APPLICATIONS
Cell Phones
Digital Cameras
Smartphones
PDAs
Portable Consumer Products
VIN
VSS
PIO
VDD
1
22
3
42
8
7
6
5
DQ
SNS
IS2
IS1
DS2755E
8-Pin TSSOP Package
DESCRIPTION
The DS2755 high-precision battery fuel gauge is a
data-acquisition and information-storage device
tailored for cost-sensitive and space-constrained 1cell Li+/polymer battery-pack applications. The
DS2755 provides the key hardware components
required to accurately estimate remaining capacity by
integrating low-power, precision measurements of
temperature,
voltage,
current,
and
current
accumulation, as well as nonvolatile (NV) data
storage, into the small footprint of a 3.0mm x 4.4mm
8-pin TSSOP package.
Through its 1-Wire interface, the DS2755 gives the
host system read/write access to status and control
registers, instrumentation registers, and generalpurpose data storage. Each device has a unique
factory-programmed 64-bit net address that allows it
to be individually addressed by the host system,
supporting multibattery operation.
ORDERING INFORMATION
PART
DS2755E+
DS2755E+T&R
MARKING
2755
2755
TEMP RANGE
-20°C to +70°C
-20°C to +70°C
DESCRIPTION
8-Pin TSSOP, Lead Free
DS2755E+ on Tape-and-Reel
1-Wire is a registered trademark of Dallas Semiconductor.
Note: Some revisions of this device may incorporate deviations from published specifications known as errata. Multiple revisions of any device
may be simultaneously available through various sales channels. For information about device errata, click here: www.maxim-ic.com/errata.
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020507
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
The DS2755 performs temperature, voltage, and current measurement to a resolution sufficient to support processmonitoring applications such as battery charge control and remaining capacity estimation. Temperature is
measured using an on-chip sensor, eliminating the need for a separate thermistor. Bidirectional current
measurement supporting current accumulation (coulomb counting) is accomplished using an external current
sense resistor.
The host system can configure the DS2755 to signal critical conditions to reduce polling overhead. The interrupt
fires when programmable upper and lower thresholds of temperature or coulomb count are crossed. The user can
select either the DQ pin or PIO pin as the interrupt signal.
The programmable I/O pin allows the host system to sense and control other electronics in the pack, including
switches, vibration motors, speakers, and LEDs, or the I/O pin can be configured as an interrupt output.
Three types of memory are provided on the DS2755 for battery information storage: EEPROM, lockable EEPROM,
and SRAM. EEPROM memory saves important battery data in true NV memory that is unaffected by severe battery
depletion, accidental shorts, or ESD events. Lockable EEPROM becomes ROM when locked to provide additional
security for unchanging battery data. SRAM provides inexpensive storage for temporary data.
Figure 1. APPLICATION EXAMPLE
PACK+
500
1k
1 Cell Li+
5.6V
(1)
DQ
VSS
SNS
PIO
IS2
VDD
IS1
103
PIO
150
DATA
104
DS2755
RSNS
5.6V
5.6V
(1)
(1)
102
PACK -
2.5V
(1) Optional component(s) for robust ESD performance
(1)
RKS
IS2
VSS
10kΩ
SNS
10kΩ
Protection IC
(Li+/Polymer)
VIN
150
ADC
Input
DS2755
2 of 20
RKS
IS1
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS*
Voltage on PIO Pin, Relative to VSS
Voltage on All Other Pins, Relative to VSS
Continuous Sink Current, DQ, PIO
Operating Temperature Range
Storage Temperature Range
Soldering Temperature
-0.3V to +12V
-0.3V to +6V
12mA
-40°C to +85°C
-55°C to +125°C
See J-STD-020 Specification
* This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operation
sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods of time may affect reliability.
RECOMMENDED DC OPERATING CONDITIONS
PARAMETER
Supply Voltage
Data Pin
VIN Pin
SYMBOL
VDD
DQ
VIN
CONDITIONS
(Note 1)
(Note 1)
(Note 1)
(2.5V ≤ VDD ≤ 5.5V, TA = -20°C to +70°C.)
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
2.5
5.5
V
-0.3
+5.5
V
-0.3
+5.5
V
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Active Current
IACTIVE
Sleep-Mode Current
ISLEEP
(2.5V ≤ VDD ≤ 5.5V, TA = -20°C to +70°C.)
CONDITIONS
MIN TYP
MAX
UNITS
DQ = VDD, EEC bit = 0,
75
100
μA
0°C to +50°C, 2.5V < VDD < 4.2V
DQ = VDD, EEC bit = 0
110
DQ = 0V (Note 3)
1
2
μA
Current Measurement
Input Range
VIS1-IS2
(Note 2)
Current Register Offset
Error
IOERR
(Note 5)
Current Gain Error
IGERR
(Note 2, 6)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
±64
±7.813
μV
±1
%I
reading
0
µVhr
24 Hour Accumulated
Current Error
Current Sampling
Frequency
IS1-VSS, IS2-SNS Filter
Resistors
Input Resistance: VIN
Voltage Offset Error
RIN
VOERR
Voltage Gain Error
VGERR
Temperature Error
Input Logic High:
DQ, PIO
Input Logic Low:
DQ, PIO
Output Logic Low:
DQ, PIO
DQ Pulldown Current
DQ Capacitance
DQ Low-to-Sleep Time
Undervoltage Detect
Undervoltage Delay
Internal Timebase
Accuracy
TERR
(Note 9)
VIH
(Note 1)
VIL
(Note 1)
0.4
V
VOL
IOL = 4mA
(Note 1)
0.4
V
qCA
VIS1-IS2 = 0, OBEN set,
(Note 2, 7, 4)
mV
-200
fSAMP
RKS
+25°C
VIN = VDD
(Note 8)
tERR
1456
Hz
10
kΩ
5
±5
±2
±3
1.5
IPD
CDQ
tSLEEP
VUV
tUVD
-100
V
1
60
2.1
2.45
90
(Note 1)
0°C to +50°C (Note 10)
-20°C to +70°C
3 of 20
MΩ
mV
%V
reading
°C
2.5
100
±1
2.55
110
±2
±3
μA
pF
s
V
ms
%
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS—1-WIRE INTERFACE
PARAMETER
Snapshot Trigger 0
Snapshot Delay
STANDARD TIMING
Time Slot
Recovery Time
Write-0 Low Time
Write-1 Low Time
Read Data Valid
Reset Time High
Reset Time Low
Presence-Detect High
Presence-Detect Low
Interrupt Time Low
OVERDRIVE TIMING
Time Slot
Recovery Time
Write-0 Low Time
Write-1 Low Time
Read Data Valid
Reset Time High
Reset Time Low
Presence-Detect High
Presence-Detect Low
Interrupt Time Low
SYMBOL
tSWL
tSDLY
CONDITIONS
tSLOT
tREC
tLOW0
tLOW1
tRDV
tRSTH
tRSTL
tPDH
tPDL
tIL
(2.5V ≤ VDD ≤ 5.5V, TA = -20°C to +70°C.)
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
1
16
μs
80
100
120
μs
60
1
60
1
120
119
15
15
480
480
15
60
480
tSLOT
tREC
tLOW0
tLOW1
tRDV
tRSTH
tRSTL
tPDH
tPDL
tIL
960
60
240
1920
6
1
6
1
16
16
2
2
48
48
2
8
48
80
6
24
192
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
μs
EEPROM RELIABILITY SPECIFICATION
PARAMETER
Copy to EEPROM Time
EEPROM Copy
Endurance
Note 1:
Note 2:
Note 3:
Note 4:
Note 5:
Note 6:
Note 7:
Note 8:
Note 9:
Note 10:
Note 11:
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
(2.5V ≤ VDD ≤ 5.5V, TA = -20°C to +70°C.)
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
tEEC
NEEC
2
(Note 11)
50,000
10
ms
cycles
All voltages are referenced to VSS.
Specifications relative to VIS1 - VIS2.
The DS2755 requires a maximum of 25µAH of charge to transition into sleep mode.
Summation of worst case time base and current measurement sampling errors.
Continuous offset cancellation corrects offset errors in the current measurement system. Individual values reported by the
Current register have a maximum offset of ±0.5 LSb’s (±7.8125μV). Individual values reported in the Average Current register
have a maximum offset of ±2 LSb’s (±7.8125μV).
Current Gain Error specifies the gain error in the Current register value compared to a reference voltage between IS1 and IS2.
The DS2755 does not compensate for sense resistor characteristics, and any error terms arising from the sense resistor should
be taken into account when calculating total current measurement error.
Achieving the 24 Hour Accumulated Current Error assumes positive offset accumulation blanking is enabled (OBEN bit set) and
can require a one time 3.5s in-system calibration after mounting to the printed circuit board. Variations in temperature and supply
voltage are compensated for by periodic offset corrections performed automatically during Active mode operation.
Voltage offset measurement is with respect to 4.2V at +25°C.
Self heating due to output pin loading and sense resistor power dissipation can alter the Temperature reading from ambient
conditions.
Typical value for tERR valid at 3.7V and +25°C. tERR applies to all internal timings (ex. fSAMP, tSLEEP, tUVD) except for the 1-Wire
Interface timings.
Four year data retention at +50°C.
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DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Figure 2. FUNCTIONAL DIAGRAM
1-WIRE
INTERFACE
AND
ROM ID
DQ
LOCKABLE EEPROM
BLOCKS
SRAM
VOLTAGE
REFERENCE
THERMAL
SENSE
M
U
X
VIN
VDD
BIAS
TEMPERATURE
VOLTAGE
ADC
CURRENT
ACCUM. CURRENT
TIMEBASE
COMPARATORS
STATUS / CONTROL
-
IS2
+
SNS
PIO
IS1
chip ground
VSS
DETAILED PIN DESCRIPTION
PIN
NAME
1
VIN
2
VSS
3
4
5
6
7
PIO
VDD
IS1
IS2
SNS
8
DQ
DESCRIPTION
Battery voltage sense input. Voltage measurement performed on VIN input and
displayed in Voltage Register.
Device ground and current sense resistor connection. VSS attaches to battery end
of sense resistor.
General purpose programmable I/O pin or optional interrupt output.
Input supply: +2.5V to +5.5V input range. Bypass VDD to VSS with 0.1μF.
Current sense filter input 1
Current sense filter input 2
Sense resistor connection. SNS attaches to pack end of current sense resistor.
Serial interface data I/O pin. Bidirection data transmit and receive at 16kbps or
143kbps. Optional interrupt output.
POWER MODES
The DS2755 has two power modes: Active and Sleep. While in Active mode, the DS2755 continuously measures
current, voltage and temperature. Current accumulation and monitoring for under voltage also occur continuously in
Active mode. In Sleep mode, the DS2755 ceases these activities. The DS2755 enters Sleep mode when PMOD =
1 AND either of the following occur:
the DQ line is low for longer than tSLEEP (minimum 2.1s)
(DQ low used indicate that the pack has been disconnected or that the host system is signaling the
DS2755 to enter Sleep mode.)
the UVEN bit in the Status Register is set to 1 AND the voltage on VIN drops below undervoltage threshold VUV for
tUVD
ƒ
The DS2755 returns to Active mode when the DQ line is pulled from a low-to-high state and the voltage on VIN is
above VUV. The factory default for the DS2755 is UVEN = PMOD = 0. The DS2755 defaults to Active mode when
power is first applied.
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DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
CURRENT MEASUREMENT AND ACCUMULATION
The DS2755 current measurement system is designed to provide timely data on charge and discharge current at a
moderate resolution level while simultaneously accumulating high resolution average data to support accurate
coulomb counting. Current is measured with an Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) by sampling the voltage drop
across a series sense resistor, RSNS, connected between SNS and VSS. Individual current samples are taken every
687μs (1456-1 Hz). Multiple samples are averaged to report Current and Average Current values, and accumulated
for coulomb counting.
Current Measurement
The voltage signal developed across the sense resistor (between SNS and VSS) is differentially sampled by the
ADC inputs via internal 10kΩ resistors connected between VSS and IS1, and SNS and IS2. Isolating the ADC
inputs (IS1 and IS2 pins) from the sense resistor with 10kΩ facilitates the use of an RC filter by adding a single
external capacitor. The RC filter extends the input range beyond ±64mV in pulse load or pulse charge applications.
The ADC accurately measures large peak signals as long as the differential signal level at IS1 and IS2 does not
exceed ±64mV.
The Current register operates in two modes, normal and snapshot. In normal mode, the Current register reports the
average of 128 individual current samples every 88ms. The reported value represents the average current during
the 88ms measurement period. The Average Current register reports the average of 4096 current samples and is
updated every 2.8s.
In snapshot mode, the Current register holds the current measured immediately following the snapshot trigger.
Current measurements resume immediately after the snapshot value is obtained, however, the SNAP bit must be
cleared to re-enable normal mode current reporting in the Current register. The Average Current register continues
to be updated while the SNAP bit is set. Current accumulation also continues while SNAP is set. Although a small
error is introduced into both the Average Current and Accumulated Current values by the current sample timing
discontinuity introduced with each trigger of the Snapshot mode, use of Snapshot once every 5s does not produce
a significant error.
The following register formats specify the update interval and units for the Current and Average Current registers.
Values are posted in two’s compliment format. Positive values represent charge currents (VIS1 > VIS2) and negative
values represent discharge currents (VIS2 > VIS1). Positive currents above the maximum register value are reported
at the maximum value, 0x7FFF. Negative currents below the minimum register value are reported at the minimum
value, 0x8000.
Figure 3. CURRENT REGISTER FORMAT
DS2755: 12-bit + sign resolution (13-bit), 88ms update interval
MSB—Address 0E
S
211
MSb
210
29
28
LSB—Address 0F
27
26
25
LSb
24
23
22
21
20
X
MSb
“S”: sign bit(s)
X
LSb
Units:
6 of 20
X
0
2 = 15.625μV/Rsns
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Figure 4. AVERAGE CURRENT REGISTER FORMAT
DS2755: 15-bit + sign resolution (16-bit), 2.8s update interval
MSB—Address 1A
S
214
213
212
211
LSB—Address 1B
210
29
MSb
28
27
LSb
26
25
24
23
22
21
MSb
20
LSb
“S”: sign bit(s)
0
Units:
2 = 1.953μV/Rsns
Current Offset Correction
Continuous offset cancellation is performed automatically to correct for offsets in the current measurement system.
Individual values reported by the Current register have a maximum offset of ±0.5 LSb’s (±7.8125μV). Individual
values reported in the Average Current register have a maximum offset of ±2 LSb’s (±7.8125μV).
Current Accumulation
The DS2755 measures current for coulomb counting purposes, with an accuracy of ±2% ±3.9μV over a range of
±64mV. Using a 20mΩ sense resistor, current accumulation is performed over a range of ±3.2A while measuring
standby currents with an accuracy of ±195μA. Current measurements are internally summed, or accumulated, with
the results displayed in the Accumulated Current Register (ACR). The accuracy of the ACR is dependent on both
the current measurement and the accumulation timebase. The 16-bit ACR has a range of ±204.8mVh with an LSb
of 6.25μVh. Accumulation of charge current above the maximum register value is reported at the maximum value;
conversely, accumulation of discharge current below the minimum register value is reported at the minimum value.
Read and write access is allowed to the ACR. The ACR must be written MSB first then LSB. Whenever the ACR is
written, internal fractional accumulation result bits are cleared. In order to preserve the ACR value in case of power
loss, the ACR MSB and LSB are automatically backed up to EEPROM after incrementing or decrementing by
100μVh (5.0mAh for Rsns = 20mΩ). The ACR value is recovered from EEPROM on power-up or by a Recall Data
command targeting the ACR register address. A write to the ACR results in an automatic copy of the new value to
EEPROM.
Figure 5. ACCUMULATED CURRENT REGISTER FORMAT
MSB—Address 10
S
214
213
212
211
210
LSB—Address 11
29
MSb
28
27
LSb
MSb
26
25
24
23
22
6.25μVh/Rsns
ACR LSB
6.25 Vh
RSNS
20mΩ
15mΩ
10mΩ
5mΩ
312.5μAh
416.7μAh
625μAh
1.250mAh
ACR RANGE
VIS1- VIS2
±204.8mVh
RSNS
20mΩ
15mΩ
10mΩ
5mΩ
±10.24Ah
±13.65Ah
±20.48Ah
±40.96Ah
7 of 20
20
LSb
Units:
VIS1- VIS2
21
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Offset Accumulation Blanking
In order to avoid the accumulation of small positive offset errors over long periods, an offset blanking filter is
provided. The blanking filter is enabled by setting the OBEN bit in the Status Register. When OBEN is set, charge
currents (positive Current register values) less than 62.5μV are not accumulated in the ACR. The minimum charge
current accumulated in the ACR is 3.125mA for RSNS=0.020Ω and 12.5mA for RSNS=0.005Ω.
Accumulation Bias
Systematic errors or an application preference can require the application of an arbitrary bias to the current
accumulation process. The Accumulation Bias register is provided to allow a user programmed constant positive or
negative polarity bias to the current accumulation process. The Accumulation Bias value can be used to estimate
battery currents that do not flow through the sense resistor, estimate battery self-discharge, or correct for offset
error accumulated in the ACR register. The user programmed two’s compliment value in the Accumulation Bias
register is added to the ACR once per current sample. The register format supports the accumulation bias to be
applied in 1.95μV increments over a ±250μV range. When using a 20mΩ sense resistor, the bias control is 100μA
over a ±12.5mA range.
The Accumulation Bias register is directly read and write accessible. The user value is made nonvolatile with a
Copy Data command targeting EEPROM block 0. The Accumulation Bias register is loaded from EEPROM
memory on power up and a transition from Sleep to Active mode.
Figure 6. ACCUMULATION BIAS REGISTER FORMAT
Address 33h
S
26
25
24
23
22
21
MSb
20
LSb
“S”: sign bit
1.95μV/Rsns
VOLTAGE MEASUREMENT
The voltage register operates in two modes, normal and snapshot. In normal mode, the DS2755 continually
measures the voltage between pins VIN and VSS over a 0 to 4.75V range, and the Voltage Register is updated in
two’s-complement format every 3.4ms with a resolution of 4.88mV.
In snapshot mode, the Voltage register holds the voltage measured immediately following the snapshot trigger.
Normal voltage measurements resume after the snapshot value is obtained, however, the SNAP bit must be
cleared to re-enable normal mode reporting of voltage measurement to the Voltage register.
Voltages above the maximum register value are reported as the maximum value.
Figure 7. VOLTAGE REGISTER FORMAT
MSB—Address 0C
S
29
28
27
26
25
LSB—Address 0D
24
MSb
23
22
LSb
MSb
21
20
X
X
X
X
X
LSb
Units: 4.88 mV
TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENT
The DS2755 uses an integrated temperature sensor to continually measure battery temperature. Temperature
measurements are updated in the Temperature Register every 220ms in two’s-complement format with a resolution
of 0.125°C over a ±127°C range. The Temperature Register format is shown in Figure 8.
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DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Figure 8. TEMPERATURE REGISTER FORMAT
MSB—Address 18
S
29
28
27
26
MSb
25
LSB—Address 19
24
23
22
LSb
MSb
21
20
X
X
X
X
X
LSb
Units: 0.125°C
PROGRAMMABLE I/O
The PIO pin can be used as a general purpose programmable I/O pin, or as an interrupt output to alert the system
of a critical change in Temperature or ACR registers. To use the PIO pin in the programmable I/O mode described
in this section, the PIO interrupt method must not be enabled. See the Interrupt Signaling section.
As a programmable I/O pin, PIO provides a digital input or an open drain digital output. Writing a 1 to the PIO bit in
the Special Feature Register disables the output driver. With the PIO pin Hi-Z, it can be used as an input. The logic
level of the PIO pin is reported when the Special Feature Register is read via the serial interface.
To use the PIO pin as an output, write the desired output value to the PIO bit in the Special Feature Register.
Writing a 0 to the PIO bit enables the PIO output driver, pulling the PIO pin to VSS. As stated above, writing a 1 to
the PIO bit forces the pin to a Hi-Z state. A pullup resistor or current source must be provided to force the pin high.
The PIO pin can be biased several volts above VDD allowing inter-operation with a system voltage which is higher
than the battery voltage. Consult the Absolute Maximum Ratings table when operating the PIO pin significantly
above VDD. The DS2755 turns off the PIO output driver and sets the PIO bit high when in Sleep mode or when DQ
is low for more than tSLEEP, regardless of the state of the PMOD bit.
INTERRUPT SIGNALING
The interrupt feature is enabled by setting the Interrupt Enable (IE) bit (bit 2 in the Special Feature Register). When
IE is set, an interrupt will be signaled if the alarm comparator thresholds are crossed. A 1-Wire RESET clears IE.
The host must re-enable interrupts by setting IE in the last transaction on the bus.
The interrupt signal pin is selected by setting or clearing the Interrupt Output Select (IOS) bit (bit 2 in the Status
Register). When IOS is set, the DQ pin performs the interrupt signaling, when IOS is cleared, the PIO pin performs
the interrupt signaling.
DQ signals an interrupt condition by driving the 1-Wire bus low for tIL μs. The DS2755 and all other 1-Wire devices
present on the bus interpret this signal as a 1-Wire RESET. A Presence Pulse should be expected from all 1-Wire
devices, including the DS2755 following the interrupt signal. The host system can sense the interrupt signal on the
falling or rising edge of either the RESET or Presence Pulse.
PIO signals an interrupt by driving low. PIO remains low until the host clears the condition by writing a 1 to the PIO
bit (bit 7 in the Special Feature Register). A pullup resistor or current source must be provided to force the pin high.
The host can sense the interrupt on the falling edge of PIO.
ALARM COMPARATORS
Interrupt threshold values can be programmed by the user in the designated SRAM memory registers in the
formats and locations found in Figure 9. Since these thresholds are located in SRAM memory, they must be
reprogrammed if a loss of power to the DS2755 occurs. The DS2755 interrupts the system host to indicate that one
of the following events has occurred:
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
Accumulated Current ≥ Current Accumulator Interrupt High Threshold
Accumulated Current ≤ Current Accumulator Interrupt Low Threshold
Temperature ≥ Temperature Interrupt High Threshold
Temperature ≤ Temperature Interrupt Low Threshold
The host may then poll the DS2755 to determine which threshold has been met or exceeded.
9 of 20
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Figure 9. INTERRUPT THRESHOLD REGISTER FORMATS
Current Accumulator Interrupt High Threshold
MSB—Address 80
S
214
213
212
211
LSB—Address 81
210
29
MSb
28
27
26
LSb
MSb
25
24
23
22
21
20
LSb
Units: 6.25μVhrs
Current Accumulator Interrupt Low Threshold
MSB—Address 82
S
214
213
212
211
LSB—Address 83
210
29
MSb
28
27
26
LSb
MSb
25
24
23
22
21
20
LSb
Units: 6.25μVhrs
Temperature Interrupt High Threshold
Address 84
S
26
25
24
23
22
21
MSb
20
LSb
Units: 1.0°C
Temperature Alarm Low Threshold
Address 85
S
26
25
24
23
MSb
22
21
20
LSb
Units: 1.0°C
SNAPSHOT MODE
Measurement of the current and voltage can be synchronized to a system event with the Snapshot mode.
Triggering a Snapshot event causes the ADC to abandon the current conversion and capture one current and one
voltage sample. The Snapshot results are reported in the Current and Voltage registers for retrieval by the host.
Normal current, voltage and temperature measurements and current accumulation resume immediately following a
Snapshot event, though the Snapshot current and voltage values persist until the host system writes the SNAP bit
in the Special Function Register to a 0. Since the snapshot mode disrupts the continuity of the coulomb counting
process, it should be used sparingly.
The Sync Function Command [D2h] signals the ADC control to expect a Snapshot trigger on DQ. Following the
Sync command, the host can trigger a Snapshot event by toggling the DQ line. Synchronization occurs on the
10 of 20
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
rising edge of the DQ high to low to high pulse. The Snapshot mode can be abandoned by sending a 1-Wire Reset
instead of the synchronization pulse. The rising edge DQ trigger is formed by the first data bit after issuing the Sync
Function command. A full byte can be issued, but the rising edge of the first bit sets the trigger point. [[The SNAP
bit is set after the rising edge trigger: timing is not critical and could be several 100μs later since it cannot be read
quickly via 1-Wire]]. If a 1-wire reset is issued instead of a data bit, then the Snapshot is abandoned (SNAP bit not
set).]
The Snapshot Synchronization Timing in Figure 10 illustrates the timing of the Snapshot current and voltage
sample apertures relative to the DQ rising edge trigger and one timeslot GSM power amp load pulse. In the
diagram, tSAMP = 1/ fSAMP.= 1456-1 = 687μs. The current and voltage measurements are taken 343μs apart but
within a single GSM timeslot.
Figure 10. SNAPSHOT SYNCHRONIZATION TIMING
MEMORY
The DS2755 has a 256-byte linear address space with registers for instrumentation, status, and control in the lower
32 bytes, with lockable EEPROM and SRAM memory occupying portions of the remaining address space. All
EEPROM and SRAM memory is general-purpose except addresses 31h and 33h, which should be written with the
default values for the Status Register and Accumulation Bias Register, respectively. When the MSB of any twobyte register is read, the MSB and LSB values are latched and held for the duration of the Read Data command.
This prevents updates during the read to ensure synchronization between the two register bytes. For consistent
results, always read the MSB and the LSB of a two-byte register during the same Read Data command sequence.
In describing register control and status bits, the terms set and clear refer to internal operations which manipulate
bit values. The terms read and write refer to 1-Wire access to the bit values. Several bits are set internally but
require the host system to write them to a 0 value.
EEPROM memory is shadowed by RAM to eliminate programming delays between writes and to allow the data to
be verified by the host system before being copied to EEPROM. The Read Data and Write Data protocols to/from
EEPROM memory addresses access the shadow RAM. The Recall Data function command transfers data from the
EEPROM to the shadow RAM. The Copy Data function command transfers data from the shadow RAM to the
EEPROM and requires tEEC to complete programming of the EEPROM cells. In unlocked EEPROM blocks, writing
data updates shadow RAM. In locked EEPROM blocks, the Write Data command is ignored. The Copy Data
function command copies the contents of shadow RAM to EEPROM in an unlocked block of EEPROM but has no
effect on locked blocks. The Recall Data function command copies the contents of a block of EEPROM to shadow
RAM regardless of whether the block is locked or not.
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DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Figure 9. EEPROM Access via Shadow RAM
Copy
EEPROM
Write
Serial
Interface
Recall
Shadow RAM
Read
Table 1. MEMORY MAP
ADDRESS (HEX)
00
01
02 to 06
07
08
09 to 0B
0C
0D
0E
0F
10
11
12 to 17
18
19
1A
1B
1C to 1F
20 to 3F
40 to 5F
60 to 7F
80 to 8F
90 to FF
DESCRIPTION
Reserved
Status Register
Reserved
EEPROM Register
Special Feature Register
Reserved
Voltage Register MSB
Voltage Register LSB
Current Register MSB
Current Register LSB
READ/WRITE
R
R/W
R/W
R
R
R
R
Accumulated Current Register MSB
Accumulated Current Register LSB
Reserved
Temperature Register MSB
Temperature Register LSB
Average Current Register MSB
Average Current Register LSB
Reserved
EEPROM, block 0
EEPROM, block 1
EEPROM, block 2
SRAM
Reserved
R/W
R/W
R
R
R
R
R/W*
R/W*
R/W*
R/W
*Each EEPROM block is read/write until locked by the LOCK command, after which it is read-only.
STATUS REGISTER
The default values for the Status Register bits are stored in lockable EEPROM in the corresponding bits of address
31h. A Recall Data command for EEPROM block 1 recalls the default values into the Status Register bits. The
format of the Status Register is shown in Figure 11. The function of each bit is described in detail in the following
paragraphs.
Figure 11. STATUS REGISTER FORMAT
Address 01
bit 7
bit 6
bit 5
bit 4
bit 3
bit 2
bit 1
bit 0
X
X
PMOD
RNAOP
UVEN
IOS
OBEN
OVD
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DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
PMOD—Sleep Mode Enable. A value of 1 in this bit enables the DS2755 to enter sleep mode when the DQ line
goes low for greater than tSLEEP. A value of 0 disables the DS2755 from entering the sleep mode. This bit is readonly. The desired default value should be set in bit 5 of address 31h. The factory default is 0.
RNAOP—Read Net Address Opcode. A value of 0 in this bit sets the opcode for the Read Net Address command
to 33h, while a 1 sets the opcode to 39h. This bit is read-only. The desired default value should be set in bit 4 of
address 31h. The factory default is 0.
UVEN—Undervoltage Sleep Enable. A value of 1 in UVEN along with a value of 1 in PMOD enables the DS2755 to
enter sleep mode when the voltage on VIN drops below undervoltage threshold VUV for tUVD (cell depletion). A value
of 0 disables the DS2755 from entering the sleep mode due to undervoltage events. This bit is read-only. The
desired default value should be set in bit 3 of address 31h. The factory default is 0.
IOS—Interrupt output select. IOS set to a 1 selects the DQ interrupt signaling method. IOS cleared to 0 selects the
PIO interrupt signaling method. The IE bit must be set to enable either type of interrupt. The desired default value
should be set in bit 2 of address 31h. The factory default is 0.
OBEN—Offset Blanking Enable. A value of 1 in this bit location enables the offset blanking function described in
the Current Accumulation section. If set to 0, the offset blanking function is disabled. This bit is read-only. The
desired default value should be set in bit 1 of address 31h. The factory default is 0.
OVD—Overdrive Timing Enable. A value of 1 in this bit location enables the Overdrive 1-Wire timings. If set to 0,
the Regular mode timings are enabled. This bit cannot be written directly. The desired bit value must be written to
bit 1 of address 31h, (an EEPROM block 0 location), then recalled before any change to the 1-Wire speed
becomes effective. A power-on reset forces a recall of settings from EEPROM block 0. The factory default in bit 1
of address 31h is 0 (Standard 1-Wire timing).
X—Reserved Bits.
EEPROM REGISTER
The format of the EEPROM Register is shown in Figure 12. The function of each bit is described in detail in the
following paragraphs.
Figure 12. EEPROM REGISTER FORMAT
Address 07
bit 7
bit 6
bit 5
bit 4
bit 3
bit 2
bit 1
bit 0
EEC
LOCK
X
X
X
BL2
BL1
BL0
EEC—EEPROM Copy Flag. A 1 in this read-only bit indicates that a Copy Data command is in progress. While this
bit is high, writes to EEPROM addresses are ignored. A 0 in this bit indicates that data can be written to unlocked
EEPROM blocks.
LOCK—EEPROM Lock Enable. When this bit is 0, the Lock command is ignored. Writing a 1 to this bit enables the
Lock command. After the Lock command is executed, the LOCK bit is reset to 0. The factory default is 0.
BL2—EEPROM Block 2 Lock Flag. A 1 in this read-only bit indicates that EEPROM block 2 (addresses 60 to 7F) is
locked (read-only), while a 0 indicates block 1 is unlocked (read/write).
BL1—EEPROM Block 1 Lock Flag. A 1 in this read-only bit indicates that EEPROM block 1 (addresses 40 to 5F) is
locked (read-only), while a 0 indicates block 1 is unlocked (read/write).
BL0—EEPROM Block 0 Lock Flag. A 1 in this read-only bit indicates that EEPROM block 0 (addresses 20 to 3F) is
locked (read-only), while a 0 indicates block 0 is unlocked (read/write).
X—Reserved Bits.
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DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
SPECIAL FEATURE REGISTER
The format of the Special Feature Register is shown in Figure 13. The function of each bit is described in detail in
the following paragraphs.
Figure 13. SPECIAL FEATURE REGISTER FORMAT
Address 08
bit 7
bit 6
bit 5
bit 4
bit 3
bit 2
bit 1
bit 0
POR
PIO
X
X
X
IE
X
SNAP
POR—POR Indicator bit. This bit is set to a 1 when the DS2755 experiences a power-on-reset (POR) event. To
use the POR bit to detect a power-on-reset, the POR bit must be set to a 0 by the host system upon power-up and
after each subsequent occurrence of a POR. This bit is read/write to 0.
PIO—PIO Pin Sense and Control. See the Programmable I/O section for details on this read/write bit.
IE—Interrupt Enable. A value of 1 in this bit location enables interrupt signaling to the host system. If set to 0, the
interrupt signaling is disabled. When IE is 0, the alarm comparator registers are available as SRAM and have no
effect on device operation. IE bit is read/write to 1. It is cleared to 0 by a 1-Wire reset.
SNAP—Snapshot Control. This bit is set to a 1 immediately after the DS2755 executes a Snapshot conversion
pair. SNAP = 1 indicates that the Current and Voltage registers contain Snapshot results. While SNAP = 1, the
Snapshot results persist in the Current and Voltage registers until the SNAP bit is written to a 0 by the host system.
This bit is read/write to 0.
X—Reserved Bits.
1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM
The 1-Wire bus is a system that has a single bus master and one or more slaves. A multidrop bus is a 1-Wire bus
with multiple slaves. A single-drop bus has only one slave device. In all instances, the DS2755 is a slave device.
The bus master is typically a microprocessor in the host system. The discussion of this bus system consists of four
topics: 64-Bit Net Address, Hardware Configuration, Transaction Sequence, and 1-Wire Signaling.
64-BIT NET ADDRESS
Each DS2755 has a unique, factory-programmed 1-Wire net address that is 64 bits in length. The first 8 bits are the
1-Wire family code (35h for DS2755). The next 48 bits are a unique serial number. The last 8 bits are a CRC of the
first 56 bits (see Figure 14). The 64-bit net address and the 1-Wire I/O circuitry built into the device enable the
DS2755 to communicate through the 1-Wire protocol detailed in the 1-Wire Bus System section of this data sheet.
Figure 14. 1-WIRE NET ADDRESS FORMAT
8-Bit CRC
48-Bit Serial Number
MSb
8-Bit Family
Code (35h)
LSb
CRC GENERATION
The DS2755 has an 8-bit CRC stored in the most significant byte of its 1-Wire net address. To ensure error-free
transmission of the address, the host system can compute a CRC value from the first 56 bits of the address and
compare it to the CRC from the DS2755. The host system is responsible for verifying the CRC value and taking
action as a result. The DS2755 does not compare CRC values and does not prevent a command sequence from
proceeding as a result of a CRC mismatch. Proper use of the CRC can result in a communication channel with a
very high level of integrity.
14 of 20
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
The CRC can be generated by the host using a circuit consisting of a Shift Register and XOR gates as shown in
Figure 15, or it can be generated in software. Additional information about the Dallas 1-Wire CRC is available in
Application Note 27: Understanding and Using Cyclic Redundancy Checks with Dallas Semiconductor Touch
Memory Products.
Figure 15. 1-WIRE CRC GENERATION BLOCK DIAGRAM
INPUT
MSb
XOR
XOR
LSb
XOR
In the circuit in Figure 15, the shift bits are initialized to 0. Then, starting with the least significant bit of the family
code, one bit at a time is shifted in. After the 8th bit of the family code has been entered, then the serial number is
entered. After the 48th bit of the serial number has been entered, the Shift Register contains the CRC value.
HARDWARE CONFIGURATION
Because the 1-Wire bus has only a single line, it is important that each device on the bus be able to drive it at the
appropriate time. To facilitate this, each device attached to the 1-Wire bus must connect to the bus with open-drain
or tri-state output drivers. The DS2755 uses an open-drain output driver as part of the bidirectional interface
circuitry shown in Figure 16. If a bidirectional pin is not available on the bus master, separate output, and input pins
can be connected together.
The 1-Wire bus must have a pullup resistor at the bus-master end of the bus. For short line lengths, the value of
this resistor should be approximately 5kΩ. The idle state for the 1-Wire bus is high. If, for any reason, a bus
transaction must be suspended, the bus must be left in the idle state in order to properly resume the transaction
later. If the bus is left low for more than 120μs, slave devices on the bus begin to interpret the low period as a reset
pulse, effectively terminating the transaction.
Figure 16. 1-WIRE BUS INTERFACE CIRCUITRY
BUS MASTER
VPULLUP
(2.0V to 5.5V)
DS275x 1-WIRE PORT
4.7kΩ
Rx
Rx
1μA
Typ.
Tx
Rx = RECEIVE
Tx = TRANSMIT
15 of 20
Tx
100Ω
MOSFET
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
TRANSACTION SEQUENCE
The protocol for accessing the DS2755 through the 1-Wire port is as follows:
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
Initialization
Net Address Command
Function Command
Transaction/Data
The sections that follow describe each of these steps in detail.
All transactions of the 1-Wire bus begin with an initialization sequence consisting of a reset pulse transmitted by the
bus master followed by a presence pulse simultaneously transmitted by the DS2755 and any other slaves on the
bus. The presence pulse tells the bus master that one or more devices are on the bus and ready to operate. For
more details, see the I/O Signaling section.
NET ADDRESS COMMANDS
Once the bus master has detected the presence of one or more slaves, it can issue one of the net address
commands described in the following paragraphs. The name of each command is followed by the 8-bit opcode for
that command in square brackets. Figure 17 presents a transaction flowchart of the net address commands.
Read Net Address [33h or 39h]. This command allows the bus master to read the DS2755’s 1-Wire net address.
This command can only be used if there is a single slave on the bus. If more than one slave is present, a data
collision occurs when all slaves try to transmit at the same time (open drain produces a wired-AND result). The
RNAOP bit in the Status Register selects the opcode for this command, with RNAOP = 0 indicating 33h and
RNAOP = 1 indicating 39h.
Match Net Address [55h]. This command allows the bus master to specifically address one DS2755 on the 1-Wire
bus. Only the addressed DS2755 responds to any subsequent function command. All other slave devices ignore
the function command and wait for a reset pulse. This command can be used with one or more slave devices on
the bus.
Skip Net Address [CCh]. This command saves time when there is only one DS2755 on the bus by allowing the
bus master to issue a function command without specifying the address of the slave. If more than one slave device
is present on the bus, a subsequent function command can cause a data collision when all slaves transmit data at
the same time.
Search Net Address [F0h]. This command allows the bus master to use a process of elimination to identify the 1Wire net addresses of all slave devices on the bus. The search process involves the repetition of a simple threestep routine: read a bit, read the complement of the bit, then write the desired value of that bit. The bus master
performs this simple three-step routine on each bit location of the net address. After one complete pass through all
64 bits, the bus master knows the address of one device. The remaining devices can then be identified on
additional iterations of the process. See Chapter 5 of the Book of DS19xx iButton® Standards for a comprehensive
discussion of a net address search, including an actual example. This publication can be found on the
Maxim/Dallas website at www.maxim-ic.com.
FUNCTION COMMANDS
After successfully completing one of the net address commands, the bus master can access the features of the
DS2755 with any of the function commands described in the following paragraphs. The name of each function is
followed by the 8-bit opcode for that command in square brackets.
Read Data [69h, XX]. This command reads data from the DS2755 starting at memory address XX. The LSb of the
data in address XX is available to be read immediately after the MSb of the address has been entered. Because
the address is automatically incremented after the MSb of each byte is received, the LSb of the data at address XX
+ 1 is available to be read immediately after the MSb of the data at address XX. If the bus master continues to read
beyond address FFh, the DS2755 outputs logic 1 until a reset pulse occurs. Addresses labeled “reserved” in the
memory map contain undefined data. The Read Data command can be terminated by the bus master with a reset
pulse at any bit boundary.
iButton is a registered trademark of Dallas Semiconductor.
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DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Write Data [6Ch, XX]. This command writes data to the DS2755 starting at memory address XX. The LSb of the
data to be stored at address XX can be written immediately after the MSb of the address has been entered.
Because the address is automatically incremented after the MSb of each byte is written, the LSb to be stored at
address XX + 1 can be written immediately after the MSb to be stored at address XX. If the bus master continues
to write beyond address FFh, the DS2755 ignores the data. Writes to read-only addresses, reserved addresses
and locked EEPROM blocks are ignored. Incomplete bytes are not written. Writes to unlocked EEPROM blocks are
to shadow RAM rather than EEPROM. See the Memory section for more details.
Copy Data [48h, XX]. This command copies the contents of shadow RAM to EEPROM for the 32-byte EEPROM
block containing address XX. Copy Data commands that address locked blocks are ignored. While the Copy Data
command is executing, the EEC bit in the EEPROM Register is set to 1 and writes to EEPROM addresses are
ignored. Reads and writes to non-EEPROM addresses can still occur while the copy is in progress. The Copy Data
command execution time, tEEC, is 2ms typical and starts after the last address bit is transmitted.
Recall Data [B8h, XX]. This command recalls the contents of the 32-byte EEPROM block containing address XX
to shadow RAM.
Lock [6Ah, XX]. This command locks (write-protects) the 32-byte block of EEPROM memory containing memory
address XX. The LOCK bit in the EEPROM Register must be set to l before the Lock command is executed. If the
LOCK bit is 0, the Lock command has no effect. The Lock command is permanent; a locked block can never be
written again.
Sync [D2h, XX]. This command allows the bus to be used to trigger current and voltage Snapshot readings.
Following the issue of the Sync command, the bus returns to the idle state awaiting the measurement trigger.
When the bus transitions high to low and then low to high on the first data bit issued after the command byte, the
Snapshot measurements are performed. Only one bit of the data byte is required to trigger the Snapshot
measurements. One Snapshot command must be issued for each Snapshot trigger event.
Table 2. FUNCTION COMMANDS
COMMAND
Read Data
Write Data
Copy Data
Recall Data
Lock
Sync
DESCRIPTION
Reads data from memory
starting at address XX
Writes data to memory
starting at address XX
Copies shadow RAM data to
EEPROM block containing
address XX
Recalls EEPROM block
containing address XX to
shadow RAM
Permanently locks the block
of EEPROM
containing address XX
Arms the Snapshot
Measurement Mode
COMMAND
PROTOCOL
BUS STATE AFTER
COMMAND PROTOCOL
69h, XX
Master Rx
6Ch, XX
Master Tx
48h, XX
Bus idle
None
B8h, XX
Bus idle
None
6Ah, XX
Bus idle
None
D2h, XX
Bus idle
None
17 of 20
BUS DATA
Up to 256
bytes of data
Up to 256
bytes of data
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Figure 17. NET ADDRESS COMMAND FLOW CHART
MASTER Tx
RESET PULSE
DS2755 Tx
PRESENCE PULSE
MASTER Tx
NET ADDRESS
COMMAND
33h/39h
READ
NO
YES
55h
MATCH
NO
F0h
SEARCH
YE
S
YES
DS2755 Tx
FAMILY CODE
1 BYTE
DS2755 Tx BIT 0
MASTER Tx
BIT 0
DS2755 Tx BIT 0
NO
CCh
SKIP
NO
YE
S
MASTER Tx
FUNCTION
COMMAND
MASTER Tx BIT 0
DS2755 Tx
SERIAL NUMBER
6 BYTES
BIT 0
MATCH?
DS2755 Tx
CRC
1 BYTE
NO
NO
YE
S
MASTER Tx
BIT 1
BIT 0
MATCH?
DS2755 Tx BIT 1
DS2755 Tx BIT 1
MASTER Tx BIT 1
BIT 1
MATCH?
NO
NO
BIT 1
MATCH?
YE
S
MASTER Tx
BIT 63
YE
S
DS2755 Tx BIT 63
DS2755 Tx BIT 63
MASTER Tx BIT 63
MASTER Tx
FUNCTION
COMMAND
YES
BIT 63
MATCH?
NO
I/O SIGNALING
The 1-Wire bus requires strict signaling protocols to ensure data integrity. The four protocols or signaling types
used are:
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1)
2)
3)
4)
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
Initialization sequence (Reset Pulse followed by Presence Pulse)
Write 0
Write 1
Read Data
All signaling is initiated by the bus master. Except for the Presence Pulse, all falling edges are created by the bus
master. The initialization sequence required to begin communication with the DS2755 is shown in Figure 18. A
presence pulse following a reset pulse indicates the DS2755 is ready to accept a net address command. The bus
master transmits (Tx) a reset pulse for tRSTL. The bus master then releases the line and goes into receive mode
(Rx). The 1-Wire bus line is then pulled high by the pullup resistor. After detecting the rising edge on the DQ pin,
the DS2755 waits for tPDH and then transmits the Presence Pulse for tPDL.
Figure 18. 1-WIRE INITIALIZATION SEQUENCE
tRSTL
tRSTH
tPDH
tPDL
PACK+
DQ
PACK–
LINE TYPE LEGEND:
BUS MASTER ACTIVE LOW
DS2755 ACTIVE LOW
BOTH BUS MASTER AND
DS2755 ACTIVE LOW
RESISTOR PULLUP
WRITE-TIME SLOTS
A write-time slot is initiated when the bus master pulls the 1-Wire bus from a logic-high (inactive) level to a logic-low
level. There are two types of write-time slots: write 1 and write 0. All write-time slots must be tSLOT in duration with a
1μs minimum recovery time, tREC, between cycles.
The bus master generates a write 1 time slot by pulling 1-Wire bus line low for tLOW1 and then releasing it. The bus
must be pulled high within 15μs in Standard mode or 2μs in Overdrive mode after the start of the write-time slot.
The bus master generates a write 0 time slot by pulling 1-Wire bus line low and then holding it low for tLOW0, or up to
the end of the write-time slot.
The DS2755 samples the 1-Wire bus after the line falls, sampling occurs between 15μs and 60μs in Standard
mode and between 2μs and 6μs in Overdrive mode. If the line is high when sampled by the DS2755, a write 1
occurs, that is, the DS2755 accepts the bit value to be a 1. If the line is low when sampled, a write 0 occurs, that is,
the DS2755 accepts the bit value to be a 0. See Figure 19 for more information.
READ-TIME SLOTS
A read-time slot is initiated when the bus master pulls the 1-Wire bus line from a logic-high level to a logic-low level.
The bus master generated read-time slot results in a read 1 and read 0 depending on the data presented by the
DS2755. All read-time slots must be tSLOT in duration with a 1μs minimum recovery time, tREC, between cycles.
The bus master initiates a read-time slot by pulling the bus line low for at least 1μs and then releasing it to allow the
DS2755 to present valid data. The DS2755 generates a read 0 by holding the line low. The line is held low for at
least the Read Data Valid time (tRDV) from the start of the read-time slot. The DS2755 releases the bus line and
allows it to be pulled high by the external pullup resistor some time after tRDV but before the end of the read-time
slot. A read 1 is generated by not holding the line low after the time slot is initiated by the master. The line is
allowing it to be pulled high as soon as it is released by the master. The bus master must sample the bus after
initializing the time slot and before tRDV to read the data value transmitted by the DS2755. Sampling should occur
19 of 20
DS2755: High-Accuracy Battery Fuel Gauge with Snapshot
as close to tRDV as possible to allow for the rise time of the passive pullup 1-Wire bus. See Figure 19 for more
information.
Figure 19. 1-WIRE WRITE AND READ TIME SLOTS
WRITE 0 SLOT
WRITE 1 SLOT
tSLOT
tSLOT
tLOW0
tLOW1
tREC
VPULLUP
GND
Mode
MIN
DS2755 Sample Window
TYP
MAX
MIN
>1μs
DS2755 Sample Window
TYP
MAX
Standard
15μs
15μs
30μs
15μs
15μs
30μs
Overdrive
2μs
1μs
3μs
2μs
1μs
3μs
READ 0 SLOT
READ 1 SLOT
tSLOT
tSLOT
tREC
VPULLUP
GND
Master Sample Window
>1μs
tRDV
Master Sample Window
tRDV
LINE TYPE LEGEND:
Bus master active low
DS2755 active low
Both bus master and
DS2755 active low
Resistor pullup
20 of 20
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