CYW43903 PRELIMINARY WICED™ IEEE 802.11 a/b/g/n SoC with an Embedded Applications Processor The Cypress CYW43903 embedded wireless system-on-a-chip (SoC) is uniquely suited for Internet-of-Things applications. It supports all rates specified in the IEEE 802.11 b/g/n specifications.The device includes an ARM Cortex-based applications processor, a single stream IEEE 802.11n MAC/baseband/radio, a power amplifier (PA), and a receive low-noise amplifier (LNA). It also supports optional antenna diversity for improved RF performance in difficult environments. The CYW43903 is an optimized SoC targeting embedded Internet-of-Things applications in the industrial and medical sensor, home appliance markets. Using advanced design techniques and process technology to reduce active and idle power, the device is designed for embedded applications that require minimal power consumption and a compact size. The device includes a PMU for simplifying system power topology and allows for direct operation from a battery while maximizing battery life. Cypress Part Numbering Scheme Cypress is converting the acquired IoT part numbers from Broadcom to the Cypress part numbering scheme. Due to this conversion, there is no change in form, fit, or function as a result of offering the device with Cypress part number marking. The Table 1 provides Cypress ordering part number that matches an existing IoT part number. Table 1. Mapping Table for Part Number between Broadcom and Cypress Broadcom Part Number Cypress Part Number BCM43903 CYW43903 BCM43903KUBG CYW43903KUBG Features Application Processor Features ■ ARM Cortex-R4 32-bit RISC processor. ■ 1 MB of on-chip SRAM for code and data. ■ An on-chip cryptography core ■ 640 KB of ROM containing WICED SDK components such as RTOS and TCP/IP stack. ■ 17 GPIOs supported. ■ Q-SPI serial flash interface to support up to 40 Mbps of peak transfer. ■ Support for UART (3), SPI or CSC master, interfaces. (Cypress Serial Control (CSC) is an I2C-compatible interface.) ■ On-chip power and low-noise amplifiers. ■ An internal fractional nPLL allows support for a wide range of reference clock frequencies. ■ Integrated ARM Cortex-R4 processor with tightly coupled memory for complete WLAN subsystem functionality, minimizing the need to wake up the applications processor for standard WLAN functions (to further minimize power consumption while maintaining the ability to upgrade to future features in the field). ■ Software architecture supported by standard WICED SDK allows easy migration from existing discrete MCU designs and to future devices. ■ Key IEEE 801.11x Features ■ Single-band 2.4 GHz IEEE 802.11n compliant. ■ Single-stream spatial multiplexing up to 72 Mbps. ■ Supports 20 MHz channels with optional SGI. ■ Full IEEE 802.11 b/g legacy compatibility with enhanced performance. ■ TX and RX low-density parity check (LDPC) support for improved range and power efficiency. Cypress Semiconductor Corporation Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G • Security support: WPA and WPA2 (Personal) support for powerful encryption and authentication. ❐ AES and TKIP in hardware for faster data encryption and IEEE 802.11i compatibility. ❐ Reference WLAN subsystem provides Cisco Compatible Extensions (CCX, CCX 2.0, CCX 3.0, CCX 4.0, and CCX 5.0). ❐ Wi-Fi Protected Setup and Wi-Fi Easy-Setup Worldwide regulatory support: Global products supported with worldwide design approval. ❐ ■ 198 Champion Court • San Jose, CA 95134-1709 • 408-943-2600 Revised January 11, 2018 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 General Features ■ Supports battery voltage range from 3.0V to 4.8V with an internal switching regulator. ■ Programmable dynamic power management. ■ 6 Kb OTP memory for storing board parameters. ■ 151-ball WLBGA (4.91mm x 5.85mm, 0.4 mm pitch). Figure 1. Functional Block Diagram CYW43903 1 MB RAM, 640 KB ROM UART SPI APPS ARM Cortex-R4 32 KB (I), 32 KB (D) ICACHE CSC PWM (6) PWM CSC SPI SPI or CSC AXI to AXI Bridge GPIO GPIO (17) TCM 512 KB RAM 320 KB ROM JTAG WLAN ARM Cortex-R4 AXI-to-AXI Bridge Crytography Engine AXI AXI DMA 32 kHz External LPO WLAN APPS Domain IEEE 802.11 MAC RF Switch Controls 1 x 1, IEEE 802.11n PHY Always-On Domain REG_ON HIB_REG_ON_IN AXI SR_Eng PMU Control VBAT PS RAM LNA PMU TX Switch PS VIO 2.4 GHz Radio AXI-to-AXI Bridge 2.4 GHz 37.4 MHz Crystal PA TX Switch CSC = Cypress Serial Control. An I2C‐compatible interface. WRF_PAOUT_2G WRF_RFIN_2G Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 2 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Contents 1. Overview ............................................................ 5 1.1 Introduction ......................................................... 5 1.1.1 Features .................................................. 6 1.2 Standards Compliance ........................................ 7 2. Power Supplies and Power Management ....... 8 2.1 Power Supply Topology ...................................... 8 2.2 CYW43903 Power Management Unit Features .. 8 2.3 Power Management .......................................... 11 2.4 PMU Sequencing .............................................. 11 2.5 Power-Off Shutdown ......................................... 12 2.6 Power-Up/Power-Down/Reset Circuits ............. 12 3. Frequency References ................................... 13 3.1 Crystal Interface and Clock Generation ............ 13 3.2 External Frequency Reference ......................... 14 3.3 External 32.768 kHz Low-Power Oscillator ....... 15 4. Applications Subsystem ................................ 16 7.2.8 MAC-PHY Interface ................................24 7.3 IEEE 802.11™ b/g/n PHY ...................................25 8. WLAN Radio Subsystem ............................... 26 8.1 Receiver Path .....................................................26 8.2 Transmit Path .....................................................26 8.3 Calibration ..........................................................26 9. Pinout and Signal Descriptions..................... 27 9.1 Ball Map .............................................................27 9.2 Ball List ...............................................................28 9.3 Signal Descriptions ............................................30 10. GPIO Signals and Strapping Options ........... 34 10.1 Overview ............................................................34 10.2 Weak Pull-Down and Pull-Up Resistances ........34 10.3 Strapping Options ..............................................34 10.4 Alternate GPIO Signal Functions .......................35 11. Pin Multiplexing .............................................. 36 4.1 Overview ........................................................... 16 4.2 Applications CPU and Memory Subsystem ...... 16 12. I/O States ......................................................... 38 4.3 Memory-to-Memory DMA Core ......................... 16 13. Electrical Characteristics............................... 40 4.4 Cryptography Core ............................................ 16 13.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings ...............................40 5. Applications Subsystem External Interfaces 17 13.2 Environmental Ratings .......................................41 5.1 GPIO ................................................................. 17 5.2 Cypress Serial Control ...................................... 17 5.3 JTAG and ARM Serial Wire Debug ................... 17 5.4 PWM ................................................................. 18 5.5 SPI Flash ........................................................... 18 5.6 UART ................................................................ 18 5.7 SPI .................................................................... 19 6. Global Functions............................................. 20 6.1 External Coexistence Interface ......................... 20 6.2 One-Time Programmable Memory .................... 20 6.3 Hibernation Block .............................................. 20 6.4 System Boot Sequence ..................................... 21 7. Wireless LAN Subsystem............................... 22 7.1 WLAN CPU and Memory Subsystem ............... 22 7.2 IEEE 802.11n MAC ........................................... 22 7.2.1 PSM ....................................................... 23 7.2.2 WEP ...................................................... 23 7.2.3 TXE ........................................................ 23 7.2.4 RXE ....................................................... 24 7.2.5 IFS ......................................................... 24 7.2.6 TSF ........................................................ 24 7.2.7 NAV ....................................................... 24 Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G 13.3 Electrostatic Discharge Specifications ...............41 13.4 Recommended Operating Conditions and DC Characteristics ...................................................41 13.5 Power Supply Segments ....................................43 13.6 GPIO, UART, and JTAG Interfaces DC Characteristics ...................................................43 14. WLAN RF Specifications................................ 44 14.1 Introduction ........................................................44 14.2 2.4 GHz Band General RF Specifications ..........44 14.3 WLAN 2.4 GHz Receiver Performance Specifications .....................................................45 14.4 WLAN 2.4 GHz Transmitter Performance Specifications .....................................................47 14.5 General Spurious Emissions Specifications .......48 14.5.1 Transmitter Spurious Emissions Specifications .........................................48 14.5.2 Receiver Spurious Emissions Specifications .........................................48 15. Internal Regulator Electrical Specifications. 49 15.1 Core Buck Switching Regulator .........................49 15.2 3.3V LDO (LDO3P3) ..........................................50 15.3 CLDO .................................................................51 15.4 LNLDO ...............................................................52 Page 3 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 15.5 BBPLL LDO ....................................................... 53 19. Thermal Information ....................................... 61 16. System Power Consumption ......................... 54 19.1 Package Thermal Characteristics ......................61 16.1 WLAN Current Consumption ............................. 54 16.1.1 2.4 GHz Mode ....................................... 54 19.2 Junction Temperature Estimation and PSIJT Versus THETAJC ............................................................. 61 17. SPI Flash Characteristics............................... 55 17.1 SPI Flash Timing ............................................... 55 17.1.1 Read-Register Timing ............................ 55 17.1.2 Write-Register Timing ............................ 56 17.1.3 Memory Fast-Read Timing .................... 57 17.1.4 Memory-Write Timing ............................ 58 17.1.5 SPI Flash Parameters ........................... 59 19.3 Environmental Characteristics ...........................61 20. Mechanical Information.................................. 62 21. Ordering Information...................................... 63 22. Additional Information ................................... 63 22.1 Acronyms and Abbreviations .............................63 22.2 IoT Resources ....................................................63 18. Power-Up Sequence and Timing ................... 60 22.3 Errata .................................................................63 18.1 Sequencing of Reset and Regulator Control Signals .............................................................. 60 18.1.1 Description of Control Signals ............... 60 18.1.2 Control Signal Timing Diagrams ............ 60 Document History Page ................................................. 64 Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Sales, Solutions, and Legal Information ...................... 65 Page 4 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 1. Overview 1.1 Introduction The Cypress CYW43903 is a single-chip device that provides the highest level of integration for an embedded system-on-a-chip with integrated IEEE 802.11 b/g/n MAC/baseband/radio and a separate ARM Cortex-R4 applications processor. It provides a small formfactor solution with minimal external components to drive down cost for mass volumes and allows for an embedded system with flexibility in size, form, and function. Comprehensive power management circuitry and software ensure that the system can meet the needs of highly embedded systems that require minimal power consumption and reliable operation. Figure 2 shows the interconnect of all the major physical blocks in the CYW43903 and their associated external interfaces, which are described in greater detail in Applications Subsystem External Interfaces. Figure 2. Block Diagram and I/O CYW43903 RF TX SPI Flash APPS Subsystem WLAN Subsystem ARM Cortex‐R4 160 MHz 32 KB I‐cache 32 KB D‐cache ARM Cortex‐R4 160 MHz 448 KB ROM TCM 576 KB SRAM TCM 1 MB SRAM 640 KB ROM 802.11n 1x1 2.4 GHz RF RX GPIO[16:0] 2x 2-Wire UART 4-Wire UART SPI/CSC CSC JTAG/SWD WAKE Switch Control Antenna Diversity VDDIOs GND Note: Another SPI interface can be defined by reconfiguring GPIO_8 through GPIO_11 and another CSC interface can be defined by reconfiguring GPIO_12 and GPIO_13 (see Table 11, “Pin Multiplexing,”). Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 5 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 1.1.1 Features The CYW43903 supports the following features: ■ ARM Cortex-R4 clocked at 160 MHz. ■ 1 MB of SRAM and 640 KB ROM available for the applications processor. ■ One high-speed 4-wire UART interface with operation up to 4 Mbps. ■ Two low-speed 2-wire UART interfaces multiplexed on general purpose I/O (GPIO) pins. ■ One dedicated CSC1 interface. Note: Another CSC interface can be defined by reconfiguring GPIOs. See Table 11, “Pin Multiplexing,”. ■ One SPI master interface with operation up to 24 MHz. Either or both of the SPI interfaces can be used as CSC master interfaces. This is in addition to the two dedicated CSC interfaces. Note: In addition to the dedicated CSC interface, the SPI interface can be used as a CSC master interface. Note: Another SPI interface can be defined by reconfiguring GPIOs. See Table 11, “Pin Multiplexing,”. ■ One SPI master interface for serial flash. ■ Six dedicated PWM outputs. ■ 17 GPIOs. ■ IEEE 802.11 b/g/n 1×1 2.4 GHz radio. ■ Single- and dual-antenna support. 1.Cypress Serial Control (CSC) is an I2C-compatible interface. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 6 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 1.2 Standards Compliance The CYW43903 supports the following standards: ■ IEEE 802.11n ■ IEEE 802.11b ■ IEEE 802.11g ■ IEEE 802.11d ■ IEEE 802.11h ■ IEEE 802.11i ■ Security: ■ ❐ WEP ❐ WPA Personal ❐ WPA2 Personal ❐ WMM ❐ WMM-PS (U-APSD) ❐ WMM-SA ❐ AES (hardware accelerator) ❐ TKIP (hardware accelerator) ❐ CKIP (software support) Proprietary Protocols: ❐ CCXv2 ❐ CCXv3 ❐ CCXv4 ❐ CCXv5 ❐ WFAEC The CYW43903 supports the following additional standards: ■ IEEE 802.11r—Fast Roaming (between APs) ■ IEEE 802.11w—Secure Management Frames ■ IEEE 802.11 Extensions: ■ IEEE 802.11e QoS enhancements (already supported as per the WMM specification) ■ IEEE 802.11i MAC enhancements ■ IEEE 802.11k radio resource measurement Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 7 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 2. Power Supplies and Power Management 2.1 Power Supply Topology One core buck regulator, multiple LDO regulators, and a power management unit (PMU) are integrated into the CYW43903. All regulators are programmable via the PMU. These blocks simplify power supply design for application and WLAN functions in embedded designs. A single VBAT (3.0V to 4.8V DC maximum) and VIO supply (1.8V to 3.3V) can be used, with all additional voltages being provided by the regulators in the CYW43903. The REG_ON control signal is used to power up the regulators and take the appropriate sections out of reset. The CBUCK, CLDO, LNLDO, and other regulators power up when any of the reset signals are deasserted. All regulators are powered down only when REG_ON is deasserted. The regulators may be turned off/on based on the dynamic demands of the digital baseband. The CYW43903 provides a low power-consumption mode whereby the CBUCK, CLDO, and LNLDO regulators are shut down. When in this state, the low-power linear regulator (LPLDO1) supplied by the system VIO supply provides the CYW43903 with all required voltages. 2.2 CYW43903 Power Management Unit Features The CYW43903 supports the following Power Management Unit (PMU) features: ■ VBAT to 1.35Vout (550 mA maximum) core buck (CBUCK) switching regulator ■ VBAT to 3.3Vout (450 mA maximum) LDO3P3 ■ 1.35V to 1.2Vout (350 mA maximum) CLDO with bypass mode for deep-sleep ■ 1.35V to 1.2Vout (55 mA maximum) LDO for BBPLL ■ Additional internal LDOs (not externally accessible) ■ PMU internal timer auto-calibration by the crystal clock for precise wake-up timing from the low power-consumption mode. Figure 3 and Figure 4 show the regulators and a typical power topology. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 8 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Figure 3. Typical Power Topology (Page 1 of 2) WLRF TX Mixer and PA (not always) CYW43903 1.2V VBAT Operational: 2.3V to 4.8V Performance: 3.0V to 4.8V Absolute Maximum: 5.5V VDDIO Operational: 3.3V Cap-less LNLDO 1.2V Cap-less LNLDO 1.2V Cap-less VCOLDO 1.2V Cap-less LNLDO 1.2V Cap-less LNLDO 1.2V 15 mA XTAL LDO 1.2V Mini‐PMU (Inside WL Radio) VBAT 1.35V Core Buck Regulator (CBUCK) CLDO WLRF LOGEN WLRF LNA WLRF AFE and TIA WLRF TX WLRF ADC REF WLRF XTAL WLRF RFPLL, PFD, and MMD 1.3V, 1.2V, .095V (AVS) WLAN/CLB/Top, Always On WL PHY WL Subcore WL VDDM (SRAMS in AOS) APPS VDDM VDDIO LPLDO1 1.35V APPS SOCSRAM APPS Subcore REG_ON BBPLL LNLDO 1.2V Supply ball Supply bump/pad Power switch Ground ball Ground bump/pad No power switch WLAN reset ball External to chip No dedicated power switch, but internal power‐ down modes and block‐specific power switches Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G WL BBPLL/DFLL Page 9 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Figure 4. Typical Power Topology (Page 2 of 2) CYW43903 2.5V and 3.3V 450 to 800 mA WLRF PA 3.3V VBAT LDO3P3 WLRF Pad VDDIO_RF WL OTP 3.3V 2.5V Cap-less LNLDO WL RF RX, TX, NMOS, Mini-PMU LDOs 2.5V Cap-less LNLDO 2.5V 2.5V Cap-less LNLDO 2.5V WL RF VCO WL RF CP VCOLDO2P5 Inside WL Radio Supply ball Supply bump/pad Power switch Ground ball Ground bump/pad No power switch External to chip No dedicated power switch, but internal power‐ down modes and block‐specific power switches Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 10 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 2.3 Power Management The CYW43903 has been designed with the stringent power consumption requirements of mobile devices in mind. All areas of the chip design are optimized to minimize power consumption. Silicon processes and cell libraries were chosen to reduce leakage current and supply voltages. Additionally, the CYW43903 includes an advanced Power Management Unit (PMU) sequencer. The PMU sequencer provides significant power savings by putting the CYW43903 into various power management states appropriate to the environment and activities that are being performed. The power management unit enables and disables internal regulators, switches, and other blocks based on a computation of the required resources and a table that describes the relationship between resources and the time needed to enable and disable them. Power-up sequences are fully programmable. Configurable, free-running counters (running at a 32.768 kHz LPO clock) in the PMU sequencer are used to turn on and turn off individual regulators and power switches. Clock speeds are dynamically changed (or gated altogether) as a function of the mode. Slower clock speeds are used whenever possible. Table 2 provides descriptions for the CYW43903 power modes. Table 2. CYW43903 Power Modes Mode Description Active All WLAN blocks in the CYW43903 are powered up and fully functional with active carrier sensing and frame transmission and receiving. All required regulators are enabled and put in the most efficient mode based on the load current. Clock speeds are dynamically adjusted by the PMU sequencer. Doze The radio, analog domains, and most of the linear regulators are powered down. The rest of the CYW43903 remains powered up in an idle state. All main clocks (PLL, crystal oscillator, or TCXO) are shut down to minimize active power consumption. The 32.768 kHz LPO clock is available only for the PMU sequencer. This condition is necessary to allow the PMU sequencer to wake up the chip and transition to Active mode. In Doze mode, the primary power consumed is due to leakage current. Deep-sleep Most of the chip, including both analog and digital domains and most of the regulators, is powered off. Logic states in the digital core are saved and preserved in a retention memory in the Always-On domain before the digital core is powered off. Upon a wake-up event triggered by the PMU timers or an external interrupt, logic states in the digital core are restored to their pre-deep-sleep settings to avoid lengthy HW reinitialization. Power-down The CYW43903 is effectively powered off by shutting down all internal regulators. The chip is brought out of this mode by external logic re-enabling the internal regulators. 2.4 PMU Sequencing The PMU sequencer minimizes system power consumption. It enables and disables various system resources based on a computation of required resources and a table that describes the relationship between resources and the time required to enable and disable them. Resource requests can come from several sources: clock requests from cores, the minimum resources defined in the ResourceMin register, and the resources requested by any active resource-request timers. The PMU sequencer maps clock requests into a set of resources required to produce the requested clocks. Each resource is in one of the following four states: ■ enabled ■ disabled ■ transition_on ■ transition_off The timer contains 0 when the resource is enabled or disabled and a nonzero value when in a transition state. The timer is loaded with the time_on or time_off value of the resource after the PMU determines that the resource must be enabled or disabled and decrements on each 32.768 kHz PMU clock. When it reaches 0, the state changes from transition_off to disabled or transition_on to enabled. If the time_on value is 0, the resource can transition immediately from disabled to enabled. Similarly, a time_off value of 0 indicates that the resource can transition immediately from enabled to disabled. The terms enable sequence and disable sequence refer to either the immediate transition or the timer load-decrement sequence. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 11 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 During each clock cycle, the PMU sequencer performs the following actions: ■ Computes the required resource set based on requests and the resource dependency table. ■ Decrements all timers whose values are nonzero. If a timer reaches 0, the PMU clears the ResourcePending bit of the resource and inverts the ResourceState bit. ■ Compares the request with the current resource status and determines which resources must be enabled or disabled. ■ Initiates a disable sequence for each resource that is enabled, is no longer being requested, and has no powered-up dependents. ■ Initiates an enable sequence for each resource that is disabled, is being requested, and has all of its dependencies enabled. 2.5 Power-Off Shutdown The CYW43903 provides a low-power shutdown feature that allows the device to be turned off while the host, and any other system devices remain operational. When the CYW43903 is not needed in the system, VDDIO_RF and VDDC are shut down while VDDIO remains powered. This allows the CYW43903 to be effectively off while keeping the I/O pins powered so that they do not draw extra current from devices connected to the I/O. During a low-power shutdown state, provided VDDIO remains applied to the CYW43903, all outputs are tristated and most inputs signals are disabled. Input voltages must remain within the limits defined for normal operation. This is done to prevent current paths or create loading on any digital signals in the system, and enables the CYW43903 to be fully integrated in an embedded device while taking full advantage of the lowest power-saving modes. When the CYW43903 is powered on from this state, it is the same as a normal power-up and does not retain any information about its state from before it was powered down. 2.6 Power-Up/Power-Down/Reset Circuits The CYW43903 has two signals (see Table 3) that enable or disable circuits and the internal regulator blocks, allowing the host to control power consumption. For timing diagrams of these signals and the required power-up sequences, see Power-Up Sequence and Timing. Table 3. Power-Up/Power-Down/Reset Control Signals Signal Description REG_ON This signal is used by the PMU to power up the CYW43903. It controls the internal CYW43903 regulators. When this pin is high, the regulators are enabled and the device is out of reset. When this pin is low, the device is in reset and the regulators are disabled. This pin has an internal 200 k pull-down resistor that is enabled by default. It can be disabled through programming. HIB_REG_ON_IN This signal is used by the hibernation block to decide whether or not to power down the internal CYW43903 regulators. If HIB_REG_ON_IN is low, the regulators will be disabled. For a signal at HIB_REG_ON_IN to function as intended, HIB_REG_ON_OUT must be connected to REG_ON. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 12 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 3. Frequency References An external crystal is used for generating all radio frequencies and normal-operation clocking. As an alternative, an external frequency reference can be used. In addition, a low-power oscillator (LPO) is provided for lower power mode timing. 3.1 Crystal Interface and Clock Generation The CYW43903 can use an external crystal to provide a frequency reference. The recommended crystal oscillator configuration, including all external components, is shown in Figure 5. Consult the reference schematics for the latest configuration. Figure 5. Recommended Oscillator Configuration Device boundary C WRF_XTAL_XON 1.3 pF 27 pF 37.4 MHz C x ohms 27 pF Programmable internal shunt caps are from 0 pF to 7.5 pF in steps of 0.5 pF. WRF_XTAL_XOP 0.4 pF External resistor and programmable internal resistor value is determined by crystal drive level. Programmable internal series resistor is from 50 ohms to 500 ohms in steps of 50 ohms. Boot‐up ROM value is 50 ohms. Note: A reference schematic is available for further details. Contact your Cypress FAE. A fractional-N synthesizer in the CYW43903 generates the radio frequencies, clocks, and data/packet timing, enabling it to operate using a wide selection of frequency references. The recommended default frequency reference is a 37.4 MHz crystal. The signal characteristics for the crystal interface are listed in Table 4. Note: Although the fractional-N synthesizer can support alternative reference frequencies, frequencies other than the default require support to be added in the driver, plus additional extensive system testing. Contact Cypress for further details. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 13 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 3.2 External Frequency Reference As an alternative to a crystal, an external precision frequency reference can be used, provided that it meets the phase noise requirements listed in Table 4. If used, the external clock should be connected to the WRF_XTAL_XON pin through an external 1000 pF coupling capacitor, as shown in Figure 6. The internal clock buffer connected to this pin will be turned off when the CYW43903 goes into sleep mode. When the clock buffer turns on and off, there will be a small impedance variation. Power must be supplied to the WRF_XTAL_VDD1P35 pin. Figure 6. Recommended Circuit to Use With an External Reference Clock 1000 pF Reference Clock WRF_XTAL_XON NC WRF_XTAL_XOP Table 4. Crystal Oscillator and External Clock—Requirements and Performance External Frequency Reference2 Crystal1 Parameter Frequency Conditions/Notes 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands: IEEE 802.11a/b/g/n operation Frequency tolerance over the Without trimming lifetime of the equipment, including temperature3 Min. Typ. Max. Min. Typ. Max. Units – 37.4 – – –37.4 – MHz –20 – 20 –20 – 20 ppm Crystal load capacitance – – 16 – – – – pF ESR – – – 60 – – – Ω Drive level External crystal must be able to tolerate this drive level. 200 – – – – – µW Input impedance (WRF_XTAL_XON) Resistive – – – 30k 100k – Ω Capacitive – – 7.5 – – 7.5 pF WRF_XTAL_XON Input low level DC-coupled digital signal – – – 0 – 0.2 V WRF_XTAL_XON Input high level DC-coupled digital signal – – – 1.0 – 1.26 V WRF_XTAL_XON input voltage (see Figure 6) IEEE 802.11b/g operation only – – – 400 – 1200 mVp-p WRF_XTAL_XON input voltage (see Figure 6) IEEE 802.11n AC-coupled analog input – – – 1 – – Vp-p Duty cycle 37.4 MHz clock – – – 40 50 60 % 37.4 MHz clock at 10 kHz offset – – – – – –129 dBc/Hz 37.4 MHz clock at 100 kHz offset – – – – – –136 dBc/Hz 37.4 MHz clock at 10 kHz offset – – – – – –134 dBc/Hz 37.4 MHz clock at 100 kHz offset – – – – – –141 dBc/Hz 4 Phase noise (IEEE 802.11b/g) noise4 Phase (IEEE 802.11n, 2.4 GHz) 1. (Crystal) Use WRF_XTAL_XON and WRF_XTAL_XOP. 2. See External Frequency Reference for alternative connection methods. 3. It is the responsibility of the equipment designer to select oscillator components that comply with these specifications. 4. Assumes that external clock has a flat phase noise response above 100 kHz. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 14 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 3.3 External 32.768 kHz Low-Power Oscillator The CYW43903 uses a secondary low frequency clock for low-power-mode timing. Either the internal low-precision LPO or an external 32.768 kHz precision oscillator is required. The internal LPO frequency range is approximately 33 kHz ± 30% over process, voltage, and temperature, which is adequate for some applications. However, one tradeoff caused by this wide LPO tolerance is a small current consumption increase during power save mode that is incurred by the need to wake-up earlier to avoid missing beacons. Whenever possible, the preferred approach is to use a precision external 32.768 kHz clock that meets the requirements listed in Table 5. Table 5. External 32.768 kHz Sleep Clock Specifications Parameter LPO Clock Units Nominal input frequency 32.768 kHz Frequency accuracy ±200 ppm Duty cycle 30–70 % Input signal amplitude 200–3300 mV, p-p Signal type Square-wave or sine-wave – >100k <5 Ω pF <10,000 ppm Input impedance1 Clock jitter (during initial start-up) 1. When power is applied or switched off. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 15 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 4. Applications Subsystem 4.1 Overview The Applications subsystem contains the general use CPU, memory, the standalone DMA core, the cryptography core, and the majority of the external interfaces. 4.2 Applications CPU and Memory Subsystem This subsystem has an integrated 32-bit ARM Cortex-R4 processor with an internal 32 KB D-cache and an internal 32 KB I-cache. The ARM Cortex-R4 is a low-power processor that features a low gate count, low interrupt latency, and low-cost debugging capabilities. It is intended for deeply embedded applications that require fast interrupt response features. The ARM Cortex-R4 implements the ARM v7-R architecture and supports the Thumb-2 instruction set. At 0.19 µW/MHz, the Cortex-R4 is the most power efficient general-purpose microprocessor available, outperforming 8- and 16-bit devices on a MIPS/µW basis. It also supports integrated sleep modes. Using multiple technologies to reduce cost, the ARM Cortex-R4 enables improved memory utilization, reduced pin overhead, and reduced silicon area. It also has extensive debugging features, including real-time tracing of program execution. On-chip memory for the CPU includes 1 MB SRAM, 640 KB ROM, and an 8 KB RAM powered independently of the application subsystem. 4.3 Memory-to-Memory DMA Core The CYW43903 memory-to-memory DMA (M2MDMA) engine contains eight DMA channel pairs, each containing one transmit/pull engine and one receive/push engine. The DMA engine provides general purpose data movement between memories that can be on the device, attached directly to the device, or accessed through a host interface. The transmit/pull engine reads data from the source memory and immediately passes it to the paired receive/push engine, which proceeds to write it to the destination memory. Multiple masters can program the individual channels, and multiple interrupts are provided so that interrupts for different channels can be routed separately to different masters. 4.4 Cryptography Core This core provides general purpose data movement between memories, which may be either on the device, attached directly to the device, or accessed through a host interface. The transmit/pull engine reads data from the source memory and passes it immediately to the paired receive/push engine that proceeds to write it to the destination memory. Multiple masters may program the individual channels, and multiple interrupts are provided so that interrupts for different channels can be routed separately to different masters. The cryptography block provides a hardware accelerator for enciphering and deciphering data that has undergone processing using standards-based encryption algorithms. The cryptography block includes the following primary features: ■ Encryption and hash engines that support single pass AUTH-ENC or ENC-AUTH processing. ■ A scalable AES module that supports CBC, ECB, CTR, CFB, OFB, and XTS encryption with 128-, 192-, and 256-bit key sizes. ■ A scalable DES module that supports DES and 3DES in ECB and CBC modes. ■ An RC4 stream cipher module that supports state initialization, state update, and key-stream generation. ■ MD5, SHA1, SHA224, and SHA256 engines that support pure hash or HMAC operations. ■ A built-in 512-byte key cache for locally protected key storage. OTP memory is used to store authentication keys. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 16 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 5. Applications Subsystem External Interfaces 5.1 GPIO There are 17 general-purpose I/O (GPIO) pins available on the CYW43903. The GPIOs can be used to connect to various external devices. Upon power-up and reset, these pins are tristated. Subsequently, they can be programmed to be either input or output pins via the GPIO control register. In addition, the GPIO pins can be assigned to various other functions. Apart from other functions, GPIOs are used to set bootstrap options and use the JTAG interface for debugging during software development. 5.2 Cypress Serial Control The CYW43903 has two Cypress Serial Control (CSC2) master interfaces for external communication with codecs, DACs, NVRAM, etc. The I/O pads can be configured as pull-ups or pull-ups can be installed on the reference design to support a multimaster on an open drain bus. 5.3 JTAG and ARM Serial Wire Debug The CYW43903 supports the IEEE 1149.1 JTAG boundary scan standard for performing device package and PCB assembly testing during manufacturing. In addition, the JTAG interface allows Cypress to assist customers by using proprietary debug and characterization test tools during board bring-up. Therefore, it is highly recommended to provide access to the JTAG pins by means of test points or a header on all PCB designs. The CYW43903 also supports ARM Serial Wire Debug (SWD) for connecting a JTAG debugger directly to both ARM Cortex-R4s. For SWD, the combination of a clock and a bidirectional signal (on a single pin) provides normal JTAG debug and test functionality. The reduced pin-count SWD interface is a high-performance alternative to the JTAG interface. Table 6 shows the JTAG_SEL and TAP_SEL states for test and debug function selection. Test and debug function selection is independent of the debugging interface (JTAG or SWD) being used. Table 6. JTAG_SEL and TAP_SEL States for Test and Debug Function Selection JTAG_SEL State TAP_SEL State Test and Debug Function 0 0 JTAG not used. 0 1 JTAG not used. 1 0 Access the LV tap directly for ATE and bring-up. 1 1 Access either of the ARM Cortex-R4’s directly via either the 5-pin JTAG port or the 2-pin SWD configuration. Note: JTAG_SEL is exposed on a dedicated physical pin. TAP_SEL uses the GPIO_8 physical pin. 2. Cypress Serial Control is an I2C compatible interface. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 17 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 5.4 PWM The CYW43903 provides up to six independent pulse width modulation (PWM) channels. The following features apply to the PWM channels: ■ Each channel is a square wave generator with a programmable duty cycle. ■ Each channel generates its duty cycle by dividing down the input clock. ■ Both the high and low duration of the duty cycle can be divided down independently by a 16-bit divider register. ■ Each channel can work independently or update simultaneously. ■ Pairs of PWM outputs can be inverted for devices that need a differential output. ■ Continuous or single pulses can be generated. ■ The input clock can either be a high-speed clock from a PLL channel or a lower speed clock at the crystal frequency. 5.5 SPI Flash The SPI flash interface supports the following features: ■ A SPI-compatible serial bus. ■ An 80 MHz (maximum) clock frequency. ■ Increased Throughput to 40 MBps in Quad-mode or upto 10 MBps in single Mode3. ■ Support for either ×1 or ×4 addresses with ×4 data. ■ 3-bytes and 4-byte addressing modes. ■ A configurable dummy-cycle count that is programmable from 1 to 15. ■ Programmable instructions output to serial flash. ■ An option to change the sampling edge from rising-edge to falling-edge for read-back data when in high-speed mode. 5.6 UART A high-speed 4-wire CTS/RTS UART interface can be enabled by software and has dedicated pins. Provided primarily for debugging during development, this UART enables the CYW43903 to operate as RS-232 data termination equipment (DTE) for exchanging and managing data with other serial devices. It is compatible with the industry standard 16550 UART and provides a FIFO size of 64 × 8 in each direction. There are two low-speed UART interfaces on the CYW43903. Each functions as a standard 2-wire UART. They are also enabled as alternate functions on GPIOs and can be enabled independently of the 4-wire fast UART. Note: The high-speed, 4-wire UART interface is identified as UART0 in this document and in reference schematics. The two lowspeed, 2-wire UART interfaces are identified as UART1 and UART2 in this document and in the reference schematics. 3. Note that the clock needs to be constrained to ~26.67MHz for reliable operation at high operating temperatures. The throughput of the SPI Flash block is therefore restricted to ~13 MBps for Quad mode and ~3 MBps for single mode. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 18 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 5.7 SPI CYW43903 contains one SPI block. This block support a fixed SPI mode (CPOL = 0, CPHA = 0) and 8-bit data read/write. ■ CPOL = 0: Clock idles at 0, and each cycle consists of a pulse of 1. The leading edge is a rising edge, and the trailing edge is a falling edge. ■ CPHA = 0: The "out" side changes the data on the trailing edge of the preceding clock cycle, while the "in" side captures the data on (or shortly after) the leading edge of the clock cycle. The SPI hardware block supports a hold time of 25ns and a maximum clock frequency of 40MHz. If a SPI slave does not support the above mode or requires a hold time greater than 25ns, a bit banging software SPI driver should be used. Cypress's WICED SDK provides and example of such a driver. Note that the maximum SPI frequency support by a software SPI driver is much lower than 40 MHz. SPI0 mentioned in Table 8 is multiplexed with GPIOs and can therefore support a bit banging based software SPI driver. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 19 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 6. Global Functions 6.1 External Coexistence Interface An external handshake interface is available to enable signaling between the device and an external colocated wireless device, such as Bluetooth, to manage wireless medium sharing for optimum performance. Figure 7 shows the coexistence interface. Figure 7. Cypress 2-Wire External Coexistence Interface CYW43903 WLAN GCI BT\IC SECI_OUT SECI_IN UART_IN UART_OUT NOTES: SECI_OUT/BT_TXD and SECI_IN/BT_RXD are multiplexed on the GPIOs. The 2‐wire coexistence interface is intended for future compatibility with the BT SIG 2‐wire interface that is being standardized for Core 4.1. Note: SECI UART is the same as UART2, one of the low-speed UART interfaces mentioned in section 5.7 and in the reference schematics. 6.2 One-Time Programmable Memory Various hardware configuration parameters can be stored in an internal 6144-bit (768 bytes) One-Time Programmable (OTP) memory that is read by system software after a device reset. In addition, customer-specific parameters, including the system vendor ID and MAC address can be stored, depending on the specific board design. The initial state of all bits in an unprogrammed OTP memory device is 0. After any bit is programmed to a 1, it cannot be reprogrammed to 0. The entire OTP memory array can be programmed in a single write-cycle using a utility provided with the Cypress WLAN manufacturing test tools. Alternatively, multiple write cycles can be used to selectively program specific bytes, but only bits that are still in the 0 state can be altered during each programming cycle. Prior to OTP memory programming, all values should be verified using the appropriate editable nvram.txt file. The nvram.txt file is provided with the reference board design package. 6.3 Hibernation Block The Hibernation (HIB) block is a self-contained power domain that can be used to completely shut down the rest of the CYW43903. This optional block uses the HIB_REG_ON_OUT pin to drive the REG_ON pin. Therefore, for the HIB block to work as designed, the HIB_REG_ON_OUT pin must be connected to the REG_ON pin. To use the HIB block, software programs the HIB block with a wake count and then asserts a signal indicating that the chip should be put into hibernation. After assertion, the HIB block drives HIB_REG_ON_OUT low for the number of 32 kHz clock cycles programmed as the wake count. After the wake-count timer expires, HIB_REG_ON_OUT is driven high. Other than the logic state of the HIB block, no state is saved in the CYW43903 during hibernation. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 20 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 6.4 System Boot Sequence The following general sequence occurs after a CYW43903 is powered on: 1. Either REG_ON or HIB_REG_ON_IN is asserted. Note: For HIB_REG_ON_IN to function as intended, HIB_REG_ON_OUT must be connected to REG_ON. 2. The core LDO (CLDO) and LDO3P3 outputs stabilize. 3. The OTP memory bits are used to initialize various functions, such as PMU trimming, package selection, memory size selection, etc. 4. The APP and WLAN cores are powered up. 5. The XTAL is powered up. 6. The APP and WLAN CPU bootup sequences start. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 21 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 7. Wireless LAN Subsystem 7.1 WLAN CPU and Memory Subsystem The CYW43903 WLAN section includes an integrated 32-bit ARM Cortex-R4 processor with internal RAM and ROM. The ARM CortexR4 is a low-power processor that features a low gate count, a small interrupt latency, and low-cost debug capabilities. It is intended for deeply embedded applications that require fast interrupt response features. Delivering more than a 30% performance gain over ARM7TDMI, the ARM Cortex-R4 implements the ARM v7-R architecture with support for the Thumb-2 instruction set. At 0.19 µW/MHz, the Cortex-R4 is the most power efficient general-purpose microprocessor available, outperforming 8- and 16-bit devices on MIPS/µW. It also supports integrated sleep modes. On-chip memory for this CPU includes 576 KB of SRAM and 448 KB of ROM. 7.2 IEEE 802.11n MAC The CYW43903 WLAN media access controller (MAC) is designed to support high-throughput operation with low power consumption. It does so without compromising the Bluetooth coexistence policies, thereby enabling optimal performance over both networks. In addition, several power-saving modes have been implemented that allow the MAC to consume very little power while maintaining network-wide timing synchronization. The architecture diagram of the MAC is shown in Figure 8. The following sections provide an overview of the important MAC modules. Figure 8. WLAN MAC Architecture Em bedded CPU Interface Host Registers, DM A Engines TX‐FIFO 32 KB PM Q RX‐FIFO 10 KB PSM PSM UCODE M em ory IFS Backoff, BTCX W EP TKIP, AES, W API TSF SHM BUS IHR NAV EXT‐ IHR BUS TXE TX A‐M PDU RXE RX A‐M PDU Shared M em ory 6 KB M AC‐PHY Interface The CYW43903 WLAN MAC supports features specified in the IEEE 802.11 base standard and amended by IEEE 802.11n. The key MAC features include: ■ Transmission and reception of aggregated MPDUs (A-MPDU) for high throughput (HT). ■ Support for power management schemes, including WMM power-save, power-save multi-poll (PSMP), and multiphase PSMP operation. ■ Support for immediate ACK and Block-ACK policies. ■ Interframe space timing support, including RIFS. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 22 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 ■ Support for RTS/CTS and CTS-to-self frame sequences for protecting frame exchanges. ■ Back-off counters in hardware for supporting multiple priorities as specified in the WMM specification. ■ Timing synchronization function (TSF), network allocation vector (NAV) maintenance, and target beacon transmission time (TBTT) generation in hardware. ■ Hardware offload for AES-CCMP, legacy WPA TKIP, legacy WEP ciphers, WAPI, and support for key management. ■ Support for coexistence with Bluetooth and other external radios. ■ Programmable independent basic service set (IBSS) or infrastructure basic service set functionality. ■ Statistics counters for MIB support. 7.2.1 PSM The programmable state machine (PSM) is a microcoded engine that provides most of the low-level control to the hardware in order to implement the IEEE 802.11 specification. It is a microcontroller that is highly optimized for flow-control operations, which are predominant in implementations of communication protocols. The instruction set and fundamental operations are simple and general, allowing algorithms to be optimized very late in the design process. It also allows for changes to the algorithms to track evolving IEEE 802.11 specifications. The PSM fetches instructions from microcode memory. It uses the shared memory to obtain operands for instructions, as a data store, and to exchange data between both the host and the MAC data pipeline (via the SHM bus). The PSM also uses a scratch-pad memory (similar to a register bank) to store frequently accessed and temporary variables. The PSM exercises fine-grained control over the hardware engines by programming internal hardware registers (IHR). These IHRs are colocated with the hardware functions they control and are accessed by the PSM via the IHR bus. The PSM fetches instructions from the microcode memory using an address determined by the program counter, instruction literal, or a program stack. For ALU operations, the operands are obtained from shared memory, scratch-pad memory, IHRs, or instruction literals, and the results are written into the shared memory, scratch-pad memory, or IHRs. There are two basic branch instructions: conditional branches and ALU-based branches. To better support the many decision points in the IEEE 802.11 algorithms, branches can depend on either readily available signals from the hardware modules (branch condition signals are available to the PSM without polling the IHRs) or on the results of ALU operations. 7.2.2 WEP The wired equivalent privacy (WEP) engine encapsulates all the hardware accelerators to perform encryption and decryption as well as MIC computation and verification. The accelerators implement the following cipher algorithms: legacy WEP, WPA TKIP, WPA2 AES-CCMP. The PSM determines, based on the frame type and association information, the appropriate cipher algorithm to use. It supplies the keys to the hardware engines from an on-chip key table. The WEP interfaces with the transmit engine (TXE) to encrypt and compute the MIC on transmit frames and the receive engine (RXE) to decrypt and verify the MIC on receive frames. 7.2.3 TXE The transmit engine (TXE) constitutes the transmit data path of the MAC. It coordinates the DMA engines to store the transmit frames in the TXFIFO. It interfaces with the WEP module to encrypt frames and transfers the frames across the MAC-PHY interface at the appropriate time determined by the channel-access mechanisms. The data received from the DMA engines are stored in transmit FIFOs. The MAC has multiple logical queues to support traffic streams that have different QoS priority requirements. The PSM uses the channel access information from the IFS module to schedule a queue from which the next frame is transmitted. Once the frame is scheduled, the TXE hardware transmits the frame based on a precise timing trigger received from the IFS module. The TXE module also contains the hardware that allows the rapid assembly of MPDUs into an A-MPDU for transmission. The hardware module aggregates the encrypted MPDUs by adding appropriate headers and pad delimiters as needed. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 23 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 7.2.4 RXE The receive engine (RXE) constitutes the receive data path of the MAC. It interfaces with the DMA engine to drain the received frames from the RXFIFO. It transfers bytes across the MAC-PHY interface and interfaces with the WEP module to decrypt frames. The decrypted data is stored in the RXFIFO. The RXE module contains filters that are programmed by the PSM to accept or filter frames based on several criteria such as receiver address, BSSID, and certain frame types. The RXE module also contains the hardware required to detect A-MPDUs, parse the headers of the containers, and disaggregate them into component MPDUS. 7.2.5 IFS The IFS module contains the timers required to determine interframe-space timing including RIFS timing. It also contains multiple backoff engines required to support prioritized access to the medium as specified by WMM. The interframe-spacing timers are triggered by the cessation of channel activity on the medium, as indicated by the PHY. These timers provide precise timing to the TXE to begin frame transmission. The TXE uses this information to send response frames or perform transmit frame-bursting (RIFS or SIFS separated, as within a TXOP). The backoff engines (for each access category) monitor channel activity, in each slot duration, to determine whether to continue or pause the backoff counters. When the backoff counters reach 0, the TXE gets notified so that it may commence frame transmission. In the event of multiple backoff counters decrementing to 0 at the same time, the hardware resolves the conflict based on policies provided by the PSM. The IFS module also incorporates hardware that allows the MAC to enter a low-power state when operating under the IEEE power save mode. In this mode, the MAC is in a suspended state with its clock turned off. A sleep timer, whose count value is initialized by the PSM, runs on a slow clock and determines the duration over which the MAC remains in this suspended state. When the timer expires, the MAC is restored to its functional state. The PSM updates the TSF timer based on the sleep duration, ensuring that the TSF is synchronized to the network. The IFS module also contains the PTA hardware that assists the PSM in Bluetooth coexistence functions. 7.2.6 TSF The timing synchronization function (TSF) module maintains the TSF timer of the MAC. It also maintains the target beacon transmission time (TBTT). The TSF timer hardware, under the control of the PSM, is capable of adopting timestamps received from beacon and probe response frames in order to maintain synchronization with the network. The TSF module also generates trigger signals for events that are specified as offsets from the TSF timer, such as uplink and downlink transmission times used in PSMP. 7.2.7 NAV The network allocation vector (NAV) timer module is responsible for maintaining the NAV information conveyed through the duration field of MAC frames. This ensures that the MAC complies with the protection mechanisms specified in the standard. The hardware, under the control of the PSM, maintains the NAV timer and updates the timer appropriately based on received frames. This timing information is provided to the IFS module, which uses it as a virtual carrier-sense indication. 7.2.8 MAC-PHY Interface The MAC-PHY interface consists of a data path interface to exchange RX/TX data from/to the PHY. In addition, there is an programming interface that can be controlled either by the host or the PSM to configure and control the PHY. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 24 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 7.3 IEEE 802.11™ b/g/n PHY The CYW43903 WLAN digital PHY complies with IEEE 802.11b/g/n single-stream specifications to provide wireless LAN connectivity supporting data rates from 1 Mbps to 72 Mbps for low-power, high-performance, handheld applications. The PHY has been designed to work in the presence of interference, radio nonlinearity, and various other impairments. It incorporates optimized implementations of filters, FFTs, and Viterbi-decoder algorithms. Efficient algorithms have been designed to achieve maximum throughput and reliability, including algorithms for carrier sensing and rejection, frequency/phase/timing acquisition and tracking, and channel estimation and tracking. The PHY receiver also contains a robust IEEE 802.11b demodulator. The PHY carriersensing algorithm provides high throughput for IEEE 802.11b/g hybrid networks with Bluetooth coexistence. The key PHY features include: ■ Programmable data rates from MCS0–7 in 20 MHz channels. ■ Support for Optional Short GI and Green Field modes in TX and RX. ■ TX and RX LDPC for improved range and power efficiency. ■ All scrambling, encoding, forward error correction, and modulation in the transmit direction and inverse operations in the receive direction. ■ Support for IEEE 802.11h/k for worldwide operation. ■ Advanced algorithms for low power consumption and enhanced sensitivity, range, and reliability. ■ Algorithms to improve performance in the presence of externally received Bluetooth signals. ■ An automatic gain control scheme for blocking and nonblocking cellular applications. ■ Closed loop transmit power control. ■ Digital RF chip calibration algorithms to handle CMOS RF chip process, voltage, and temperature (PVT) variations. ■ On-the-fly channel frequency and transmit power selection. ■ Per-packet RX antenna diversity. ■ Available per-packet channel quality and signal-strength measurements. ■ Compliance with FCC and other worldwide regulatory requirements. Figure 9. WLAN PHY Block Diagram Filters and Radio Comp AFE and Radio Radio Control Block Carrier Sense, AGC, and Rx FSM Tx FSM Common Logic Block Filters and Radio Comp CCK/DSSS Demodulate Frequency and Timing Synch OFDM Demodulate Buffers Viterbi Decoder Descramble and Deframe FFT/IFFT MAC Interface Modulation and Coding Frame and Scramble PA Comp Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Modulate/ Spread COEX Page 25 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 8. WLAN Radio Subsystem The CYW43903 includes an integrated WLAN RF transceiver that has been optimized for use in 2.4 GHz Wireless LAN systems. It has been designed to provide low-power, low-cost, and robust communications for applications operating in the globally available 2.4 GHz unlicensed ISM band. The transmit and receive sections include all on-chip filtering, mixing, and gain control functions. Ten RF control signals are available to drive external RF switches. See the reference board schematics for more information. A block diagram of the radio subsystem is shown in Figure 10. Note that integrated on-chip baluns (not shown) convert the fully differential transmit and receive paths to single-ended signal pins. 8.1 Receiver Path The CYW43903 has a wide dynamic range, direct conversion receiver that employs high-order on-chip channel filtering to ensure reliable operation in the noisy 2.4 GHz ISM band. The 2.4 GHz path has a dedicated on-chip low-noise amplifier (LNA). 8.2 Transmit Path Baseband data is modulated and upconverted to the 2.4 GHz ISM band. Linear on-chip power amplifiers deliver high output powers while meeting IEEE 802.11b/g/n specifications without the need for external PAs. When using the internal PA, which is required in the 2.4 GHz band, closed-loop output power control is completely integrated. 8.3 Calibration The CYW43903 features dynamic and automatic on-chip calibration to continually compensate for temperature and process variations across components. These calibration routines are performed periodically during the course of normal radio operation. Examples of some of the automatic calibration algorithms are baseband filter calibration for optimum transmit and receive performance and LOFT calibration for carrier leakage reduction. In addition, I/Q calibration and VCO calibration are performed on-chip. No per-board calibration is required during manufacturing testing. This helps to minimize the test time and cost in large-volume production environments. Figure 10. Radio Functional Block Diagram WL TX 2.4 GHz Mixer WL DAC WL TXLPF TX Mode Switch WL PA WL DAC WL TXLPF WLAN BB Voltage Regulators WL ADC WL RXLPF TX Mode Switch WL‐G‐LNA11 WL G‐LNA12 WL ADC WL RX 2.4 GHz Mixer WL RXLPF WL 2.4 GHz TX WL 2.4 GHz RX WL LOGEN WL PLL XON Shared XO LPO/Ext LPO/RCAL Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G XOP Page 26 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 9. Pinout and Signal Descriptions 9.1 Ball Map Figure 11. 151-Ball WLBGA Map—Top View with Balls Facing Down P N M L 12 VDDIO RF_SW_ CTRL_8 RF_SW_ CTRL_7 11 RF_SW_ CTRL_9 VSSC RF_SW_ CTRL_1 VSSC VDDC RF_SW_ CTRL_6 NC_J10 VSSC GPIO_2 GPIO_4 VDDIO NC_H9 VSSC VSSC VSSC SRSTN K PWR_GND J NC_J12 NC_J11 10 JTAG_SEL NC_N10 RF_SW_ CTRL_5 9 RF_SW_ CTRL_2 RF_SW_ CTRL_3 RF_SW_ CTRL_0 RF_SW_ CTRL_4 VDDIO_RF VSSC 8 OTP_VDD3P3 AVDD1P2 LPO_XTAL_IN VSSC VDDIO_RF VDDIO 7 WRF_XTAL_ XON WRF_XTAL_ GND1P2 AVSS VDDC VDDIO 6 WRF_XTAL_ XOP WRF_XTAL_ VDD1P35 WRF_XTAL_ VDD1P2 WRF_SYNTH_ VDD3P3 VDDC VSSC 5 WRF_PMU_ VDD1P35 WRF_SYNTH_ VDD1P2 WRF_SYNTH_ GND WRF_VCO_ GND VDDC VSSC 4 WRF_RX5G_ GND WRF_AFE_ VDD1P35 WRF_GENERAL _GND WRF_EXT_ TSSIA VSSC RF_GND_P3 WRF_GENERAL 2_GND WRF_AFE_ GND WRF_GPAIO_ OUT HIB_REG_ ON_IN HIB_LPO_ SELMODE 2 RF_GND_P2 WRF_PA_ GND3P3 WRF_TXMIX_ VDD WRF_RX2G_ GND VSSC 1 WRF_PA_ VDD3P3 WRF_ PAOUT_2G WRF_RFIN_ 2G M L 3 P N Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G H NC_H12 VDDC VDDC G GPIO_3 NC_G11 F GPIO_6 GPIO_5 E D C B A VOUT_3P3 LDO_ VDDBAT5V LDO_ VDD1P5 SR_ VDDBAT5V SR_PVSS 12 VOUT_LNLDO VOUT_ HSICLDO VOUT_CLDO SR_VLX 11 VSSC PMU_AVSS VOUT_ CLDO_SENSE WL_REG_ON 10 VDDIO GPIO_8 VSSC I2C0_SDATA VDDC 9 GPIO_13 VSSC I2C0_CLK UART0_TXD VDDIO 8 VSSC UART0_RXD UART0_RTS UART0_CTS 7 VDDIO VSSC VDDC VDDC VSSC SPI0_CS GPIO_12 SPI0_SISO SFL_CS 6 VDDC GPIO_7 SPI0_MISO SPI0_CLK SFL_CLK 5 VDDC SFL_IO3 SFL_IO2 SFL_IO0 4 VSSC VDDC VSSC SFL_IO1 GPIO_14 3 GPIO_15 2 VSSC HIB_WAKE_B VSSC HIB_XTALOUT HIB_XTALIN VSSC VDDC GPIO_9 VSSC GPIO_16 VSSC VSSC VDDC HIB_REG_ON_O UT HIB_VDDO VDDC GPIO_0 GPIO_1 GPIO_10 GPIO_11 K J H G F E D C B 1 A Page 27 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 9.2 Ball List Table 7 contains the 151-ball WLBGA net names. Table 7. WLBGA Net Names Ball Ball Net Name Net Name A2 GPIO_15 D8 VSSC A3 GPIO_14 D9 GPIO_8 A4 SFL_IO0 D10 VSSC A5 SFL_CLK D11 VOUT_LNLDO A6 SFL_CS D12 LDO_VDDBAT5V A7 UART0_CTS E1 GPIO_0 A8 VDDIO E2 GPIO_9 A9 VDDC E3 VSSC A10 REG_ON E5 GPIO_7 A11 SR_VLX E6 SPI0_CS A12 SR_PVSS E8 GPIO_13 B1 GPIO_11 E9 VDDIO B2 VSSC E10 VDDIO B3 SFL_IO1 E11 VDDIO B4 SFL_IO2 E12 VOUT_3P3 B5 SPI0_CLK F1 VDDC B6 SPI0_SISO F2 VDDC B7 UART0_RTS F5 VDDC B8 UART0_TXD F6 VSSC B9 I2C0_SDATA F8 VSSC B10 VOUT_CLDO_SENSE F9 VSSC B11 VOUT_CLDO F10 GPIO_4 B12 SR_VDDBAT5V F11 GPIO_5 C1 GPIO_10 F12 GPIO_6 C2 GPIO_16 G1 HIB_VDDO C3 VSSC G2 VSSC C4 SFL_IO3 G3 VSSC C5 SPI0_MISO G4 VSSC C6 GPIO_12 G6 VDDC C7 UART0_RXD G7 VSSC C8 I2C0_CLK G9 VSSC C9 VSSC G10 GPIO_2 C10 PMU_AVSS G11 NC_G11 C11 VOUT_HSICLDO G12 GPIO_3 C12 LDO_VDD1P5 H1 HIB_REG_ON_OUT D1 GPIO_1 H2 HIB_XTALIN D2 VSSC H3 HIB_WAKE_B D3 VDDC H5 VDDC D4 VDDC H7 VDDC D7 VSSC H9 NC_H9 Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 28 of 65 PRELIMINARY Ball Net Name CYW43903 Ball Net Name H10 VSSC M7 AVSS H11 VDDC M8 LPO_XTAL_IN H12 NC_H12 M9 RF_SW_CTRL_0 J1 VDDC M10 RF_SW_CTRL_5 J2 HIB_XTALOUT M11 VSSC J3 HIB_LPO_SELMODE M12 RF_SW_CTRL_8 J5 VSSC N2 WRF_AFE_GND J6 VSSC N3 WRF_AFE_GND J8 VDDIO N4 WRF_AFE_VDD1P35 J9 VSSC N5 WRF_SYNTH_VDD1P2 J10 NC_J10 N6 WRF_XTAL_VDD1P35 J11 NC_J11 N7 WRF_AFE_GND J12 NC_J12 N8 AVDD1P2 K1 VSSC N9 RF_SW_CTRL_3 K2 VSSC N10 NC_N10 K3 HIB_REG_ON_IN N11 RF_SW_CTRL_9 K4 VSSC N12 VDDIO K5 VDDC P1 WRF_PA_VDD3P3 K6 VDDC P2 RF_GND_P2 K7 VDDIO P3 RF_GND_P3 K8 VDDIO_RF P4 WRF_AFE_GND K9 VDDIO_RF P5 WRF_PMU_VDD1P35 K10 RF_SW_CTRL_6 P6 WRF_XTAL_XOP K11 VSSC P7 WRF_XTAL_XON K12 PWR_GND P8 OTP_VDD3P3 L1 WRF_RFIN_2G P9 RF_SW_CTRL_2 L2 WRF_AFE_GND P10 JTAG_SEL L3 WRF_GPAIO_OUT P11 SRSTN L4 WRF_EXT_TSSIA L5 WRF_AFE_GND L6 WRF_SYNTH_VDD3P3 L7 VDDC L8 VSSC L9 RF_SW_CTRL_4 L10 VDDC L11 RF_SW_CTRL_1 L12 RF_SW_CTRL_7 M1 WRF_PAOUT_2G M2 WRF_TXMIX_VDD M3 WRF_AFE_GND M4 WRF_AFE_GND M5 WRF_AFE_GND M6 WRF_XTAL_VDD1P2 Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 29 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 9.3 Signal Descriptions Table 8 provides the signal name, type, and description for each CYW43903 ball. The symbols shown under Type indicate pin directions (I/O = bidirectional, I = input, and O = output) and the internal pull-up/pull-down characteristics (PU = weak internal pull-up resistor and PD = weak internal pull-down resistor), if any. Table 8. Signal Descriptions Ball Number Signal Name Type Description Cypress Serial Control (CSC) Interfaces C8 I B9 I2 2C0_CLK C0_SDATA O CSC master clock. I/O CSC serial data Clocks P6 WRF_XTAL_XOP I XTAL oscillator input. P7 WRF_XTAL_XON O XTAL oscillator output. M8 LPO_XTAL_IN I External sleep clock input (32.768 kHz). H2 HIB_XTALIN I 3.3V 32 kHz crystal input J2 HIB_XTALOUT O 3.3V 32 kHz crystal output GPIO Interface (WLAN) E1 GPIO_0 I/O D1 GPIO_1 I/O G10 GPIO_2 I/O G12 GPIO_3 I/O F10 GPIO_4 I/O F11 GPIO_5 I/O F12 GPIO_6 I/O E5 GPIO_7 I/O D9 GPIO_8 I/O E2 GPIO_9 I/O C1 GPIO_10 I/O B1 GPIO_11 I/O C6 GPIO_12 I/O E8 GPIO_13 I/O A3 GPIO_14 I/O A2 GPIO_15 I/O C2 GPIO_16 I/O Programmable GPIO pins. Ground L2, L5, M3, M4, M5, N2, N3, N7, WRF_AFE_GND P4 GND AFE ground M11, K11, H10, D10, J9, G9, F9, VSSC C9, L8, F8, D8, G7, D7, J6, F6, J5, K4, G4, G3, E3, C3, K2, G2, D2, B2, K1 GND Core ground for WLAN and APP sections A12 GND Power ground SR_PVSS C10 PMU_AVSS GND Quiet ground M7 AVSS GND Baseband PLL ground Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 30 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Table 8. Signal Descriptions (Cont.) Ball Number Signal Name Type Description Hibernation Block, Power-Down/Power-Up, and Reset A10 REG_ON I Used by PMU to power up or power down the internal CYW43903 regulators used by the WLAN and APP sections. Also, when deasserted, this pin holds the WLAN and APP sections in reset. This pin has an internal 200 kΩ pull-down resistor that is enabled by default. It can be disabled through programming. K3 HIB_REG_ON_IN I Used by the hibernation block to power up or power down the internal CYW43903 regulators. For applications that use the hibernation block, HIB_REG_ON_OUT must connect to REG_ON. Also, when deasserted, this pin holds the WLAN and APP sections in reset. H1 HIB_REG_ON_OUT O REG_ON output signal generated by the hibernation block. H3 HIB_WAKE_B I Wake up chip from hibernation mode. J3 HIB_LPO_SELMODE I Select precise or coarse 32 kHz clock. P11 SRSTN I System reset. This active-low signal resets the backplanes. JTAG Interface P10 JTAG_SEL I JTAG select. This pin must be connected to ground if the JTAG interface is not used. No Connects J10, J11, J12, H9, H12, G11, N10, L4 NC_J10, NC_J11, NC_J12, NC_H9, NC_H12, NC_G11, NC_N10, WRF_EXT_TSSIA – No connect Power Supplies (Miscellaneous) P8 OTP_VDD3P3 PWR OTP 3.3V supply H11, L10, A9, L7, H7, K6, G6, K5, H5, F5, D4, D3, F2, J1, F1 VDDC PWR 1.2V core supply for WLAN N12, E11, E10, E9, J8, A8, K7 VDDIO PWR I/O supply K8, K9 VDDIO_RF PWR I/O supply for RF switch control pads (3.3V). K12 PWR_GND GND Power supply ground G1 HIB_VDDO PWR I/O supply for hibernation block N8 AVDD1P2 PWR 1.2V supply for baseband PLL Power Supplies (WLAN) L6 WRF_SYNTH_VDD3P3 PWR Synthesizer VDD 3.3V supply P1 WRF_PA_VDD3P3 PWR 2.4 GHz PA 3.3V VBAT supply P5 WRF_PMU_VDD1P35 PWR PMU 1.35V supply M2 WRF_TXMIX_VDD PWR 3.3V supply for TX mixer N5 WRF_SYNTH_VDD1P2 PWR 1.2V supply for synthesizer N4 WRF_AFE_VDD1P35 PWR 1.35V supply for the analog front end (AFE) PWM Interface (Alternate Function for GPIOs) – PWM0 O Pulse width modulation bit 0. – PWM1 O Pulse width modulation bit 1 – PWM2 O Pulse width modulation bit 2 – PWM3 O Pulse width modulation bit 3 Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 31 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Table 8. Signal Descriptions (Cont.) Ball Number Signal Name Type Description – PWM4 O Pulse width modulation bit 4 – PWM5 O Pulse width modulation bit 5 RF Signal Interface (WLAN) L1 WRF_RFIN_2G I 2.4 GHz WLAN receiver input P3 RF_GND_P3 GND RF ground M1 WRF_PAOUT_2G O 2.4 GHz WLAN PA output P2 RF_GND_P2 GND RF ground L3 WRF_GPAIO_OUT I/O Analog GPIO RF Switch Control Lines M9 RF_SW_CTRL_0 O L11 RF_SW_CTRL_1 O P9 RF_SW_CTRL_2 O N9 RF_SW_CTRL_3 O L9 RF_SW_CTRL_4 O M10 RF_SW_CTRL_5 I/O K10 RF_SW_CTRL_6 I/O L12 RF_SW_CTRL_7 I/O M12 RF_SW_CTRL_8 I/O N11 RF_SW_CTRL_9 I/O Programmable RF switch control lines. The control lines are programmable via the driver and nvram.txt file. SPI Flash Interface A5 SFL_CLK O Flash clock A4 SFL_IO0 I/O Flash data B3 SFL_IO1 I/O Flash data B4 SFL_IO2 I/O Flash data C4 SFL_IO3 I/O Flash data A6 SFL_CS O Flash slave select SPI Interface Note: The SPI interface can alternatively be configured and used as a CSC interface. B5 SPI0_CLK O SPI clock C5 SPI0_MISO I SPI data master in B6 SPI0_SISO O SPI data master out E6 SPI0_CS O SPI slave select UART Interface A7 UART0_CTS I UART clear-to-send B7 UART0_RTS O UART request-to-send C7 UART0_RXD I UART serial input B8 UART0_TXD O UART serial output Voltage Regulators (Integrated) B12 SR_VDDBAT5V I VBAT. A11 SR_VLX O CBUCK switching regulator output Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 32 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Table 8. Signal Descriptions (Cont.) Ball Number Signal Name Type Description C12 LDO_VDD1P5 I LNLDO input D12 LDO_VDDBAT5V I LDO VBAT N6 WRF_XTAL_VDD1P35 I XTAL LDO input (1.35V) M6 WRF_XTAL_VDD1P2 O XTAL LDO output (1.2V) D11 VOUT_LNLDO O Terminate with 2.2 μF capacitor to GND B11 VOUT_CLDO O Output of core LDO E12 VOUT_3P3 O LDO 3.3V output B10 VOUT_CLDO_SENSE O Voltage sense pin for core LDO C11 VOUT_HSICLDO O Output of HSIC LDO Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 33 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 10. GPIO Signals and Strapping Options 10.1 Overview This section describes GPIO signals and strapping options. The pins are sampled at power-on reset (POR) to determine various operating modes. Sampling occurs a few milliseconds after an internal POR or deassertion of the external POR. After the POR, each pin assumes the GPIO or alternative function specified in Table 10. Each strapping option pin has an internal pull-up (PU) or pull-down (PD) resistor that determines the default mode. To change the mode, connect an external PU resistor to VDDIO or a PD resistor to ground, using a 10 kΩ resistor or less. Note: Refer to the reference board schematics for more information. 10.2 Weak Pull-Down and Pull-Up Resistances At VDDO = 3.3V ±10%, the minimum, typical, and maximum weak pull-down resistances (for a pin voltage of VDDO) are 37.99 kΩ, 44.57 kΩ, and 51.56 kΩ, respectively. At VDDO = 3.3V ±10%, the minimum, typical, and maximum weak pull-up resistances (for a pin voltage of 0V) are 34.73 kΩ, 39.58 kΩ, and 44.51 kΩ, respectively. 10.3 Strapping Options Table 9 provides the strapping options. Table 9. Strapping Options Pin Name Strap # Default Internal Pull During Strap Description GPIO_1 GSPI_MODE D1 PD Enable gSPI interface GPIO_7 WCPU_BOOT_MODE E5 PD Boot from SoC SROM or SoC SRAM GPIO_11 ACPU_BOOT_MODE B1 PD Boot from tightly coupled memory (TCM) ROM or TCM RAM GPIO_13 SDIO_MODE E8 PD Select either SDIO host mode or SDIO device mode GPIO_15 VTRIM_EN A2 PD Enable PMU voltage trimming RF_SW_CTRL_5 DAP_CLK_SEL M10 PD Select XTAL clock or the test clock (tck) for the debug access port (DAP) RF_SW_CTRL_7 RSRC_INIT_MODE L12 PD PMU resource initialization mode selection Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 34 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 10.4 Alternate GPIO Signal Functions Table 10 provides the alternate signal functions of the GPIO signals. Table 10. Alternate GPIO Signal Functions GPIO Default GPIO_0 – GPIO_1 GPIO_2 JTAG_SEL Default Pull HOLD/PDLOW/ PDHIGH Strap Comments – No pull HOLD – 8 mA – – Down HOLD GSPI_MODE 8 mA GCI_GPIO(0) JTAG_TCK No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_3 GCI_GPIO(1) JTAG_TMS No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_4 GCI_GPIO(2) JTAG_TDI No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_5 GCI_GPIO(3) JTAG_TDO No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_6 GCI_GPIO(4) JTAG_TRST No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_7 – – Down HOLD WCPU_BOOT_MODE 8 mA GPIO_8 GPIO_8 – No pull HOLD – 8 mA 8 mA GPIO_9 GPIO_9 – Down HOLD GPIO_10 GPIO_10 – No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_11 – – Down HOLD ACPU_BOOT_MODE 8 mA GPIO_12 GPIO_12 – No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_13 – – Down HOLD SDIO_MODE 8 mA GPIO_14 GPIO_14 – No pull HOLD – 8 mA GPIO_15 – – Down HOLD VTRIM_EN 8 mA GPIO_16 – – No pull HOLD – 8 mA Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 35 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 11. Pin Multiplexing Table 11 shows the pin multiplexing functions. Table 11. Pin Multiplexing Function Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 GPIO_0 GPIO_0 UART0_RXD I2C1_SDATA PWM0 SPI1_MISO PWM2 GPIO_12 GPIO_8 – PWM4 – GPIO_1 GPIO_1 UART0_TXD I2C1_CLK PWM1 SPI1_CLK PWM3 GPIO_13 GPIO_9 – PWM5 – GPIO_2 GPIO_2 – – GCI_GPIO_0 – – – – TCK – – GPIO_3 GPIO_3 – – GCI_GPIO_1 – – – – TMS – – GPIO_4 GPIO_4 – – GCI_GPIO_2 – – – – TDI – – GPIO_5 GPIO_5 – – GCI_GPIO_3 – – – – TDO – – GPIO_6 GPIO_6 – – GCI_GPIO_4 – – – – TRST_L – – GPIO_7 GPIO_7 UART0_ RTS_OUT PWM1 PWM3 SPI1_CS I2C1_CLK GPIO_15 GPIO_11 PMU_TEST_ O – PWM5 GPIO_8 GPIO_8 SPI1_MISO PWM2 PWM4 UART0_RXD – GPIO_16 GPIO_12 TAP_SEL_P I2C1_SDATA PWM0 GPIO_9 GPIO_9 SPI1_CLK PWM3 PWM5 UART0_TXD – GPIO_0 GPIO_13 – I2C1_CLK PWM1 GPIO_10 GPIO_10 SPI1_MOSI PWM4 I2C1_SDATA UART0_ CTS_IN PWM0 GPIO_1 GPIO_14 PWM2 – – GPIO_11 GPIO_11 SPI1_CS PWM5 I2C1_CLK UART0_ RTS_OUT PWM1 GPIO_7 GPIO_15 PWM3 – – GPIO_12 GPIO_12 I2C1_SDATA UART0_RXD SPI1_MISO PWM2 PWM4 GPIO_8 GPIO_16 PWM0 – – GPIO_13 GPIO_13 I C1_CLK UART0_TXD SPI1_CLK PWM3 PWM5 GPIO_9 GPIO_0 PWM1 – – GPIO_14 GPIO_14 PWM0 UART0_ CTS_IN SPI1_MOSI I2C1_SDATA – GPIO_10 – PWM4 – PWM2 GPIO_15 GPIO_15 PWM1 UART0_ RTS_OUT SPI1_CS I2C1_CLK – GPIO_11 GPIO_7 PWM5 – PWM3 GPIO_16 GPIO_16 UART0_ CTS_IN PWM0 PWM2 SPI1_MOSI I2C1_SDATA GPIO_14 GPIO_10 RF_ DISABLE_L – PWM4 RF_SW_ CTRL_5 RF_SW_ CTRL_5 GCI_GPIO_5 – – – – – – – – – RF_SW_ CTRL_6 RF_SW_ CTRL_6 UART_ DBG_RX1 SECI_IN1 – – – – – – – – RF_SW_ CTRL_7 RF_SW_ CTRL_7 UART_ DBG_TX1 SECI_OUT1 – – – – – – – – 2 Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 36 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Table 11. Pin Multiplexing Function Pin 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 RF_SW_ CTRL_8 RF_SW_ CTRL_8 SECI_IN1 UART_ DBG_RX1 – – – – – – – – RF_SW_ CTRL_9 RF_SW_ CTRL_9 SECI_OUT1 UART_ DBG_TX1 – – – – – – – – SPI0_MISO SPI0_MISO GPIO_17 GPIO_24 – – – – – – – – SPI0_CLK SPI0_CLK GPIO_18 GPIO_25 – – – – – – – – SPI0_MOSI SPI0_MOSI GPIO_19 GPIO_26 – – – – – – – – SPI0_CS SPI0_CS GPIO_20 GPIO_27 – – – – – – – – I2C0_SDATA I2C0_SDATA GPIO_21 GPIO_28 – – – – – – – – I2C0_CLK I2C0_CLK GPIO_22 GPIO_29 – – – – – – – – 1. UART_DBG_TX and UART_DBG_RX are for UART1 mentioned in section 5.7 and in the reference schematics. SECI_IN and SECI_OUT are for UART2 mentioned in section 5.7 and in the reference schematics. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 37 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 12. I/O States Table 12 provides I/O state information for the signals listed. The following notations are used in Table 12: ■ I: Input signal ■ O: Output signal ■ I/O: Input/Output signal ■ PU = Pulled up ■ PD = Pulled down ■ NoPull = Neither pulled up nor pulled down Table 12. I/O States Low Power State/Sleep (All Power Present) Power-down2 (REG_ON Held Low) Out-of-Reset; Before Software Download (REG_ON High) I/O Keeper1 HIB_REG_ON_IN I N Input; PD (Pull-down can be disabled.) Input; PD (Pull-down can be disabled.) Input Input – REG_ON I N Input; PD (Pull-down can be disabled.) Input; PD (Pull-down can be disabled.) Input; PD (of 200 kΩ) Input; PD (of 200 kΩ) – GPIO_0 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) High-Z, NoPull Input; PD VDDIO GPIO_1 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_2 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_3 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) High-Z, NoPull Input; PD VDDIO GPIO_4 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_5 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) High-Z, NoPull Input; PD VDDIO Ball Name Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Active Mode Power Rail Page 38 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Table 12. I/O States Low Power State/Sleep (All Power Present) Power-down2 (REG_ON Held Low) Out-of-Reset; Before Software Download (REG_ON High) I/O Keeper1 GPIO_6 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_7 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_8 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) High-Z, NoPull Input; PD VDDIO GPIO_9 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) High-Z, NoPull Input; PD VDDIO GPIO_10 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_11 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: PD]) High-Z, NoPull Input; PD VDDIO GPIO_12 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_13 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_14 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_15 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO GPIO_16 I/O Y Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) Input/Output; PU, PD, or NoPull (programmable [Default: NoPull]) High-Z, NoPull Input; NoPull VDDIO RF_SW_CTRL (0 to 9) I/O Y Output; NoPull Output; NoPull High-Z Output; NoPull VDDIO_RF Ball Name Active Mode Power Rail 1. Keeper column: N = pad has no keeper. Y = pad has a keeper. Keeper is always active except in power-down state. If there is no keeper, and it is an input and there is NoPull, then the pad should be driven to prevent leakage due to floating pad (WL_REG_ON, for example). 2. In the power-down state (xx_REG_ON=0): High-Z; NoPull => the pad is disabled because power is not supplied. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 39 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 13. Electrical Characteristics Note: Values in this data sheet are design goals and are subject to change based on the results of device characterization. 13.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings Caution! The absolute maximum ratings in Table 13 indicate levels where permanent damage to the device can occur, even if these limits are exceeded for only a brief duration. Functional operation is not guaranteed under these conditions. Operation at absolute maximum conditions for extended periods can adversely affect long-term reliability of the device. Table 13. Absolute Maximum Ratings Parameter DC supply for VBAT and PA driver supply 1 Symbol VBAT Value –0.5 to +5.5 Unit V DC supply voltage for digital I/O VDDIO –0.5 to 3.9 V DC supply voltage for RF switch I/O VDDIO_RF –0.5 to 3.9 V – –0.5 to 1.575 V VDD3P3RF –0.5 to 3.6 V 1.35V DC supply voltage for RF analog4 VDD1P35RF –0.5 to 1.5 V 1.2V DC supply voltage for RF analog5 VDD1P2RF –0.5 to 1.26 V 1.2V DC supply voltage for analog circuits6 VDD1P2A –0.5 to 1.26 V DC supply voltage for the core7 VDDC –0.5 to 1.32 V DC supply voltage for OTP memory OTP_VDD3P3 –0.5 to 3.9 V Maximum undershoot voltage for I/O Vundershoot –0.5 V Maximum junction temperature Tj 125 °C DC input supply voltage for CLDO, LNLDO, and LDO2 3.3V DC supply voltage for RF analog 3 1. For the SR_VDDBAT5V and LDO_VDDBAT5V supplies. 2. For the LDO_VDD1P5 and WRF_XTAL_VDD1P35 supplies. 3. For the WRF_SYNTH_VDD3P3, WRF_PA_VDD3P3, and WRF_TXMIX_VDD supplies. 4. For WRF_PMU_VDD1P35 and WRF_AFE_VDD1P35 supplies. 5. For the WRF_SYNTH_VDD1P2 supply. 6. For the AVDD1P2 supply. 7. For the VDD supply. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 40 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 13.2 Environmental Ratings The environmental ratings are shown in Table 14. Table 14. Environmental Ratings Characteristic Value Ambient temperature (TA) Units –30 to +85 Conditions/Comments °C Functional operation Storage temperature –40 to +125 °C – Relative humidity Less than 60 % Storage Less than 85 % Operation 13.3 Electrostatic Discharge Specifications Extreme caution must be exercised to prevent electrostatic discharge (ESD) damage. Proper use of wrist and heel grounding straps to discharge static electricity is required when handling these devices. Always store unused material in its antistatic packaging. Table 15. ESD Specifications Pin Type Symbol Condition ESD Rating Unit 1.5 k V ESD ESD_HAND_HBM Human body model contact discharge per JEDEC EID/JESD22-A114 CDM ESD_HAND_CDM Charged device model contact discharge per JEDEC 250 EIA/JESD22-C101 V 13.4 Recommended Operating Conditions and DC Characteristics Caution! Functional operation is not guaranteed outside of the limits shown in Table 16. Operation outside these limits for extended periods can adversely affect long-term reliability of the device. Table 16. Recommended Operating Conditions and DC Characteristics Value Parameter Symbol DC supply voltage for VBAT VBAT DC supply voltage for digital I/O VDDIO Minimum Typical Maximum Unit 3.6 4.8 V 1.71 – 3.63 V 3.13 3.3 3.6 V 1 2.3 DC supply voltage for RF switch I/Os VDDIO_RF DC input supply voltage for CLDO, LNLDO, and LDO – 1.3 1.35 1.5 V 3.3V DC supply voltage for RF analog VDD3P3RF3 3 3.3 3.45 V 1.35V DC supply voltage for RF analog VDD1P35RF3 1.3 1.35 1.5 V 1.2V DC supply voltage for RF analog VDD1P2RF3 1.1 1.2 1.26 V 1.2V DC supply voltage for analog VDD1P2A3 1.1 1.2 1.26 V DC supply voltage for core VDDC 1.14 1.2 1.26 V 2.97 3.3 3.63 V DC supply voltage for OTP memory 2 2 OTP_VDD3P3 DC supply voltage for TCXO input buffer WRF_TCXO_VDD 1.62 1.8 1.98 V Internal POR threshold Vth_POR 0.4 – 0.7 V Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G 3 Page 41 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Table 16. Recommended Operating Conditions and DC Characteristics (Cont.) Value Parameter Symbol Minimum Typical Maximum Unit Other Digital I/O Pins For VDDIO = 1.8V: Input high voltage VIH 0.65 × VDDIO – – V Input low voltage VIL – – 0.35 × VDDIO V Output high voltage @ 2 mA VOH VDDIO – 0.45 – – V Output low voltage @ 2 mA VOL – – 0.45 V For VDDIO = 3.3V: Input high voltage VIH 2.00 – – V Input low voltage VIL – – 0.80 V Output high voltage @ 2 mA VOH VDDIO – 0.4 – – V Output low voltage @ 2 mA VOL – – 0.40 V RF Switch Control Output Pins4 For VDDIO_RF = 3.3V: Output high voltage @ 2 mA Output low voltage @ 2 mA Input capacitance VOH VDDIO – 0.4 – – V VOL – – 0.40 V CIN – – 5 pF 1. The CYW43903 is functional across this range of voltages. Optimal RF performance specified in the data sheet, however, is guaranteed only for 3V < VBAT < 4.8V. 2. VDD3P3RF, which is an internally generated supply, can drive this node. There is sufficient current and the appropriate state is maintained during hibernation and sleep cycles. 3. Internally generated supply. 4. Programmable 2 mA to 16 mA drive strength. Default is 10 mA. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 42 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 13.5 Power Supply Segments The digital I/O's are placed in physical segments. The supply voltage for each segment can be independently selected. Table 17 shows the power supply segments and the I/O pins associated with each segment. Table 17. Power Supply Segments Power Supply Segment Pins VDDIO GPIO_0, GPIO_1, GPIO_2, GPIO_3, GPIO_4, GPIO_5, GPIO_6, GPIO_7, GPIO_8, GPIO_9, GPIO_10, GPIO_11, GPIO_12, GPIO_13, GPIO_14, GPIO_15, GPIO_16, I2C0_CLK, I2C0_SDATA, I2C1_CLK, I2C1_SDATA, JTAG_SEL, SFL_CLK, SFL_CS, SFL_IO0, SFL_IO1, SFL_IO2, SFL_IO3, SPI0_CLK, SPI0_CS, SPI0_MISO, SPI0_SISO, SPI1_CLK, SPI1_CS, SPI1_MISO, SPI1_SISO, SRSTN, UART0_CTS, UART0_RTS, UART0_RXD, UART0_TXD VDDIO_RF RF_SW_CTRL_0, RF_SW_CTRL_1, RF_SW_CTRL_2, RF_SW_CTRL_3, RF_SW_CTRL_4, RF_SW_CTRL_5, RF_SW_CTRL_6, RF_SW_CTRL_7, RF_SW_CTRL_8, RF_SW_CTRL_9 13.6 GPIO, UART, and JTAG Interfaces DC Characteristics Table 18. GPIO, UART, and JTAG Interfaces Parameter Symbol Minimum Maximum Units Conditions Logic input high voltage VIH 2.0 VDDIO + 0.5 V – Logic input low voltage VIL –0.5 0.8 V – Logic output high voltage VOH 2.4 – V – Logic output low voltage VOL – 0.4 V – Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 43 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 14. WLAN RF Specifications 14.1 Introduction The CYW43903 includes an integrated direct conversion radio that supports the 2.4 GHz band. This section describes the RF characteristics of the 2.4 GHz radio. Note: Values in this section of the data sheet are design goals and are subject to change based on device characterization results. Unless otherwise stated, limit values apply for the conditions specified in Table 14, “Environmental Ratings,” and Table 16, “Recommended Operating Conditions and DC Characteristics,”. Typical values apply for the following conditions: ■ VBAT = 3.6V ■ Ambient temperature +25°C Figure 12. Port Locations for WLAN Testing CYW43903 Chip Output Port 2.4 GHz WLAN TX (WRF_PAOUT_2G) Filter 2.4 GHz WLAN RX (WRF_RFIN_2G) RF Port Chip Input Port 14.2 2.4 GHz Band General RF Specifications Table 19. 2.4 GHz Band General RF Specifications Item Condition Minimum Typical Maximum Unit TX/RX switch time Including TX ramp down – – 5 μs RX/TX switch time Including TX ramp up – – 2 μs Power-up and power-down ramp time DSSS/CCK modulations – – <2 μs Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 44 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 14.3 WLAN 2.4 GHz Receiver Performance Specifications Note: The specification shown in Table 20 apply at the chip ports, unless otherwise defined. Table 20. WLAN 2.4 GHz Receiver Performance Specifications Parameter Condition/Notes Minimum Typical Maximum Unit Frequency range – 2400 – 2500 MHz RX sensitivity IEEE 802.11b (8% PER for 1024 octet PSDU) 1 Mbps DSSS – –98.9 – dBm 2 Mbps DSSS – –96.0 – dBm 5.5 Mbps DSSS – –93.9 – dBm 11 Mbps DSSS – –90.4 – dBm 6 Mbps OFDM – –95.0 – dBm 9 Mbps OFDM – –93.8 – dBm 12 Mbps OFDM – –92.7 – dBm 18 Mbps OFDM – –90.3 – dBm 24 Mbps OFDM – –87.1 – dBm 36 Mbps OFDM – –83.6 – dBm 48 Mbps OFDM – –79.3 – dBm 54 Mbps OFDM – –78.0 – dBm – –94.6 – dBm – –92.1 – dBm RX sensitivity IEEE 802.11g (10% PER for 1024 octet PSDU) RX sensitivity IEEE 802.11n 20 MHz channel spacing for all MCS rates (10% PER for 4096 octet PSDU) 1 MCS0 Defined for default parameters: MCS1 800 ns GI and non-STBC. MCS2 Input in-band IP3 Maximum receive level @ 2.4 GHz – –89.8 – dBm MCS3 – –86.6 – dBm MCS4 – –83.0 – dBm MCS5 – –78.3 – dBm MCS6 – –76.6 – dBm MCS7 – –75.0 – dBm Maximum LNA gain – –8 – dBm Minimum LNA gain – +9 – dBm @ 1, 2 Mbps (8% PER, 1024 octets) –3.5 – – dBm @ 5.5, 11 Mbps (8% PER, 1024 octets) –9.5 – – dBm @ 6, 9, 12 Mbps (10% PER, 1024 octets) –9.5 – – dBm @ MCS0–2 rates (10% PER, 4095 octets) –9.5 – – dBm @ 18, 24, 36, 48, 54 Mbps (10% PER, 1024 octets) –14.5 – – dBm @ MCS3–7 rates (10% PER, 4095 octets) –14.5 – – dBm Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 45 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Table 20. WLAN 2.4 GHz Receiver Performance Specifications (Cont.) Parameter Adjacent channel rejection-DSSS (Difference between interfering and desired signal at 8% PER for 1024 octet PSDU with desired signal level as specified in Condition/Notes.) Condition/Notes Minimum Typical Maximum Unit Desired and interfering signal 30 MHz apart 1 Mbps DSSS –74 dBm 35 – – dB 2 Mbps DSSS –74 dBm 35 – – dB Desired and interfering signal 25 MHz apart 5.5 Mbps DSSS –70 dBm 35 – – dB 11 Mbps DSSS –70 dBm 35 – – dB 6 Mbps OFDM –79 dBm 16 – – dB 9 Mbps OFDM –78 dBm 15 – – dB 12 Mbps OFDM –76 dBm 13 – – dB 18 Mbps OFDM –74 dBm 11 – – dB 24 Mbps OFDM –71 dBm 8 – – dB 36 Mbps OFDM –67 dBm 4 – – dB 48 Mbps OFDM –63 dBm 0 – – dB 54 Mbps OFDM –62 dBm –1 – – dB MCS0 –79 dBm 16 – – dB MCS1 –76 dBm 13 – – dB MCS2 –74 dBm 11 – – dB MCS3 –71 dBm 8 – – dB MCS4 –67 dBm 4 – – dB MCS5 –63 dBm 0 – – dB MCS6 –62 dBm –1 – – dB MCS7 –61 dBm –2 – – dB Maximum receiver gain – – – 66 – dB Gain control step – – – 3 – dB –5 – 5 dB Adjacent channel rejection-OFDM (Difference between interfering and desired signal (25 MHz apart) at 10% PER for 1024 octet PSDU with desired signal level as specified in Condition/Notes.) Adjacent channel rejection MCS0– 7 (Difference between interfering and desired signal (25 MHz apart) at 10% PER for 4096 octet PSDU with desired signal level as specified in Condition/Notes.) RSSI accuracy2 Range –953 dBm to –30 dBm Range above –30 dBm –8 – 8 dB Return loss Zo = 50Ω, across the dynamic range 10 11.5 13 dB Receiver cascaded noise figure At maximum gain – 4 – dB 1. Sensitivity degradations for alternate settings in MCS modes. MM: 0.5 dB drop, and SGI: 2 dB drop. 2. The minimum and maximum values shown have a 95% confidence level. 3. –95 dBm with calibration at time of manufacture, –92 dBm without calibration. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 46 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 14.4 WLAN 2.4 GHz Transmitter Performance Specifications Note: Unless otherwise noted, the values shown in Table 21 apply at the chip ports. Table 21. WLAN 2.4 GHz Transmitter Performance Specifications Parameter Frequency range Condition/Notes – EVM1 Typical Maximum Unit 2400 – 2500 MHz –9 dB – 20.5 – dBm –8 dB – 20 – dBm –13 dB – 20 – dBm OFDM, 16-QAM –19 dB – 19 – dBm OFDM, 64-QAM (R = 3/ 4) –25 dB – 19 – dBm OFDM, 64-QAM (MCS7, –27 dB HT20) – 18.5 – dBm OFDM, BPSK 5 dBm –29 –31 – dB OFDM, 64-QAM 5 dBm –31 –33 – dB MCS7 5 dBm –33 DSS/CCK RF port TX power (highest power setting, 25°C, and OFDM, BPSK VBAT = 3.6) OFDM, QPSK OFDM EVM2 (25°C, VBAT = 3.6V) Minimum –35 – dB Phase noise 37.4 MHz crystal, integrated from 10 kHz to – 10 MHz 0.45 – Degrees TX power control dynamic range – – – dB Closed-loop TX power variation at Across full temperature and voltage range. – highest Applies to 10 dBm to 20 dBm output power power level setting range. 10 – ±1.5 dB Carrier suppression – dBc – 15 – Gain control step – – 0.25 – dB Return loss at Chip port TX Zo = 50Ω – 6 – dB 1. This specification row indicates the linear power specification as measured from the chip output port. The requirement is in dBm (TX power). The ratio (dB) in the Conditions/Notes column is the EVM. 2. This specification row indicates the EVM floor. The requirement is in dB (EVM). The power in the Conditions/Notes column is the TX power specification in dBm. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 47 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 14.5 General Spurious Emissions Specifications This section provides the TX and RX spurious emissions specifications for the WLAN 2.4 GHz band. The recommended spectrum analyzer settings for the spurious emissions specifications are provided in Table 22. Table 22. Recommended Spectrum Analyzer Settings Parameter Setting Resolution bandwidth (RBW) 1 MHz Video bandwidth (VBW) 1 MHz Sweep Auto Span 100 MHz Detector Maximum peak Trace Maximum hold Modulation OFDM 14.5.1 Transmitter Spurious Emissions Specifications 2.4 GHz Band Spurious Emissions 20-MHz Channel Spacing Note: Possible AFE combinations are as follows. The AFE=VCO/18 specifications for channel 2442 are listed in Table 23 . Table 23. 2.4 GHz Band, 20-MHz Channel Spacing TX Spurious Emissions Specifications 2G - 20 MHz BW Spurious Emissions Level (dBm) Emissions Frequency Range (MHz) Channel Power (dBm) CH2442 1000-2000 21 –50 2000-2400 21 –40 2500-3000 21 –40 3000-4000 21 –39 4000-5000 21 –24 5000-6000 21 –48 6000-7000 21 –49 7000-8000 21 –13 8000-10000 21 –43 10000-12000 21 –52 12000-15000 21 –50 15000-20000 21 –49 14.5.2 Receiver Spurious Emissions Specifications Table 24. 2G General Receiver Spurious Emissions Band 2G Frequency Range Typical Maximum Unit 2.4 GHz < f < 2.5 GHz –75.5 –74.1 dBm 3.6 GHz < f < 3.8 GHz –52.8 –50.9 dBm Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 48 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 15. Internal Regulator Electrical Specifications 15.1 Core Buck Switching Regulator Note: Values in this data sheet are design goals and are subject to change based on device characterization results. Note: Functional operation is not guaranteed outside of the specification limits provided in this section. Table 25. Core Buck Switching Regulator (CBUCK) Specifications Specification Input supply voltage (DC) Notes DC voltage range inclusive of disturbances. Min. Typ. Max. 3.0 3.6 4.81 Unit V PWM mode switching frequency CCM, load > 100 mA VBAT = 3.6V. – 4 – MHz PWM output current – – – 550 mA Output current limit – – 1400 – mA Output voltage range Programmable, 30 mV steps. Default = 1.35V. 1.2 1.35 1.5 V PWM output voltage DC accuracy Includes load and line regulation. Forced PWM mode. –4 – 4 % PWM ripple voltage, static Measure with 20 MHz bandwidth limit. Static load. Max. ripple based on VBAT = 3.6V, Vout = 1.35V, Fsw = 4 MHz, 2.2 μH inductor with min. effective L > 1.05 μH, cap. + board total – ESR < 20 mΩ, Cout > 1.9 μF, ESL<200 pH – 7 20 mVpp PWM mode peak efficiency Peak efficiency at 200 mA load. 78 86 – % PFM mode efficiency 10 mA load current. 70 81 – % Start-up time from power down VIO already ON and steady. Time from REG_ON rising edge to CLDO reaching 1.2V. – 400 500 µs External inductor 0806 size, 2.2 μH, DCR = 0.11Ω, ACR = 1.18Ω @ 4 MHz. – 2.2 – µH External output capacitor Ceramic, X5R, 0402, ESR <30 mΩ at 4 MHz, 4.7 μF ±20%, 6.3V. 2.02 4.7 103 µF External input capacitor For SR_VDDBAT5V pin, ceramic, X5R, 0603, ESR < 30 mΩ at 4 MHz, ±4.7 μF ±20%, 6.3V. 0.672 4.7 – µF Input supply voltage ramp-up time 0 to 4.3V. 40 – – µs 1. The maximum continuous voltage is 4.8V. Voltages up to 6.0V for up to 10 seconds, cumulative duration, over the lifetime of the device are allowed. Voltages as high as 5.0V for up to 250 seconds, cumulative duration, over the lifetime of the device are allowed. 2. Minimum capacitor value refers to the residual capacitor value after taking into account the part-to-part tolerance, DC-bias, temperature, and aging. 3. Total capacitance includes those connected at the far end of the active load. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 49 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 15.2 3.3V LDO (LDO3P3) Table 26. LDO3P3 Specifications Specification Input supply voltage, Vin Notes Min. Typ. Max. Units Min. = Vo + 0.2V = 3.5V dropout voltage requirement 3.0 must be met under maximum load for performance specifications. 3.6 4.81 V Output current – 0.001 – 450 mA Nominal output voltage, Vo Default = 3.3V. – 3.3 – V Dropout voltage At max. load. – – 200 mV Output voltage DC accuracy Includes line/load regulation. –5 – +5 % Quiescent current No load. – – 85 µA Line regulation Vin from (Vo + 0.2V) to 4.8V, max. load. – – 3.5 mV/V Load regulation Load from 1 mA to 450 mA. – – 0.3 mV/mA PSRR Vin ≥ Vo + 0.2V, Vo = 3.3V, Co = 4.7 µF, Max load, 100 Hz to 100 kHz. 20 – – dB LDO turn-on time Chip already powered up. – 160 250 µs External output capacitor, Co Ceramic, X5R, 0402,(ESR: 5 mΩ–240 mΩ), ± 10%, 10V. 4.7 10 µF External input capacitor For LDO_VDDBAT5V pin (shared with band gap) – ceramic, X5R, 0402, (ESR: 30mΩ–200 mΩ), ± 10%, 10V. Not needed if sharing 4.7 µF VBAT capacitor with SR_VDDBAT5V. 4.7 – µF 1.0 2 1. The maximum continuous voltage is 4.8V. Voltages up to 6.0V for up to 10 seconds, cumulative duration, over the lifetime of the device are allowed. Voltages as high as 5.0V for up to 250 seconds, cumulative duration, over the lifetime of the device are allowed. 2. Minimum capacitor value refers to the residual capacitor value after taking into account the part-to-part tolerance, DC-bias, temperature, and aging. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 50 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 15.3 CLDO Table 27. CLDO Specifications Specification Notes Input supply voltage, Vin Min. = 1.2 + 0.15V = 1.35V dropout voltage requirement must be met under maximum load. Min. Typ. Max. Units 1.3 1.35 1.5 V Output current – 0.2 – 350 mA Output voltage, Vo Programmable in 10 mV steps. Default = 1.2.V. 0.95 1.2 1.26 V Dropout voltage At max. load. – – 150 mV Output voltage DC accuracy Includes line/load regulation. –4 – +4 % Quiescent current No load. – 26 – µA 200 mA load. – 2.48 – mA Line regulation Vin from (Vo + 0.15V) to 1.5V, maximum load. – – 5 mV/V Load regulation Load from 1 mA to 300 mA. – 0.02 0.05 mV/mA Leakage current Power down. – 10 40 µA Bypass mode. – 2 6 µA PSRR @1 kHz, Vin ≥ 1.35V, Co = 4.7 µF. 20 – Start-up time of PMU VIO up and steady. Time from the REG_ON rising edge to the CLDO reaching 1.2V. – – 700 µs LDO turn-on time LDO turn-on time when the rest of the chip is up. – 140 180 µs 3.761 4.7 – µF 1 2.2 µF External output capacitor, Total ESR: 5 mΩ–240 mΩ. Co External input capacitor Only use an external input capacitor at the LDO_VDD1P5 pin if it is not – supplied from the CBUCK output. dB 1. Minimum capacitor value refers to the residual capacitor value after taking into account the part-to-part tolerance, DC-bias, temperature, and aging. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 51 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 15.4 LNLDO Table 28. LNLDO Specifications Specification Notes Min. Units 1.5 V mA Min. VIN = VO + 0.15V = 1.35V (where VO = 1.2V)dropout voltage requirement must be met under maximum load. Output current – 0.1 – 150 Output voltage, Vo Programmable in 25 mV steps. Default = 1.2V. 1.1 1.2 1.275 V Dropout voltage At maximum load. – – 150 mV Output voltage DC accuracy Includes line/load regulation. –4 – +4 % Quiescent current No load. – 44 – µA Max. load. – 970 990 µA Line regulation Vin from (Vo + 0.1V) to 1.5V, 150 mA load. – – 5 mV/V Load regulation Load from 1 mA to 150 mA. – 0.02 0.05 mV/ mA Leakage current Power-down. – – 10 µA Output noise @30 kHz, 60–150 mA load Co = 2.2 µF. @100 kHz, 60–150 mA load Co = 2.2 µF. – – 60 35 nV/rt Hz nV/ rt Hz PSRR @ 1kHz, Input > 1.35V, Co= 2.2 µF, Vo = 1.2V. 20 – – dB LDO turn-on time LDO turn-on time when the rest of the chip is up. – 140 180 µs 2.2 4.7 µF 1 2.2 µF External input capacitor 1 0.5 Only use an external input capacitor at the LDO_VDD1P5 pin if it is – not supplied from the CBUCK output. Total ESR (trace/capacitor): 30 mΩ–200 mΩ. 1.35 Max. Input supply voltage, Vin External output capacitor, Total ESR (trace/capacitor): 5 mΩ–240 mΩ. Co 1.3 Typ. 1. Minimum capacitor value refers to the residual capacitor value after taking into account the part-to-part tolerance, DC-bias, temperature, and aging. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 52 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 15.5 BBPLL LDO Table 29. BBPLL LDO Specifications Parameter Conditions and Comments Min. Typ. Max. Units Input supply voltage, Vin Min. Vin= Vo + 0.15V = 1.35V (for Vo = 1.2V). The dropout voltage requirement must be met under maximum load. 1.3 1.35 1.5 V Output voltage, Vo Programmable in 25 mV steps. Default = 1.2V. 1.1 1.2 1.275 V Dropout voltage At max. load – – 150 mV Output voltage DC accuracy Includes line/load regulation. –4 – +4 % Output current Peak load = 80 mA, average = 35 mA 0.1 – 55 mA Quiescent current No load – 10 12 μA 55 mA load – 550 570 μA Line regulation Vin from (Vo + 0.15V) to 1.5V; 200 mA load – – 5 mV/V Load regulation load from 1mA to 200 mA; Vin ≥ (Vo + 0.15V) – 0.025 0.045 mV/mA Leakage current Powered down. Junction temperature is 85°C. – 5 20 μA Bypass mode – 0.2 1.5 μA PSRR @1 kHz, Vin ≥ Vo + 0.15V, Co = 4.7 μF 20 – – dB Start-up time of PMU VIO up and steady. Time from REG_ON rising edge to CLDO reaching 99% of Vo. – 530 700 us LDO turn-on time The LDO turn-on time when the rest of the chip is up. – 140 180 us Inrush current Vin=Vo+0.15V to 1.5V, Co=0.47uF, no load – 60 70 mA External output capacitor, Co Ceramic, X5R, size 0201, max. 6.3V, 20% tolerance 0.27 0.47 – μF External input capacitor Only use an external input capacitor at the LDO_VDD1P5 pin if it is not supplied from the CBUCK output. – 1 – μF Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 53 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 16. System Power Consumption Note: Values in this data sheet are design goals and are subject to change based on the results of device characterization. Note: Unless otherwise stated, these values apply for the conditions specified in Table 16, “Recommended Operating Conditions and DC Characteristics,”. 16.1 WLAN Current Consumption The tables in this subsection show the typical, total current used by the CYW43903. Current values may be measured with the APPS core powered off. The first column of the table, the mode description, will state the power condition of the APPS core. 16.1.1 2.4 GHz Mode Table 30. 2.4 GHz Mode WLAN Current Consumption VBAT = 3.6V 1 (μA) Mode VDDIO = VDDIO_HIB = 3.3V 1, 2(μA) Sleep Modes 3 3 Sleep 4, 5 6 160 IEEE Power Save, DTIM=1, single RX, APPS powered down 6 2180 160 IEEE Power Save, DTIM=3, single RX, APPS powered down 7 680 160 IEEE Power Save, DTIM=9, single RX, APPS powered down 233 160 Radio off 3 Active Modes Continuous RX mode MCS7, HT20, 1SS, APPS powered up 8, 9 57,200 60 CRS-HT20, APPS powered up 10 55,200 60 Continuous TX mode 1 Mbps, APPS powered up 11 325,000 60 Continuous TX mode MCS7, HT20, 1SS, 1 TX, APPS powered up 12 302,000 60 Ping to associated access point 11 336,000 60 Sleep 6 160 Ping Modes 1. Typical silicon. 2. VIO is specified with all pins idle (not switching) and not driving any loads. 3. REG_ON is low or the device is in hibernation, and all supplies are present. 4. REG_ON is high. APPS domain is powered down. WLAN domain is in low-power state retention mode. Top level is powered up. 5. Inter-beacon current. 6. Beacon Interval = 102.4 ms. Beacon duration = 1 ms @ 1 Mbps. Average current over 3× DTIM intervals. 7. Beacon interval = 307.2 ms. Beacon duration = 1 ms @ 1 Mbps. Average current over 3× DTIM intervals. 8. Duty cycle is 100%. Carrier sense (CS) detect/packet receive. 9. Measured using packet engine test mode. 10. Carrier sense (CCA) when no carrier present. 11. Duty cycle is 100%. TX power at chip output ~17.7 dBm. 12. Duty cycle is 100%. TX power at chip output ~15.2 dBm. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 54 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 17. SPI Flash Characteristics 17.1 SPI Flash Timing 17.1.1 Read-Register Timing Figure 13 shows the SPI flash extended and quad read-register timing. Note: Regarding Figure 13: All Read Register commands except Read Lock Register are supported. A Read Nonvolatile Configuration Register operation will output data starting from the least significant byte. Figure 13. SPI Flash Read-Register Timing Extended 0 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 C LSB DQ0 Command MSB DQ1 LSB High-Z DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT MSB Quad 0 1 2 3 C LSB DQ[3:0] Command MSB Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G LSB DOUT DOUT DOUT Don’t care MSB Page 55 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 17.1.2 Write-Register Timing Figure 14 shows the SPI flash extended and quad write-register timing. Note: Regarding Figure 14: 1. All write-register commands except Write Lock Register are supported. 2. The waveform must be extended for each protocol: to 23 for extended and five for quad. 3. A Write Nonvolatile Configuration Register operation requires data being sent starting from the least significant byte. Figure 14. SPI Flash Write-Register Timing Extended 0 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 C LSB LSB DQ0 Command DIN MSB Quad DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN MSB 0 1 2 3 C LSB DQ[3:0] LSB DIN Command MSB Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G DIN DIN MSB Page 56 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 17.1.3 Memory Fast-Read Timing Figure 15 shows the SPI flash extended and quad memory fast-read timing. Note: Regarding Figure 15: 1. 24-bit addressing is used, so A[MAX] = A[23] and A[MIN] = A[0]. 2. For an extended SPI protocol, Cx = 7 + (A[MAX] + 1). 3. For a quad SPI protocol, Cx = 1 + (A[MAX] + 1)/4. Figure 15. Memory Fast-Read Timing Extended 0 7 8 Cx C A[MIN] LSB Command DQ0 MSB DQ1 A[MAX] LSB DOUT High-Z DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT DOUT MSB Dummy Cycles Quad 0 1 2 Cx C LSB A[MIN] LSB DQ[3:0] Command MSB DOUT A[MAX] DOUT MSB Dummy Cycles Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G DOUT Don’t care Page 57 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 17.1.4 Memory-Write Timing Figure 16 shows the SPI flash extended and quad memory-write (Page Program) timing. Note: Regarding Figure 16: 1. For an extended SPI protocol, Cx = 7 + (A[MAX] + 1). 2. For a quad SPI protocol, Cx = 1 + (A[MAX] + 1)/4. Figure 16. Memory-Write Timing Extended 0 7 8 Cx C LSB A[MIN] LSB DIN Command DQ0 MSB Quad A[MAX] 0 1 DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN DIN MSB 2 Cx C LSB A[MIN] LSB DQ[3:0] Command MSB Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G DIN A[MAX] DIN DIN MSB Page 58 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 17.1.5 SPI Flash Parameters The combination of Figure 17 and Table 31 provide the SPI flash timing parameters. Figure 17. SPI Flash Timing Parameters Diagram T_DVCH Clock (C) T_CHDX Data in (DIN) (DQ1 in Serial [Extended] mode) (DQ[3:0] in Quad mode) T_CLQX Data out (DOUT) (DQ0 in Serial [Extended] mode) (DQ[3:0] in Quad mode) T_CLQV Table 31. SPI Flash Timing Parameters Parameter Description Minimum Maximum Units T_DVCH Data setup time 2 – ns T_CHDX Data hold time 3 – ns T_CLQX Output hold time 1 – ns T_CLQV Output valid time (with a 10 pF load) – 5 ns Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 59 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 18. Power-Up Sequence and Timing 18.1 Sequencing of Reset and Regulator Control Signals The CYW43903 has two signals that allow the host to control power consumption by enabling or disabling the internal regulator blocks. These signals are described below. Additionally, diagrams are provided to indicate proper sequencing of the signals for various operational states (see Figure 18 and Figure 19). The timing values indicated are minimum required values; longer delays are also acceptable. 18.1.1 Description of Control Signals ■ REG_ON: Used by the PMU to power-up the CYW43903. It controls the internal CYW43903 regulators. When this pin is high, the regulators are enabled and the device is out of reset. When this pin is low the regulators are disabled. ■ HIB_REG_ON_IN: Used by the Hibernation (HIB) block to power up the internal CYW43903 regulators. If the HIB_REG_ON_IN pin is low, the regulators are disabled. For the HIB_REG_ON_IN pin to work as designed, HIB_REG_ON_OUT must be connected to REG_ON. Note: The CYW43903 has an internal power-on reset (POR) circuit. The device will be held in reset for a maximum of 110 ms after VDDC and VDDIO have both passed the POR threshold. Note: The 10%–90% VBAT rise time should not be faster than 40 microseconds. VBAT should be up before or at the same time as VDDIO. VDDIO should not be present first or be held high before VBAT is high. 18.1.2 Control Signal Timing Diagrams Figure 18. REG_ON = High, No HIB_REG_ON_OUT Connection to REG_ON 3 2 .6 7 8 k H z S le e p C lo c k VBAT V D D IO ~ 2 S le e p C y c le s REG_O N H IB _ R E G _ O N _ IN Figure 19. HIB_REG_ON_IN = High, HIB_REG_ON_OUT Connected to REG_ON 3 2 .6 7 8 k H z S le e p C lo c k VBAT V D D IO ~ 2 S le e p C y c le s H IB _ R E G _ O N _ IN Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 60 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 19. Thermal Information 19.1 Package Thermal Characteristics Table 32. Package Thermal Characteristics1 Characteristic WLBGA JA (°C/W) (value in still air) JB (°C/W) JC (°C/W) 31.72 JT (°C/W) 4.3 JB (°C/W) 9.28 Maximum Junction Temperature Tj (°C) 113.9 Maximum power dissipation (W) 1.38 3.95 2.16 1. No heat sink, TA = 70°C. This is an estimate based on a 4-layer PCB that conforms to EIA/JESD51–7. Air velocity is 0 m/s. 19.2 Junction Temperature Estimation and PSIJT Versus THETAJC Package thermal characterization parameter PSI–JT (JT) yields a better estimation of actual junction temperature (TJ) versus using the junction-to-case thermal resistance parameter Theta–JC (JC). The reason for this is that JC assumes that all the power is dissipated through the top surface of the package case. In actual applications, some of the power is dissipated through the bottom and sides of the package. JT takes into account power dissipated through the top, bottom, and sides of the package. The equation for calculating the device junction temperature is: TJ = TT + P x YJT Where: ■ TJ = Junction temperature at steady-state condition (°C) ■ TT = Package case top center temperature at steady-state condition (°C) ■ P = Device power dissipation (Watts) ■ JT = Package thermal characteristics; no airflow (°C/W) 19.3 Environmental Characteristics For environmental characteristics data, see Table 14, “Environmental Ratings,”. Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 61 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 20. Mechanical Information Figure 20. WLBGA Package Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 62 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 21. Ordering Information Part Number CYW43903KUBG Package 4.91 mm x 5.85 mm, 0.4 mm ball pitch, 151-pin WLBGA Description – Operating Ambient Temperature –30°C to +85°C 22. Additional Information 22.1 Acronyms and Abbreviations In most cases, acronyms and abbreviations are defined upon first use. For a more complete list of acronyms and other terms used in Cypress documents, go to: http://www.cypress.com/glossary. 22.2 IoT Resources Cypress provides a wealth of data at http://www.cypress.com/internet-things-iot to help you to select the right IoT device for your design, and quickly and effectively integrate the device into your design. Cypress provides customer access to a wide range of information, including technical documentation, schematic diagrams, product bill of materials, PCB layout information, and software updates. Customers can acquire technical documentation and software from the Cypress Support Community website (https://community.cypress.com/) 22.3 Errata 1. The RTC block has been deprecated from this datasheet in revision *A and later. This block is used by Cypress for internal testing/validation/verification and is not intended for customers to use. 2. The details of the SPI hardware blocks was not available in revision *E and 5.7 SPI has been added in Revision *F. Note that the SPI hardware blocks can only support a hold time of 25ns and a fixed SPI mode (CPHA=0, CPOL = 0). For slaves that require higher hold times or a different mode, a bit banging based SPI driver is recommended. 3. The clock for the SPI Flash block needs to be constrained to ~26.67MHz for reliable operation at high operating temperatures. The throughput of the SPI Flash block is therefore restricted to ~13 MBps for Quad mode and ~3 MBps for single mode Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 63 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 Document History Page Document Title: CYW43903 WICED™ IEEE 802.11 a/b/g/n SoC with an Embedded Applications Processor Document Number: 002-14826 ECN Orig. of Change ** – – 10/15/2015 *A – – 11/03/2015 43903-DS101-R Updated: Table 21: “Absolute Maximum Ratings”, Table 24: “Recommended Operating Conditions and DC Characteristics”, Table 30: “WLAN 2.4 GHz Receiver Performance Specifications”, Table 31: “WLAN 2.4 GHz Transmitter Performance Specifications” *B – – 03/12/2016 43903-DS102-R Updated: General edits *C 5445059 UTSV 11/28/2016 Added Cypress Part Numbering Scheme and Mapping Table. Updated to Cypress template. *D 5593296 TREB 01/24/2017 Removed 43909 Documentation. Updated Cypress Logo and Copyright. *E 5909757 UTSV 10/12/2017 Updated 512 KB to 1 MB in the following pages: Features on page 1, Figure 1 on page 2, Figure 2 on page 5, Features on page 6, Applications CPU and Memory Subsystem on page 16. *F 5986964 SHJL 12/11/2017 Updated “Broadcom Serial Control (BSC)” to “Cypress Serial Control (BSC)” throughout the document. Added VBAT in Figure 1 on page 2. Updated the footnotes in Table 4 on page 14. Deleted 3.3 Frequency Selection and Real-Time Clock. Added “Note: JTAG_SEL is exposed on a dedicated physical pin. TAP_SEL uses the GPIO_8 physical pin.” below Table 6. Added “Note: The high-speed, 4-wire UART interface is identified as UART0 in this document and in reference schematics. The two low-speed, 2-wire UART interfaces are identified as UART1 and UART2 in this document and in the reference schematics” in the UART on page 18. Added footnote in Table 11 on page 36 and Table 30 on page 54. Added section SPI on page 19. Added Errata on page 63 *G 6026132 SHJL 1/11/2018 Updated footnote of 5.5 SPI Flash as “Note that the clock needs to be constrained to ~26.67MHz for reliable operation at high operating temperatures. The throughput of the SPI Flash block is therefore restricted to ~13 MBps for Quad mode and ~3 MBps for single mode”. Added “ The clock for the SPI Flash block needs to be constrained to ~26.67MHz for reliable operation at high operating temperatures. The throughput of the SPI Flash block is therefore restricted to ~13 MBps for Quad mode and ~3 MBps for single mode.” to 22.3.Errata. Revision Submission Date Description of Change 43903-DS100-R Initial Release Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Page 64 of 65 PRELIMINARY CYW43903 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. 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Document Number: 002-14826 Rev. *G Revised January 11, 2018 Page 65 of 65