RAMTRON FM24V01

Preliminary
FM24V01
128Kb Serial 3V F-RAM Memory
Features
128K bit Ferroelectric Nonvolatile RAM
 Organized as 16,384 x 8 bits
 High Endurance 100 Trillion (1014) Read/Writes
 10 year Data Retention
 NoDelay™ Writes
 Advanced High-Reliability Ferroelectric Process
Fast Two-wire Serial Interface
 Up to 3.4 MHz maximum bus frequency
 Direct hardware replacement for EEPROM
 Supports legacy timing for 100 kHz & 400 kHz
Description
The FM24V01 is a 128Kbit nonvolatile memory
employing an advanced ferroelectric process. A
ferroelectric random access memory or F-RAM is
nonvolatile and performs reads and writes like a
RAM. It provides reliable data retention for 10 years
while eliminating the complexities, overhead, and
system level reliability problems caused by
EEPROM and other nonvolatile memories.
The FM24V01 performs write operations at bus
speed. No write delays are incurred. The next bus
cycle may commence immediately without the need
for data polling. In addition, the product offers write
endurance orders of magnitude higher than
EEPROM. Also, F-RAM exhibits much lower power
during writes than EEPROM since write operations
do not require an internally elevated power supply
voltage for write circuits.
These capabilities make the FM24V01 ideal for
nonvolatile memory applications requiring frequent
or rapid writes. Examples range from data collection
where the number of write cycles may be critical, to
demanding industrial controls where the long write
time of EEPROM can cause data loss. The
combination of features allows more frequent data
writing with less overhead for the system.
Device ID
 Device ID reads out Manufacturer ID & Part ID
Low Voltage, Low Power Operation
 Low Voltage Operation 2.0V – 3.6V
 Active Current 90 A (typ. @ 100KHz)
 Standby Current 80 A (typ.)
 Sleep Mode Current 4 A (typ.)
Industry Standard Configuration
 Industrial Temperature -40 C to +85 C
 8-pin “Green”/RoHS SOIC Package
a hardware drop-in replacement. The device is
available in an industry standard 8-pin SOIC package
using a familiar two-wire (I2C) protocol. The device
incorporates a read-only Device ID that allows the
host to determine the manufacturer, product density,
and product revision. The device is guaranteed over
an industrial temperature range of -40°C to +85°C.
Pin Configuration
A0
A1
A2
1
8
VDD
2
7
3
6
VSS
4
5
WP
SCL
SDA
Pin Name
A0-A2
SDA
SCL
WP
VDD
VSS
Function
Device Select Address
Serial Data/address
Serial Clock
Write Protect
Supply Voltage
Ground
The FM24V01 provides substantial benefits to users
of serial EEPROM, yet these benefits are available in
This is a product that has fixed target specifications but are subject
to change pending characterization results.
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Ramtron International Corporation
1850 Ramtron Drive, Colorado Springs, CO 80921
(800) 545-FRAM, (719) 481-7000
http://www.ramtron.com
Page 1 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
Counter
Address
Latch
2K x 64
FRAM Array
8
SDA
Serial to Parallel
Converter
Data Latch
8
SCL
WP
Control Logic
A0-A2
Device ID and
Serial Number
Figure 1. FM24V01 Block Diagram
Pin Description
Pin Name
A0-A2
Type
Input
SDA
I/O
SCL
Input
WP
Input
VDD
VSS
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Supply
Supply
Pin Description
Device Select Address 0-2: These pins are used to select one of up to 8 devices of
the same type on the same two-wire bus. To select the device, the address value on
the two pins must match the corresponding bits contained in the slave address. The
address pins are pulled down internally.
Serial Data/Address: This is a bi-directional pin for the two-wire interface. It is
open-drain and is intended to be wire-OR’d with other devices on the two-wire bus.
The input buffer incorporates a Schmitt trigger for noise immunity and the output
driver includes slope control for falling edges. An external pull-up resistor is
required.
Serial Clock: The serial clock pin for the two-wire interface. Data is clocked out of
the part on the falling edge, and into the device on the rising edge. The SCL input
also incorporates a Schmitt trigger input for noise immunity.
Write Protect: When tied to VDD, addresses in the entire memory map will be writeprotected. When WP is connected to ground, all addresses may be written. This pin
is pulled down internally.
Supply Voltage
Ground
Page 2 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
Overview
Two-wire Interface
The FM24V01 is a serial F-RAM memory device.
The memory array is logically organized as a 16,384
x 8 bit memory array and is accessed using an
industry standard two-wire (I2C) interface. Functional
operation of the F-RAM is similar to serial
EEPROM. The major difference between the
FM24V01 and serial EEPROM is F-RAM’s superior
write performance.
The FM24V01 employs a bi-directional two-wire bus
protocol using few pins or board space. Figure 2
illustrates a typical system configuration using the
FM24V01 in a microcontroller-based system. The
industry standard two-wire bus is familiar to many
users but is described in this section.
Memory Architecture
When accessing the FM24V01, the user addresses
16,384 locations each with 8 data bits. These data bits
are shifted serially. The 16,384 addresses are
accessed using the two-wire protocol, which includes
a slave address (to distinguish other non-memory
devices) and a 2-byte address. All 14 address bits are
used by the decoder for accessing the memory.
The access time for memory operation is essentially
zero beyond the time needed for the serial protocol.
That is, the memory is read or written at the speed of
the two-wire bus. Unlike an EEPROM, it is not
necessary to poll the device for a ready condition
since writes occur at bus speed. That is, by the time a
new bus transaction can be shifted into the part, a
write operation will be complete. This is explained in
more detail in the interface section below.
Users expect several obvious system benefits from
the FM24V01 due to its fast write cycle and high
endurance as compared with EEPROM. However
there are less obvious benefits as well. For example
in a high noise environment, the fast-write operation
is less susceptible to corruption than an EEPROM
since it is completed quickly. By contrast, an
EEPROM requiring milliseconds to write is
vulnerable to noise during much of the cycle.
By convention, any device that is sending data onto
the bus is the transmitter while the target device for
this data is the receiver. The device that is controlling
the bus is the master. The master is responsible for
generating the clock signal for all operations. Any
device on the bus that is being controlled is a slave.
The FM24V01 always is a slave device.
The bus protocol is controlled by transition states in
the SDA and SCL signals. There are four conditions
including start, stop, data bit, or acknowledge. Figure
3 illustrates the signal conditions that specify the four
states. Detailed timing diagrams are shown in the
electrical specifications section.
VDD
Rmin = 1.1 Kohm
Rmax = tR/Cbus
Microcontroller
SDA
SCL
FM24V01
A0
A1
A2
SDA
SCL
FM24V01
A0
A1
A2
Figure 2. Typical System Configuration
Note that it is the user’s responsibility to ensure that
VDD is within datasheet tolerances to prevent
incorrect operation.
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Page 3 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
SCL
SDA
7
Stop
(Master)
Start
(Master)
6
Data bits
(Transmitter)
0
Data bit Acknowledge
(Transmitter) (Receiver)
Figure 3. Data Transfer Protocol
Stop Condition
A stop condition is indicated when the bus master
drives SDA from low to high while the SCL signal is
high. All operations using the FM24V01 should end
with a stop condition. If an operation is in progress
when a stop is asserted, the operation will be aborted.
The master must have control of SDA (not a memory
read) in order to assert a stop condition.
Start Condition
A start condition is indicated when the bus master
drives SDA from high to low while the SCL signal is
high. All commands should be preceded by a start
condition. An operation in progress can be aborted by
asserting a start condition at any time. Aborting an
operation using the start condition will ready the
FM24V01 for a new operation.
If during operation the power supply drops below the
specified VDD minimum, the system should issue a
start condition prior to performing another operation.
Data/Address Transfer
All data transfers (including addresses) take place
while the SCL signal is high. Except under the two
conditions described above, the SDA signal should
not change while SCL is high.
Acknowledge
The acknowledge takes place after the 8th data bit has
been transferred in any transaction. During this state
the transmitter should release the SDA bus to allow
the receiver to drive it. The receiver drives the SDA
signal low to acknowledge receipt of the byte. If the
receiver does not drive SDA low, the condition is a
no-acknowledge and the operation is aborted.
The receiver would fail to acknowledge for two
distinct reasons. First is that a byte transfer fails. In
this case, the no-acknowledge ceases the current
operation so that the part can be addressed again.
This allows the last byte to be recovered in the event
of a communication error.
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Second and most common, the receiver does not
acknowledge to deliberately end an operation. For
example, during a read operation, the FM24V01 will
continue to place data onto the bus as long as the
receiver sends acknowledges (and clocks). When a
read operation is complete and no more data is
needed, the receiver must not acknowledge the last
byte. If the receiver acknowledges the last byte, this
will cause the FM24V01 to attempt to drive the bus
on the next clock while the master is sending a new
command such as stop.
Slave Address
The first byte that the FM24V01 expects after a start
condition is the slave address. As shown in Figure 4,
the slave address contains the device type or slave
ID, the device select address bits, a page address bit,
and a bit that specifies if the transaction is a read or a
write.
Bits 7-4 are the device type (slave ID) and should be
set to 1010b for the FM24V01. These bits allow other
function types to reside on the 2-wire bus within an
identical address range. Bits 3-1 are the device select
address bits. They must match the corresponding
value on the external address pins to select the
device. Up to eight FM24V01 devices can reside on
the same two-wire bus by assigning a different
address to each. Bit 0 is the read/write bit. R/W=1
indicates a read operation and R/W=0 indicates a
write operation.
High Speed Mode (HS-mode)
The FM24V01 supports a 3.4MHz high speed mode.
A master code (0000 1XXXb) must be issued to place
the device into high speed mode. Communication
between master and slave will then be enabled for
speeds up to 3.4MHz. A stop condition will exit HSmode. Single- and multiple-byte reads and writes are
supported. See Figures 10 and 11 for HS-mode
timings.
Page 4 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
Memory Operation
Device Select
Slave ID
1
0
1
0
A2
A1
A0
R/W
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Figure 4. Slave Address
Addressing Overview
After the FM24V01 (as receiver) acknowledges the
slave address, the master can place the memory
address on the bus for a write operation. The address
requires two bytes. The complete 14-bit address is
latched internally. Each access causes the latched
address value to be incremented automatically. The
current address is the value that is held in the latch -either a newly written value or the address following
the last access. The current address will be held for as
long as power remains or until a new value is written.
Reads always use the current address. A random read
address can be loaded by beginning a write operation
as explained below.
After transmission of each data byte, just prior to the
acknowledge, the FM24V01 increments the internal
address latch. This allows the next sequential byte to
be accessed with no additional addressing. After the
last address (3FFFh) is reached, the address latch will
roll over to 0000h. There is no limit to the number of
bytes that can be accessed with a single read or write
operation.
Data Transfer
After the address information has been transmitted,
data transfer between the bus master and the
FM24V01 can begin. For a read operation the
FM24V01 will place 8 data bits on the bus then wait
for an acknowledge from the master. If the
acknowledge occurs, the FM24V01 will transfer the
next sequential byte. If the acknowledge is not sent,
the FM24V01 will end the read operation. For a write
operation, the FM24V01 will accept 8 data bits from
the master then send an acknowledge. All data
transfer occurs MSB (most significant bit) first.
The FM24V01 is designed to operate in a manner
very similar to other 2-wire interface memory
products. The major differences result from the
higher performance write capability of F-RAM
technology. These improvements result in some
differences between the FM24V01 and a similar
configuration EEPROM during writes. The complete
operation for both writes and reads is explained
below.
Write Operation
All writes begin with a slave address, then a memory
address. The bus master indicates a write operation
by setting the LSB of the slave address (R/W bit) to a
‘0’. After addressing, the bus master sends each byte
of data to the memory and the memory generates an
acknowledge condition. Any number of sequential
bytes may be written. If the end of the address range
is reached internally, the address counter will wrap
from 3FFFh to 0000h.
Unlike other nonvolatile memory technologies, there
is no effective write delay with F-RAM. Since the
read and write access times of the underlying
memory are the same, the user experiences no delay
through the bus. The entire memory cycle occurs in
less time than a single bus clock. Therefore, any
operation including read or write can occur
immediately following a write. Acknowledge polling,
a technique used with EEPROMs to determine if a
write is complete is unnecessary and will always
return a ready condition.
Internally, an actual memory write occurs after the 8 th
data bit is transferred. It will be complete before the
acknowledge is sent. Therefore, if the user desires to
abort a write without altering the memory contents,
this should be done using start or stop condition prior
to the 8th data bit. The FM24V01 uses no page
buffering.
The memory array can be write-protected using the
WP pin. Setting the WP pin to a high condition (VDD)
will write-protect all addresses. The FM24V01 will
not acknowledge data bytes that are written to
protected addresses. In addition, the address counter
will not increment if writes are attempted to these
addresses. Setting WP to a low state (V SS) will
deactivate this feature. WP is pulled down internally.
Figures 5 and 6 below illustrate a single-byte and
multiple-byte write cycles.
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Page 5 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
Start
By Master
S
Stop
Address & Data
Slave Address
0 A
Address MSB
By FM24V01
A
Address LSB
A
Data Byte
A
P
Acknowledge
Figure 5. Single Byte Write
Start
S
By FM24V01
Stop
Address & Data
By Master
Slave Address
0 A
Address MSB
A
Address LSB
A
Data Byte
A
Data Byte
A
P
Acknowledge
Figure 6. Multiple Byte Write
Read Operation
There are two basic types of read operations. They
are current address read and selective address read. In
a current address read, the FM24V01 uses the
internal address latch to supply the address. In a
selective read, the user performs a procedure to set
the address to a specific value.
Current Address & Sequential Read
As mentioned above the FM24V01 uses an internal
latch to supply the address for a read operation. A
current address read uses the existing value in the
address latch as a starting place for the read
operation. The system reads from the address
immediately following that of the last operation.
To perform a current address read, the bus master
supplies a slave address with the LSB set to a ‘1’.
This indicates that a read operation is requested.
After receiving the complete slave address, the
FM24V01 will begin shifting out data from the
current address on the next clock. The current address
is the value held in the internal address latch.
Beginning with the current address, the bus master
can read any number of bytes. Thus, a sequential read
is simply a current address read with multiple byte
transfers. After each byte the internal address counter
will be incremented.
Each time the bus master acknowledges a byte,
this indicates that the FM24V01 should read out
the next sequential byte.
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
There are four ways to properly terminate a read
operation. Failing to properly terminate the read will
most likely create a bus contention as the FM24V01
attempts to read out additional data onto the bus. The
four valid methods are:
1.
2.
3.
4.
The bus master issues a no-acknowledge in the
9th clock cycle and a stop in the 10th clock cycle.
This is illustrated in the diagrams below. This is
preferred.
The bus master issues a no-acknowledge in the
9th clock cycle and a start in the 10th.
The bus master issues a stop in the 9th clock
cycle.
The bus master issues a start in the 9th clock
cycle.
If the internal address reaches 3FFFh, it will wrap
around to 0000h on the next read cycle. Figures 7 and
8 below show the proper operation for current
address reads.
Selective (Random) Read
There is a simple technique that allows a user to
select a random address location as the starting point
for a read operation. This involves using the first
three bytes of a write operation to set the internal
address followed by subsequent read operations.
To perform a selective read, the bus master sends out
the slave address with the LSB set to 0. This specifies
a write operation. According to the write protocol,
the bus master then sends the address bytes that are
loaded into the internal address latch. After the
FM24V01 acknowledges the address, the bus master
issues a start condition. This simultaneously aborts
Page 6 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
the write operation and allows the read command to
be issued with the slave address LSB set to a ‘1’. The
Start
By Master
operation is now a current address read.
No
Acknowledge
Address
Stop
S
Slave Address
By FM24V01
1 A
Data Byte
Acknowledge
1
P
Data
Figure 7. Current Address Read
Start
By Master
Address
No
Acknowledge
Acknowledge
Stop
S
Slave Address
By FM24V01
1 A
Data Byte
A
Acknowledge
Data Byte
1 P
Data
Figure 8. Sequential Read
Start
Address
By Master
Start
No
Acknowledge
Address
Stop
S
Slave Address
0 A
Address MSB
A
Address LSB
By FM24V01
A
S
Slave Address
1 A
Data Byte
1 P
Data
Acknowledge
Figure 9. Selective (Random) Read
Start
Start &
Enter HS-mode Address
HS-mode command
By Master
S
0
0
0
0
1
X
X
By FM24V01
1
X
S
No
Acknowledge
Stop &
Exit HS-mode
Slave Address 1 A
No
Acknowledge
Data Byte
1
P
Data
Acknowledge
Figure 10. HS-mode Current Address Read
Start
Start &
Enter HS-mode
HS-mode command
By Master
S
By FM24V01
0
0
0
0
1
X
X
X
1
S
Slave Address 0 A
Stop &
Exit HS-mode
Address & Data
Address MSB
No
Acknowledge
A
Address LSB
A
Data Byte
A P
Acknowledge
Figure 11. HS-mode Byte Write
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Page 7 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
5.
6.
7.
Sleep Mode
A low power mode called Sleep Mode is
implemented on the FM24V01 device. The device
will enter this low power state when the Sleep
command 86h is clocked-in. Sleep Mode entry can be
entered as follows:
1.
2.
3.
4.
The master sends Reserved Slave ID 0x86
The FM24V01 sends an ACK.
The master sends STOP to ensure the device
enters sleep mode.
Once in sleep mode, the device draws IZZ current, but
the device continues to monitor the I2C pins. Once
the master sends a Slave Address that the FM24V01
identifies, it will “wakeup” and be ready for normal
operation within tREC (400 s max.). As an alternative
method of determining when the device is ready, the
master can send read or write commands and look for
an ACK. While the device is waking up, it will
NACK the master until it is ready.
The master sends a START command.
The master sends Reserved Slave ID 0xF8
The master sends the I2C-bus slave address of
the slave device it needs to identify. The last
bit is a ‘Don’t care’ value (R/W bit). Only one
device must acknowledge this byte (the one
that has the I2C-bus slave address).
The master sends a Re-START command.
Start
Address
By Master
S
By FM24V01
Rsvd Slave ID (F8)
A
Address
Start
Slave Address
X A
S
Rsvd Slave ID (86)
Stop
A
P
Acknowledge
Figure 12. Sleep Mode Entry
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Page 8 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
5.
6.
Device ID
The FM24V01 device incorporates a means of
identifying the device by providing three bytes of
data, which are manufacturer, product ID, and die
revision. The Device ID is read-only. It can be
accessed as follows:
1.
2.
3.
4.
The master sends Reserved Slave ID 0xF9
The Device ID Read can be done, starting
with the 12 manufacturer bits, followed by
the 9 part identification bits, and then the 3
die revision bits.
The master ends the Device ID read
sequence by NACKing the last byte, thus
resetting the slave device state machine and
allowing the master to send the STOP
command.
7.
The master sends a START command.
The master sends Reserved Slave ID 0xF8
The master sends the I2C-bus slave address
of the slave device it needs to identify. The
last bit is a ‘Don’t care’ value (R/W bit).
Only one device must acknowledge this byte
(the one that has the I2C-bus slave address).
The master sends a Re-START command.
Note: The reading of the Device ID can be stopped
anytime by sending a NACK command.
Start
Address
By Master
No
Acknowledge
Acknowledge
Address
Start
Stop
S
Rsvd Slave ID (F8)
A
Slave Address
By FM24V01
A
S
Rsvd Slave ID (F9)
A
Data Byte
A
Data Byte
A
Data Byte
1
Data
Acknowledge
Figure 13. Read Device ID
Manufacturer ID
11
10
9
8
7
6
5
4
Product ID
3
2
1
0
8
Ramtron
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
7
6
5
4
Density
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
3
Die Rev.
2
1
0
2
1
0
0
0
0
0
Variation
1
N
0
0
0
Figure 14. Manufacturer and Product ID
Density: 01h=128Kb, 02h=256Kb, 03h=512Kb, 04=1Mb
Variation: Product ID bit 4 = S/N, Product ID bit 0 = reserved
The 3-byte hex code for an FM24V01 will be:
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
0x00 0x41 0x00
Page 9 of 14
P
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
Electrical Specifications
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Symbol
Description
VDD
Power Supply Voltage with respect to VSS
VIN
Voltage on any pin with respect to VSS
TSTG
TLEAD
VESD
Storage Temperature
Lead Temperature (Soldering, 10 seconds)
Electrostatic Discharge Voltage
- Human Body Model (AEC-Q100-002 Rev. E)
- Charged Device Model (AEC-Q100-011 Rev. B)
- Machine Model (AEC-Q100-003 Rev. E)
Package Moisture Sensitivity Level
Ratings
-1.0V to +4.5V
-1.0V to +4.5V
and VIN < VDD+1.0V *
-55C to +125C
260 C
3.5kV
1.25kV
200V
MSL-1
* Exception: The “VIN < VDD+1.0V” restriction does not apply to the SCL and SDA inputs.
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 listed in the operational section of this
specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum ratings conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
DC Operating Conditions (TA = -40 C to + 85 C, VDD =2.0V to 3.6V unless otherwise specified)
Symbol Parameter
Min
Typ
Max
Units
VDD
Main Power Supply
2.0
3.3
3.6
V
IDD
VDD Supply Current
@ SCL = 100 kHz
90
175
A
@ SCL = 1 MHz
200
400
A
@ SCL = 3.4 MHz
500
1000
A
ISB
Standby Current
80
150
A
IZZ
Sleep Mode Current
4
8
A
ILI
Input Leakage Current
±1
A
ILO
Output Leakage Current
±1
A
VIL
Input Low Voltage
-0.3
0.3 VDD
V
VIH
Input High Voltage
0.7 VDD
VDD + 0.3
V
VOL1
Output Low Voltage (IOL = 2 mA, VDD ≥ 2.7V)
0.4
V
VOL2
Output Low Voltage (IOL = 150 A)
0.2
V
RIN
Address Input Resistance (WP, A2-A0)
For VIN = VIL (max)
50
K
For VIN = VIH (min)
1
M
Notes
1
2
2
3
3
4
Notes
1. SCL toggling between VDD-0.2V and VSS, other inputs VSS or VDD-0.2V.
2. SCL = SDA = VDD. All inputs VSS or VDD. Stop command issued.
3. VIN or VOUT = VSS to VDD. Does not apply to WP, A2-A0 pins.
4. The input pull-down circuit is stronger (50K) when the input voltage is below VIL and weak (1M) when the input voltage
is above VIH.
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Page 10 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
AC Parameters (TA = -40 C to + 85 C, VDD =2.0V to 3.6V unless otherwise specified)
F/S-mode
HS-mode
(CL<500pF)
(CL<100pF)
Symbol Parameter
Min
Max
Min
Max
fSCL
SCL Clock Frequency
0
1.0
0
3.4
tLOW
Clock Low Period
500
160
tHIGH
Clock High Period
260
60
tAA
SCL Low to SDA Data Out Valid
450
130
tBUF
tHD:STA
tSU:STA
tHD:DAT
tSU:DAT
tR
tF
tSU:STO
tDH
tSP
Bus Free Before New Transmission
Start Condition Hold Time
Start Condition Setup for Repeated Start
Data In Hold
Data In Setup
Input Rise Time
Input Fall Time
Stop Condition Setup
Data Output Hold (from SCL @ V IL)
Noise Suppression Time Constant on SCL, SDA
0.5
260
260
0
50
0.3
160
160
0
10
120
120
80
80
260
0
160
0
50
5
Units
MHz
ns
ns
ns
s
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
Notes
1
4
3
2
2
Notes: All SCL specifications as well as start and stop conditions apply to both read and write operations.
1. The speed-related specifications are guaranteed characteristic points along a continuous curve of operation from DC to fSCL
(max).
2. This parameter is periodically sampled and not 100% tested.
3. In HS-mode and VDD < 2.7V, the tSU:DAT (min.) spec is 15 ns.
4. In HS-mode and VDD < 2.7V, the tHIGH (min.) spec is 100 ns.
Capacitance (TA = 25 C, f=1.0 MHz, VDD = 3.3V)
Symbol Parameter
CI/O
Input/Output Capacitance (SDA)
CIN
Input Capacitance
Min
-
Max
8
6
Units
pF
pF
Notes
1
1
Notes
1.
This parameter is periodically sampled and not 100% tested.
Power Cycle Timing (TA = -40 C to +85 C, VDD = 2.0V to 3.6V)
Symbol Parameter
tVR
VDD Rise Time
tVF
VDD Fall Time
tPU
Power Up (VDD min) to First Access (Start condition)
tPD
Last Access (Stop condition) to Power Down (VDD min)
tREC
Recovery Time from Sleep Mode
Notes
1.
2.
3.
Min
50
100
250
0
-
Max
400
Units
s/V
s/V
s
s
s
Notes
1,2
1,2
3
This parameter is characterized and not 100% tested.
Slope measured at any point on VDD waveform.
Applies to VDD > 2.7V. When powering up to VDD < 2.7V, the tPU limit is 500 s.
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Page 11 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
AC Test Conditions
Input Pulse Levels
Input rise and fall times
Input and output timing levels
Equivalent AC Test Load Circuit
0.1 VDD to 0.9 VDD
10 ns
0.5 VDD
3.6V
1.8 Kohm
Output
Diagram Notes
All start and stop timing parameters apply to both read and write cycles.
Clock specifications are identical for read and write cycles. Write
timing parameters apply to slave address, word address, and write data
bits. Functional relationships are illustrated in the relevant datasheet
sections. These diagrams illustrate the timing parameters only.
100 pF
Read Bus Timing
tR
`
tF
t HIGH
t SP
t LOW
t SP
SCL
t SU:SDA
1/fSCL
t BUF
t HD:DAT
t SU:DAT
SDA
Start
t DH
t AA
Stop Start
Acknowledge
Write Bus Timing
t HD:DAT
SCL
t HD:STA
t SU:STO
t SU:DAT
t AA
SDA
Start
Data Retention (TA = -40 C to +85 C)
Parameter
Data Retention
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Stop Start
Min
10
Acknowledge
Max
-
Units
Years
Notes
Page 12 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
Mechanical Drawing
8-pin SOIC (JEDEC Standard MS-012 variation AA)
Recommended PCB Footprint
7.70
3.90 ±0.10
3.70
6.00 ±0.20
2.00
0.65
1.27
Pin 1
4.90 ±0.10
1.27
0.33
0.51
0.25
0.50
1.35
1.75
0.10
0.25
0.19
0.25
45
0.10 mm
0-8
0.40
1.27
Refer to JEDEC MS-012 for complete dimensions and notes.
All dimensions in millimeters.
SOIC Package Marking Scheme
XXXXXX-P
RLLLLLLL
RICYYWW
Legend:
XXXXX= part number, P=package type
R=rev code, LLLLLLL= lot code
RIC=Ramtron Int’l Corp, YY=year, WW=work week
Example: FM24V01, “Green”/RoHS SOIC package,
Rev. A, Lot 9646447, Year 2010, Work Week 21
FM24V01-G
A9646447
RIC1021
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Page 13 of 14
FM24V01 - 128Kb I2C FRAM
Revision History
Revision
1.0
1.1
Date
10/20/2010
9/22/2011
Summary
Initial Release
Removed S/N ordering option. Added note to tPU, tSU:DAT, and tHIGH timing
parameters that apply when VDD < 2.7V.
Ordering Information
Part Number
Features
FM24V01-G
FM24V01-GTR
Device ID
Device ID
Rev. 1.1
Sept. 2011
Operating
Voltage
2.0-3.6V
2.0-3.6V
Package
8-pin “Green”/RoHS SOIC
8-pin “Green”/RoHS SOIC,
Tape & Reel
Page 14 of 14