XICOR X24128S14-1.8

16K x 8 Bit
X24128
128K
400KHz 2-Wire Serial E2PROM with Block LockTM
FEATURES
DESCRIPTION
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The X24128 is a CMOS Serial E2PROM, internally
organized 16K x 8. The device features a serial interface and software protocol allowing operation on a
simple two wire bus.
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•
•
•
•
•
•
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Save Critical Data with Programmable
Block Lock Protection
—Block Lock (0, 1/4, 1/2, or all of E2PROM Array)
—Software Write Protection
—Programmable Hardware Write Protect
In Circuit Programmable ROM Mode
400KHz 2-Wire Serial Interface
—Schmitt Trigger Input Noise Suppression
—Output Slope Control for Ground Bounce
Noise Elimination
Longer Battery Life With Lower Power
—Active Read Current Less Than 1mA
—Active Write Current Less Than 3mA
—Standby Current Less Than 1µA
1.8V to 3.6V, 2.5V to 5.5V and 4.5V to 5.5V
Power Supply Versions
32 Word Page Write Mode
—Minimizes Total Write Time Per Word
Internally Organized 16K x 8
Bidirectional Data Transfer Protocol
Self-Timed Write Cycle
—Typical Write Cycle Time of 5ms
High Reliability
—Endurance: 100,000 Cycles
—Data Retention: 100 Years
14-Lead SOIC
16-Lead SOIC
8-Lead PDIP
Three device select inputs (S0–S2) allow up to eight
devices to share a common two wire bus.
A Write Protect Register at the highest address location, FFFFh, provides three write protection features:
Software Write Protect, Block Lock Protect, and
Programmable Hardware Write Protect. The Software
Write Protect feature prevents any nonvolatile writes to
the device until the WEL bit in the Write Protect
Register is set. The Block Lock Protection feature
gives the user four array block protect options, set by
programming two bits in the Write Protect Register.
The Programmable Hardware Write Protect feature
allows the user to install the device with WP tied to
VCC, write to and Block Lock the desired portions of
the memory array in circuit, and then enable the In
Circuit Programmable ROM Mode by programming the
WPEN bit HIGH in the Write Protect Register. After
this, the Block Locked portions of the array, including
the Write Protect Register itself, are permanently
protected from being erased.
FUNCTIONAL DIAGRAM
DATA REGISTER
SERIAL E2PROM DATA
AND ADDRESS (SDA)
SCL
Y DECODE LOGIC
COMMAND
DECODE
AND
CONTROL
LOGIC
PAGE
DECODE
LOGIC
SERIAL E2PROM
ARRAY
16K x 8
4K x 8
BLOCK LOCK AND
WRITE PROTECT
CONTROL LOGIC
4K x 8
S2
S1
DEVICE
SELECT
LOGIC
WRITE
PROTECT
REGISTER
8K x 8
S0
WRITE VOLTAGE
CONTROL
WP
Xicor, 1995, 1996 Patents Pending
7027-1.3 5/14/97 T2/C0/D2 SH
1
7027 FM 01
Characteristics subject to change without notice
X24128
Xicor E2PROMs are designed and tested for applications requiring extended endurance. Inherent data
retention is greater than 100 years.
PIN NAMES
Symbol
PIN DESCRIPTIONS
Serial Clock (SCL)
The SCL input is used to clock all data into and out of
the device.
Serial Data (SDA)
SDA is a bidirectional pin used to transfer data into
and out of the device. It is an open drain output and
may be wire-ORed with any number of open drain or
open collector outputs.
Description
S0, S1, S2
Device Select Inputs
SDA
Serial Data
SCL
Serial Clock
WP
Write Protect
VSS
Ground
VCC
Supply Voltage
NC
No Connect
7027 FM T01
PIN CONFIGURATION
An open drain output requires the use of a pull-up
resistor. For selecting typical values, refer to the
Pull-up resistor selection graph at the end of this data
sheet.
Not to scale
14 Lead SOIC
Device Select (S0, S1, S2)
The device select inputs (S0, S1, S2) are used to set
the first three bits of the 8-bit slave address. This
allows up to eight devices to share a common bus.
These inputs can be static or actively driven. If used
statically they must be tied to VSS or VCC as appropriate. If actively driven, they must be driven with
CMOS levels (driven to VCC or VSS).
.344”
S0
1
S1
2
14
13
NC
3
12
VCC
WP
NC
NC
4
11
NC
NC
5
S2
VSS
X24128
10
NC
6
9
SCL
7
8
SDA
.244”
Write Protect (WP)
The Write Protect input controls the Hardware Write
Protect feature. When held LOW, Hardware Write
Protection is disabled. When this input is held HIGH,
and the WPEN bit in the Write Protect Register is set
HIGH, the Write Protect Register is protected,
preventing changes to the Block Lock Protection and
WPEN bits.
16 Lead SOIC
.394”
S0
1
S1
2
NC
3
14
NC
4
13
NC
12
NC
16
15
X24128
VCC
WP
NC
NC
5
NC
6
11
NC
S2
7
10
SCL
VSS
8
9
SDA
6
VCC
WP
SCL
5
SDA
.244”
8 Lead PDIP
.430”
S0
1
8
S1
2
7
S2
VSS
3
X24128
4
.325”
2
7027 FM 02
X24128
Clock and Data Conventions
Data states on the SDA line can change only during
SCL LOW. SDA state changes during SCL HIGH are
reserved for indicating start and stop conditions. Refer
to Figures 1 and 2.
DEVICE OPERATION
The device supports a bidirectional 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 a master and the device being controlled is
the slave. The master will always initiate data transfers, and provide the clock for both transmit and
receive operations. Therefore, the device will be
considered a slave in all applications.
Start Condition
All commands are preceded by the start condition,
which is a HIGH to LOW transition of SDA when SCL
is HIGH. The device continuously monitors the SDA
and SCL lines for the start condition and will not
respond to any command until this condition has been
met.
Figure 1. Data Validity
SCL
SDA
DATA STABLE
DATA
CHANGE
7027 FM 03
Figure 2. Definition of Start and Stop
SCL
SDA
START BIT
STOP BIT
3
7027 FM 04
X24128
Stop Condition
All communications must be terminated by a stop
condition, which is a LOW to HIGH transition of SDA
when SCL is HIGH. The stop condition is also used to
place the device into the standby power mode after a
read sequence. A stop condition can only be issued
after the transmitting device has released the bus.
The device will respond with an acknowledge after
recognition of a start condition and its slave address. If
both the device and a write operation have been
selected, the device will respond with an acknowledge
after the receipt of each subsequent 8-bit word.
In the read mode the device will transmit eight bits of
data, release the SDA line and monitor the line for an
acknowledge. If an acknowledge is detected and no
stop condition is generated by the master, the device
will continue to transmit data. If an acknowledge is not
detected, the device will terminate further data transmissions. The master must then issue a stop condition
to return the device to the standby power mode and
place the device into a known state.
Acknowledge
Acknowledge is a software convention used to indicate
successful data transfer. The transmitting device,
either master or slave, will release the bus after transmitting eight bits. During the ninth clock cycle the
receiver will pull the SDA line LOW to acknowledge
that it received the eight bits of data. Refer to Figure 3.
Figure 3. Acknowledge Response From Receiver
SCL FROM
MASTER
1
8
9
DATA OUTPUT
FROM
TRANSMITTER
DATA
OUTPUT
FROM
RECEIVER
START
ACKNOWLEDGE
7027 FM 05
4
X24128
device select input pins. If the compare is not successful,
no acknowledge is output during the ninth clock cycle
and the device returns to the standby mode.
DEVICE ADDRESSING
Following a start condition, the master must output the
address of the slave it is accessing. The first four bits
of the Slave Address Byte are the device type identifier
bits. These must equal “1010”. The next 3 bits are the
device select bits S0, S1, and S2. This allows up to 8
devices to share a single bus. These bits are
compared to the S0, S1, and S2 device select input
pins. The last bit of the Slave Address Byte defines the
operation to be performed. When the R/W bit is a one,
then a read operation is selected. When it is zero then
a write operation is selected. Refer to figure 4. After
loading the Slave Address Byte from the SDA bus, the
device compares the device type bits with the value
“1010” and the device select bits with the status of the
The word address is either supplied by the master or
obtained from an internal counter, depending on the
operation. The master must supply the two Word
Address Bytes as shown in figure 4.
The internal organization of the E2 array is 512 pages by
32 bytes per page. The page address is partially
contained in the Word Address Byte 1 and partially in
bits 7 through 5 of the Word Address Byte 0. The byte
address is contained in bits 4 through 0 of the Word
Address Byte 0. See figure 4.
Figure 4. Device Addressing
DEVICE TYPE
IDENTIFIER
1
0
1
DEVICE
SELECT
0
S2
S1
S0
R/ W
SLAVE ADDRESS BYTE
HIGH ORDER WORD ADDRESS
0
0
A13
A12
A11 A10
A9
A8
X24128 WORD ADDRESS BYTE 1
LOW ORDER WORD ADDRESS
A7
A6
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
D1
D0
WORD ADDRESS BYTE 0
D7
D6
D5
D4
D3
DATA BYTE
5
D2
7027 FM 06
X24128
master can transmit up to thirty-one more words. The
device will respond with an acknowledge after the
receipt of each word, and then the byte address is
internally incremented by one. The page address
remains constant. When the counter reaches the end
of the page, it “rolls over” and goes back to the first
byte of the current page. This means that the master
can write 32 words to the page beginning at any byte.
If the master begins writing at byte 16, and loads 32
words, then the first 16 words are written to bytes 16
through 31, and the last 16 words are written to bytes
0 through 15. Afterwards, the address counter would
point to byte 16. If the master writes more than 32
words, then the previously loaded data is overwritten
by the new data, one byte at a time.
WRITE OPERATIONS
Byte Write
For a write operation, the device requires the Slave
Address Byte, the Word Address Byte 1, and the Word
Address Byte 0, which gives the master access to any
one of the words in the array. Upon receipt of the Word
Address Byte 0, the device responds with an acknowledge, and waits for the first eight bits of data. After
receiving the 8 bits of the data byte, the device again
responds with an acknowledge. The master then
terminates the transfer by generating a stop condition,
at which time the device begins the internal write cycle
to the nonvolatile memory. While the internal write
cycle is in progress the device inputs are disabled
and the device will not respond to any requests from
the master. The SDA pin is at high impedance. See
figure 5.
The master terminates the data byte loading by
issuing a stop condition, which causes the device to
begin the nonvolatile write cycle. As with the byte write
operation, all inputs are disabled until completion of
the internal write cycle. Refer to figure 6 for the
address, acknowledge, and data transfer sequence.
Page Write
The device is capable of a thirty-two byte page write
operation. It is initiated in the same manner as the byte
write operation; but instead of terminating the write
operation after the first data word is transferred, the
Figure 5. Byte Write Sequence
SIGNALS
FROM THE
MASTER
S
T
A
R
T
SDA BUS
S1 0 1 0
WORD ADDRESS WORD ADDRESS
BYTE 1
BYTE 0
SLAVE
ADDRESS
S
T
O
P
DATA
0
P
A
C
K
SIGNALS
FROM THE
SLAVE
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
7027 FM 07
Figure 6. Page Write Sequence
(0≤n≤31)
SIGNALS
FROM THE
MASTER
S
T
A
R
T
SDA BUS
S 1 0 1 0
SIGNALS
FROM THE
SLAVE
WORD ADDRESS WORD ADDRESS
BYTE 1
BYTE 0
SLAVE
ADDRESS
DATA
(0)
DATA
(n)
S
T
O
P
0
P
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
7027 FM 08
6
X24128
READ OPERATIONS
Acknowledge Polling
The maximum write cycle time can be significantly
reduced using Acknowledge Polling. To initiate
Acknowledge Polling, the master issues a start condition followed by the Slave Address Byte for a write or
read operation. If the device is still busy with the
internal write cycle, then no ACK will be returned. If the
device has completed the internal write operation, an
ACK will be returned and the host can then proceed
with the read or write operation. Refer to figure 7 .
Read operations are initiated in the same manner as
write operations with the exception that the R/W bit of
the Slave Address Byte is set to one. There are three
basic read operations: Current Address Reads,
Random Reads, and Sequential Reads.
Current Address Read
Internally, the device contains an address counter that
maintains the address of the last word read or written
incremented by one. After a read operation from the
last address in the array, the counter will “roll over” to
the first address in the array. After a write operation to
the last address in a given page, the counter will “roll
over” to the first address on the same page.
Figure 7. Acknowledge Polling Sequence
BYTE LOAD COMPLETED
BY ISSUING STOP.
ENTER ACK POLLING
Upon receipt of the Slave Address Byte with the R/W
bit set to one, the device issues an acknowledge and
then transmits the eight bits of the Data Byte. The
master terminates the read operation when it does not
respond with an acknowledge during the ninth clock
and then issues a stop condition. Refer to figure 8 for
the address, acknowledge, and data transfer
sequence.
ISSUE
START
ISSUE SLAVE
ADDRESS BYTE
(READ OR WRITE)
ACK
RETURNED?
ISSUE STOP
It should be noted that the ninth clock cycle of the read
operation is not a “don’t care.” To terminate a read
operation, the master must either issue a stop condition during the ninth cycle or hold SDA HIGH during
the ninth clock cycle and then issue a stop condition.
NO
YES
HIGH
VOLTAGE
CYCLE COMPLETE.
CONTINUE
SEQUENCE?
Figure 8. Current Address Read Sequence
NO
SIGNALS
FROM THE
MASTER
S
T
A
R
T
SDA BUS
S 1 0 1 0
YES
CONTINUE NORMAL
READ OR WRITE
COMMAND SEQUENCE
ISSUE STOP
SIGNALS
FROM THE
SLAVE
S
T
O
P
SLAVE
ADDRESS
1
P
A
C
K
DATA
7027 FM 10
PROCEED
7027 FM 09
7
X24128
Random Read
Random read operation allows the master to access
any memory location in the array. Prior to issuing
the Slave Address Byte with the R/W bit set to one,
the master must first perform a “Dummy” write operation. The master issues the start condition and the
Slave Address Byte with the R/W bit low, receives
an acknowledge, then issues the Word Address
Byte 1, receives another acknowledge, then issues
the Word Address Byte 0. After the device acknowledges receipt of the Word Address Byte 0, the
master issues another start condition and the Slave
Address Byte with the R/W bit set to one. This is
followed by an acknowledge and then eight bits of
data from the device. The master terminates the
read operation by not responding with an acknowledge and then issuing a stop condition. Refer to
figure 9 for the address, acknowledge, and data
transfer sequence.
ation is that the new address is loaded into the
address counter, but no data is output by the device.
The next Current Address Read operation will read
from the newly loaded address.
Sequential Read
Sequential reads can be initiated as either a current
address read or random read. The first Data Byte is
transmitted as with the other modes; however, the
master now responds with an acknowledge, indicating
it requires additional data. The device continues to
output data for each acknowledge received. The
master terminates the read operation by not
responding with an acknowledge and then issuing a
stop condition.
The data output is sequential, with the data from address
n followed by the data from address n + 1. The address
counter for read operations increments through all byte
addresses, allowing the entire memory contents to be
read during one operation. At the end of the address
space the counter “rolls over” to address 0000h and the
device continues to output data for each acknowledge
received. Refer to figure 10 for the acknowledge and
data transfer sequence.
The device will perform a similar operation called “Set
Current Address” if a stop is issued instead of the
second start shown in figure 9. The device will go into
standby mode after the stop and all bus activity will be
ignored until a start is detected. The effect of this oper-
Figure 9. Random Read Sequence
SIGNALS
FROM THE
MASTER
S
T
A
R
T
SDA BUS
S1 0 1 0
S
T
A
R
T
WORD ADDRESS WORD ADDRESS
BYTE 1
BYTE 0
SLAVE
ADDRESS
0
A
C
K
S
T
O
P
1
S
A
C
K
SIGNALS
FROM THE
SLAVE
SLAVE
ADDRESS
A
C
K
P
A
C
K
DATA
7027 FM 11
Figure 10. Sequential Read Sequence
SIGNALS
FROM THE
MASTER
SLAVE
ADDRESS
SDA BUS
S
SIGNALS
FROM THE
SLAVE
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
S
T
O
P
1
P
A
C
K
DATA
(1)
DATA
(2)
DATA
(n–1)
DATA
(n)
(n is any integer greater than 1)
7027 FM 12
8
X24128
WPEN: Write Protect Enable Bit (Nonvolatile)
The Write Protect (WP) pin and the Write Protect
Enable (WPEN) bit in the Write Protect Register
control the Programmable Hardware Write Protection
feature. Hardware Write Protection is enabled when
the WP pin is HIGH and the WPEN bit is HIGH, and
disabled when either the WP pin is LOW or the WPEN
bit is LOW. Figure 12 defines the write protect status
for each combination of WPEN and WP. When the
chip is Hardware Write Protected, nonvolatile writes
are disabled to the Write Protect Register, including
the Block Lock Protect bits and the WPEN bit itself, as
well as to the Block Lock protected sections in the
memory array. Only the sections of the memory array
that are not Block Lock protected, and the volatile bits
WEL and RWEL, can be written.
WRITE PROTECT REGISTER (WPR)
Writing to the Write Protect Register
The Write Protect Register can only be modified by
performing a “Byte Write” operation directly to the
address FFFFh as described below.
The Data Byte must contain zeroes where indicated in
the procedural descriptions below; otherwise the operation will not be performed. Only one Data Byte is
allowed for each register write operation. The part will
not acknowledge any data bytes after the first byte is
entered. The user then has to issue a stop to initiate
the nonvolatile write cycle that writes BL0, BL1, and W
PEN to the nonvolatile bits. A stop must also be issued
after volatile register write operations to put the device
into Standby.
In Circuit Programmable ROM Mode
The state of the Write Protect Register can be read by
performing a random byte read at FFFFh at any time.
The part will reset itself after the first byte is read. The
master should supply a stop condition to be consistent
with the protocol, but a stop is not required to end this
operation. After the read, the address counter contains
0000h.
Note that when the WPEN bit is write protected, it
cannot be changed back to a LOW state; so write
protection is enabled as long as the WP pin is held
HIGH. Thus an In Circuit Programmable ROM function
can be implemented by hardwiring the WP pin to VCC,
writing to and Block Locking the desired portion of the
array to be ROM, and then programming the WPEN bit
HIGH.
Write Protect Register: WPR (ADDR = FFFFh)
7
6
5
4
3
WPEN
0
0
BL1
BL0
2
1
RWEL WEL
0
Unused Bit Positions
Bits 0, 5 & 6 are not used. All writes to the WPR must
have zeros in these bit positions. The data byte output
during a WPR read will contain zeros in these bits.
0
WEL: Write Enable Latch (Volatile)
0 = Write Enable Latch reset, writes disabled.
Writing to the WEL and RWEL bits
WEL and RWEL are volatile latches that power up in
the LOW (disabled) state. While the WEL bit is LOW,
writes to any address other than FFFFh will be ignored
(no acknowledge will be issued after the Data Byte).
The WEL bit is set by writing 00000010 to address
FFFFh. Once set, WEL remains HIGH until either it is
reset to 0 (by writing 00000000 to FFFFh) or until the
part powers up again. Writes to WEL and RWEL do
not cause a nonvolatile write cycle, so the device is
ready for the next operation immediately after the stop
condition.
1 = Write Enable Latch set, writes enabled.
RWEL: Register Write Enable Latch (Volatile)
0 = Register Write Enable Latch reset, writes to the W
rite Protect Register disabled.
1 = Register Write Enable Latch set, writes to the Write
Protect Register enabled.
BL0, BL1: Block Lock Protect Bits (Nonvolatile)
The Block Lock Protect Bits, BL0 and BL1, determine
which blocks of the array are protected. A write to a
protected block of memory is ignored, but will receive
an acknowledge. The master must issue a stop to put
the part into standby, just as it would for a valid write;
but the stop will not initiate an internal nonvolatile write
cycle. See figure 11.
The RWEL bit controls writes to the Block Lock Protect
bits, BL0 and BL1, and the WPEN bit. If RWEL is 0
then no writes can be performed on BL0, BL1, or W
PEN. RWEL is reset when the device powers up or
after any nonvolatile write, including writes to the Block
Lock Protect bits, WPEN bit, or any bytes in the
memory array. When RWEL is set, WEL cannot be
9
X24128
step 2. RWEL is reset to zero in step 3 so that user is
required to perform steps 2 and 3 to make another
change. RWEL must be 0 in step 3. If the RWEL bit in
the data byte for step 3 is a one, then no changes are
made to the Write Protect Register and the device
remains at step 2.
reset, nor can RWEL and WEL be reset in one write
operation. RWEL can be reset by writing 00000010 to
FFFFh; but this is the same operation as in step 3
described below, and will result in programing BL0,
BL1, and WPEN.
Writing to the BL and WPEN Bits
A 3 step sequence is required to change the nonvolatile Block Lock Protect or Write Protect Enable bits:
The WP pin must be LOW or the WPEN bit must be
LOW before a nonvolatile register write operation is
initiated. Otherwise, the write operation will abort and
the device will go into standby mode after the master
issues the stop condition in step 3.
1) Set WEL=1, Write 00000010 to address FFFFh
(Volatile Write Cycle.)
2) Set RWEL=1, Write 00000110 to address FFFFh
(Volatile Write Cycle.)
Step 3 is a nonvolatile write operation, requiring tWC to
complete (acknowledge polling may be used to reduce
this time requirement). It should be noted that step 3
MUST end with a stop condition. If a start condition is
issued during or at the end of step 3 (instead of a stop
condition) the device will abort the nonvolatile register
write and remain at step 2. If the operation is aborted
with a start condition, the master must issue a stop to
put the device into standby mode.
3) Set BL1, BL0, and/or WPEN bits, Write u00xy010 to
address FFFFh, where u=WPEN, x=BL1, and y=BL0.
(Nonvolatile Write Cycle.)
The three step sequence was created to make it difficult to change the contents of the Write Protect
Register accidentally. If WEL was set to one by a
previous register write operation, the user may start at
Figure 11. Block Lock Protect Bits and Protected Addresses
BL1
BL0
Protected Addresses
Array Location
0
0
None
No Protect
0
1
3000h - 3FFFh
Upper 1/4
1
0
2000h - 3FFFh
Upper 1/2
1
1
0000h - 3FFFh
Full Array
7027 FRM T02
Figure 12. WP Pin and WPEN Bit Functionality
WP
WPEN
Memory Array Not
Lock Block Protected
Memory Array Block
Lock Protected
Block Lock Bits
WPEN
Bit
0
X
Unprotected
Protected
Unprotected
Unprotected
X
0
Unprotected
Protected
Unprotected
Unprotected
1
1
Unprotected
Protected
Protected
Protected
7027 FRM T03
10
X24128
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS*
Temperature under Bias
X24128.......................................–65°C to +135°C
Storage Temperature ........................–65°C to +150°C
Voltage on any Pin with
Respect to VSS .................................... –1V to +7V
D.C. Output Current ..............................................5mA
Lead Temperature
(Soldering, 10 seconds) .............................. 300°C
*COMMENT
Stresses above those listed under “Absolute Maximum
Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device.
This is a stress rating only and the functional operation
of the device at these or any other conditions above
those indicated in the operational sections of this
specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute
maximum rating conditions for extended periods may
affect device reliability.
RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS
Temperature
Min.
Supply Voltage
Limits
Max.
X24128
4.5V to 5.5V
Commercial
0°C
+70°C
X24128–2.5
2.5V to 5.5V
Industrial
–40°C
+85°C
X24128–1.8
1.8V to 3.6V
7027 FRM T04
7027 FRM T05
D.C. OPERATING CHARACTERISTICS
Limits
Symbol
Parameter
Min.
Max.
Units
Test Conditions
ICC1
VCC Supply Current (Read)
1
mA
ICC2
VCC Supply Current (Write)
3
mA
ISB1(1)
VCC Standby Current
5
µA
SCL = SDA = VCC, All Other
Inputs = VSS or VCC – 0.3V,
VCC = 5V ± 10%
ISB2(1)
VCC Standby Current
1
µA
SCL = SDA = VCC, All Other
Inputs = VSS or VCC – 0.3V,
VCC = 2.5V
ILI
Input Leakage Current
10
µA
VIN = VSS to VCC
ILO
Output Leakage Current
10
µA
VOUT = VSS to VCC
VlL(2)
Input LOW Voltage
–0.5
VCC x 0.3
V
VIH(2)
Input HIGH Voltage
VCC x 0.7
VCC + 0.5
V
VOL
Output LOW Voltage
0.4
V
Vhys(3)
Hysteresis of Schmitt
Trigger Inputs
VCC x 0.05
SCL = VCC X 0.1/VCC X 0.9 Levels
@ 400KHz, SDA = Open, All Other
Inputs = VSS or VCC – 0.3V
IOL = 3mA
V
7027 FRM T06
CAPACITANCE TA = +25°C, f = 1MHz, VCC = 5V
Symbol
Parameter
Max.
Units
Test Conditions
CI/O(3)
Input/Output Capacitance (SDA)
8
pF
VI/O = 0V
CIN(3)
Input Capacitance (S0, S1, S2, SCL, WP)
6
pF
VIN = 0V
7027 FRM T07
Notes: (1) Must perform a stop command prior to measurement.
(2) VIL min. and VIH max. are for reference only and are not 100% tested.
(3) This parameter is periodically sampled and not 100% tested.
11
X24128
EQUIVALENT A.C. LOAD CIRCUIT
A.C. CONDITIONS OF TEST
Input Pulse Levels
VCC x 0.1 to VCC x 0.9
Input Rise and
Fall Times
5V
10ns
Input and Output
Timing Levels
1.53KΩ
OUTPUT
VCC X 0.5
7027 FRM T08
100pF
7027 FM 13
A.C. OPERATING CHARACTERISTICS (Over the recommended operating conditions, unless otherwise specified.)
Read & Write Cycle Limits
Symbol
Parameter
Min.
Max.
Units
400
KHz
fSCL
SCL Clock Frequency
0
tI
Noise Suppression Time
Constant at SCL, SDA Inputs
50
tAA
SCL LOW to SDA Data Out Valid
0.1
tBUF
Time the Bus Must Be Free Before a
New Transmission Can Start
1.2
µs
tHD:STA
Start Condition Hold Time
0.6
µs
tLOW
Clock LOW Period
1.2
µs
tHIGH
Clock HIGH Period
0.6
µs
tSU:STA
Start Condition Setup Time
(for a Repeated Start Condition)
0.6
µs
tHD:DAT
Data In Hold Time
0
µs
tSU:DAT
Data In Setup Time
100
ns
tR
SDA and SCL Rise Time
300
ns
tF
SDA and SCL Fall Time
300
ns
tSU:STO
Stop Condition Setup Time
0.6
tDH
Data Out Hold Time
50
300
ns
tOF
Output Fall Time
20+0.1Cb(5)
250
µs
ns
µs
0.9
µs
7027 FRM T09
POWER-UP TIMING(4)
Symbol
Parameter
Max.
Units
tPUR
Power-up to Read Operation
1
ms
tPUW
Power-up to Write Operation
5
ms
7027 FRM T10
Notes: (4) tPUR and tPUW are the delays required from the time V CC is stable until the specified operation can be initiated. These parameters
are periodically sampled and not 100% tested.
(5) Typical values are for TA = 25°C and nominal supply voltage (5V).
12
X24128
Bus Timing
t HIGH
tF
t LOW
tR
SCL
tSU:STA
t HD:STA
tHD:DAT
t SU:DAT
t SU:STO
SDA IN
tAA
t DH
t BUF
SDA OUT
7027 FM 14
Write Cycle Limits
Symbol
Parameter
TWC(6)
Write Cycle Time
Min.
Typ.(5)
Max.
Units
5
10
ms
7027 FRM T11
Notes: (5) Typical values are for TA = 25°C and nominal supply voltage (5V).
(6) tWR is the minimum cycle time to be allowed from the system perspective unless polling techniques are used. It is the maximum
time the device requires to automatically complete the internal write operation.
The write cycle time is the time from a valid stop condition of a write sequence to the end of the internal erase/write
cycle. During the write cycle, the X24128 bus interface circuits are disabled, SDA is allowed to remain HIGH, and
the device does not respond to its slave address.
Bus Timing
SCL
SDA
8th BIT
ACK
WORD n
t WR
STOP
CONDITION
Guidelines for Calculating Typical Values of
Bus Pull-Up Resistors
RESISTANCE (KΩ)
120
80
60
WAVEFORM
40
20
MIN.
RESISTANCE
0
0
20
40
60
80 100 120
BUS CAPACITANCE (pF)
7027 FM 15
SYMBOL TABLE
V
RMIN = CC MAX =1.8KΩ
IOL MIN
t
RMAX = R
CBUS
MAX.
RESISTANCE
100
START
CONDITION
7027 FM 16
13
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
N/A
Changing:
State Not
Known
Center Line
is High
Impedance
7027 FM 17
X24128
PACKAGING INFORMATION
14-LEAD PLASTIC SMALL OUTLINE GULLWING PACKAGE TYPE S
0.150 (3.80)
0.158 (4.00)
0.228 (5.80)
0.244 (6.20)
PIN 1 INDEX
PIN 1
0.014 (0.35)
0.020 (0.51)
0.336 (8.55)
0.345 (8.75)
(4X) 7°
0.053 (1.35)
0.069 (1.75)
0.004 (0.10)
0.010 (0.25)
0.050 (1.27)
0.050" Typical
0.010 (0.25)
X 45°
0.020 (0.50)
0.050" T ypical
0° – 8°
0.250"
0.0075 (0.19)
0.010 (0.25)
0.016 (0.410)
0.037 (0.937)
FOO TPRINT
0.030" Typical
14 Places
NOTE: ALL DIMENSIONS IN INCHES (IN PARENTHESES IN MILLIMETERS)
14
X24128
PACKAGING INFORMATION
16-LEAD PLASTIC SMALLOUTLINE GULL WING PACKAGE TYPE S
0.150 (3.80)
0.158 (4.00)
0.228 (5.80)
0.244 (6.20)
PIN 1 INDEX
PIN 1
0.014 (0.35)
0.020 (0.51)
0.386 (9.80)
0.394 (10.01)
(4X) 7°
0.053 (1.35)
0.069 (1.75)
0.004 (0.19)
0.010 (0.25)
0.050 (1.27)
0.010 (0.25)
0.020 (0.50) X 45°
0.050" Typical
0° – 8°
0.0075 (0.19)
0.010 (0.25)
0.050"
Typical
0.250"
0.016 (0.410)
0.037 (0.937)
FOOTPRINT
0.030" Typical
16 Places
NOTE: ALL DIMENSIONS IN INCHES (IN PARENTHESES IN MILLIMETERS)
15
X24128
PACKAGING INFORMATION
8-LEAD PLASTIC DUAL IN-LINE PACKAGE TYPE P
0.430 (10.92)
0.360 (9.14)
0.260 (6.60)
0.240 (6.10)
PIN 1 INDEX
PIN 1
0.300
(7.62) REF.
HALF SHOULDER WIDTH ON
ALL END PINS OPTIONAL
0.145 (3.68)
0.128 (3.25)
SEATING
PLANE
0.025 (0.64)
0.015 (0.38)
0.065 (1.65)
0.045 (1.14)
0.150 (3.81)
0.125 (3.18)
0.110 (2.79)
0.090 (2.29)
0.015 (0.38)
MAX.
0.060 (1.52)
0.020 (0.51)
0.020 (0.51)
0.016 (0.41)
0.325 (8.25)
0.300 (7.62)
0°
15°
TYP .0.010 (0.25)
NOTE:
1. ALL DIMENSIONS IN INCHES (IN PARENTHESES IN MILLIMETERS)
2. PACKAGE DIMENSIONS EXCLUDE MOLDING FLASH
7040 FM 18
16
X24128
ORDERING INFORMATION
X24128
X
X
-X
V CC Range
Blank = 5V ±10%
2.5 = 2.5V to 5.5V
1.8 = 1.8V to 3.6V
Device
Temperature Range
Blank = 0°C to +70°C
I = –40°C to +85°C
Package
X24128
S14 = 14-Lead SOIC
S = 16-Lead SOIC
P = 8-Lead PDIP
Part Mark Convention
X24128
X
S14 = 14-Lead SOIC
S = 16-Lead SOIC
P = 8-Lead PDIP
X
Blank = 4.5V to 5.5V, 0°C to +70°C
I = 4.5V to 5.5V, –40°C to +85°C
AE = 2.5V to 5.5V, 0°C to +70°C
AF = 2.5V to 5.5V, –40°C to +85°C
AG = 1.8V to 3.6V, 0°C to +70°C
AH = 1.8V to 3.6V, –40°C to +85°C
LIMITED WARRANTY
Devices sold by Xicor, Inc. are covered by the warranty and patent indemnification provisions appearing in its Terms of Sale only. Xicor, Inc.
makes no warranty, express, statutory, implied, or by description regarding the information set forth herein or regarding the freedom of the
described devices from patent infringement. Xicor, Inc. makes no warranty of merchantability or fitness for any purpose. Xicor, Inc. reserves the
right to discontinue production and change specifications and prices at any time and without notice.
Xicor, Inc. assumes no responsibility for the use of any circuitry other than circuitry embodied in a Xicor, Inc. product. No other circuits, patents,
licenses are implied.
U.S. PATENTS
Xicor products are covered by one or more of the following U.S. Patents: 4,263,664; 4,274,012; 4,300,212; 4,314,265; 4,326,134; 4,393,481;
4,404,475; 4,450,402; 4,486,769; 4,488,060; 4,520,461; 4,533,846; 4,599,706; 4,617,652; 4,668,932; 4,752,912; 4,829, 482; 4,874, 967;
4,883, 976. Foreign patents and additional patents pending.
LIFE RELATED POLICY
In situations where semiconductor component failure may endanger life, system designers using this product should design the system with
appropriate error detection and correction, redundancy and back-up features to prevent such an occurence.
Xicor's products are not authorized for use in critical components in life support devices or systems.
1. Life support devices or systems are devices or systems which, (a) are intended for surgical implant into the body, or (b) support or sustain
life, and whose failure to perform, when properly used in accordance with instructions for use provided in the labeling, can be reasonably
expected to result in a significant injury to the user.
2. A critical component is any component of a life support device or system whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to cause the
failure of the life support device or system, or to affect its safety or effectiveness.
17