CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 ® CapSense Express™ Button Capacitive Controllers CapSense® Express™ Button Capacitive Controllers Features ■ ■ ■ 10/8/6/4 capacitive button input ❐ Robust sensing algorithm ❐ High sensitivity, low noise ❐ Immunity to RF and AC noise ❐ Low radiated EMC noise ❐ Supports wide range of input capacitance, sensor shapes, and sizes Target applications ❐ Printers ❐ Cellular handsets ❐ LCD monitors ❐ Portable DVD players I2C communication ❐ Supported from 1.8 V ❐ Internal pull-up resistor support option ❐ Data rate up to 400 kbps 2 ❐ Configurable I C addressing ■ Industrial temperature range: –40 °C to +85 °C. ■ Available in 16-pin QFN, 8-pin, and 16-pin SOIC packages Overview ■ Low operating current ❐ Active current: continuous sensor scan: 1.5 mA ❐ Deep sleep current: 4 µA ■ Industry's best configurability ❐ Custom sensor tuning, one optional capacitor ❐ Output supports strong drive for LED 2 ❐ Output state can be controlled through I C or directly from CapSense® input state 2 ❐ Run time reconfigurable over I C ■ ■ Wide range of operating voltages ❐ 2.4 V to 2.9 V ❐ 3.10 V to 3.6 V ❐ 4.75 V to 5.25 V Advanced features ❐ All GPIOs support LED dimming with configurable delay option in CY8C20110 ❐ Interrupt outputs ❐ User defined inputs ❐ Wake on interrupt input ❐ Sleep control pin ❐ Nonvolatile storage of custom settings ❐ Easy integration into existing products – configure output to match system ❐ No external components required ❐ World class free configuration tool These CapSense Express™ controllers support four to ten capacitive sensing (CapSense) buttons. The device functionality is configured through an I2C port and can be stored in onboard nonvolatile memory for automatic loading at power-on. The CY8C20110 is optimized for dimming LEDs in 15 selectable duty cycles for back light applications. The device can be configured to have up to 10 GPIOs connected to the PWM output. The PWM duty cycle is programmable for variable LED intensities. The four key blocks that make up these devices are: a robust capacitive sensing core with high immunity against radiated and conductive noise, control registers with nonvolatile storage, configurable outputs, and I2C communications. The user can configure registers with parameters needed to adjust the operation and sensitivity of the CapSense buttons and outputs and permanently store the settings. The standard I2C serial communication interface enables the host to configure the device and read sensor information in real time. The I2C address is fully configurable without any external hardware strapping. Errata: For information on silicon errata, see “Errata” on page 41. Details include trigger conditions, devices affected, and proposed workaround. Cypress Semiconductor Corporation Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J • 198 Champion Court • San Jose, CA 95134-1709 • 408-943-2600 Revised June 19, 2013 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Contents Pinouts -16-Pin QFN ......................................................... 3 Pin Definitions .................................................................. 3 Pinouts - 16-Pin SOIC ....................................................... 4 Pin Definitions .................................................................. 4 Pinouts - 8-pin SOIC ......................................................... 5 Pin Definitions .................................................................. 5 Typical Circuits ................................................................. 6 I2C Interface ...................................................................... 8 I2C Device Addressing ................................................ 8 I2C Clock Stretching .................................................... 8 Format for Register Write and Read ........................... 9 Operating Modes of I2C Commands ............................. 10 Normal Mode ............................................................. 10 Setup Mode ............................................................... 10 Device Operation Modes ................................................ 10 Active Mode ............................................................... 10 Periodic Sleep Mode ................................................. 10 Deep Sleep Mode ...................................................... 10 Sleep Control Pin ............................................................ 10 Interrupt Pin to Master ................................................... 10 LED Dimming .................................................................. 10 LED Dimming Mode 1: Change Intensity on ON/OFF Button Status ............................................................................... 11 LED Dimming Mode 2: Flash Intensity on ON Button Status ........................................................................ 11 LED Dimming Mode 3: Hold Intensity After ON/OFF Button Transition .......................................................................... 12 LED Dimming Mode 4: Toggle Intensity on ON/OFF or OFF/ON Button Transitions .............................................. 12 Registers ......................................................................... 13 Register Map ............................................................. 13 Device IDs ................................................................. 17 CapSense Express Commands ................................ 17 Register Conventions ................................................ 17 Layout Guidelines and Best Practices ......................... 18 CapSense Button Shapes ......................................... 18 Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Button Layout Design ................................................ 18 Recommended via Hole Placement .......................... 18 Example PCB Layout Design with Two CapSense Buttons and Two LEDs .................................................................. 20 Operating Voltages ......................................................... 21 CapSense Constraints ................................................... 21 Absolute Maximum Ratings .......................................... 22 Operating Temperature .................................................. 22 Electrical Specifications ................................................ 23 DC Electrical Specifications ...................................... 23 CapSense Electrical Characteristics ......................... 26 AC Electrical Specifications ....................................... 26 Appendix ......................................................................... 29 Examples of Frequently Used I2C Commands ......... 29 Ordering Information ...................................................... 30 Ordering Code Definitions ......................................... 30 Thermal Impedances ..................................................... 31 Solder Reflow Specifications ........................................ 31 Package Diagrams .......................................................... 32 Acronyms ........................................................................ 35 Reference Documents .................................................... 35 Document Conventions ................................................. 35 Units of Measure ....................................................... 35 Numeric Conventions ................................................ 35 Glossary .......................................................................... 36 Errata ............................................................................... 41 CY8C20110 ............................................................... 41 CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0 .................................. 42 Document History Page ................................................. 44 Sales, Solutions, and Legal Information ...................... 46 Worldwide Sales and Design Support ....................... 46 Products .................................................................... 46 PSoC® Solutions ...................................................... 46 Cypress Developer Community ................................. 46 Technical Support ..................................................... 46 Page 2 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Pinouts -16-Pin QFN Figure 1. 16-pin QFN (3 × 3 × 0.6 mm) (no e-pad) pinout [1] QFN Pin Definitions 16-pin QFN (no e-pad) [1, 2] Pin No. 1 Pin Name Description GP0[0] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 2 GP0[1] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 3 I2C SCL I2C clock 4 I2C SDA I2C data 5 GP1[0] 6 GP1[1] 7 VSS 8 GP1[2] [3] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Ground connection [3] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 9 GP1[3] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 10 GP1[4] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 11 XRES Active high external reset with internal pull-down 12 GP0[2] 13 VDD 14 GP0[3] 15 CSInt 16 GP0[4] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Supply voltage Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Integrating capacitor Input. The external capacitance is required only if 5:1 SNR cannot be achieved. Typical range is 1 nF to 4.7 nF Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Notes 1. CY8C20110 (10 Buttons) / CY8C20180 (8 Buttons) / CY8C20160 (6 Buttons) / CY8C20140 (4 Buttons) 2. 8/6/4 available configurable IOs can be configured to any of the 10 IOs of the package. After any of the 8/6/4 IOs are chosen, the remaining 2/4/6 IOs of the package are not available for any functionality. 3. Avoid using GP1[1] and GP1[2] for driving LEDs. These two pins have special functions during power-up which is used at factory. LEDs connected to these two pins blink during the power-up of the device. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 3 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Pinouts - 16-Pin SOIC Figure 2. 16-pin SOIC (150 Mils) pinout [4] Pin Definitions 16-pin SOIC [4, 5] Pin No. Name Description 1 GP0[3] 2 CSint 3 GP0[4] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 4 GP0[0] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 5 GP0[1] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 6 I2C SCL I2C clock 7 I2C I2C data 8 GP1[0] 9 GP1[1] VSS 11 Integrating capacitor input. The external capacitance is required only if 5:1 SNR cannot be achieved. Typical range is 1 nF to 4.7 nF. SDA 10 GP1[2] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO [6] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Ground connection [6] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 12 GP1[3] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 13 GP1[4] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 14 XRES Active high external reset with internal pull-down 15 GP0[2] 16 VDD Configurable as CapSense or GPIO Supply voltage Notes 4. CY8C20110 (10 Buttons) / CY8C20180 (8 Buttons) / CY8C20160 (6 Buttons) / CY8C20140 (4 Buttons) 5. 8/6/4 available configurable IOs can be configured to any of the 10 IOs of the package. After any of the 8/6/4 IOs are chosen, the remaining 2/4/6 IOs of the package are not available for any functionality. 6. Avoid using GP1[1] and GP1[2] for driving LEDs. These two pins have special functions during power-up which is used at factory. LEDs connected to these two pins blink during the power-up of the device. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 4 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Pinouts - 8-pin SOIC Figure 3. 8-pin SOIC (150 Mils) pinout CY8C20142 (4 Button) Pin Definitions 8-pin SOIC CY8C20142 (4 Button) Pin No. Name Description 1 VSS 2 I2C SCL I2C Clock 3 I2C SDA I2C Data 4 GP1[0] [7] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 5 [7] GP1[1] Ground Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 6 GP0[0] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 7 GP0[1] Configurable as CapSense or GPIO 8 VDD Supply voltage Important Note For information on the preferred dimensions for mounting QFN packages, see the "Application Notes for Surface Mount Assembly of Amkor's MicroLeadFrame (MLF) Packages" available at http://www.amkor.com. Note 7. Avoid using GP1[0] and GP1[1] for driving LED. These two pins have special functions during power up which is used at factory. LEDs connected to these two pins will blink during power up of the device. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 5 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Typical Circuits Figure 4. Circuit 1 – Five Buttons and Five LEDs with I2C Interface Capsense sensor B2 B3 VDD_CE VDD_CE R1 C1 R2 560E 1.2nF 560E C2 0.1uF R10 330E 560E 2 3 4 GP0[3] 13 VDD 14 15 GPO[1] XRES CY8C20110 I2C_SCL GP1[4] I2C_SDA GP1[3] 5 GP1[2] 330E R7 12 B4 Capsense sensor R6 560E 10 R9 560E D3 LED 9 R11 560E D4 LED 11 VDD_CE 8 R8 LED GPO[2] VSS D2 GPO[0] 7 VDD_CE 560E 1 GP1[1] R4 4.7K R5 GP1[0] I 2C CO MM I NT ER FAC E R3 4.7K LED 6 D1 CSint U1 GPO[4] 16 VDD_CE R12 R13 R14 560E 560E 560E D5 LED VDD_CE B1 B0 Capsense sensor Figure 5. Circuit 2 – Two Buttons and Two LEDs with I2C Interface Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 6 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Typical Circuits (continued) Figure 6. Circuit 3 – Compatibility with 1.8 V I2C Signaling [8, 9] Figure 7. Circuit 4 – Powering Down CapSense Express Device for Low Power Requirements [10] Output enable LDO Output VDD LED Master Or Host CapSense Express I2C Pull UPs SDA I2C BUS SCL Notes 8. 1.8 V VDD_I2C VDD_CE and 2.4 V VDD_CE 5.25 V. 9. The I2C drive mode of the CapSense device should be configured properly before using in an I2C environment with external pull-ups. Please refer to I2C_ADDR_DM register and its factory setting. 10. For low power requirements, if VDD is to be turned off, this concept can be used. The requirement is that the VDDs of CapSense Express, I2C pull-ups, and LEDs should be from the same source such that turning off the VDD ensures that no signal is applied to the device while it is unpowered. The I2C signals should not be driven high by the master in this situation. If a port pin or group of port pins of the master can cater to the power supply requirements of the circuit, the LDO can be avoided. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 7 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 I2C Interface The CapSense Express devices support the industry standard I2C protocol, which can be used for: ■ Configuring the device ■ Reading the status and data registers of the device ■ Controlling device operation ■ Executing commands The I2C address can be modified during configuration. I2C Device Addressing The device uses a seven bit addressing protocol. The I2C data transfer is always initiated by the master sending a one byte address: the first 7 bits contain the address and the LSB indicates the data transfer direction. Zero in the LSB bit indicates the write transaction from master and one indicates read transfer by the master. The following table shows examples for different I2C addresses. Table 1. I2C Address Examples 7-bit Slave Address D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 8-bit Slave Address 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0(W) 02 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1(R) 03 75 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 0(W) 96 75 1 0 0 1 0 1 1 1(W) 97 I2C Clock Stretching ‘Clock stretching’ or ‘bus stalling’ in I2C communication protocol is a state in which the slave holds the SCL line low to indicate that it is busy. In this condition, the master is expected to wait till the SCL is released by the slave. When an I2C master communicates with the CapSense Express device, the CapSense Express stalls the I2C bus after the reception of each byte (that is, just before the ACK/NAK bit) until processing of the byte is complete and critical internal functions are executed. Use a fully I2C compliant master to communicate with the CapSense Express device. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J If the I2C master does not support clock stretching (a bit banged software I2C Master), the master must wait for a specific amount of time (as specified in Format for Register Write and Read on page 9) for each register write and read operation before the next bit is transmitted. The I2C master must check the SCL status (it should be high) before the I2C master initiates any data transfer with CapSense Express. If the master fails to do so and continues to communicate, the communication is erroneous. The following diagrams represent the ACK time delays shown in Format for Register Write and Read on page 9 for write and read. Page 8 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Figure 8. Write ACK Time Representation [11] Figure 9. Read ACK Time Representation [12] Format for Register Write and Read Register write format Start Slave Addr + W A Reg Addr A Data Register read format Start Slave Addr + W Start Slave Addr + R A A Reg Addr Data A A Stop Data Legends: Master Slave A A Data ..... A ..... Data Data N A Stop Stop A – ACK N – NAK Notes 11. Time to process the received data. 12. Time taken for the device to send next byte. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 9 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Operating Modes of I2C Commands Normal Mode In normal mode of operation, the acknowledgment time[13] is optimized. The timings remain approximately the same for different configurations of the slave. To reduce the acknowledgment times in normal mode, the registers 0x06–0x09, 0x0C, 0x0D, 0x10–0x17, 0x50, 0x51, 0x57–0x60, 0x7E are given only read access. Write to these registers can be done only in setup mode. Setup Mode All registers have read and write access (except those which are read only) in this mode. The acknowledgment times[14] are longer compared to normal mode. When CapSense scanning is disabled (command code 0x0A in command register 0xA0), the acknowledgment times can be improved to values similar to the normal mode of operation. Device Operation Modes CapSense Express devices are configured to operate in any of the following three modes to meet different power consumption requirements: ■ Active Mode ■ Periodic Sleep Mode ■ Deep Sleep Mode Active Mode In the active mode, all the device blocks including the CapSense sub system are powered. Typical active current consumption of the device across the operating voltage range is 1.5 mA. Periodic Sleep Mode Sleep mode provides an intermediate power operation mode. It is enabled by configuring the corresponding device registers (0x7E, 0x7F). The device goes into sleep after there is no event for stay awake counter (Reg 0x80) number of sleep intervals. The device wakes up on sleep interval and It scans the capacitive sensors before going back to sleep again. If any sensor is active, then the device wakes up. The device can also wake up from sleep mode with a GPIO interrupt. The sleep interval is configured through registers. The following sleep intervals are supported in CapSense Express: ■ 1.95 ms (512 Hz) ■ 15.6 ms (64 Hz) ■ 125 ms (8 Hz) ■ 1 s (1 Hz) 1. Write configuration data to registers with sleep interval being 8 Hz or 1 Hz 2. Save the settings to FLASH 3. Change the sleep interval as per design. Deep Sleep Mode Deep sleep mode provides the lowest power consumption because there is no operation running. All CapSense scanning is disabled during this mode. In this mode, the device wakes up only using an external GPIO interrupt. A sleep timer interrupt cannot wake up a device from deep sleep mode. This is treated as a continuous sleep mode without periodic wakeups. Refer to the application note “CapSense Express Power and Sleep Considerations” - AN44209 for details on different sleep modes. To get the lowest power during this mode the sleep timer frequency should be set to 1 Hz. Sleep Control Pin The devices require a dedicated sleep control pin to enable reliable I2C communication in case any sleep mode is enabled. This is achieved by pulling the sleep control pin low to wake up the device and start I2C communication. The sleep control pin can be configured on any GPIO. Interrupt Pin to Master To inform the master of any button press a GPIO can be configured as interrupt output and all CapSense buttons can be connected to this GPIO with an OR logic operator. This can be configured using the software tool. LED Dimming To change the brightness and intensity of the LEDs, the host master (MCU, MPU, DSP, and so on) must send I2C commands and program the PWM registers to enable output pins, set duty cycle, and mode configuration. The single PWM source is connected to all GPIO pins and has a common user defined duty cycle. Each PWM enabled pin has two possible outputs: PWM and 0/1 (depending on the configuration). Four different modes of LED[15] dimming are possible, as shown in LED Dimming Mode 1: Change Intensity on ON/OFF Button Status on page 11 to LED Dimming Mode 4: Toggle Intensity on ON/OFF or OFF/ON Button Transitions on page 12. The operation mode and duty cycle of the PWM enabled pins is common. This means that one pin cannot behave as in Mode 1 and another pin as in Mode 2. The sleep interval should be 8 Hz or 1 Hz when using save to flash command. The configuration sequence should be: Notes 13. Errata: The worst case Acknowledgment time for all critical registers is 140 µs. For more information, see “Errata” on page 41. 14. Errata: The CY8C20110 device acknowledges to host within 100 µs, but is not accessible for any other operation until configuration is successfully stored into flash memory and the device is ready to execute the next command. For more information, see “Errata” on page 41. 15. Errata: Applicable only for CY8C20110 device. For more information, see “Errata” on page 41. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 10 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 LED Dimming Mode 1: Change Intensity on ON/OFF Button Status LED Dimming Mode 2: Flash Intensity on ON Button Status Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 11 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 LED Dimming Mode 3: Hold Intensity After ON/OFF Button Transition LED Dimming Mode 4: Toggle Intensity on ON/OFF or OFF/ON Button Transitions Note LED DIMMING is available only in CY8C20110. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 12 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Registers Register Map Name INPUT_PORT0 INPUT_PORT1 STATUS_POR0 STATUS_POR1 OUTPUT_PORT0 OUTPUT_PORT1 CS_ENABL0 CS_ENABLE GPIO_ENABLE0 GPIO_ENABLE1 INVERSION_MASK0 INVERSION_MASK1 INT_MASK0 INT_MASK1 STATUS_HOLD_MSK0 STATUS_HOLD_MSK1 DM_PULL_UP0 DM_STRONG0 DM_HIGHZ0 DM_OD_LOW0 DM_PULL_UP1 DM_STRONG1 DM_HIGHZ1 DM_OD_LOW1 PWM_ENABLE0[18] PWM_ENABLE1[18] PWM_MODE_DC[18] PWM_DELAY[18] OP_SEL_00 OPR1_PRT0_00 OPR1_PRT1_00 OPR2_PRT0_00 OPR2_PRT1_00 OP_SEL_01 OPR1_PRT0_01 OPR1_PRT1_01 OPR2_PRT0_01 OPR2_PRT1_01 OP_SEL_02 Register Address (in Hex) 00 01 02 03 04 05 06 07 08 09 0A 0B 0C 0D 0E 0F 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 1A 1B 1C 1D 1E 1F 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 Access R R R R W W RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW Factory Default Writable Only in of Registers SETUP Mode [16] Values(in Hex) – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 – 00 – 00 YES 00 YES 00 – 03/1F [17] – 03/1F [17] YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 YES 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 I2C Max ACK Time in Normal Mode (ms) 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 – – – – 0.11 0.11 – – 0.11 0.11 – – – – – – – – 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 I2C Max ACK Time in Setup Mode (ms) – – – – – – 11 11 11 11 – – 11 11 – – 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 – – – – 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 Notes 16. These registers are writable only after entering into setup mode. All the other registers available for read and write in Normal as well as in Setup mode. 17. The factory defaults of Reg 0x0E and 0x0F is 0x03 for 20142 device and 0x1F for 20140/60/80/10 devices. 18. Errata: These registers are available only in CY8C20110. For more information, see “Errata” on page 41. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 13 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Register Map (continued) Name OPR1_PRT0_02 OPR1_PRT1_02 OPR2_PRT0_02 OPR2_PRT1_02 OP_SEL_03 OPR1_PRT0_03 OPR1_PRT1_03 OPR2_PRT0_03 OPR2_PRT1_03 OP_SEL_04 OPR1_PRT0_04 OPR1_PRT1_04 OPR2_PRT0_04 OPR2_PRT1_04 OP_SEL_10 OPR1_PRT0_10 OPR1_PRT1_10 OPR2_PRT0_10 OPR2_PRT1_10 OP_SEL_11 OPR1_PRT0_11 OPR1_PRT1_11 OPR2_PRT0_11 OPR2_PRT1_11 OP_SEL_12 OPR1_PRT0_12 OPR1_PRT1_12 OPR2_PRT0_12 OPR2_PRT1_12 OP_SEL_13 OPR1_PRT0_13 OPR1_PRT1_13 OPR2_PRT0_13 OPR2_PRT1_13 OP_SEL_14 OPR1_PRT0_14 OPR1_PRT1_14 OPR2_PRT0_14 OPR2_PRT1_14 CS_NOISE_TH CS_BL_UPD_TH CS_SETL_TIME CS_OTH_SET CS_HYSTERISIS CS_DEBOUNCE Register Address (in Hex) 27 28 29 2A 2B 2C 2D 2E 2F 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 3A 3B 3C 3D 3E 3F 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 4A 4B 4C 4D 4E 4F 50 51 52 53 Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Access RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW Factory Default Writable Only in of Registers SETUP Mode [16] Values(in Hex) – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 00 – 28 – 64 YES A0 YES 00 – 0A – 03 I2C Max ACK Time in Normal Mode (ms) 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.11 0.11 – – 0.11 0.11 I2C Max ACK Time in Setup Mode (ms) 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 35 35 11 11 Page 14 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Register Map (continued) Name CS_NEG_NOISE_TH CS_LOW_BL_RST CS_FILTERING[19,20] CS_SCAN_POS_00 CS_SCAN_POS_01 CS_SCAN_POS_02 CS_SCAN_POS_03 CS_SCAN_POS_04 CS_SCAN_POS_10 CS_SCAN_POS_11 CS_SCAN_POS_12 CS_SCAN_POS_13 CS_SCAN_POS_14 CS_FINGER_TH_00 CS_FINGER_TH_01 CS_FINGER_TH_02 CS_FINGER_TH_03 CS_FINGER_TH_04 CS_FINGER_TH_10 CS_FINGER_TH_11 CS_FINGER_TH_12 CS_FINGER_TH_13 CS_FINGER_TH_14 CS_IDAC_00 CS_IDAC_01 CS_IDAC_02 CS_IDAC_03 CS_IDAC_04 CS_IDAC_10 CS_IDAC_11 CS_IDAC_12 CS_IDAC_13 CS_IDAC_14 I2C_ADDR_LOCK DEVICE_ID DEVICE_STATUS I2C_ADDR_DM Register Address (in Hex) 54 55 56 57 58 59 5A 5B 5C 5D 5E 5F 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 6A 6B 6C 6D 6E 6F 70 71 72 73 74 75 [21] 76 [21] 77 [21] 78 [21] 79 7A 7B 7C Access RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW RW R R RW Factory Default Writable Only in Values of Registers [16] SETUP Mode (in Hex) – 14 – 14 – 20 YES FF YES FF YES FF YES FF YES FF YES FF YES FF YES FF YES FF YES FF – 64 – 64 – 64 – 64 – 64 – 64 – 64 – 64 – 64 – 64 – 0A – 0A – 0A – 0A – 0A – 0A – 0A – 0A – 0A – 0A – – – – 01 42/40/60/80/10 [22] 03 00 I2C Max ACK Time in Normal Mode (ms) 0.11 0.11 0.11 – – – – – – – – – – 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 0.14 I2C Max ACK Time in Setup Mode (ms) 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 0.11 0.11 0.11 0.11 11 11 11 11 Notes 19. Errata: Added two on-chip filtering algorithms for improved CapSense performance and better noise immunity. 20. Errata: If a finger is on the sensor, during power-up the sensor triggers and the baseline gets stuck. Baseline is stuck only when Averaging Filter is enabled. For more information, see “Errata” on page 41. 21. The register 0x75–0x78, 0x7,D and 0x8A–0x8D are reserved. 22. The Device ID for different devices are tabulated in Device IDs on page 17. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 15 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Register Map (continued) Name SLEEP_PIN SLEEP_CTRL SLEEP_SA_CNTR CS_READ_BUTTON CS_READ_BLM CS_READ_BLL CS_READ_DIFFM CS_READ_DIFFL CS_READ_RAWM CS_READ_RAWL CS_READ_STATUSM CS_READ_STATUSL COMMAND_REG Register Address (in Hex) 7D [24] 7E 7F 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 8A [24] 8B [24] 8C [24] 8D [24] A0 Access Factory Default Writable Only in of Registers SETUP Mode [16] Values(in Hex) I2C Max ACK Time in Normal Mode (ms) I2C Max ACK Time in Setup Mode (ms) RW RW RW RW R R R R R R R R YES – – – – – – – – – – – 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 0.12 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 11 W – 00 0.1 11 Notes 23. These registers are writable only after entering into setup mode. All the other registers available for read and write in Normal as well as in Setup mode. 24. The register 0x75–0x78, 0x7D and 0x8A–0x8D are reserved. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 16 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Device IDs Part Number Device ID CY8C20142 42 CY8C20140 40 CY8C20160 60 CY8C20180 80 CY8C20110 10 Note All the Ack times specified are maximum values with all buttons enabled and filer enabled with maximum order. CapSense Express Commands Command [25] W 00 A0 00 [26] Description Executable Mode Get firmware revision Setup/Normal Duration the Device is not accessible after ACK (in ms) 0 Store current configuration to NVM Setup/Normal 120 W 00 A0 02 Restore factory configuration Setup/Normal 120 W 00 A0 03 Write NVM POR defaults Setup/Normal 120 W 00 A0 04 Read NVM POR defaults Setup/Normal 5 W 00 A0 01 W 00 A0 05 Read current configurations (RAM) Setup/Normal 5 W 00 A0 06 Reconfigure device (POR) Setup 5 W 00 A0 07 Set normal mode of operation Setup/Normal 0 W 00 A0 08 Set setup mode of operation Setup/Normal 0 W 00 A0 09 Start scan Setup/Normal 10 W 00 A0 0A Stop scan Setup/Normal 5 W 00 A0 0B Get CapSense scan status Setup/Normal 0 Register Conventions This table lists the register conventions that are specific to this section. Convention RW R Description Register has both read and write access Register has only read access Notes 25. The ‘W’ indicates the write transfer. The next byte of data represents the 7-bit I2C address. 26. Errata: Save to flash command fails when the sleep interval is set to 512 or 64 Hz. For more information, see “Errata” on page 41. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 17 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Layout Guidelines and Best Practices CapSense Button Shapes Button Layout Design X: Button to ground clearance (Refer to Table 2 on page 18) Y: Button to button clearance (Refer to Table 2 on page 18) Recommended via Hole Placement Table 2. Recommended Layout Guidelines and Best Practices S. No. Category Min Max Recommendations/Remarks – – Solid round pattern, round with LED hole, rectangle with round corners 5 mm 15 mm Equal to button ground clearance – 0.5 mm 2 mm 1 Button shape 2 Button size 3 Button-button spacing 4 Button ground clearance 5 Ground flood-top layer – – Hatched ground 7-mil trace and 45-mil grid (15% filling) 6 Ground flood-bottom layer – – Hatched ground 7-mil trace and 70-mil grid (10% filling) 7 Trace length from sensor to PSoC-buttons – 200 mm < 100 mm 8 Trace width 0.17 mm 0.20 mm 0.17 mm (7-mil) Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J 10 mm 8 mm [X] Button ground clearance = Overlay thickness [Y] Page 18 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Table 2. Recommended Layout Guidelines and Best Practices (continued) S. No. Category Min Max Recommendations/Remarks 9 Trace routing – – Traces should be routed on the non sensor side. If any non CapSense trace crosses CapSense trace, ensure that intersection is orthogonal. 10 Via position for the sensors – – Via should be placed near the edge of the button/slider to reduce trace length thereby increasing sensitivity. 11 Via hole size for sensor traces – – 10-mil 12 Number of vias on sensor trace 1 2 1 13 CapSense series resistor placement – 10 mm Place CapSense series resistors close to PSoC for noise suppression. CapSense resistors have highest priority place them first. 14 Distance between any CapSense trace to ground flood 10-mil 20-mil 20-mil 15 Device placement – – Mount the device on the layer opposite to sensor. The CapSense trace length between the device and sensors should be minimum 16 Placement of components in 2-layer PCB – – Top layer – sensor pads and bottom layer – PSoC, other components, and traces. 17 Placement of components in 4-layer PCB – – Top layer – sensor pads, second layer – CapSense traces, third layer – hatched ground, bottom layer – PSoC, other components, and non CapSense traces 18 Overlay material – – Should to be non conductive material. Glass, ABS plastic, Formica 19 Overlay adhesives – – Adhesive should be non conductive and dielectrically homogenous. 467MP and 468MP adhesives made by 3M are recommended. 20 LED back lighting – – Cut a hole in the sensor pad and use rear mountable LEDs. Refer the PCB layout below. 21 Board thickness – – Standard board thickness for CapSense FR4 based designs is 1.6 mm. The recommended maximum overlay thickness is 5 mm (with external CSInt)/ 2 mm (without external CSInt). For more details refer to the section “The Integrating Capacitor (Cint)” in AN53490. Note Some device packages does not have CSInt pin and external capacitor cannot be connected. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 19 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Example PCB Layout Design with Two CapSense Buttons and Two LEDs Figure 10. Top Layer Figure 11. Bottom Layer Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 20 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Operating Voltages For details on I2C 1x ACK time, refer to Register Map on page 13 and CapSense Express Commands on page 17. I2C 4x ACK time is approximately four times the values mentioned in these tables. CapSense Constraints Parameter Min Typ Max Units Parasitic capacitance (CP) of the CapSense sensor – – 30 pF Supply voltage variation (VDD) – – ±5% – Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Notes Page 21 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Absolute Maximum Ratings Parameter Description Min Typ Max Unit Notes –55 25 +100 °C Higher storage temperatures reduce data retention time. Recommended storage temperature is +25 °C ± 25 °C (0 °C to 50 °C). Extended duration storage temperatures above 65 °C degrade reliability – 125 See Package label °C See package label – 72 Hours TSTG Storage temperature TBAKETEMP Bake temperature tBAKETIME Bake time TA Ambient temperature with power applied –40 – +85 °C VDD Supply voltage on VDD relative to VSS –0.5 – +6.0 V VIO DC input voltage VSS – 0.5 – VDD + 0.5 V VIOZ DC voltage applied to tristate VSS – 0.5 – VDD + 0.5 V IMIO Maximum current into any GPIO pin –25 – +50 mA ESD Electro static discharge voltage 2000 – – V LU Latch-up current – – 200 mA Human body model ESD Operating Temperature Min Typ Max Unit TA Parameter Ambient temperature Description –40 – +85 °C TJ Junction temperature –40 – +100 °C Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Notes Page 22 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Electrical Specifications DC Electrical Specifications DC Chip Level Specifications Table 3. DC Chip Level Specifications Parameter Description Min Typ Max Unit Notes VDD Supply voltage 2.40 – 5.25 V IDD Supply current – 1.5 2.5 mA Conditions are VDD = 3.10 V, TA = 25 °C ISB Deep sleep mode current with POR and LVD active – 2.6 4 µA VDD = 2.55 V, 0 °C < TA < 40 °C ISB Deep sleep mode current with POR and LVD active – 2.8 5 µA VDD = 3.3 V, –40 °C < TA < 85 °C ISB Deep sleep mode current with POR and LVD active – 5.2 6.4 µA VDD = 5.25 V, –40 °C < TA < 85 °C DC GPIO Specifications This table lists guaranteed maximum and minimum specifications for the voltage and temperature ranges: 4.75 V to 5.25 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C, 3.10 V to 3.6 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C. Typical parameters apply to 5 V and 3.3 V at 25 °C and are for design guidance only. Table 4. 5-V and 3.3-V DC GPIO Specifications Typ Max Unit Notes VOH1 Parameter High output voltage on Port 0 pins VDD – 0.2 Description Min – – V IOH < 10 µA, VDD > 3.10 V, maximum of 20 mA source current in all I/Os. VOH2 High output voltage on Port 0 pins VDD – 0.9 – – V IOH = 1 mA, VDD > 3.10 V, maximum of 20 mA source current in all I/Os. VOH3 High output voltage on Port 1 pins VDD – 0.2 – – V IOH < 10 µA, VDD > 3.10 V, maximum of 20 mA source current in all I/Os. VOH4 High output voltage on Port 1 pins VDD – 0.9 – – V IOH = 5 mA, VDD > 3.10 V, maximum of 20 mA source current in all I/Os. VOL Low output voltage – – 0.75 V IOL = 20 mA/pin, VDD > 3.10, maximum of 40/60 mA sink current on even port pins and of 40/60 mA sink current on odd port pins.[27] IOH1 High output current on Port 0 pins 0.01 – 1 mA VDD 3.1 V, maximum of 20 mA source current in all IOs IOH2 High output current on Port 1 pins 0.01 – 5 mA VDD 3.1 V, maximum of 20 mA source current in all IOs IOL Low output current – – 20 mA VDD 3.1 V, maximum of 60 mA sink current on pins P0_2, P1_2, P1_3, P1_4 and 60 mA sink current on pins P0_0, P0_1, P0_3, P0_4, P1_0, P1_1 VIL Input low voltage – – 0.75 V VDD = 3.10 V to 3.6 V. VIH Input high voltage 1.6 – – V VDD = 3.10 V to 3.6 V. VIL Input low voltage – – 0.8 V VDD = 4.75 V to 5.25 V. VIH Input high voltage 2.0 – – V VDD = 4.75 V to 5.25 V. Note 27. The maximum sink current is 40 mA for 20140 and 20142 devices and for all other devices the maximum sink current is 60 mA. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 23 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Table 4. 5-V and 3.3-V DC GPIO Specifications (continued) Min Typ Max Unit VH Parameter Input hysteresis voltage Description – 140 – mV – Notes IIL Input leakage – 1 – nA Gross tested to 1 µA. CIN Capacitive load on pins as input 0.5 1.7 5 pF Package and pin dependent. Temp = 25 °C. COUT Capacitive load on pins as output 0.5 1.7 5 pF Package and pin dependent. Temp = 25 °C. This table lists guaranteed maximum and minimum specifications for the voltage and temperature ranges: 2.4 V to 2.90 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C, respectively. Typical parameters apply to 2.7 V at 25 °C and are for design guidance only. Table 5. 2.7-V DC GPIO Specifications Parameter Description Min Typ Max Unit Notes VOH1 High output voltage on Port 0 pins VDD – 0.2 – – V IOH <10 µA, maximum of 10 mA source current in all I/Os. VOH2 High output voltage on Port 0 pins VDD – 0.5 – – V IOH = 0.2 mA, maximum of 10 mA source current in all I/Os. VOH3 High output voltage on Port 1 pins VDD – 0.2 – – V IOH <10 µA, maximum of 10 mA source current in all I/Os. VOH4 High output voltage on Port 1 pins VDD – 0.5 – – V IOH = 2 mA, maximum of 10 mA source current in all I/Os. VOL1 Low output voltage – – 0.75 V IOL = 10 mA/pin, VDD > 3.10, maximum of 20/30 mA sink current on even port pins and of 20/30 mA sink current on odd port pins. [28] IOH High output current 0.01 – 2 mA VDD < 2.9 V, maximum of 10 mA source current in all I/Os IOL1 Low output current on Port 0 pins – – 10 mA VDD < 2.9 V, maximum of 30 mA sink current on pins P0_2, P1_2, P1_3, P1_4 and 30 mA sink current on pins P0_0, P0_1, P0_3, P0_4, P1_0, P1_1 IOL2 Low output current – – 20 mA VDD < 2.9 V, maximum of 50 mA sink current on pins P0_2, P1_2, P1_3, P1_4 and 50 mA sink current on pins P0_0, P0_1, P0_3, P0_4, P1_0, P1_1 VIL Input low voltage – – 0.75 V VDD = 2.4 to 2.90 V and 3.10 V to 3.6 V. VIH1 Input high voltage 1.4 – – V VDD = 2.4 to 2.7 V. VIH2 Input high voltage 1.6 – – V VDD = 2.7 to 2.90 V and 3.10 V to 3.6 V. VH Input hysteresis voltage – 60 – mV IIL Input leakage – 1 – nA Gross tested to 1 µA. CIN Capacitive load on pins as input 0.5 1.7 5 pF Package and pin dependent. Temp = 25 °C. COUT Capacitive load on pins as output 0.5 1.7 5 pF Package and pin dependent. Temp = 25 °C Note 28. The maximum sink current per port is 20 mA for 20140 and 20142 devices and for all other devices the maximum sink current is 30 mA. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 24 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 DC POR and LVD Specifications Table 6. DC POR and LVD Specifications Parameter VPPOR0 VPPOR1 VLVD0 VLVD2 VLVD6 Description VDD value for PPOR trip VDD = 2.7 V VDD = 3.3 V, 5 V VDD value for LVD trip VDD = 2.7 V VDD = 3.3 V VDD = 5 V Min Typ Max Unit – – 2.36 2.60 2.40 2.65 V V 2.39 2.75 3.98 2.45 2.92 4.05 2.51 2.99 4.12 V V V Notes VDD must be greater than or equal to 2.5 V during startup or internal reset. DC Flash Write Specifications This table lists guaranteed maximum and minimum specifications for the voltage and temperature ranges: 4.75 V to 5.25 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C, 3.10 V to 3.6 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C or 2.4 V to 2.90 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C, respectively. Typical parameters apply to 5 V, 3.3 V, or 2.7 V at 25 °C. These are for design guidance only. Flash Endurance and Retention specifications are valid only within the range: 25 °C ± 20 °C during the flash write operation. It is at the user’s own risk to operate out of this temperature range. If flash writing is done out of this temperature range, the endurance and data retention reduces. Table 7. DC Flash Write Specifications Symbol VDDIWRITE IDDP FlashENPB FlashDR Description Supply voltage for flash write operations Supply current for flash write operations Flash endurance Flash data retention Min 2.7 Typ – Max – Units V – 5 25 mA 50,000[29] 10 – – – – Notes – Erase/write cycles Years DC I2C Specifications This table lists guaranteed maximum and minimum specifications for the voltage and temperature ranges: 4.75 V to 5.25 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C, 3.10 V to 3.6 V and –40 °C < TA < 85 °C. Typical parameters apply to 5 V and 3.3 V at 25 °C and are for design guidance only. Table 8. DC I2C Specifications Symbol [30] VILI2C Description Input low level VIHI2C VOLP CI2C Input high level Low output voltage Capacitive load on I2C pins RPU Pull-up resistor Min – Typ – – 0.7 × VDD – 0.5 – – – 1.7 4 5.6 Max Units Notes 0.3 × VDD V 2.4 V VDD 2.9 V 3.1 V VDD 3.6 V 0.25 × VDD V 4.75 V VDD 5.25 V – V 2.4 V VDD 5.25 V 0.4 V IOL = 5 mA/pin 5 pF Package and pin dependent. Temp = 25 °C. 8 k – Notes 29. Commands involving flash writes (0x01, 0x02, 0x03) and flash read (0x04) must be executed only within the same VCC voltage range detected at POR (power on, or command 0x06) and above 2.7 V. 30. All GPIO meet the DC GPIO VIL and VIH specifications found in the DC GPIO Specifications sections. The I2C GPIO pins also meet the above specs. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 25 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 CapSense Electrical Characteristics Max (V) Typ (V) Min (V) Conditions for Supply Voltage 3.6 3.3 3.1 < 2.9 2.90 2.7 2.45 The device automatically reconfigures itself to work in 2.7 V mode of operation. > 2.9 or < 3.10 5.25 5.0 4.75 Result < 2.45 V This range is not recommended for CapSense usage. The scanning for CapSense parameters shuts down until the voltage returns to over 2.45 V. > 3.10 The device automatically reconfigures itself to work in 3.3 V mode of operation. < 2.4 V The device goes into reset. < 4.73 V The scanning for CapSense parameters shuts down until the voltage returns to over 4.73 V. AC Electrical Specifications AC Chip-Level Specifications Table 9. 5-V and 3.3-V AC Chip-Level Specifications Parameter Description Min Typ Max Units Notes F32K1 Internal low-speed oscillator (ILO) frequency 15 32 64 kHz Calculations during sleep operations are done based on ILO frequency. tXRST External reset pulse width 10 – – Us tPOWERUP Time from end of POR to CPU executing code – 150 – ms SRPOWER_UP Power supply slew rate – – 250 V/ms Min Typ Max Units Table 10. 2.7-V AC Chip-Level Specifications Parameter Description Notes F32K1 Internal low-speed oscillator (ILO) frequency 8 32 96 kHz Calculations during sleep operations are done based on ILO frequency. tXRST External reset pulse width 10 – – Us tPOWERUP Time from end of POR to CPU executing code – 600 – ms SRPOWER_UP Power supply slew rate – – 250 V/ms Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 26 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 AC GPIO Specifications Table 11. 5-V and 3.3-V AC GPIO Specifications Parameter Description Min Max Unit Notes tRise0 Rise time, strong mode, Cload = 50 pF, Port 0 15 80 ns VDD = 3.10 V to 3.6 V and 4.75 V to 5.25 V, 10% to 90% tRise1 Rise time, strong mode, Cload = 50 pF, Port 1 15 50 ns VDD = 3.10 V to 3.6 V, 10% to 90% tFall Fall time, strong mode, Cload = 50 pF, all ports 10 50 ns VDD = 3.10 V to 3.6 V and 4.75 V to 5.25 V, 10% to 90% Min Max Unit Notes Table 12. 2.7-V AC GPIO Specifications Parameter Description tRise0 Rise time, strong mode, Cload = 50 pF, Port 0 15 100 ns VDD = 2.4 V to 2.90 V, 10% to 90% tRise1 Rise time, strong mode, Cload = 50 pF, Port 1 15 70 ns VDD = 2.4 V to 2.90 V, 10% to 90% tFall Fall time, strong mode, Cload = 50 pF 10 70 ns VDD = 2.4 V to 2.90 V, 10% to 90% AC I2C Specifications Table 13. AC I2C Specifications Parameter Description Standard Mode Fast Mode Min Max Min Max 0 100 0 400 Units FSCLI2C SCL clock frequency tHDSTAI2C Hold time (repeated) START condition. After this period, the first clock pulse is generated 4.0 – 0.6 – µs tLOWI2C LOW period of the SCL clock 4.7 – 1.3 – µs tHIGHI2C HIGH period of the SCL clock 4.0 – 0.6 – µs tSUSTAI C Setup time for a repeated START condition 4.7 – 0.6 – µs tHDDATI2C Data hold time 0 – 0 – µs tSUDATI2C tSUSTOI2C tBUFI2C Data setup time 250 – 100 – ns Setup time for STOP condition 4.0 – 0.6 – µs BUS free time between a STOP and START condition 4.7 – 1.3 – µs Pulse width of spikes suppressed by the input filter – – 0 50 ns 2 tSPI2C Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Notes kbps Fast mode not supported for VDD < 3.0 V. Page 27 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Figure 12. Definition of Timing for Fast/Standard Mode on the I2C Bus I2C_SDA TSUDATI2C THDSTAI2C TSPI2C THDDATI2CTSUSTAI2C TBUFI2C I2C_SCL THIGHI2C TLOWI2C S START Condition Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J TSUSTOI2C Sr Repeated START Condition P S STOP Condition Page 28 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Appendix Examples of Frequently Used I2C Commands S. No. Requirement I2C commands [31] Comment 1 Enter into setup mode W 00 A0 08 2 Enter into normal mode W 00 A0 07 3 Load factory defaults to RAM registers W 00 A0 02 4 Do a software reset W 00 A0 08 W 00 A0 06 5 Save current configuration to flash[32] W 00 A0 01 6 Load factory defaults to RAM registers and save as user configuration W 00 A0 08 W 00 A0 02 W 00 A0 01 W 00 A0 06 Enter into setup mode Load factory defaults to SRAM Save the configuration to flash. Wait for time specified in CapSense Express Commands on page 17. Do software reset 7 Enable GP00 as CapSense button W 00 A0 08 W 00 06 01 W 00 A0 01 W 00 A0 06 Enter into setup mode Configuring CapSense buttons Save the configuration to flash. Wait for time specified in CapSense Express Commands on page 17. Do software reset 8 Read CapSense button(GP00) scan results W 00 81 01 W 00 82 R 00 RD. RD. RD. 9 Read CapSense button status register W 00 88 R 00 RD Enter into setup mode Do software reset Select CapSense button for reading scan result Set the read point to 82h Consecutive 6 reads get baseline, difference count and raw count (all two byte each) Set the read pointer to 88 Reading a byte gets status CapSense inputs Notes 31. The ‘W’ indicates the write transfer and the next byte of data represents the 7-bit I2C address. The I2C address is assumed to be ‘0’ in the above examples. Similarly ‘R’ indicates the read transfer followed by 7-bit address and data byte read operations. 32. Errata: Save to flash command fails when the sleep interval is set to 512 or 64 Hz. For more information, see “Errata” on page 41. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 29 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Ordering Information Table 14. Key Features and Ordering Information Package Diagram Ordering Code Package Type 001-09116 16-pin QFN [33] CY8C20110-LDX2I Operating Temperature CapSense Block GPIOs XRES Pin Industrial Yes 10 Yes CY8C20110-SX2I 51-85068 16-pin SOIC Industrial Yes 10 Yes CY8C20180-LDX2I 001-09116 16-pin QFN [33] Industrial Yes 08 Yes CY8C20180-SX2I 51-85068 16-pin SOIC Industrial Yes 08 Yes CY8C20160-LDX2I 001-09116 16-pin QFN [33] Industrial Yes 06 Yes CY8C20160-SX2I 51-85068 16-pin SOIC Industrial Yes 06 Yes CY8C20140-LDX2I 001-09116 16-pin QFN [33] Industrial Yes 04 Yes CY8C20140-SX2I 51-85068 16-pin SOIC Industrial Yes 04 Yes CY8C20142-SX1I 51-85066 8-pin SOIC Industrial Yes 04 No Note For die sales information, contact a local Cypress sales office or Field Applications Engineer (FAE). Ordering Code Definitions CY 8 C 201 XX - XX X X I Temperature Range: I = Industrial X = 2 or 1 2 = 16-pin device; 1 = 8-pin device Pb-free Package Type: XX = LD or S LD = 16-pin QFN; S = 16-pin SOIC Part Number Family Code Technology Code: C = CMOS Marketing Code: 8 = Controllers Company ID: CY = Cypress Note 33. Earlier termed as QFN package. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 30 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Thermal Impedances Table 15. Thermal Impedances by Package Typical JA[34] Package 16-pin QFN[1] 46 °C/W 16-pin SOIC 79.96 °C/W 8-pin SOIC 127.22 °C/W Solder Reflow Specifications Table 16. Solder Reflow Specifications Maximum Peak Temperature (TC) Maximum Time above TC – 5 °C 16-pin QFN[1] Package 260 C 30 seconds 16-pin SOIC 260 C 30 seconds 8-pin SOIC 260 C 30 seconds Note 34. TJ = TA + Power × JA. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 31 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Package Diagrams Figure 13. 16-pin Chip On Lead (3 × 3 × 0.6 mm) LG16A/LD16A (Sawn) Package Outline, 001-09116 001-09116 *H Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 32 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Package Diagrams (continued) Figure 14. 16-pin SOIC (150 Mils) S16.15/SZ16.15 Package Outline, 51-85068 51-85068 *E Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 33 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Package Diagrams (continued) Figure 15. 8-pin SOIC (150 Mils) S08.15/SZ08.15 Package Outline, 51-85066 51-85066 *F Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 34 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Acronyms Table 17 lists the acronyms that are used in this document. Table 17. Acronyms Used in this Datasheet Acronym AC Description Acronym Description alternating current LVD low voltage detect CMOS complementary metal oxide semiconductor MCU microcontroller unit DC direct current PCB printed circuit board EEPROM electrically erasable programmable read-only memory POR power on reset EMC electromagnetic compatibility PPOR precision power on reset GPIO general-purpose I/O PSoC® Programmable System-on-Chip I/O input/output PWM pulse width modulator IDAC current DAC QFN quad flat no leads ILO internal low speed oscillator RF radio frequency LCD liquid crystal display SOIC small-outline integrated circuit LDO low dropout regulator SRAM static random access memory LED light-emitting diode XRES external reset LSB least-significant bit Reference Documents CapSense Express Power and Sleep Considerations – AN44209 (001-44209) Application Notes for Surface Mount Assembly of Amkor's MicroLeadFrame (MLF) Packages – available at http://www.amkor.com. Document Conventions Units of Measure Table 18 lists the units of measures. Table 18. Units of Measure Symbol Unit of Measure Symbol Unit of Measure C degree Celsius mm millimeter Hz hertz ms millisecond kbps kilo bits per second mV millivolt kHz kilohertz nA nanoampere k kilohm ns nanosecond LSB least significant bit % percent µA microampere pF picofarad µF microfarad V volt µs microsecond W watt mA milliampere Numeric Conventions Hexadecimal numbers are represented with all letters in uppercase with an appended lowercase ‘h’ (for example, ‘14h’ or ‘3Ah’). Hexadecimal numbers may also be represented by a ‘0x’ prefix, the C coding convention. Binary numbers have an appended lowercase ‘b’ (for example, 01010100b’ or ‘01000011b’). Numbers not indicated by an ‘h’ or ‘b’ are decimals. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 35 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Glossary active high 1. A logic signal having its asserted state as the logic 1 state. 2. A logic signal having the logic 1 state as the higher voltage of the two states. analog blocks The basic programmable opamp circuits. These are SC (switched capacitor) and CT (continuous time) blocks. These blocks can be interconnected to provide ADCs, DACs, multi-pole filters, gain stages, and much more. analog-to-digital (ADC) A device that changes an analog signal to a digital signal of corresponding magnitude. Typically, an ADC converts a voltage to a digital number. The digital-to-analog (DAC) converter performs the reverse operation. Application programming interface (API) A series of software routines that comprise an interface between a computer application and lower level services and functions (for example, user modules and libraries). APIs serve as building blocks for programmers that create software applications. asynchronous A signal whose data is acknowledged or acted upon immediately, irrespective of any clock signal. Bandgap reference A stable voltage reference design that matches the positive temperature coefficient of VT with the negative temperature coefficient of VBE, to produce a zero temperature coefficient (ideally) reference. bandwidth 1. The frequency range of a message or information processing system measured in hertz. 2. The width of the spectral region over which an amplifier (or absorber) has substantial gain (or loss); it is sometimes represented more specifically as, for example, full width at half maximum. bias 1. A systematic deviation of a value from a reference value. 2. The amount by which the average of a set of values departs from a reference value. 3. The electrical, mechanical, magnetic, or other force (field) applied to a device to establish a reference level to operate the device. block 1. A functional unit that performs a single function, such as an oscillator. 2. A functional unit that may be configured to perform one of several functions, such as a digital PSoC block or an analog PSoC block. buffer 1. A storage area for data that is used to compensate for a speed difference, when transferring data from one device to another. Usually refers to an area reserved for I/O operations, into which data is read, or from which data is written. 2. A portion of memory set aside to store data, often before it is sent to an external device or as it is received from an external device. 3. An amplifier used to lower the output impedance of a system. bus 1. A named connection of nets. Bundling nets together in a bus makes it easier to route nets with similar routing patterns. 2. A set of signals performing a common function and carrying similar data. Typically represented using vector notation; for example, address[7:0]. 3. One or more conductors that serve as a common connection for a group of related devices. clock The device that generates a periodic signal with a fixed frequency and duty cycle. A clock is sometimes used to synchronize different logic blocks. comparator An electronic circuit that produces an output voltage or current whenever two input levels simultaneously satisfy predetermined amplitude requirements. compiler A program that translates a high level language, such as C, into machine language. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 36 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Glossary (continued) configuration space In PSoC devices, the register space accessed when the XIO bit, in the CPU_F register, is set to ‘1’. crystal oscillator An oscillator in which the frequency is controlled by a piezoelectric crystal. Typically a piezoelectric crystal is less sensitive to ambient temperature than other circuit components. cyclic redundancy A calculation used to detect errors in data communications, typically performed using a linear feedback shift check (CRC) register. Similar calculations may be used for a variety of other purposes such as data compression. data bus A bi-directional set of signals used by a computer to convey information from a memory location to the central processing unit and vice versa. More generally, a set of signals used to convey data between digital functions. debugger A hardware and software system that allows you to analyze the operation of the system under development. A debugger usually allows the developer to step through the firmware one step at a time, set break points, and analyze memory. dead band A period of time when neither of two or more signals are in their active state or in transition. digital blocks The 8-bit logic blocks that can act as a counter, timer, serial receiver, serial transmitter, CRC generator, pseudo-random number generator, or SPI. digital-to-analog (DAC) A device that changes a digital signal to an analog signal of corresponding magnitude. The analog-to-digital (ADC) converter performs the reverse operation. duty cycle The relationship of a clock period high time to its low time, expressed as a percent. emulator Duplicates (provides an emulation of) the functions of one system with a different system, so that the second system appears to behave like the first system. External Reset (XRES) An active high signal that is driven into the PSoC device. It causes all operation of the CPU and blocks to stop and return to a pre-defined state. Flash An electrically programmable and erasable, non-volatile technology that provides you the programmability and data storage of EPROMs, plus in-system erasability. Non-volatile means that the data is retained when power is OFF. Flash block The smallest amount of Flash ROM space that may be programmed at one time and the smallest amount of Flash space that may be protected. A Flash block holds 64 bytes. frequency The number of cycles or events per unit of time, for a periodic function. gain The ratio of output current, voltage, or power to input current, voltage, or power, respectively. Gain is usually expressed in dB. I2C A two-wire serial computer bus by Philips Semiconductors (now NXP Semiconductors). I2C is an Inter-Integrated Circuit. It is used to connect low-speed peripherals in an embedded system. The original system was created in the early 1980s as a battery control interface, but it was later used as a simple internal bus system for building control electronics. I2C uses only two bi-directional pins, clock and data, both running at +5 V and pulled high with resistors. The bus operates at 100 kbits/second in standard mode and 400 kbits/second in fast mode. ICE The in-circuit emulator that allows you to test the project in a hardware environment, while viewing the debugging device activity in a software environment (PSoC Designer). input/output (I/O) A device that introduces data into or extracts data from a system. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 37 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Glossary (continued) interrupt A suspension of a process, such as the execution of a computer program, caused by an event external to that process, and performed in such a way that the process can be resumed. interrupt service routine (ISR) A block of code that normal code execution is diverted to when the M8C receives a hardware interrupt. Many interrupt sources may each exist with its own priority and individual ISR code block. Each ISR code block ends with the RETI instruction, returning the device to the point in the program where it left normal program execution. jitter 1. A misplacement of the timing of a transition from its ideal position. A typical form of corruption that occurs on serial data streams. 2. The abrupt and unwanted variations of one or more signal characteristics, such as the interval between successive pulses, the amplitude of successive cycles, or the frequency or phase of successive cycles. low-voltage detect (LVD) A circuit that senses VDD and provides an interrupt to the system when VDD falls lower than a selected threshold. M8C An 8-bit Harvard-architecture microprocessor. The microprocessor coordinates all activity inside a PSoC by interfacing to the Flash, SRAM, and register space. master device A device that controls the timing for data exchanges between two devices. Or when devices are cascaded in width, the master device is the one that controls the timing for data exchanges between the cascaded devices and an external interface. The controlled device is called the slave device. microcontroller An integrated circuit chip that is designed primarily for control systems and products. In addition to a CPU, a microcontroller typically includes memory, timing circuits, and I/O circuitry. The reason for this is to permit the realization of a controller with a minimal quantity of chips, thus achieving maximal possible miniaturization. This in turn, reduces the volume and the cost of the controller. The microcontroller is normally not used for general-purpose computation as is a microprocessor. mixed-signal The reference to a circuit containing both analog and digital techniques and components. modulator A device that imposes a signal on a carrier. noise 1. A disturbance that affects a signal and that may distort the information carried by the signal. 2. The random variations of one or more characteristics of any entity such as voltage, current, or data. oscillator A circuit that may be crystal controlled and is used to generate a clock frequency. parity A technique for testing transmitting data. Typically, a binary digit is added to the data to make the sum of all the digits of the binary data either always even (even parity) or always odd (odd parity). Phase-locked loop (PLL) An electronic circuit that controls an oscillator so that it maintains a constant phase angle relative to a reference signal. pinouts The pin number assignment: the relation between the logical inputs and outputs of the PSoC device and their physical counterparts in the printed circuit board (PCB) package. Pinouts involve pin numbers as a link between schematic and PCB design (both being computer generated files) and may also involve pin names. port A group of pins, usually eight. Power on reset (POR) A circuit that forces the PSoC device to reset when the voltage is lower than a pre-set level. This is a type of hardware reset. PSoC® Cypress Semiconductor’s PSoC® is a registered trademark and Programmable System-on-Chip™ is a trademark of Cypress. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 38 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Glossary (continued) PSoC Designer™ The software for Cypress’ Programmable System-on-Chip technology. pulse width An output in the form of duty cycle which varies as a function of the applied measurand modulator (PWM) RAM An acronym for random access memory. A data-storage device from which data can be read out and new data can be written in. register A storage device with a specific capacity, such as a bit or byte. reset A means of bringing a system back to a know state. See hardware reset and software reset. ROM An acronym for read only memory. A data-storage device from which data can be read out, but new data cannot be written in. serial 1. Pertaining to a process in which all events occur one after the other. 2. Pertaining to the sequential or consecutive occurrence of two or more related activities in a single device or channel. settling time The time it takes for an output signal or value to stabilize after the input has changed from one value to another. shift register A memory storage device that sequentially shifts a word either left or right to output a stream of serial data. slave device A device that allows another device to control the timing for data exchanges between two devices. Or when devices are cascaded in width, the slave device is the one that allows another device to control the timing of data exchanges between the cascaded devices and an external interface. The controlling device is called the master device. SRAM An acronym for static random access memory. A memory device where you can store and retrieve data at a high rate of speed. The term static is used because, after a value is loaded into an SRAM cell, it remains unchanged until it is explicitly altered or until power is removed from the device. SROM An acronym for supervisory read only memory. The SROM holds code that is used to boot the device, calibrate circuitry, and perform Flash operations. The functions of the SROM may be accessed in normal user code, operating from Flash. stop bit A signal following a character or block that prepares the receiving device to receive the next character or block. synchronous 1. A signal whose data is not acknowledged or acted upon until the next active edge of a clock signal. 2. A system whose operation is synchronized by a clock signal. tri-state A function whose output can adopt three states: 0, 1, and Z (high-impedance). The function does not drive any value in the Z state and, in many respects, may be considered to be disconnected from the rest of the circuit, allowing another output to drive the same net. UART A UART or universal asynchronous receiver-transmitter translates between parallel bits of data and serial bits. user modules Pre-build, pre-tested hardware/firmware peripheral functions that take care of managing and configuring the lower level Analog and Digital PSoC Blocks. User Modules also provide high level API (Application Programming Interface) for the peripheral function. user space The bank 0 space of the register map. The registers in this bank are more likely to be modified during normal program execution and not just during initialization. Registers in bank 1 are most likely to be modified only during the initialization phase of the program. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 39 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Glossary (continued) VDD A name for a power net meaning "voltage drain." The most positive power supply signal. Usually 5 V or 3.3 V. VSS A name for a power net meaning "voltage source." The most negative power supply signal. watchdog timer A timer that must be serviced periodically. If it is not serviced, the CPU resets after a specified period of time. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 40 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Errata CY8C20110 This section discusses the changes between the firmware revisions ×15 and ×1B in CY8C20110 devices. All shipments of samples and production parts with firmware version ×1B will encounter the following changes from the previous (×15) version of the firmware. Cypress inventory has been rotated to the ×1B firmware by WW35, and all distributor inventory will be rotated by WW42 of 2008. Contact your local Cypress Sales Representative if you have questions. Part Numbers Affected Part Number Package Type Operating Range CY8C20110 All Packages Commercial / Industrial Product Status The CY8C20110 CapSense Express device has been qualified and is available in production quantities. From now on, customers are requested to use production release of CY8C20110 with x1B firmware version. CapSense Express CY8C20110 Errata Summary The following table defines the errata applicable to CY8C20110 device. Table 19. CapSense Express CY8C20110 Errata Summary Item Issues/Changes Description Fix Status 1 I2C ACK Reduction of I2C ACK timing response by the CapSense Express slave. Time in Normal Operating Mode. Worst case Ack timing of 140 µs for all critical registers (Input, Output, CapSense™ Global Parameters, CapSense Buttons/Slider Read-back Values). For more information on critical registers I2C timings, refer to application note AN44208 “CapSense Express - I2C Communication Timing Analysis”. 2 I2C ACK Reduction of I2C ACK timing response by the CapSense Express slave. Time when executing commands to store configuration in Flash. The CY8C20110 device ACK to host within 100 µs, but is not accessible for any other operation until configuration is successfully stored into flash memory and the device is ready to execute the next command. For more information on I2C timings, refer to Application Note AN44208 “CapSense Express - I2C Communication Timing Analysis”. 3 Data Filtering Addition of two on-chip filtering algorithms for im- Averaging Filter proved CapSense performance and better noise This smoothens the raw count data, and results in immunity. better noise immunity and performance. The filter can average 2, 4, 8, or 16 samples. Drop the Sample Filter This discards any acquired CapSense sample if an I2C communication occurs after the scan process has already started. For more information on filtering, refer to application note AN48430 “CapSense Express -Noise Filtering Methods”. 4 PWM Control The PWM output functionality has been added on Four configuration registers (18h, 19h, 1Ah, 1Bh) GPIOs to support LED brightness control. are added to set PWM duty cycles and modes. This set of registers provides options that support 15 duty cycles on PWM output and 4 modes of PWM operations, which are defined as Normal, Single Pulse, Delayed Transition, and Toggle Flip-Flop. For more information on duty cycles and PWM mode settings, refer to application note AN47716 “Configuring PWM for LED Intensity Control”. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 41 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Table 19. CapSense Express CY8C20110 Errata Summary (continued) Item Issues/Changes Description Fix Status 5 Save to Flash 6 False Triggering Dur- If a finger is on the sensor during power-up the No fix will be provided. Disable the Averaging Filter ing Power-Up sensor triggers and the baseline gets stuck. This if your design requires a finger on the sensor only happens when the Averaging Filter is during power-up. enabled. Save to flash command fails when the sleep interval is set to 512 or 64 Hz. No fix will be provided. When using save to flash follow these steps: 1. Write configuration data to registers with sleep interval set to 8 or 1 Hz 2. Save the settings to flash 3. Change the sleep interval settings per design CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0 This section describes the changes between the firmware revisions ×15 and ×1B in CapSense Express devices (CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0). All shipments of samples and production parts with firmware version ×1B will encounter the following changes from the previous (×15) version of the firmware. Cypress inventory has been rotated to the ×1B firmware by WW35, and all distributor inventory will be rotated by WW42 of 2008. Contact your local Cypress Sales Representative if you have questions. Part Numbers Affected Part Number Package Type Operating Range CY8C20140 All Packages Commercial/Industrial CY8C20142 All Packages Commercial/Industrial CY8C20160 All Packages Commercial/Industrial CY8C20180 All Packages Commercial/Industrial CY8C201A0 All Packages Commercial/Industrial Product Status The CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0 CapSense Express devices have been qualified and are available in production quantities. From now on, customers are requested to use the production release of CapSense Express device with x1B firmware version. CapSense Express CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0 Errata Summary The following table defines the errata applicable to Cypress CapSense Express devices. Table 20. CapSense Express CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0 Errata Summary Item Issues Description Fix Status 1 I2C ACK Reduction of I2C ACK timing response by the CapSense Express slave. (Time in Normal Operating Mode) Worst case Ack timing of 140 µs for all critical registers (Input, Output, CapSense Global Parameters, and CapSense Buttons and Slider Read-back Values). For more information on critical register I2C timings, refer to application note AN44208 “CapSense Express - I2C Communication Timing Analysis”. 2 I2C ACK Reduction of I2C ACK timing response by the CapSense Express slave. (Time when executing commands to store configuration in Flash) The CapSense Express device ACK to host within 100 µs but is not accessible for any other operation until the configuration is successfully stored into flash memory, and the CapSense Express device is ready to execute the next command. For more information on I2C timings to store configuration in Flash, refer to application note AN44208 “CapSense Express - I2C Communication Timing Analysis”. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 42 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Table 20. CapSense Express CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0 Errata Summary (continued) Item Issues Description Fix Status 3 Data Filtering Addition of two on-chip filtering algorithms for improved Averaging Filter CapSense performance and better noise immunity. This smoothens the raw count data, and results in better noise immunity and performance. The filter can average 2, 4, 8, or 16 samples. Drop the Sample Filter This discards any acquired CapSense sample if an I2C communication occurs after the scan process has already started. For more information on filtering, refer to application note AN48430 “CapSense Express-Noise Filtering Methods”. 4 Save to Flash Save to flash command fails when the sleep interval is No fix will be provided. When using save to set to 512 or 64 Hz. flash follow these steps: 1. Write configuration data to registers with sleep interval set to 8 or 1 Hz 2. Save the settings to flash 3. Change the sleep interval settings per design 5 False Triggering Dur- If a finger is on the sensor during power-up the sensor No fix will be provided. Disable the Averaging ing Power-Up triggers and the baseline gets stuck. This only happens Filter if your design requires a finger on the when the Averaging Filter is enabled. sensor during power-up. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Page 43 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Document History Page Document Title: CY8C20110/CY8C20180/CY8C20160/CY8C20140/CY8C20142, CapSense® Express™ Button Capacitive Controllers Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. ECN Orig. of Change Submission Date ** 2741726 SLAN / FSU 07/21/2009 New data sheet. *A 2821828 SSHH / FSU 12/4/2009 Added Contents. Updated Absolute Maximum Ratings (Added F32k u, tPOWERUP parameters and their details). Updated Electrical Specifications (Updated DC Electrical Specifications (Updated DC Flash Write Specifications (Updated Note 29))). *B 2892629 NJF 03/15/2010 Updated Pin Definitions (Added a Note “For information on the preferred dimensions for mounting QFN packages, see the "Application Notes for Surface Mount Assembly of Amkor's MicroLeadFrame (MLF) Packages" available at http://www.amkor.com.” below the column). Updated Absolute Maximum Ratings (Added TBAKETEMP and TBAKETIME parameters and their details). Updated Package Diagrams (Updated Figure 1 (Changed 16-pin COL to 16-pin QFN). *C 3002214 SLAN 07/29/2010 Updated Features (Changed the part number from CY8C21110 to CY8C20110). Added Acronyms and Units of Measure. Minor edits across the document. *D 3042142 ARVM 09/30/10 Updated Pin Definitions (Added Note 3 and referred the same Note in all GP1[1] and GP1[2] pins). Updated Pin Definitions (Added Note 6 and referred the same Note in all GP1[1] and GP1[2] pins). Updated Pin Definitions (Added Note 7 and referred the same Note in all GP1[1] and GP1[2] pins). Updated Absolute Maximum Ratings (Removed F32k u, tPOWERUP parameters and their details). Updated Electrical Specifications (Updated AC Electrical Specifications (Added AC Chip-Level Specifications section)). Updated Typical Circuits (Updated Figure 4 (Replaced with updated one)). Updated in new template. *E 3085081 NJF 11/12/10 Updated Electrical Specifications (Updated DC Electrical Specifications (Updated DC GPIO Specifications (Removed sub-section “2.7-V DC Spec for I2C Line with 1.8 V External Pull-up”), added DC I2C Specifications)), updated AC Electrical Specifications (Updated AC I2C Specifications (Updated Figure 12 (No specific changed were made to I2C Timing Diagram. Updated for clearer understanding.)))). Updated Solder Reflow Specifications (Updated Table 16). Added Reference Documents and Glossary. Updated in new template. *F 3276234 ARVM 06/07/11 Updated Layout Guidelines and Best Practices (Updated Table 2 (Removed “Overlay thickness-buttons” category), added the following statement after Table 2 – “The Recommended maximum overlay thickness is 5 mm (with external CSInt)/ 2 mm (without external CSInt). For more details refer to the section “The Integrating Capacitor (Cint)” in AN53490. Note Some device packages does not have CSInt pin and external capacitor cannot be connected.”). Updated CapSense Constraints (Removed the parameter “Overlay thickness”). Updated Solder Reflow Specifications (Updated Table 16). Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Description of Change Page 44 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Document History Page (continued) Document Title: CY8C20110/CY8C20180/CY8C20160/CY8C20140/CY8C20142, CapSense® Express™ Button Capacitive Controllers Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. ECN Orig. of Change Submission Date *G 3631370 VAIR / SLAN 05/31/2012 Updated Pin Definitions (Updated description of XRES pin). Updated Pin Definitions (Updated description of XRES pin). Updated Typical Circuits (Updated Figure 6 (Added Note 9 and referred the same Note in Figure 6)). Updated Package Diagrams (spec 001-09116 (Changed revision from *E to *F), spec 51-85068 (Changed revision from *C to *D)). Updated in new template. *H 3837914 SLAN 12/11/2012 Updated Device Operation Modes (Updated Periodic Sleep Mode (Updated description)). Updated Package Diagrams (spec 001-09116 (Changed revision from *F to *G), spec 51-85068 (Changed revision from *D to *E)). *I 3992042 SLAN 05/06/2013 Updated Package Diagrams: spec 001-09116 – Changed revision from *G to *H. spec 51-85066 – Changed revision from *E to *F. Added Errata. Added CY8C20140/142/160/180/1A0. *J 4033835 DCHE 06/19/2013 Added Errata Footnotes. Updated in new template. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Description of Change Page 45 of 46 CY8C20110, CY8C20180 CY8C20160, CY8C20140 CY8C20142 Sales, Solutions, and Legal Information Worldwide Sales and Design Support Cypress maintains a worldwide network of offices, solution centers, manufacturer’s representatives, and distributors. To find the office closest to you, visit us at Cypress Locations. PSoC® Solutions Products Automotive Clocks & Buffers Interface Lighting & Power Control cypress.com/go/automotive cypress.com/go/clocks cypress.com/go/interface cypress.com/go/powerpsoc cypress.com/go/plc Memory cypress.com/go/memory PSoC Touch Sensing cypress.com/go/psoc PSoC 1 | PSoC 3 | PSoC 4 | PSoC 5LP Cypress Developer Community Community | Forums | Blogs | Video | Training Technical Support cypress.com/go/support cypress.com/go/touch USB Controllers Wireless/RF psoc.cypress.com/solutions cypress.com/go/USB cypress.com/go/wireless © Cypress Semiconductor Corporation, 2009-2013. The information contained herein is subject to change without notice. Cypress Semiconductor Corporation assumes no responsibility for the use of any circuitry other than circuitry embodied in a Cypress product. Nor does it convey or imply any license under patent or other rights. Cypress products are not warranted nor intended to be used for medical, life support, life saving, critical control or safety applications, unless pursuant to an express written agreement with Cypress. Furthermore, Cypress does not authorize its products for use as critical components in life-support systems where a malfunction or failure may reasonably be expected to result in significant injury to the user. The inclusion of Cypress products in life-support systems application implies that the manufacturer assumes all risk of such use and in doing so indemnifies Cypress against all charges. Any Source Code (software and/or firmware) is owned by Cypress Semiconductor Corporation (Cypress) and is protected by and subject to worldwide patent protection (United States and foreign), United States copyright laws and international treaty provisions. Cypress hereby grants to licensee a personal, non-exclusive, non-transferable license to copy, use, modify, create derivative works of, and compile the Cypress Source Code and derivative works for the sole purpose of creating custom software and or firmware in support of licensee product to be used only in conjunction with a Cypress integrated circuit as specified in the applicable agreement. Any reproduction, modification, translation, compilation, or representation of this Source Code except as specified above is prohibited without the express written permission of Cypress. Disclaimer: CYPRESS MAKES NO WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WITH REGARD TO THIS MATERIAL, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. Cypress reserves the right to make changes without further notice to the materials described herein. Cypress does not assume any liability arising out of the application or use of any product or circuit described herein. Cypress does not authorize its products for use as critical components in life-support systems where a malfunction or failure may reasonably be expected to result in significant injury to the user. The inclusion of Cypress’ product in a life-support systems application implies that the manufacturer assumes all risk of such use and in doing so indemnifies Cypress against all charges. Use may be limited by and subject to the applicable Cypress software license agreement. Document Number: 001-54606 Rev. *J Revised June 19, 2013 All products and company names mentioned in this document may be the trademarks of their respective holders. Page 46 of 46