INTEGRATED CIRCUITS SE95 Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog Product data sheet Supersedes data of 2004 Oct 05 2004 Dec 21 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 The device is powered-up in normal operation mode with the OS in comparator mode, temperature threshold of 80 °C and hysteresis of 75 °C, so that it can be used as a stand-alone thermostat with those pre-defined temperature set points. The conversion rate is programmable, with a default of 10 conversions/sec. FEATURES • Pin-for-pin replacement for industry standard LM75/LM75A and offers improved temperature resolution • Specification of a single part over power supply range from 2.8 V GENERAL DESCRIPTION to 5.5 V. The SE95 is a temperature-to-digital converter using an on-chip band-gap temperature sensor and Sigma-delta A-to-D conversion technique. The device is also a thermal detector providing an over-temp detection output. The SE95 contains a number of data registers: Configuration register (Conf) to store the device settings such as sampling rate, device operation mode, OS operation mode, OS polarity, and OS fault queue as described in the functional description section; temperature register (Temp) to store the digital temp reading, and set-point registers (Tos & Thyst) to store programmable overtemp shutdown and hysteresis limits, and also an ID register to store manufacturer numbers. These registers are accessed by a controller via the 2-wire serial I2C-bus interface. The device includes an open-drain output (OS) which becomes active when the temperature exceeds the programmed limits. There are three selectable logic address pins so that eight devices can be connected on the same bus without address conflict. • Small 8-pin package types: SO8 and TSSOP8 (MSOP8) • I2C-bus interface to 400kHz with up to 8 devices on the same bus • Power supply range from 2.8 V to 5.5 V • Temperatures range from –55 °C to +125 °C • 13-bit ADC that offers a temperature resolution of 0.03125 °C • Temperature accuracy of ±1 °C from –25 °C to +100 °C • Programmable temperature threshold and hysteresis set points • Supply current of 7.0 µA in shut-down mode for power conservation • Stand-alone operation as thermostat at power-up • ESD protection exceeds 1000 V HBM per JESD22-A114, The SE95 can be configured for different operation conditions. It can be set in normal mode to periodically monitor the ambient temperature, or in shutdown mode to minimize power consumption. The OS output operates in either of two selectable modes: OS comparator mode and OS interrupt mode. Its active state can be selected as either HIGH or LOW. The fault queue that defines the number of consecutive faults in order to activate the OS output is programmable as well as the set-point limits. 150 V MM per JESD22-A115 • Latch-up testing is done to JEDEC Standard JESD78 which exceeds 100 mA APPLICATIONS • System thermal management • Personal computers • Electronics equipment • Industrial controllers The temperature register always stores a 13-bit 2’s complement data giving a temperature resolution of 0.03125 °C. This high temperature resolution is particularly useful in applications of measuring precisely the thermal drift or runaway. For normal operation and compatibility with the LM75A, only the 11 MSBs are read, with a resolution of 0.125 °C to provide the accuracies specified. To be compatible with the LM75, read only the 9 MSBs. ORDERING INFORMATION Package Type number n mber Topside mark SE95D SE95 SE95DP SE95DP Name Description Version Temperature p range SO8 plastic small outline package; 8 leads; body width 3.9 mm SOT96-1 –55 °C to +125 °C TSSOP8 plastic thin shrink small outline package; 8 leads; body width 3 mm SOT505-1 –55 °C to +125 °C WATCHDOG is a trademark of National Semiconductor Corporation. 2004 Dec 21 2 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 PINNING Pin configuration Pin description SDA 1 8 VCC SCL 2 7 A0 OS 3 6 A1 GND 4 5 A2 PIN SYMBOL DESCRIPTION 1 SDA Digital I/O. I2C serial bi-directional data line. Open Drain. 2 SCL Digital input. I2C serial clock input. 3 OS Overtemp Shutdown output. Open Drain. 4 GND Ground. To be connected to the system ground. 5 A2 Digital input. User-defined address bit2. 6 A1 Digital input. User-defined address bit1. 7 A0 Digital input. User-defined address bit0. 8 VCC Power supply. SL01388 Figure 1. SO8 and TSSOP8 pin configurations. SIMPLIFIED BLOCK DIAGRAM SE95 VCC A/D CONTROL AND OTP CONTROL OTP CONF REG BIAS TEMP REG BANDGAP TOS REG BIT STREAM SIGMA–DELTA MODULATOR DECIMATION FILTER THYST REG INTERRUPTION LOGIC . . . OSC REGISTER BANK POR OS I2C A2 INTERFACE LOGIC A1 A0 SCL SDA GND SL01735 Figure 2. Simplified block diagram. 2004 Dec 21 3 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 TYPICAL APPLICATION CIRCUIT VCC POWER SUPPLY 0.1 µF BUS PULL-UP RESISTORS 10 kΩ 8 VCC 2 I2C-BUS 1 SCL SDA SE95 5 DIGITAL LOGIC OR TIE TO VCC/GND 6 7 OS 3 DETECTOR OR INTERRUPT LINE A2 A1 A0 GND 4 SL01883 Figure 3. Typical application circuit ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS1 SYMBOL MIN. MAX. UNIT VCC to GND PARAMETER –0.3 6.0 V Voltage at inputs SCL and SDA –0.3 6.0 V Voltage at inputs A0, A1, A2 –3.0 VCC + 0.3 V Current at input pins –5.0 5.0 mA – 10.0 mA OS output sink current OS output voltage Vesd Tstg Tj –0.3 6.0 V Human Body Model – 1000 V Machine Model – 150 V –65 150 °C – 150 °C Storage temperature range Junction temperature NOTE: 1. This is a stress rating only. Functional operation of the device as indicated in the operational section is not applied to this absolute maximum rating. Stresses above those listed in ‘Absolute Maximum Ratings’ may cause permanent damage to the device and exposure to any of these rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. OPERATING RATINGS SYMBOL PARAMETER MIN. MAX. UNIT VCC Supply voltage 2.8 5.5 V Tamb Operating ambient temperature range –55 125 °C 2004 Dec 21 4 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS VCC = 2.8 V to 5.5 V, Tamb = –55 °C to +125 °C unless otherwise noted. PARAMETER TYP.2 MAX. UNIT Tamb = –25 °C to +100 °C –1.0 – +1.0 °C VCC = 2.8 V to 3.6 V Tamb = –55 °C to +125 °C –2.0 – +2.0 °C Temperature accuracy (Note 1) Tamb = –25 °C to +100 °C –2 – +2 °C VCC = 3.6 V to 5.5 V Tamb = –55 °C to +125 °C –3 – +3 °C TRES Temperature resolution 11-bit digital temp data – 0.125 – °C TCON Temperature conversion time Normal mode – 33 – ms Supply quiescent current Normal mode: I2C inactive – 150 – µA Normal mode: I2C active – – 1.0 mA Shut-down mode – 7.5 – µA 0.7 × VCC – VCC + 0.3 V –0.3 – 0.3 × VCC V TACC IDD CONDITIONS MIN. Temperature accuracy (Note 1) SYM VIH HIGH-level input voltage Digital pins (SCL, SDA, A2–A0) VIL LOW-level input voltage Digital pins VIHYS Input voltage hysteresis SCL and SDA pins – 300 – mV A2 to A0 pins – 300 – mV IIH HIGH–level input current Digital pins; VIN = VCC –1.0 – 1.0 µA IIL LOW-level input current Digital pins; VIN = 0 V –1.0 – 1.0 µA VOL LOW-level output voltage SDA and OS pins; IOL = 3 mA – – 0.4 V IOL = 4 mA – – 0.8 V ILO Output leakage current SDA and OS pins; VOH = VCC – – 10 µA POR Power-on reset VCC supply below which the logic is reset 1.0 – 2.5 V OSQ OS fault queue Programmable 1 – 6 Conv 3 Overtemp shutdown Default value Sampling rate Programmable Hysteresis Input capacitance Tos Thyst CIN – 80 – °C 0.125 10 30 sample/s Default value – 75 – °C Digital pins – 20 – pF NOTE: 1. Assumes a minimum 11-bit temperature reading. 2. Typical values are at VCC = 3.3 V and Tamb = 25 °C. 3. Conv: device A-to-D conversion. 2004 Dec 21 5 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 I2C INTERFACE AC CHARACTERISTICS 1 VCC = 2.8 V to 5.5 V, Tamb = –55 °C to +125 °C unless otherwise noted. PARAMETER MIN. TYP. MAX. UNIT 2.5 – – µs SCL HIGH pulse width 0.6 – – µs SCL LOW pulse width 1.3 – – µs tHD:STA Start Hold time 100 – – ns tSU:DAT Data set–up time 100 – – ns tHD;DAT Data hold time 0 – – ns tSU;STO Stop set-up time 100 – – ns – 250 – ns SYMBOL tCLK SCL clock period tHIGH tLOW tF CONDITIONS See timing diagram (Figure 4) Fall time (SDA and OS outputs) CL = 400 pF; IOL = 3 mA NOTE: 1. These specifications are guaranteed by design and not tested in production. SDA t SU;DAT t LOW tf tf t HD;STA SCL S t HD;STA t HD;DAT t HIGH Sr t SU;STO P S SL02097 Figure 4. Timing diagram. 2004 Dec 21 6 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 25 0.25 20 0.20 VCC = 2.8 V VCC = 5.5 V VCC = 3.3 V SDA VOL (V) SHUT-DOWN SUPPLY CURRENT ( µA) PERFORMANCE CURVES 15 10 VCC = 3.9 V VCC = 3.3 V 5 0 –50 VCC = 2.8 V –25 0.15 VCC = 5.5 V VCC = 3.9 V 0.10 0.05 0 25 50 75 100 0.00 –50 125 –25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 25 50 75 100 125 TEMPERATURE (°C) SL02150 SL02153 Figure 5. Typical shut-down supply current versus temperature and VCC Figure 8. Typical SDA VOL versus temperature and VCC (IOL = 3 mA) 300 35 250 34 CONVERSION TIME (ms) NORMAL SUPPLY CURRENT ( µA) VCC = 5.5 V 200 VCC = 3.9 V 150 VCC = 2.8 V VCC = 3.3 V 100 32 31 50 0 –50 33 –25 0 25 50 75 100 30 –50 125 –25 0 TEMPERATURE (°C) 25 50 75 100 SL02152 SL02154 Figure 6. Typical normal I2C inactive supply current versus temperature and VCC Figure 9. Typical conversion time versus temperature (VCC = 2.8 V to 5.5 V) 0.25 VCC = 2.8 V 0.20 30 Conv./second VCC = 3.3 V 200 OS VOL (V) NORMAL SUPPLY CURRENT ( µA) 300 250 125 TEMPERATURE (°C) 10 Conv./second 150 1 Conv./second 0.125 Conv./second 0.15 VCC = 3.9 V 0.10 VCC = 5.5 V 100 0.05 50 0 –50 –25 0 25 50 75 100 0.00 –50 125 TEMPERATURE (°C) 0 25 50 75 100 125 TEMPERATURE (°C) SL02151 SL02155 I2C Figure 7. Typical normal inactive supply current versus temperature and conversion rate (VCC = 3.3 V) 2004 Dec 21 –25 Figure 10. Typical OS VOL versus temperature and VCC (IOL = 3 mA) 7 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog The way that the OS output responds to the comparison operation depends upon the OS operation mode selected by configuration bit B1, and the user-defined fault queue defined by configuration bits B3 and B4. FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION General operation The SE95 uses the on-chip band-gap sensor to measure the device temperature with the resolution of 0.03125 °C and stores the 13-bit 2’s complement digital data, resulted from 13-bit A-to-D conversion, into the device Temp register. This Temp register can be read at any time by a controller on the I2C-bus. Reading temperature data does not affect the conversion in progress during the read operation. In OS comparator mode, the OS output behaves like a thermostat. It becomes active when the Temp exceeds the Tos, and is reset when the Temp drops below the Thyst. Reading the device registers or putting the device into shut-down does not change the state of the OS output. The OS output in this case can be used to control cooling fans or thermal switches. The device can be set to operate in either mode: normal or shut-down. In normal operation mode, by default, the temp-to-digital conversion is executed every 100 ms and the Temp register is updated at the end of each conversion. In shut-down mode, the device becomes idle, data conversion is disabled and the Temp register holds the latest result; however, the device I2C interface is still active and register write/ read operation can be performed. The device operation mode is controlled by programming bit B0 of the configuration register. The temperature conversion is initiated when the device is powered up or returned to normal mode from shut-down. In OS interrupt mode, the OS output is used for thermal interruption. When the device is powered-up, the OS output is first activated only when the Temp exceeds the Tos; then it remains active indefinitely until being reset by a read of any register. Once the OS output has been activated by crossing Tos and then reset, it can be activated again only when the Temp drops below the Thyst; then again, it remains active indefinitely until being reset by a read of any register. The OS interrupt operation would be continued in this sequence: Tos trip, Reset, Thyst trip, Reset, Tos trip, Reset, Thyst trip, Reset, and etc. Putting the device into shut-down mode also resets the OS output. In addition, at the end of each conversion in normal mode, the temperature data (or Temp) in the Temp register is automatically compared with the over-temp shut-down threshold data (or Tos) stored in the Tos register, and the hysteresis data (or Thyst) stored in the Thyst register, in order to set the state of the device OS output accordingly. The device Tos and Thyst registers are write/read capable, and both operate with 9-bit 2’s complement digital data. To match with this 9-bit operation, the temp register uses only the 9 MSB bits of its 13-bit data for the comparison. In both cases, comparator mode and interrupt mode, the OS output is activated only if a number of consecutive faults, defined by the device fault queue, has been met. The fault queue is programmable and stored in the two bits, B3 and B4, of the Configuration register. Also, the OS output active state is selectable as HIGH or LOW by setting accordingly the configuration register bit B2. At power-up, the device is put into normal operation mode, the Tos is set to 80 °C, the Thyst is set to 75 °C, the OS active state is selected LOW and the fault queue is equal to 1. The temp reading data is not available until the first conversion is completed in about 33 ms. The device temperature conversion rate is programmable and can be chosen to be one of the four values: 0.125, 1.0, 10, and 30 conversions per second. The default conversion rate is 10 conversions per second. Furthermore, the conversion rate is selected by programming bits B5 and B6 of the Configuration Register as shown in Table 3. Note that the average supply current as well as the device power consumption increase with the conversion rate. 2004 Dec 21 SE95 The OS response to the temperature is illustrated in Figure 11. 8 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 Tos Temp Thyst READING TEMPERATURE & LIMITS OS RESET OS ACTIVE OS OUTPUT IN COMPARATOR MODE OS RESET * * * OS ACTIVE OS OUTPUT IN INTERRUPT MODE TIME POWER-UP * = OS is reset by either reading register or putting the device in shutdown. Assumed that the fault queue is met at each Tos and Thyst crossing point. SL01392 Figure 11. OS response to temperature. 2004 Dec 21 9 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 I2C serial interface Register list The SE95 can be connected to a compatible 2-wire serial interface I2C-bus as a slave device under the control of a controller or master device, using two device terminals, SCL and SDA. The controller must provide the SCL clock signal and write/read data to/from the device through the SDA terminal. Note that if the I2C common pull-up resistors have not been installed as required for I2C-bus, then an external pull-up resistor, about 10 kΩ, is needed for each of these two terminals. The bus communication protocols are described in the data communication section. The SE95 contains 7 data registers. The registers can be 1 byte or 2 bytes wide, and are defined in Table 2. The registers are accessed by the value in the content of the pointer register during I2C-bus communication. The types of registers are: read only, read/write, and reserved for manufacturer use. Note that when reading a two-byte register, the host must provide enough clock pulses as required by the I2C protocol (see the “Data communication” section) for the device to completely return both data bytes. Otherwise the device may hold the SDA line as LOW state, resulting in a bus hang condition. Slave address Register pointer The SE95 slave address on the I2C-bus is partially defined by the logic applied to the device address pins A2, A1 and A0. Each pin is typically connected either to GND for logic 0, or to VCC for logic 1. These pins represent the three LSB bits of the device 7-bit address. The other four MSB bits of the address data are preset to ‘1001’ by hard wiring inside the SE95. Table 1 shows the device’s complete address and indicates that up to 8 devices can be connected to the same bus without address conflict. Because the input pins, SCL, SDA, A2–A0, are not internally biased, it is important that they should not be left floating in any application. The register pointer or pointer byte is an 8-bit data byte that is equivalent to the register command in the I2C-bus definitions and is used to identify the device register to be accessed for a write or read operation. Its values are listed as pointer values in Table 2, “Register table”. For the device register I2C-bus communication, the pointer byte may or may not need to be included within the command as illustrated in the I2C protocol figures in section “Data communication” on page 14. The command statements of writing data to a register must always include the pointer byte; while the command statements of reading data from a register may or may not include it. To read a register that is different from the one that has been recently read, the pointer byte must be included. However, to re-read a register that has been recently read, the pointer byte may not have to be included in the reading. Table 1. Address table 1 = HIGH, 0 = LOW LSB MSB 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 At power-up, the pointer value is preset to ‘0’ for the Temp Register; users can then read the temperature without specifying the pointer byte. Table 2. Register table Register name Pointer value R/W POR state Description Conf 01H R/W 00H Configuration Register. Contains a single 8-bit data byte. To set an operating condition. Temp 00H Read only N/A Temperature Register. Contains two 8-bit data bytes. To store the measured Temp data. Tos 03H R/W 50 00H Over-temp Shutdown threshold Register. Contains two 8-bit data bytes. To store the over-temp shut-down Tos limit. Default = 80 °C. Thyst 02H R/W 4B 00H Hysteresis Register. Contains two 8-bit data bytes. To store the hysteresis Thyst limit. B7–B0 are also used in OTP test mode to supply OTP write data. Default = 75 °C. ID 05H Read only A1H ID Register. Contains a single 8-bit data byte for the manufacturer ID code. reserved 04H N/A N/A Reserved. reserved 06H N/A N/A Reserved. 2004 Dec 21 10 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 Configuration register The Configuration register is a write/read register and contains an 8-bit non-complement data byte that is used to configure the device for different operating conditions. The Configuration register table (Table 3) shows the bit assignments of this register. Table 3. Configuration register table Bit Name R/W POR Description B7 Reserved R/W 0 Reserved for manufacturer’s use. B6–B5 Rate val R/W 00 Sets the conversion rate: 00 = 10 conversions/sec (default) 01 = 0.125 conversions/sec 10 = 1 conversions/sec 11 = 30 conversions/sec B4–B3 OS Fault queue R/W 0 For OS Fault Queue programming. Programmable queue data = 0, 1 ,2, 3 for queue value = 1, 2, 4, 6 respectively. Default = 0. B2 OS Polarity R/W 0 For OS Polarity selection. 1 = OS active HIGH, 0 = OS active LOW (default). B1 OS Comp/Interrupt R/W 0 For OS operation Mode selection. 1 = OS interrupt, 0 = OS comparator (default). B0 Shut-down R/W 0 For Device Operation Mode selection. 1 = Shut-down, 0 = Normal (default). Temperature Register (Temp) The Temp register holds the digital result of temperature measurement or monitor at the end each A-to-D conversion. This register is read only and contains two 8-bit data bytes consisting of one most significant (MS) data byte and one least significant (LS) data byte. However, only 13 bits of those two bytes are used to store the Temp data in 2’s complement format with the resolution of 0.03125 °C. The Temp register table (Table 4) shows the bit arrangement of the Temp data in the data bytes. Table 4. Temp Register table Temp MS byte Temp LS byte MSB B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 LSB MSB B0 B7 LSB B6 B5 for 11-bit Temp Data B2 B1 B0 X X X X X X LSB D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 for 13-bit Temp Data X X Not used MSB D12 B3 Not used MSB D10 B4 LSB D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 When reading the Temp register, all 16 bits of the two data bytes (MS byte and LS byte) must be collected and then the 2’s complement data value according to the desired resolution must be selected for the temperature calculation. The Table 4 has shown the examples for two cases: 11-bit 2’s complement data value, and 13-bit 2’s complement data value. When converting into the temperature the proper resolution must be used as listed in Table 5 using either one of these two formulae: 1. If the Temp Data MSB = 0, then: Temp Value (°C) = +(Temp Data) × Value Resolution 2. If the Temp Data MSB = 1, then: Temp Value (°C) = –(2’s complement Temp Data) × Value Resolution Table 6 shows some examples of the results for the 11-bit calculations. Table 5. Temp Data and Temp Value resolution Data resolution Value resolution 8 bits 1.0 °C 9 bits 0.5 °C 10 bits 0.25 °C 11 bits 0.125 °C 12 bits 0.0625 °C 13 bits 0.03125 °C 2004 Dec 21 11 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 Table 6. Temp table Temp data Temp value 11–bit Binary (2’s complement) 3-bit Hex Decimal value °C 0111 1111 000 3F8h 1016 +127.000 °C 0111 1110 111 3F7h 1015 +126.875 °C 0111 1110 001 3F1h 1009 +126.125 °C 0111 1101 000 3E8h 1000 +125.000 °C 0001 1001 000 0C8h 200 +25.000 °C 0000 0000 001 001h 1 +0.125 °C 0000 0000 000 000h 0 0.000 °C 1111 1111 111 7FFh –1 –0.125 °C 1110 0111 000 738h –200 –25.000 °C 11001001 001 649h –439 –54.875 °C 1100 1001 000 648h –440 –55.000 °C Obviously, for 9-bit Temp data application in replacing the industry standard LM75, just use only 9 MSB bits of the two bytes and disregard 7 LSB bits of the LS byte. The 9-bit temp data with 0.5 °C resolution of the SE95 is defined exactly in the same way as for the standard LM75 and it is here similar to the Tos and Thyst that is described next. Overtemp shut-down threshold (Tos) and hysteresis (Thyst) registers These two registers are write/read registers, and also called set-point registers. They are used to store the user-defined temperature limits, called overtemp shut-down threshold (Tos) and hysteresis (Thyst), for the device Watchdog operation. At the end of each conversion the Temp data will be compared with the data stored in these two registers in order to set the state of the device OS output accordingly as described in the “General operation” section. Each of the set-point registers contains two 8-bit data bytes consisting of one MS data byte and one LS data byte the same as the Temp register. However, only 9 bits of the two bytes are used to store the set-point data in 2’s complement format with the resolution of 0.5 °C. The Tos register table (Table 7) and Thyst register table (Table 8) show the bit arrangement of the Tos data and Thyst data in the data bytes. Notice that because only 9-bit data are used in the set-point registers, the device uses only the 9 MSB bits of the Temp data for data comparison. Table 7. Tos register table Tos MS byte Tos LS byte MSB B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 LSB MSB B0 B7 LSB B6 B5 B4 Tos data (9 bits) B2 B1 B0 X X X Not used MSB D8 B3 LSB D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 LSB MSB B0 B7 X X X X Table 8. Thyst register table Thyst MS byte Thyst LS byte MSB B7 B6 B5 B4 B3 B2 B1 LSB B6 B5 B4 Thyst data (9 bits) MSB D8 B3 B2 B1 B0 X X X Not used LSB D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 X X X X When a set-point register is read, all 16 bits are provided to the bus and must be collected by the controller to complete the bus operation. However, only the 9 significant bits should be used and the 7 LSB bits of the LS byte are equal to zero and should be ignored. The Tos and Thyst table (Table 9) shows examples of the limit data and value. 2004 Dec 21 12 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 Table 9. Tos and Thyst table Limit data Limit temp value 11–bit Binary (2’s complement) 3-bit Hex Decimal value °C 0111 1101 0 0FAh 250 +125.0 °C 0001 1001 0 032h 50 +25.0 °C 0000 0000 1 001h 1 +0.5 °C 0000 0000 0 000h 0 0.0 °C 1111 1111 1 1FFh –1 –0.5 °C 1110 0111 0 1CEh –50 –25.0 °C 1100 1001 0 192h –110 –55.0 °C the configuration register. Notice that the programmed data and the fault queue value are not the same. The Fault queue table (Table 10) shows the one-to-one relationship between them. At power-up, fault queue data = 0 and fault queue value = 1. OS output and polarity The OS output is an open-drain output and its state represents results of the device Watchdog operation as described in the “General operation” section. In order to observe this output state, an external pull-up resistor is needed. The resistor should be as large as possible, up 200 kΩ, to minimize the temp reading error due to internal heating by the high OS sinking current. Table 10. Fault queue table Fault queue data The OS output active state can be selected as HIGH or LOW by programming bit B2 of the Configuration register: setting B2 to 1 selects OS active HIGH and setting B2 to 0 sets OS active LOW. At power-up, this bit is equal to 0 and the OS active state is LOW. Fault queue value B4 B3 Decimal 0 0 1 0 1 2 OS comparator and interrupt modes 1 0 4 As described in the “General operation” section, the device OS output responds to the result of the comparison between the Temp data and the programmed limits, Tos and Thyst, in different ways depending on the selected OS mode: OS comparator or OS interrupt. The OS mode is selected by programming bit B1 of the configuration register: setting B1 to 1 selects the OS interrupt mode, and setting B1 to 0 selects the OS comparator mode. At power up, this bit is equal to 0 and the OS comparator is selected. 1 1 6 Shutdown mode The device operation mode is selected by programming bit B0 of the Configuration register: Setting B0 to 1 will put the device into shut-down mode. Resetting B0 to 0 will return the device to normal mode. The main difference between the two modes is that in OS comparator mode, the OS output becomes active when the Temp has exceeded the Tos and reset when the Temp has dropped below the Thyst, reading a register or putting the device into shut-down does not change the state of the OS output; while in OS interrupt mode, once it has been activated either by exceeding the Tos or dropping below the Thyst, the OS output will remain active indefinitely until reading a register or putting the device into shut-down occurs, then the OS output is reset. In shut-down mode, the device draws a small current of about 7.5 µA and the power dissipation is minimized; the temperature conversion stops, but the I2C interface remains active and register write/read operation can be performed. If the OS output is in comparator mode, then it remains unchanged. In Interrupt mode, the OS output is reset. Power-up default and Power-on Reset The SE95 always powers-up in its default state with: – Normal operation mode – OS comparator mode – Tos = 80 °C – Thyst = 75 °C – OS output active state = LOW – Pointer value = 0. The Tos & Thyst limits must be selected so that Tos temp value > Thyst temp value. Otherwise, the OS output state will be undefined. OS fault queue Fault queue is defined as the number of faults that must occur consecutively to activate the OS output. It is provided to avoid false tripping due to noise. Because faults are determined at the end of data conversions, fault queue is also defined as the number of consecutive conversions returning a temperature trip. The value of fault queue is selectable by programming the two bits B4 and B3 of 2004 Dec 21 When the power supply voltage is dropped below the device power-on reset level of about 1.9 V (POR) and then rises up again, the device will be reset to its default condition as listed above. 13 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 7. W: Write bit, when the Write/Read bit = LOW in a write command. Data communication The communication between the host and the SE95 must strictly follow the rules as defined by the I2C-bus management. The protocols for SE95 register read/write operations are illustrated by the Figures as follows with these definitions: 8. R: Read bit, when the Write/Read bit = HIGH in a read command. 9. A: Device Acknowledge bit, returned by the SE95. It is LOW if the device works properly and HIGH if not. The host must release the SDA line during this period in order to give the device the control on the SDA line. 1. Before a communication, the I2C-bus must be free or not busy. It means that the SCL and SDA lines must be both released by all devices on the bus, and they become HIGH by the bus pull-up resistors. 2. The host must provide SCL clock pulses necessary for the communication. Data is transferred in sequence of 9 SCL clock pulses for every 8-bit data byte followed by 1-bit status of the acknowledgement. 10. A′ : Master Acknowledge bit, not returned by the device, but set by the master or host in reading 2-byte data. During this clock period, the host must set the SDA line to LOW in order to notice the device that the first byte has been read for the device to provide the second byte onto the bus. 3. During data transfer, except the Start and Stop signals, the SDA signal must be stable while the SCL signal is HIGH. It means that SDA signal can be changed only during the LOW duration of the SCL line. 11. NA: Not-Acknowledge bit. During this clock period, both the device and host release the SDA line at the end of a data transfer, the host is then enabled to generate the Stop signal. 4. S: Start signal, initiated by the host to start a communication, the SDA goes from HIGH-to-LOW while the SCL is HIGH. 12. In a write protocol, data is sent from the host to the device and the host controls the SDA line, except during the clock period when the device sends to the bus the device acknowledgement signal. 5. RS: Re-start signal, same as the Start signal, to start a read command that follows a write command. 13. In a read protocol, data is sent to the bus by the device and the host must release the SDA line during the time that the device is providing data onto the bus and controlling the SDA line, except during the clock period when the master sends to the bus the master acknowledgement signal. 6. P: Stop signal, generated by the host to stop a communication, the SDA goes from LOW-to-HIGH while the SCL is HIGH. The bus becomes free thereafter. 2004 Dec 21 14 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 Protocols for writing and reading the registers 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 A 0 0 0 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 9 SCL SDA S W A DEVICE ADDRESS POINTER BYTE A P CONFIGURATION DATA BYTE STOP START WRITE DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE SL01393 Figure 12. Write configuration register (1-byte data). 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 SCL SDA (next) S 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 W A 0 0 DEVICE ADDRESS START 0 0 0 0 0 1 A RS (next) POINTER BYTE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE WRITE 8 9 RE-START 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 NA SCL (cont.) SDA (cont.) R A DEVICE ADDRESS P DATA BYTE FROM DEVICE STOP MASTER NOT ACKNOWLEDGED DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE READ SL01398 Figure 13. Read configuration register including Pointer byte (1-byte data). 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 8 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 8 9 SCL SDA S DEVICE ADDRESS R A D0 NA P DATA BYTE FROM DEVICE STOP START READ DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE MASTER NOT ACKNOWLEDGED SL01394 Figure 14. Read configuration register with preset Pointer (1-byte data). 2004 Dec 21 15 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 SE95 9 SCL SDA (next) S 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 W A 0 0 DEVICE ADDRESS START 0 0 0 0 P1 P0 A (next) POINTER BYTE WRITE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE 8 9 DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 9 SCL (cont.) SDA (cont.) D0 A A P LS BYTE DATA MS BYTE DATA STOP DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE SL01397 Figure 15. Write Tos or Thyst register (2-byte data). 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0 (next) SCL SDA S 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 W A 0 0 DEVICE ADDRESS START 0 0 0 0 P1 P0 A RS (next) POINTER BYTE WRITE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE 8 9 DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 RE-START 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 NA SCL (cont.) SDA (cont.) R A DEVICE ADDRESS A′ MS BYTE FROM DEVICE P LS BYTE FROM DEVICE STOP READ DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE MASTER ACKNOWLEDGE MASTER NOT ACKNOWLEDGED SL01396 Figure 16. Read Temp or Tos or Thyst register including Pointer byte (2-byte data). 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 1 0 0 1 A2 A1 A0 8 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 NA SCL SDA S DEVICE ADDRESS R A MS BYTE FROM DEVICE A′ P LS BYTE FROM DEVICE STOP START READ DEVICE ACKNOWLEDGE MASTER ACKNOWLEDGE MASTER NOT ACKNOWLEDGED SL01395 Figure 17. Read Temp or Tos or Thyst register with preset Pointer (2-byte data). 2004 Dec 21 16 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SO8: plastic small outline package; 8 leads; body width 3.9 mm 2004 Dec 21 17 SE95 SOT96-1 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog TSSOP8: plastic thin shrink small outline package; 8 leads; body width 3 mm 2004 Dec 21 18 SE95 SOT505-1 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 REVISION HISTORY Rev Date Description _3 20041221 Product data sheet (9397 750 14388). Supersedes data of 2004 Oct 05 (9397 750 14163). Modifications: • ‘Features’ section on page 2, – 2nd bullet: add “(MSOP8)” as package name variant for TSSOP8 – 3rd bullet: changed from “I2C-bus interface with up to 8 devices on the same bus” to “I2C-bus interface to 400 kHz with up to 8 devices on the same bus” – 8th bullet: changed from “... from 0 °C to +100 °C” to “... from –25 °C to +100 °C” – 12th bullet changed from “... 100 V MM per JESD22-A115” to “... 150 V MM per JESD22-A115” • ‘Absolute maximum ratings’ table on page 4: changed Vesd Machine Model (max.) from ‘100 V’ to ‘150 V’ • ‘DC electrical characteristics’ table on page 5: – Symbol TACC: replaced “(assumes a minimum 11-bit temperature reading)” with “(Note 1)” Conditions for VCC = 2.8 V to 3.6 V: changed “Tamb = –25 °C to 100 °C” to “Tamb = –25 °C to +100 °C” changed “Tamb = –55 °C to –125 °C” to “Tamb = –55 °C to +125 °C” _2 20041005 Objective data sheet (9397 750 14163). Supersedes data of 2003 Oct 02 (9397 750 10265). _1 20031002 Objective data (9397 750 10265) 2004 Dec 21 19 Philips Semiconductors Product data sheet Ultra high accuracy digital temperature sensor and thermal Watchdog SE95 Purchase of Philips I2C components conveys a license under the Philips’ I2C patent to use the components in the I2C system provided the system conforms to the I2C specifications defined by Philips. This specification can be ordered using the code 9398 393 40011. Data sheet status Level Data sheet status [1] Product status [2] [3] Definitions I Objective data Development This data sheet contains data from the objective specification for product development. Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to change the specification in any manner without notice. II Preliminary data Qualification This data sheet contains data from the preliminary specification. Supplementary data will be published at a later date. Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to change the specification without notice, in order to improve the design and supply the best possible product. III Product data Production This data sheet contains data from the product specification. Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to make changes at any time in order to improve the design, manufacturing and supply. Relevant changes will be communicated via a Customer Product/Process Change Notification (CPCN). [1] Please consult the most recently issued data sheet before initiating or completing a design. [2] The product status of the device(s) described in this data sheet may have changed since this data sheet was published. The latest information is available on the Internet at URL http://www.semiconductors.philips.com. [3] For data sheets describing multiple type numbers, the highest-level product status determines the data sheet status. Definitions Short-form specification — The data in a short-form specification is extracted from a full data sheet with the same type number and title. For detailed information see the relevant data sheet or data handbook. Limiting values definition — Limiting values given are in accordance with the Absolute Maximum Rating System (IEC 60134). Stress above one or more of the limiting values may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only and operation of the device at these or at any other conditions above those given in the Characteristics sections of the specification is not implied. Exposure to limiting values for extended periods may affect device reliability. Application information — Applications that are described herein for any of these products are for illustrative purposes only. Philips Semiconductors make no representation or warranty that such applications will be suitable for the specified use without further testing or modification. Disclaimers Life support — These products are not designed for use in life support appliances, devices, or systems where malfunction of these products can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Philips Semiconductors customers using or selling these products for use in such applications do so at their own risk and agree to fully indemnify Philips Semiconductors for any damages resulting from such application. Right to make changes — Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to make changes in the products—including circuits, standard cells, and/or software—described or contained herein in order to improve design and/or performance. When the product is in full production (status ‘Production’), relevant changes will be communicated via a Customer Product/Process Change Notification (CPCN). Philips Semiconductors assumes no responsibility or liability for the use of any of these products, conveys no license or title under any patent, copyright, or mask work right to these products, and makes no representations or warranties that these products are free from patent, copyright, or mask work right infringement, unless otherwise specified. Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. 2004 All rights reserved. Published in the U.S.A. Contact information For additional information please visit http://www.semiconductors.philips.com. Fax: +31 40 27 24825 Date of release: 12-04 For sales offices addresses send e-mail to: [email protected]. Document number: 2004 Dec 21 20 9397 750 14388