19-5348; Rev 3/11 78M6613 Single-Phase AC Power Measurement IC A Maxim Integrated Products Brand DATA SHEET DS_6613_018 March 2011 DESCRIPTION FEATURES The 78M6613 is a highly integrated IC for simplified implementation of single-phase AC power measurement into power supplies, smart appliances, and ot her applications with embedded AC load monitoring and control. It is packaged in a small, 5mm x 5mm, 32-pin QFN package for optimal space savings. • < 0.5% Wh Accuracy Over Wide 2000:1 Current Range and Over Temperature • Voltage Reference < 40ppm/°C • Four Sensor Inputs—V3P3A Referenced • 22-Bit Delta-Sigma ADC with Independent 32-Bit Compute Engine (CE) • 8-Bit MPU (80515), One Clock Cycle per Instruction with 2KB MPU XRAM • 32KB Flash with Security • Integrated In-Circuit Emulator (ICE) Interface for MPU Debug • 32kHz Time Base with Hardware Watchdog Timer • UART Interface and Up to 10 GeneralPurpose 5V Tolerant I/O Pins • Packaged in a RoHS-Compliant (6/6) Lead(Pb)-Free, 32-Pin QFN (5mm x 5mm) • Complete Application Firmware Provides: o True RMS Calculations for Current, Voltage, Line Frequency, Real Power, Reactive Power, Apparent Power, and Power Factor o Accumulated Watt-Hours, Kilowatt-Hours o Intelligent Switch Control at Zero Crossings o Digital Temperature Compensation o Phase Compensation (±15°) o Quick Calibration Routines o 46–64Hz Line Frequency Range with Same Calibration At the measurement interface, the device provides four analog inputs for interfacing to voltage and current sensors. Voltages from the sensors are fed to our Single Converter Technology® that uses a 22-bit delta-sigma ADC, independent 32-bit compute engine (CE), digital temperature compensation, and precision voltage references to provide better than 0.5% power measurement accuracy over a wide 2000:1 dynamic range. The integrated MPU core and 32 KB of flash memory provides a flexible means of configuration, post-processing, data formatting, and interfacing to any host processor through the UART interface and/or DIO pins. Complete application firmware is available and can be preloaded into the IC during manufacturing test. Alternatively, a complete array of ICE, development tools, and programming libraries are available to allow customization for each application. LIVE Earth Ground Isolated Supply NEUT CONVERTER A0 A1 V3P3 TERIDIAN 78M6613 A2 A3 VOLTAGE REF VREF TEMP SENSOR OSC/PLL 32 kHz XIN XOUT 2KB RAM 32KB FLASH 32-bit COMPUTE ENGINE 80515 MPU TIMERS GND REGULATOR DIO, PULSE DIO 4-8 DIO 14-17, 19 SERIAL PORT TX RX ICE ICE_E V3P3 GND Single Converter Technology is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. Rev. 1.1 © 2011 Teridian Semiconductor Corporation 1 78M6613 Data Sheet DS_6613_018 Table of Contents 1 Hardware Description.................................................................................................................... 5 1.1 Hardware Overview ................................................................................................................ 5 1.2 Analog Front End (AFE) .......................................................................................................... 6 1.2.1 Input Multiplexer.......................................................................................................... 6 1.2.2 A/D Converter (ADC) .................................................................................................. 6 1.2.3 FIR Filter ..................................................................................................................... 6 1.2.4 Voltage References ..................................................................................................... 6 1.2.5 Temperature Sensor ................................................................................................... 7 1.2.6 Functional Description ................................................................................................. 7 1.3 Digital Computation Engine (CE) ............................................................................................ 8 1.4 80515 MPU Core .................................................................................................................... 8 1.4.1 UART .......................................................................................................................... 8 1.4.2 Timers and Counters ................................................................................................... 9 1.5 On-Chip Resources................................................................................................................. 9 1.5.1 Oscillator ..................................................................................................................... 9 1.5.2 PLL and Internal Clocks .............................................................................................. 9 1.5.3 Temperature Sensor ................................................................................................... 9 1.5.4 Flash Memory ............................................................................................................. 9 1.5.5 Digital I/O .................................................................................................................. 10 1.5.6 Hardware Watchdog Timer........................................................................................ 10 1.5.7 Program Security ...................................................................................................... 10 1.5.8 Test Ports.................................................................................................................. 10 2 Functional Description ................................................................................................................ 11 2.1 Theory of Operation .............................................................................................................. 11 2.2 Reset Behavior ..................................................................................................................... 12 2.3 Data Flow ............................................................................................................................. 12 2.4 CE/MPU Communication ...................................................................................................... 13 3 Application Information .............................................................................................................. 14 3.1 Connection of Sensors (CT, Resistive Shunt)........................................................................ 14 3.2 Temperature Measurement ................................................................................................... 15 3.3 Temperature Compensation.................................................................................................. 15 3.4 Connecting 5V Devices......................................................................................................... 16 3.5 UART (TX/RX) ...................................................................................................................... 16 3.6 Reset Function and Reset Pin Connections........................................................................... 16 3.7 Connecting the Emulator Port Pins ....................................................................................... 18 3.8 Crystal Oscillator................................................................................................................... 19 3.9 Flash Programming .............................................................................................................. 19 3.10 MPU Firmware Library .......................................................................................................... 19 3.11 Measurement Calibration ...................................................................................................... 19 4 Electrical Specifications ............................................................................................................. 20 4.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings .................................................................................................. 20 4.2 Recommended External Components ................................................................................... 21 4.3 Recommended Operating Conditions.................................................................................... 21 4.4 Performance Specifications .................................................................................................. 21 4.4.1 Input Logic Levels ..................................................................................................... 21 4.4.2 Output Logic Levels .................................................................................................. 21 4.4.3 Supply Current .......................................................................................................... 22 4.4.4 Crystal Oscillator ....................................................................................................... 22 4.4.5 VREF ........................................................................................................................ 22 4.4.6 ADC Converter, V3P3 Referenced ............................................................................ 23 4.4.7 Temperature Sensor ................................................................................................. 23 2 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 4.5 78M6613 Data Sheet Timing Specifications............................................................................................................ 24 4.5.1 RAM and Flash Memory ............................................................................................ 24 4.5.2 RESET ...................................................................................................................... 24 4.5.3 Typical Performance Data ......................................................................................... 25 5 Packaging .................................................................................................................................... 26 5.1 Pinout ................................................................................................................................... 26 5.2 Package Outline (QFN 32) .................................................................................................... 27 5.3 Recommended PCB Land Pattern for the QFN-32 Package ................................................. 28 6 Pin Descriptions .......................................................................................................................... 29 6.1 Power/Ground Pins ............................................................................................................... 29 6.2 Analog Pins .......................................................................................................................... 29 6.3 Digital Pins ........................................................................................................................... 30 7 I/O Equivalent Circuits ................................................................................................................ 31 8 Ordering Information................................................................................................................... 32 9 Contact Information .................................................................................................................... 32 Revision History .................................................................................................................................. 33 Figures Figure 1: IC Functional Block Diagram .................................................................................................... 4 Figure 2: AFE Block Diagram .................................................................................................................. 7 Figure 3: Connecting an External Load to DIO Pins ............................................................................... 10 Figure 4: Voltage. Current, Momentary and Accumulated Energy .......................................................... 11 Figure 5: MPU/CE Data Flow ................................................................................................................ 12 Figure 6: MPU/CE Communication ........................................................................................................ 13 Figure 7: Resistive Voltage Divider........................................................................................................ 14 Figure 8: Resistive Current Shunt .......................................................................................................... 14 Figure 9: Current Transformer ............................................................................................................... 14 Figure 10: Connections for the RX Pin ................................................................................................... 16 Figure 11: 78M6613 External Reset Behavior........................................................................................ 17 Figure 12: MAX810S Connections to the 78M6613 ................................................................................ 17 Figure 13: Reset Generator Based On TL431 Shunt Regulator .............................................................. 18 Figure 14: External Components for the Emulator Interface .................................................................. 18 Figure 15: Wh Accuracy, 10 mA to 20 A at 120 V/60 Hz and Room Temperature Using a 4 mΩ Current Shunt ....................................................................................................................... 25 Figure 16: Typical Measurement Accuracy over Temperature Relative to 25°C..................................... 25 Figure 17: 32-Pin QFN Pinout ............................................................................................................... 26 Figure 18: Package Outline (QFN 32).................................................................................................... 27 Figure 19: Recommended PCB Land Pattern Dimensions ..................................................................... 28 Figure 20: I/O Equivalent Circuits .......................................................................................................... 31 Table Table 1: Inputs Selected in Regular and Alternate Multiplexer Cycles...................................................... 6 Rev. 1.1 3 78M6613 Data Sheet DS_6613_018 VREF V3P3A GNDA V3P3D GNDD ∆Σ ADC CONVERTER A0 A1 A2 A3 VBIAS VBIAS MUX V3P3 FIR + TEMP VREF VREF MUX CROSS MUX CTRL OSC (32KHz) XIN CK32 RTCLK (32KHz) MCK PLL 32KHz XOUT VOLT REG DIV ADC CK32 CKADC 4.9152MHz CKTEST CKFIR 4.9152MHz 4.9152MHz CK_2X CK_GEN MUX_SYNC CE RAM (0.5KB) STRT CKCE <4.9152MHz TEST MUX CE 32 bit Compute Engine TEST MODE DIO4 DATA 00-7F MEMORY SHARE PROG 000-7FF DIO5 DIO6 1000-11FF CE CONTROL DIO7 DIO14 DIGITAL I/O XFER BUSY DIO15 I/O RAM CE_BUSY DIO8 CKMPU DIO16 DIO17 <4.9152MHz RX TX DIO19 SDCK SDOUT SDIN UART MPU (80515) DATA 0000-FFFF 2000-20FF 0000-07FF PROG 0000-7FFF MPU_RSTZ MEMORY SHARE MPU XRAM (2KB) 00007FFF FLASH (32KB) EMULATOR PORT E_RXTX E_TCLK E_RST (Open Drain) RESET E_RXTX E_TCLK E_RST TEST MUX TMUXOUT ICE_E Figure 1: IC Functional Block Diagram 4 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 1 1.1 78M6613 Data Sheet Hardware Description Hardware Overview The Teridian 78M6613 single-chip measurement unit integrates all primary functional blocks required to embed solid-state AC power and energy measurement. Included on chip are: • An analog front end (AFE) • An independent digital computation engine (CE) • An 8051-compatible microprocessor (MPU) which executes one instruction per clock cycle (80515) • A voltage reference • A temperature sensor • RAM and Flash memory • A variety of I/O pins Current sensor technologies supported include Current Transformers (CT) and Resistive Shunts. In a typical application, the 32-bit compute engine (CE) of the 78M6613 sequentially processes the samples from the voltage inputs on pins A0, A1, A2, A3 and performs calculations to measure active 2 2 energy (Wh), reactive energy (VARh), A h, and V h for four-quadrant measurement. These measurements are then accessed by the MPU, processed further and output using the peripheral interfaces available to the MPU. In addition to the temperature-trimmed ultra-precision voltage reference, the on-chip digital temperature compensation mechanism includes a temperature sensor and associated controls for correction of unwanted temperature effects on measurement. Temperature dependent external components such as crystal oscillator, current transformers (CTs), and their corresponding signal conditioning circuits can be characterized and their correction factors can be programmed to produce measurements with exceptional accuracy over the industrial temperature range, if desired. A block diagram of the IC is shown in Figure 1. A detailed description of various functional blocks follows. Rev. 1.1 5 78M6613 Data Sheet 1.2 DS_6613_018 Analog Front End (AFE) The AFE of the 78M6613 is comprised of an input multiplexer, a delta-sigma A/D converter and a voltage reference. 1.2.1 Input Multiplexer The input multiplexer supports up to four input signals that are applied to pins A0, A1, A2 and A3 of the device. Additionally, using the alternate mux selection, it has the ability to select the on-chip temperature sensor. The multiplexer can be operated in two modes: • During a normal multiplexer cycle, the signals from the A0, A2, A1, and A3 pins are selected. • During the alternate multiplexer cycle, the temperature signal (TEMP) is selected, along with the signal sources shown in Table 1. The alternate mux cycles are usually performed infrequently (e.g. every second) by the MPU. Table 1 details the regular and alternative MUX sequences. Missing samples due to an ALT multiplexer sequence are filled in by the CE. Table 1: Inputs Selected in Regular and Alternate Multiplexer Cycles Regular MUX Sequence ALT MUX Sequence Mux State Mux State 0 1 2 3 0 1 2 3 A0 A1 A2 A3 TEMP A1 V3P3D A3 In a typical application, A1 and A3 are connected to current sensors that sense the current on each branch of the line voltage. A0 and A2 are typically connected to voltage sensors through resistor dividers. The multiplexer control circuit is clocked by CK32, the 32.768 kHz clock from the PLL block, and launches with each new pass of the CE program. 1.2.2 A/D Converter (ADC) A single delta-sigma A/D converter digitizes the voltage and current inputs to the 78M6613. The resolution of the ADC is 22 bits. Conversion time is two cycles of the CK32 clock. Initiation of each ADC conversion is controlled by the multiplexer control circuit as described previously. At the end of each ADC conversion, the FIR filter output data is stored into the CE DRAM location. 1.2.3 FIR Filter The finite impulse response filter is an integral part of the ADC and it is optimized for use with the multiplexer. The purpose of the FIR filter is to decimate the ADC output to the desired resolution. At the end of each ADC conversion, the output data is stored into the fixed CE DRAM location determined by the multiplexer selection. 1.2.4 Voltage References The device includes an on-chip precision bandgap voltage reference that incorporates auto-zero techniques. The reference is trimmed to minimize errors caused by component mismatch and drift. The result is a voltage output with a predictable temperature coefficient. 6 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 1.2.5 78M6613 Data Sheet Temperature Sensor The 78M6613 includes an on-chip temperature sensor implemented as a bandgap reference. It is used to determine the die temperature. The MPU reads the temperature sensor output during alternate multiplexer cycles. The primary use of the temperature data is to determine the magnitude of compensation required to offset the thermal drift in the system (see Section 3.3 Temperature Compensation). 1.2.6 Functional Description The AFE functions as a data acquisition system, controlled by the MPU. The input signals (A0, A1, A2, and A3) are sampled and the ADC counts obtained are stored in CE DRAM where they can be accessed by the CE and, if necessary, by the MPU. Alternate multiplexer cycles are initiated less frequently by the MPU to gather access to the slow temperature signal. VREF ∆Σ ADC CONVERTER A0 A1 A2 A3 VBIAS VBIAS MUX V3P3A FIR + TEMP VREF MUX MUX CTRL VREF CROSS CK32 FIR_DONE FIR_START 4.9152 MHz Figure 2: AFE Block Diagram Rev. 1.1 7 78M6613 Data Sheet 1.3 DS_6613_018 Digital Computation Engine (CE) The CE, a dedicated 32-bit signal processor, performs the precision computations necessary to accurately measure energy. The CE calculations and processes include: • Multiplication of each current sample with its associated voltage sample to obtain the energy per sample (when multiplied with the constant sample time). • Frequency-insensitive delay cancellation on all channels (to compensate for the delay between samples caused by the multiplexing scheme). • 90° phase shifter (for narrowband VARh calculations). • Monitoring of the input signal frequency (for frequency and phase information). • Monitoring of the input signal amplitude (for sag detection). • Scaling of the processed samples based on calibration coefficients. CE code is provided by Teridian as a part of the application firmware available. The CE is not programmable by the user. Measurement algorithms in the CE code can be customized by Teridian upon request. The CE program resides in Flash memory. Common access to Flash memory by CE and MPU is controlled by a memory share circuit. Allocated Flash space for the CE program cannot exceed 1024 words (2KB). The CE DRAM can be accessed by the CE and the MPU. Holding registers are used to convert 8-bit wide MPU data to/from 32-bit wide CE DRAM data, and wait states are inserted as needed, depending on the frequency of CKMPU. The CE DRAM contains 128 32-bit words. The MPU can read and write the CE DRAM as the primary means of data communication between the two processors. CE hardware issues an interrupt when accumulation is complete. 1.4 80515 MPU Core The 78M6613 includes an 80515 MPU (8-bit, 8051-compatible) that processes most instructions in one clock cycle. Using a 5 MHz (4.9152 MHz) clock results in a processing throughput of 5 MIPS. The 80515 architecture eliminates redundant bus states and implements parallel execution of fetch and execution phases. Normally a machine cycle is aligned with a memory fetch, therefore, most of the 1-byte instructions are performed in a single cycle. This leads to an 8x performance (in average) improvement (in terms of MIPS) over the Intel 8051 device running at the same clock frequency. Actual processor clocking speed can be adjusted to the total processing demand of the application (measurement calculations, memory management and I/O management). Typical power and energy measurement functions based on the results provided by the internal 32-bit compute engine (CE) are available for the MPU as part of Teridian’s standard library. MPU Memory Organization, Special Function Registers, Interrupts, Counters, and other controls are described in the applicable firmware documentation. 1.4.1 UART The 78M6613 includes a UART that can be programmed to communicate with a variety of external devices. The UART is a dedicated 2-wire serial interface, which can communicate with an external device at up to 38,400 bits/s. All UART transfers are programmable for parity enable, parity, 2 stop bits/1 stop bit and XON/XOFF options for variable communication baud rates from 300 to 38,400 bps. 8 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 1.4.2 78M6613 Data Sheet Timers and Counters The 80515 has two 16-bit timer/counter registers: Timer 0 and Timer 1. These registers can be configured for counter or timer operations. In timer mode, the register is incremented every machine cycle, meaning that it counts up after every 12 periods of the MPU clock signal. In counter mode, the register is incremented when the falling edge is observed at the corresponding input signal T0 or T1 (T0 and T1 are the timer gating inputs derived from certain DIO pins, see the DIO Ports section). Since it takes 2 m achine cycles to recognize a 1 -to-0 event, the maximum input count rate is 1/2 of the oscillator frequency. There are no r estrictions on t he duty cycle, however to ensure proper recognition of 0 or 1 state, an input should be stable for at least 1 machine cycle. 1.5 1.5.1 On-Chip Resources Oscillator The 78M6613 oscillator drives a standard 32.768 kHz watch crystal. These crystals are accurate and do not require a high-current oscillator circuit. The 78M6613 oscillator has been designed specifically to handle these crystals and is compatible with their high impedance and limited power handling capability. 1.5.2 PLL and Internal Clocks Timing for the device is derived from the 32.768 kHz oscillator output. On-chip timing functions include the MPU master clock and the delta-sigma sample clock. In addition, the MPU has two general counter/timers. The ADC master clock, CKADC, is generated by an on-chip PLL. It multiplies the oscillator output frequency (CK32) by 150. The CE clock frequency is always CK32 * 150, or 4.9152 MHz, where CK32 is the 32 kHz clock. The MPU clock frequency is scalable from 4.9152 MHz down to 38.4 kHz. The circuit can also generate a 2x MPU clock for use by the emulator. 1.5.3 Temperature Sensor The device includes an on-chip temperature sensor for determining the temperature of the bandgap reference. The primary use of the temperature data is to determine the magnitude of compensation required to offset the thermal drift in the system (see Section 3.3 Temperature Compensation). 1.5.4 Flash Memory The 78M6613 includes 32 KB of on-chip Flash memory. The Flash memory primarily contains MPU and CE program code. It also contains images of the CE DRAM, MPU RAM, and I/O RAM. On power-up, before enabling the CE, the MPU copies these images to their respective locations. Allocated Flash space for the CE program cannot exceed 1024 words (2 KB). MPU RAM: The 78M6613 includes 2KB of static RAM memory on-chip (XRAM) plus 256B of internal RAM in the MPU core. The 2KB of static RAM are used for data storage during normal MPU operations. CE DRAM: The CE DRAM is the working data memory of the CE (128 32-bit words). The MPU can read and write the CE DRAM as the primary means of data communication between the two processors. Rev. 1.1 9 78M6613 Data Sheet 1.5.5 DS_6613_018 Digital I/O The device includes up to 10 pins of general purpose digital I/O. When configured as inputs, these pins are 5V compatible (no current-limiting resistors are needed). On reset or power-up, all DIO pins are inputs until they are configured for the desired direction under MPU control. When driving LEDs, relay coils etc., the DIO pins should sink the current into ground (as shown in Figure 3, right), not source it from V3P3 (as in Figure 3, left). If more than one input is connected to the same resource, the resources are combined using a logical OR. 78M6613 78M6613 V3P3D 3.3V V3P3D 3.3V LED R DIO DIO R LED GNDD Not recommended GNDD Recommended Figure 3: Connecting an External Load to DIO Pins 1.5.6 Hardware Watchdog Timer In addition to the basic watchdog timer included in the 80515 MPU, an independent, robust, fixedduration, watchdog timer (WDT) is included in the device. It uses the crystal oscillator as its time base and must be refreshed by the MPU firmware at least every 1.5 seconds. When not refreshed on time the WDT overflows, and the part is reset as if the RESET pin were pulled high, except that the I/O RAM bits will be maintained. 4096 oscillator cycles (or 125 ms) after the WDT overflow, the MPU will be launched from program address 0x0000. Asserting ICE_E will deactivate the WDT. 1.5.7 Program Security When enabled, the security feature limits the ICE to global Flash erase operations only. All other ICE operations are blocked. This guarantees the security of the user’s MPU and CE program code. Security is enabled by MPU code that is executed in a 32 cycle preboot interval before the primary boot sequence begins. Once security is enabled, the only way to disable it is to perform a global erase of the Flash, followed by a chip reset. 1.5.8 Test Ports TMUXOUT Pin: One out of 16 digital or 8 analog signals can be selected to be output on the TMUXOUT pin. The function of the multiplexer is described in the applicable firmware documentation. 10 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 2 2.1 78M6613 Data Sheet Functional Description Theory of Operation The energy delivered by a power source into a load can be expressed as: t E = ∫ V (t ) I (t )dt 0 The following formulae apply for wide band mode (true RMS): (i(t) * v(t)) • P=∑ • Q = √(S2 – P2) • S=V*I • V = √∑v(t)2 • I = √∑i(t)2 For a practical measurement, not only voltage and current amplitudes, but also phase angles and harmonic content may change constantly. Thus, simple RMS measurements are inherently inaccurate, and true RMS measurements must be utilized. A modern solid-state electricity Power and Energy Measurement IC such as the Teridian 78M6613 functions by emulating the integral operation above, i.e. it processes current and voltage samples through an ADC at a constant frequency. As long as the ADC resolution is high enough and the sample frequency is beyond the harmonic range of interest, the current and voltage samples, multiplied with the time period of sampling will yield an accurate quantity for the momentary energy. Summing up the momentary energy quantities over time will result in accumulated energy. 500 400 300 200 100 0 0 5 10 15 20 -100 -200 -300 Current [A] Voltage [V] Energy per Interval [Ws] -400 Accumulated Energy [Ws] -500 Figure 4: Voltage. Current, Momentary and Accumulated Energy Figure 4 shows the shapes of V(t), I(t), the momentary power and the accumulated power, resulting from 50 samples of the voltage and current signals over a period of 20 ms. The application of 240 VAC and 100 A results in an accumulation of 480 Ws (= 0.133 Wh) over the 20 ms period, as indicated by the Accumulated Power curve. The described sampling method works reliably, even in the presence of dynamic phase shift and harmonic distortion. For actual measurement equations, refer to the applicable firmware documentation. Rev. 1.1 11 78M6613 Data Sheet 2.2 DS_6613_018 Reset Behavior Reset Mode: When the RESET pin is pulled high all digital activity stops. The oscillator continues to run. Additionally, all I/O RAM bits are set to their default states. Once initiated, the reset mode will persist until the reset timer times out. This will occur in 4096 CK32 clock cycles (32768 Hz clock cycles from PLL block) after RESET goes low, at which time the MPU will begin executing its preboot and boot sequences from address 00. 2.3 Data Flow The data flow between CE and MPU is shown in Figure 5. In a typical application, the 32-bit compute engine (CE) sequentially processes the samples from the voltage inputs on pins A0, A1, A2, and A3, 2 2 performing calculations to measure active power (Wh), reactive power (VARh), A h, and V h for four-quadrant measurements. These measurements are then accessed by the MPU, processed further and output using the peripheral devices available to the MPU. IRQ Samples CE Data Pre Processor MPU Post Processor Processed Measurement Data I/O RAM (Configuration RAM) Figure 5: MPU/CE Data Flow 12 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 2.4 78M6613 Data Sheet CE/MPU Communication Figure 6 shows the functional relationship between CE and MPU. The CE is controlled by the MPU via shared registers in the I/O RAM and by registers in the CE DRAM. The CE outputs two interrupt signals to the MPU to indicate when the CE is actively processing data and when the CE is updating data to the output region of the CE DRAM. CONTROL ADC SAMPLES Mux Ctrl. CE MPU SERIAL (UART) DATA CE_BUSY XFER_BUSY DIO INTERRUPTS I/O RAM (CONFIGURATION RAM) Figure 6: MPU/CE Communication Rev. 1.1 13 78M6613 Data Sheet 3 3.1 DS_6613_018 Application Information Connection of Sensors (CT, Resistive Shunt) Figure 7, Figure 8, and Figure 9 show how resistive voltage dividers, resistive current shunts, and current transformers are connected to the voltage and current inputs of the 78M6613. Figure 7: Resistive Voltage Divider Figure 8: Resistive Current Shunt Figure 9: Current Transformer 14 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 3.2 78M6613 Data Sheet Temperature Measurement Measurement of absolute temperature uses the on-chip temperature sensor while applying the following formula: T= ( N (T ) − N n ) + Tn Sn In the above formula, T is the temperature in °C, N(T) is the ADC count at temperature T, Nn is the ADC count at 25°C, Sn is the sensitivity in LSB/°C and Tn is +25°C. Example: At 25°C a temperature sensor value of 518,203,584 (Nn) is read by the ADC by a 78M6613 in the 32-pin QFN package. At an unknown temperature T the value 449,648,000 is read at (N(T)). The absolute temperature is then determined by dividing both Nn and N(T) by 512 to account for the 9-bit shift of the ADC value and then inserting the results into the above formula, using –2220 for LSB/°C: T= 3.3 449,648,000 - 518,203,584 + 25C = 85.3°C 512 ⋅ (−2220) Temperature Compensation Temperature Coefficients: The internal voltage reference is calibrated during device manufacture. The temperature coefficients TC1 and TC2 are given as constants that represent typical component 2 behavior (in µV/°C and µV/°C , respectively). Since TC1 and TC2 are given in µV/°C and µV/°C2, respectively, the value of the VREF voltage 2 (1.195V) has to be taken into account when transitioning to PPM/°C and PPM/°C . This means that PPMC = 26.84*TC1/1.195, and PPMC2 = 1374*TC2/1.195). Temperature Compensation: The CE provides the bandgap temperature to the MPU, which then may digitally compensate the power outputs for the temperature dependence of VREF. The MPU, not the CE, is entirely in charge of providing temperature compensation. The MPU applies the following formula to determine any gain adjustments. In this formula TEMP_X is the deviation from nominal or calibration temperature expressed in multiples of 0.1°C: GAIN _ ADJ = 16385 + TEMP _ X ⋅ PPMC TEMP _ X 2 ⋅ PPMC 2 + 214 2 23 In a power and energy measurement unit, the 78M6613 is not the only component contributing to temperature dependency. A whole range of components (e.g. current transformers, resistor dividers, power sources, filter capacitors) will contribute temperature effects. Since the output of the on-chip temperature sensor is accessible to the MPU, temperature-compensation mechanisms with great flexibility are possible (e.g. system-wide temperature correction over the entire unit rather than local to the chip). Rev. 1.1 15 78M6613 Data Sheet 3.4 DS_6613_018 Connecting 5V Devices All digital input pins of the 78M6613 are compatible with external 5V devices. I/O pins configured as inputs do not require current-limiting resistors when they are connected to external 5V devices. 3.5 UART (TX/RX) The RX pin should be pulled down by a 10 kΩ resistor and optionally protected by a 100 pF ceramic capacitor, as shown in Figure 10. Optional 78M6613 RX 100pF 10k Ω TX RX TX Figure 10: Connections for the RX Pin 3.6 Reset Function and Reset Pin Connections The 78M6613 requires an external reset circuit to drive the RESET input pin. The reset is used to prevent the 78M6613 from operating at supply voltages outside the recommended operating conditions. Reset ensures the device is set to a known set of initial conditions and that it begins executing instructions from a predetermined starting address. The reset can be forced by applying a high level to the RESET pin. The reset input is internally filtered (low-pass filter) in order to eliminate spurious reset conditions that can be triggered in a noisy environment. For this reason the RESET pin must be asserted (high) for at least 1μs in order to initiate a reset sequence. The external reset circuitry should be designed in order to hold the RESET pin high (active) whenever V3P3D is below normal operating level. Refer to Section 4.3, Recommended Operating Conditions. Figure 11 shows the behavior of the external reset circuitry. 16 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 78M6613 Data Sheet > 1 µs > 1 µs Max Typ 3.3V Supply Voltage (V3P3D/V3P3A) Min 0.0V Time V3P3 RESET Figure 11: 78M6613 External Reset Behavior The RESET signal can be generated in a number of different ways. For example, a voltage supervisory device such as Maxim’s MAX810S can be us ed to implement the reset/supply voltage supervisory function as shown in Figure 12. V3P3 MAX810S Vcc RST RESET GND 78M6613 GND Figure 12: MAX810S Connections to the 78M6613 Rev. 1.1 17 78M6613 Data Sheet DS_6613_018 An alternate solution using discrete components can be used. Figure 13 shows an implementation using a shunt regulator and two transistors. Figure 13: Reset Generator Based On TL431 Shunt Regulator As long as V3P3 is below the 2.79V threshold set by the voltage divider of R1 and R2, U1 will not conduct current, the base of Q2 will be at the same potential as its emitter, so Q1 will be turned off. With no current flowing in the collector of Q2, the base of Q1 will be low, Q1 will be turned off, and RESET will track V3P3. When the V3P3 rises above 2.79V, the TL431 starts to conduct, the base of Q2 is be pulled low, turning on Q2. This drives the base of Q1 high, turning Q1 on and pulling RESET low. The inherent turn-on and turn-off delays of the TL4313 provide the ~1µs delay required to ensure proper resetting of the 78M6613. 3.7 Connecting the Emulator Port Pins It is important to bring out the ICE_E pin to the programming interface in order to create a way for reprogramming parts that have the Flash SECURE bit (SFR 0xB2[6]) set. Providing access to ICE_E ensures that the part can be reset between erase and program cycles, which will enable programming devices to reprogram the part. The reset required is implemented with a watchdog timer reset (i.e. the hardware WDT must be enabled). V3P3 78M6613 ICE_E 62 Ω E_RST 62 Ω E_RXTX E_TCLK 62 Ω 1000pF 300 Ω Figure 14: External Components for the Emulator Interface 18 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 3.8 78M6613 Data Sheet Crystal Oscillator The oscillator of the 78M6613 drives a standard 32.768 kHz watch crystal. The oscillator has been designed specifically to handle these crystals and is compatible with their high impedance and limited power handling capability. Good layouts will have XIN and XOUT shielded from each other. Since the oscillator is self-biasing, an external resistor must not be connected across the crystal. 3.9 Flash Programming Operational or test code can be programmed into the Flash memory using either an in-circuit emulator or the Flash Programmer Module (TFP-2) available from Teridian. The Flash programming procedure uses the E_RST, E_RXTX, and E_TCLK pins. 3.10 MPU Firmware Library Any application-specific MPU functions mentioned above are available from Teridian as a standard ANSI C library and as ANSI “C” source code. The code is pre-programmed in Demonstration and Evaluation Kits for the 78M6613 IC and can be pre-programmed into engineering IC samples for system evaluation. The application code allows for quick and efficient evaluation of the IC without having to write firmware or having to purchase an in-circuit emulator (ICE). A Software Licensing Agreement (SLA) can be signed to receive either the source Flash HEX file for use in a production environment or (partial) source code and SDK documentation for modification. 3.11 Measurement Calibration Once the 78M6613 Power and Energy Measurement device has been installed in a measurement system, it is typically calibrated for tolerances of the current sensors, voltage dividers and signal conditioning components. The device can be calibrated using a single gain and a single phase adjustment factors accessible to the CE. The gain adjustment is used to compensate for tolerances of components used for signal conditioning, especially the resistive components. Phase adjustment is provided to compensate for phase shifts introduced by certain types of current sensors. Due to the flexibility of the MPU firmware, any calibration method, such as calibration based on energy, or current and voltage can be implemented. It is also possible to implement segment-wise calibration (depending on current range). Teridian software supports a “quick cal” method. Rev. 1.1 19 78M6613 Data Sheet 4 4.1 DS_6613_018 Electrical Specifications Absolute Maximum Ratings Supplies and Ground Pins: V3P3 -0.5 V to 4.6 V GNDD, GNDA -0.5 V to +0.5 V Analog Output Pins: VREF -10 mA to +10 mA, -0.5 V to V3P3+0.5 V Analog Input Pins: A0, A1, A2, A3 -10 mA to +10 mA -0.5 V to V3P3+0.5 V XIN, XOUT -10 mA to +10 mA -0.5 V to 3.0 V All Other Pins: Configured as Digital Inputs -10 mA to +10 mA, -0.5 to 6 V Configured as Digital Outputs -15 mA to +15 mA, -0.5 V to V3P3D+0.5 V All other pins -0.5 V to V3P3D+0.5 V Operating junction temperature (peak, 100 ms) 140 °C Operating junction temperature (continuous) 125 °C Storage temperature -45 °C to +165 °C Solder temperature – 10 second duration 250 °C ESD stress on all pins 4 kV Stresses beyond Absolute Maximum Ratings may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only and functional operation at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated under “recommended operating conditions” is not implied. Exposure to absolute-maximum-rated conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. All voltages are with respect to GND. 20 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 4.2 78M6613 Data Sheet Recommended External Components Name From To C1 V3P3A GNDA CSYS V3P3D XTAL † CXS CXL † Function Value Unit Bypass capacitor for 3.3V supply. ≥0.1±10% µF GNDD Bypass capacitor for V3P3D. ≥0.1±10% µF XIN XOUT 32.768 kHz crystal – electrically similar to ECS .327-12.5-17X or Vishay XT26T, load capacitance 12.5 pF. 32.768 kHz XIN GND 27±10% pF XOUT GND 27±10% pF Load capacitor for crystal (exact value depends on crystal specifications and parasitic capacitance of board). † Depending on trace capacitance, higher or lower values for CXS and CXL must be used. Capacitance from XIN to GND and XOUT to GND (combining pin, trace and crystal capacitance) should be 35 pF to 37 pF. 4.3 Recommended Operating Conditions Parameter Condition Min Typ Max Unit 3.3V Supply Voltage (V3P3) Normal Operation 3.0 3.3 3.6 V +85 ºC Operating Temperature 4.4 4.4.1 -40 Performance Specifications Input Logic Levels Parameter Condition Digital high-level input voltage, VIH Min Typ 2 Input pull-up current, IIL E_RXTX, E_RST, CKTEST Other digital inputs VIN=0V, ICE_E=1 Input pull down current, IIH ICE_E Other digital inputs VIN=V3P3 0.8 V µA µA µA 10 10 -1 0 100 100 1 10 -1 0 100 1 µA µA Min Typ Max Unit Output Logic Levels Parameter Digital high-level output voltage VOH Digital low-level output voltage VOL 1 Unit V Digital low-level input voltage, VIL 4.4.2 Max Condition ILOAD = 1 mA V3P3 –0.4 V ILOAD = 15 mA V3P31 0.6 V ILOAD = 1 mA 0 ILOAD = 15 mA 0.4 V 1 V 0.8 Guaranteed by design; not production tested. Rev. 1.1 21 78M6613 Data Sheet 4.4.3 DS_6613_018 Supply Current Parameter Condition Typ Max Unit V3P3A + V3P3D current Normal Operation, V3P3=3.3V, ICE Disabled 8.1 10.3 mA V3P3A + V3P3D current vs. MPU clock frequency Same conditions as above 0.5 Normal Operation as above, except write Flash at maximum rate, ADC & CE Disabled 9.1 10 mA Typ Max Unit 1 µW V3P3A + V3PD current, Write Flash 4.4.4 Min mA/ MHz Crystal Oscillator Parameter Condition Maximum Output Power to Crystal Min Crystal connected XIN to XOUT Capacitance 3 pF Capacitance to GND XIN XOUT 5 5 pF pF 4.4.5 VREF Unless otherwise specified, VREF_DIS=0 Parameter Condition VREF output voltage, VNOM(25) Ta = 22ºC Min Typ Max Unit 1.193 1.195 1.197 V 50 mV 2.5 kΩ VREF chop step VREF output impedance * VNOM definition VREF_CAL =1, ILOAD = 10 µA, -10 µA VNOM (T ) = VREF (22) + (T − 22)TC1 + (T − 22) 2 TC 2 VREF temperature coefficients TC1 TC2 124.4 - 2.435*TRIMT -0.265 + 0.00106*TRIMT µV/ºC µV/°C2 ±25 ppm/ year VREF aging VREF(T) deviation from VNOM(T) VREF (T ) − VNOM (T ) 10 6 VNOM 62 * Ta = -40ºC to +85ºC V -401 1 +40 ppm/º C This relationship describes the nominal behavior of VREF at different temperatures. 22 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 4.4.6 78M6613 Data Sheet ADC Converter, V3P3 Referenced VREF_DIS=0, LSB values do not include the 9-bit left shift at CE input. Parameter Condition Recommended Input Range (Vin-V3P3A) Voltage to Current Crosstalk: Typ Max Unit -250 250 mV peak 1 101 μV/V Vin = 200 mV peak, 65 Hz, on A0 10 6 *Vcrosstalk cos(∠Vin − ∠Vcrosstalk ) Vcrosstalk = largest Vin measurement on A1 or A3 THD (First 10 harmonics) 250 mV-pk 20 mV-pk Min -10 Vin=65 Hz, 64 kpts FFT, BlackmanHarris window dB dB -75 -90 Input Impedance Vin=65 Hz Temperature coefficient of Input Impedance Vin=65 Hz 1.7 Ω/°C LSB size FIR_LEN=0 FIR_LEN=1 357 151 nV/LSB Digital Full Scale FIR_LEN=0 FIR_LEN=1 +884736 +2097152 LSB ADC Gain Error vs %Power Supply Variation 10 6 ∆Nout PK 357 nV / VIN 100 ∆V 3P3 A / 3.3 Vin=200 mV pk, 65 Hz V3P3=3.0V, 3.6V Input Offset (Vin-V3P3A) 4.4.7 40 90 -10 kΩ 50 ppm/% 10 mV Max Unit Temperature Sensor Parameter Condition Nominal Sensitivity (Sn) Nominal (Nn) † Temperature Error ( N (T ) − N n ) ERR = T − + Tn Sn Min Typ FIR_LEN=0 FIR_LEN=1 -669 -1585 LSB/ºC FIR_LEN=0 FIR_LEN=1 +429301 +1017558 LSB TA = -40ºC to +85ºC Tn = 25°C 1 -10 +101 ºC † Nn is measured at Tn during calibration and is stored in MPU or CE for use in temperature calculations. 1 Guaranteed by design; not production tested. Rev. 1.1 23 78M6613 Data Sheet 4.5 4.5.1 DS_6613_018 Timing Specifications RAM and Flash Memory Parameter CE DRAM wait states Condition Min Typ Max Unit CKMPU = 4.9152 MHz 5 Cycles CKMPU = 1.25 MHz 2 Cycles CKMPU = 614 kHz 1 Cycles 20,000 Cycles Flash write cycles -40 °C to +85 °C Flash data retention 25 °C 100 Years Flash data retention 85 °C 10 Years Flash byte writes between page or mass erase operations 4.5.2 Cycles Max Unit 1 µs RESET Parameter Condition Min Reset pulse fall time Reset pulse width 24 2 5 Typ µs Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 4.5.3 78M6613 Data Sheet Typical Performance Data Wh Accuracy (%) 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 Accuracy (%) 0.1 0 Wh Accuracy (%) -0.1 -0.2 -0.3 -0.4 -0.5 0.01 0.1 1 10 Current (A) Figure 15: Wh Accuracy, 10 mA to 20 A at 120 V/60 Hz and Room Temperature Using a 4 mΩ Current Shunt Relative Accuracy over Temperature Accuracy [PPM/°C] 40 30 20 10 0 -10 -20 -30 -60 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 80 100 Temperature [°C] Figure 16: Typical Measurement Accuracy over Temperature Relative to 25°C Rev. 1.1 25 78M6613 Data Sheet DIO5 DIO6 DIO7 DIO8 RX RESET Pinout V3P3A 5.1 Packaging GNDA 5 DS_6613_018 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 A1 1 24 ICE_E 23 GNDD A3 2 A2 3 22 DIO4 21 DIO19 A0 4 VREF 5 20 DIO16 19 DIO15 XIN 6 TEST 7 18 DIO14 17 DIO17 XOUT 8 V3P3D CKTEST TX TMUXOUT E_RXTX E_RST E_TCLK N/C 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Figure 17: 32-Pin QFN Pinout 26 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 5.2 78M6613 Data Sheet Package Outline (QFN 32) 0.85 NOM./ 0.9MAX. 5 0.00 / 0.005 2.5 0.20 REF. 1 2.5 2 3 5 SEATING PLANE TOP VIEW SIDE VIEW 0.35 / 0.45 3.0 / 3.2 0.18 / 0.3 CHAMFERED 0.30 1.5 / 1.6 1 2 3 3.0 / 3.2 1.5 / 1.6 0.5 0.2 MIN. 0.35 / 0.45 0.5 NOTE: Controlling BOTTOM VIEW dimensions are in mm. Figure 18: Package Outline (QFN 32) Rev. 1.1 27 78M6613 Data Sheet 5.3 DS_6613_018 Recommended PCB Land Pattern for the QFN-32 Package x y e d A G x y e d A G Symbol Description e Lead pitch Min Typ 0.50 mm x 0.28 mm y 0.69 mm d See Note 1 0.28 mm 3.00 mm A G Max 3.78 mm 3.93 mm Note 1: Do not place unmasked vias in region denoted by dimension “d”. Note 2: Soldering of bottom internal pad not required for proper operation of either commercial or industrial temperature rated versions. Figure 19: Recommended PCB Land Pattern Dimensions 28 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 6 78M6613 Data Sheet Pin Descriptions 6.1 Power/Ground Pins Name GNDA GNDD V3P3A V3P3D 6.2 Type Circuit Description P – These pins should be connected directly to the ground plane. P – A 3.3V power supply should be connected to these pins. Analog Pins Name A0, A1, A2, A3 Type I Circuit 5 Description Sense Inputs: These pins are voltage inputs to the internal A/D converter. Typically, they are connected to either the outputs of current sensors or the outputs of resistor dividers (voltage sensors). Unused pins must be connected to V3P3. VREF XIN XOUT O I 8 Voltage Reference for the ADC. This pin is left unconnected. Never use as an external reference. 7 Crystal Inputs. A 32 kHz crystal should be connected across these pins. Typically, a 27 pF capacitor is also connected from each pin to GND. It is important to minimize the capacitance between these pins. See the crystal manufacturer datasheet for details. Pin types: P = Power, O = Output, I = Input, I/O = Input/Output The circuit number denotes the equivalent circuit, as specified under “I/O Equivalent Circuits”. Rev. 1.1 29 78M6613 Data Sheet 6.3 DS_6613_018 Digital Pins Name DIO4 DIO5 DIO6 DIO7 DIO8 DIO14 DIO15 DIO16 DIO17 DIO19 E_RXTX, E_RST E_TCLK Type Circuit I/O 3, 4 I/O 1, 4 O 4 Description DIO pins. If unused, these pins must be configured as DIOs and set to outputs by the firmware. Emulator port pins (when ICE_E pulled high) . ICE_E I 2 ICE enable. When zero, E_RST, E_TCLK, and E_RXTX are disabled. For production units, this pin should be pulled to GND to disable the emulator port. This pin should be brought out to the programming interface in order to create a way for reprogramming parts that have the SECURE bit set. CKTEST O 4 Clock PLL output. TMUXOUT O 4 Digital output test multiplexer. RESET I 3 This input pin resets the chip into a known state. For normal operation, this pin should be pulled low. To force the device into reset state, it should be pulled high. Refer to Section 3.6 for RESET pin connections, use, and relevant external circuitry. RX I 3 UART input. If unused, this pin must be terminated to V3P3 or GND. TX O 4 UART output. TEST I 7 Enables Production Test. Must be grounded in normal operation. Pin types: P = Power, O = Output, I = Input, I/O = Input/Output The circuit number denotes the equivalent circuit, as specified on the following page. 30 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 7 78M6613 Data Sheet I/O Equivalent Circuits V3P3 V3P3 V3P3 V3P3 110K Digital Input Pin CMOS Input GND Digital Input Pin 110K GND Digital Input Equivalent Circuit Type 1: Standard Digital Input or pin configured as DIO Input with Internal Pull-Up Digital Input Pin CMOS Input CMOS Input GND GND Digital Input Type 3: Standard Digital Input or pin configured as DIO Input Digital Input Type 2: Pin configured as DIO Input with Internal Pull-Down V3P3 V3P3 V3P3 V3P3 Digital Output Pin CMOS Output GND GND Analog Input Pin To MUX Comparator Input Pin GND GND Digital Output Equivalent Circuit Type 4: Standard Digital Output or pin configured as DIO Output To Comparator Comparator Input Equivalent Circuit Type 6: Comparator Input Analog Input Equivalent Circuit Type 5: ADC Input V3P3 Oscillator Pin To Oscillator from internal reference GND VREF Pin GND Oscillator Equivalent Circuit Type 7: Oscillator I/O VREF Equivalent Circuit Type 8: VREF Figure 20: I/O Equivalent Circuits Rev. 1.1 31 78M6613 Data Sheet 8 DS_6613_018 Ordering Information Part 78M6613 Package 32-pin QFN (Lead(Pb)-Free) Option Ordering Number Bulk 78M6613-IM/F Tape & Reel 78M6613-IMR/F *Programmed, Bulk 78M6613-IM/F/P *Programmed, Tape & Reel 78M6613-IMR/F/P IC Marking 78M6613-IM *Contact the factory for more information on programmed part options. 9 Contact Information For more information about Maxim products or to check the availability of the 78M6613, contact technical support at www.maxim-ic.com/support. 32 Rev. 1.1 DS_6613_018 78M6613 Data Sheet Revision History REVISION NUMBER REVISION DATE 1.0 11/10 First publication. 1.1 3/11 In Section 6.3, corrected the description of the RESET pin. 30 DESCRIPTION PAGES CHANGED Teridian Semiconductor Corporation is a registered trademark of Teridian Semiconductor Corporation. All other trademarks are the property of their respective owners. Maxim cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim product. No circuit patent licenses are implied. Maxim reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time. M a x im I n t e g r a t e d P r o d uc t s , 1 2 0 S a n G a b r ie l D r iv e , S un n y v a le , C A 9 4 0 8 6 4 0 8 - 7 3 7 - 7 6 0 0 2011 Maxim Integrated Products Maxim is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products.