AD ADSP-BF549 Blackfin embedded processor Datasheet

Blackfin
Embedded Processor
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
FEATURES
PERIPHERALS
Up to 600 MHz high performance Blackfin processor
Two 16-bit MACs, two 40-bit ALUs, four 8-bit video ALUs
RISC-like register and instruction model
Wide range of operating voltages and flexible booting
options
Programmable on-chip voltage regulator
400-ball CSP_BGA, RoHS compliant package
High speed USB On-the-Go (OTG) with integrated PHY
SD/SDIO controller
ATA/ATAPI-6 controller
Up to 4 synchronous serial ports (SPORTs)
Up to 3 serial peripheral interfaces (SPI-compatible)
Up to 4 UARTs, two with automatic H/W flow control
Up to 2 CAN (controller area network) 2.0B interfaces
Up to 2 TWI (2-wire interface) controllers
8- or 16-bit asynchronous host DMA interface
Multiple enhanced parallel peripheral interfaces (EPPIs),
supporting ITU-R BT.656 video formats and 18-/24-bit LCD
connections
Media transceiver (MXVR) for connection to a MOST network
Pixel compositor for overlays, alpha blending, and color
conversion
Up to eleven 32-bit timers/counters with PWM support
Real-time clock (RTC) and watchdog timer
Up/down counter with support for rotary encoder
Up to 152 general-purpose I/O (GPIOs)
On-chip PLL capable of frequency multiplication
Debug/JTAG interface
MEMORY
Up to 324K bytes of on-chip memory comprised of
instruction SRAM/cache; dedicated instruction SRAM; data
SRAM/cache; dedicated data SRAM; scratchpad SRAM
External sync memory controller supporting either DDR
SDRAM or mobile DDR SDRAM
External async memory controller supporting 8-/16-bit async
memories and burst flash devices
NAND flash controller
4 memory-to-memory DMA pairs, 2 with ext. requests
Memory management unit providing memory protection
Code security with Lockbox secure technology and 128-bit
AES/ARC4 data encryption
One-time-programmable (OTP) memory
VOLTAGE
REGULATOR
CAN (0-1)
JTAG TEST AND
EMULATION
RTC
WATCHDOG
TIMER
OTP
TWI (0-1)
PAB 16
B
TIMERS(0-10)
PORTS
HOST DMA
INTERRUPTS
UART (0-1)
COUNTER
UART (2-3)
L2
SRAM
KEYPAD
L1
INSTR ROM
L1
INSTR SRAM
L1
DATA SRAM
SPI (2)
32-BIT DMA
MXVR
DCB 32
EAB 64
DAB1
DEB 32
PORTS
SPI (0-1)
32
SPORT (2-3)
USB
16-BIT DMA
DAB0
EXTERNAL PORT
NOR, DDR, MDDR
BOOT
ROM
16
SPORT (0-1)
SD / SDIO
ATAPI
DDR/MDDR
16
EPPI (0-2)
ASYNC
16
NAND FLASH
CONTROLLER
PIXEL
COMPOSITOR
Figure 1. ADSP-BF549 Functional Block Diagram
Blackfin and the Blackfin logo are registered trademarks of Analog Devices, Inc.
Rev. E
Document Feedback
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable.
However, no responsibility is assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any
infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that may result from its use.
Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication
or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106 U.S.A.
Tel: 781.329.4700
©2014 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
Technical Support
www.analog.com
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Features ................................................................. 1
Voltage Regulation .............................................. 16
Memory ................................................................ 1
Clock Signals ...................................................... 17
Peripherals ............................................................. 1
Booting Modes ................................................... 18
General Description ................................................. 3
Instruction Set Description .................................... 21
Low Power Architecture ......................................... 4
Development Tools .............................................. 21
System Integration ................................................ 4
MXVR Board Layout Guidelines ............................. 22
Blackfin Processor Peripherals ................................. 4
Additional information ......................................... 23
Blackfin Processor Core .......................................... 4
Related Signal Chains ........................................... 23
Memory Architecture ............................................ 6
Lockbox Secure Technology Disclaimer .................... 23
DMA Controllers .................................................. 9
Pin Descriptions .................................................... 24
Real-Time Clock ................................................. 10
Specifications ........................................................ 34
Watchdog Timer ................................................ 10
Operating Conditions ........................................... 34
Timers ............................................................. 10
Electrical Characteristics ....................................... 36
Up/Down Counter and Thumbwheel Interface .......... 11
Absolute Maximum Ratings ................................... 40
Serial Ports (SPORTs) .......................................... 11
ESD Sensitivity ................................................... 41
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Ports ...................... 11
Package Information ............................................ 41
UART Ports (UARTs) .......................................... 11
Timing Specifications ........................................... 42
Controller Area Network (CAN) ............................ 12
Output Drive Currents ......................................... 88
TWI Controller Interface ...................................... 12
Test Conditions .................................................. 90
Ports ................................................................ 12
Capacitive Loading .............................................. 90
Pixel Compositor (PIXC) ...................................... 13
Typical Rise and Fall Times ................................... 91
Enhanced Parallel Peripheral Interface (EPPI) ........... 13
Thermal Characteristics ........................................ 93
USB On-the-Go Dual-Role Device Controller ............ 13
400-Ball CSP_BGA Package ...................................... 94
ATA/ATAPI-6 Interface ....................................... 14
Outline Dimensions .............................................. 100
Keypad Interface ................................................. 14
Surface-Mount Design ........................................ 100
Secure Digital (SD)/SDIO Controller ....................... 14
Automotive Products ............................................ 101
Code Security .................................................... 14
Ordering Guide ................................................... 101
Media Transceiver MAC Layer (MXVR) .................. 14
Dynamic Power Management ................................ 15
REVISION HISTORY
03/14—Rev. D to Rev. E
Updated Development Tools .................................... 21
Corrected SPI2 pin count in Port B configuration in
Pin Multiplexing .................................................... 24
Added/changed package dimensions to Figure 88 in
Outline Dimensions .............................................. 100
Added low Alpha Package model to Ordering Guide ..... 101
Corrected typographical error of parameter name in
External DMA Request Timing ................................. 58
Added note to Table 42 in
Serial Ports—Enable and Three-State .......................... 63
Corrected tWL and tWH minimum specifications from tSCLK +1 to
1 × tSCLK in Timer Cycle Timing ................................. 69
Rev. E |
Page 2 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
GENERAL DESCRIPTION
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin® processors are members of the
Blackfin family of products, incorporating the Analog Devices/
Intel Micro Signal Architecture (MSA). Blackfin processors
combine a dual-MAC state-of-the-art signal processing engine,
the advantages of a clean, orthogonal RISC-like microprocessor
instruction set, and single-instruction, multiple-data (SIMD)
multimedia capabilities into a single instruction-set
architecture.
Specific peripherals for ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors are
shown in Table 2.
ADSP-BF542
ADSP-BF544
EBIU (async)
P
P
P
P
P
NAND flash controller
P
P
P
P
P
P
1
1
1
1
128-bit AES/ ARC4 data encryption
1
1
1
1
1
EPPI2
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
–
–
ADSP-BF544
1
ADSP-BF547
Lockbox® 1code security
EPPI1
Processor Features
ADSP-BF548
ATAPI
ADSP-BF549
ADSP-BF542
Table 1. ADSP-BF54x Processor Features
ADSP-BF547
Module
ADSP-BF548
Specific performance, memory configurations, and features of
ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors are shown in Table 1.
ADSP-BF549
Table 2. Specific Peripherals for ADSP-BF54x Processors
P
P
P
–
Host DMA port (HOSTDP)
P
P
P
P
–
SD/SDIO controller
P
P
P
–
P
EPPI0
P
P
P
P
–
P
P
P
P
P
SD/SDIO controller
1
1
1
–
1
SPORT0
Pixel compositor
1
1
1
1
1
SPORT1
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
18- or 24-bit EPPI0 with LCD
1
1
1
1
–
SPORT2
16-bit EPPI1, 8-bit EPPI2
1
1
1
1
1
SPORT3
P
P
P
P
P
–
SPI0
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
Host DMA port
1
1
1
1
NAND flash controller
1
1
1
1
1
SPI1
ATAPI
1
1
1
–
1
SPI2
P
P
P
–
–
P
P
P
P
P
High speed USB OTG
1
1
1
–
1
UART0
Keypad interface
1
1
1
–
1
UART1
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
–
–
MXVR
1
–
–
–
–
UART2
CAN ports
2
2
–
2
1
UART3
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
P
–
P
P
P
–
P
P
TWI ports
2
2
2
2
1
High speed USB OTG
SPI ports
3
3
3
2
2
CAN0
UART ports
4
4
4
3
3
CAN1
P
P
–
P
–
P
P
P
P
P
SPORTs
4
4
4
3
3
TWI0
Up/down counter
1
1
1
1
1
TWI1
P
P
P
P
–
8
Timer 0–7
P
P
P
P
P
Timers
11
General-purpose I/O pins
152 152 152 152 152
Timer 8–10
P
P
P
P
–
16
16
16
16
16
Up/down counter
P
P
P
P
P
48
48
48
48
48
Keypad interface
P
P
P
–
P
32
MXVR
P
–
–
–
–
32
GPIOs
P
P
P
P
P
L1 Instruction SRAM/cache
Memory
Configura- L1 Instruction SRAM
tions
L1 Data SRAM/cache
(K Bytes)
L1 Data SRAM
32
11
32
11
32
11
32
32
32
32
32
L1 Scratchpad SRAM
4
4
4
4
4
L1 ROM2
64
64
64
64
64
L2
128 128 128 64
L3 Boot ROM2
Maximum core instruction rate (MHz)
4
4
4
4
–
4
533 533 600 533 600
1
Lockbox is a registered trademark of Analog Devices, Inc.
2
This ROM is not customer-configurable.
Rev. E |
Page 3 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors are completely code- and
pin-compatible. They differ only with respect to their performance, on-chip memory, and selection of I/O peripherals.
Specific performance, memory, and feature configurations are
shown in Table 1.
memory spaces, including external DDR (either standard or
mobile, depending on the device) and asynchronous memory.
Multiple on-chip buses running at up to 133 MHz provide
enough bandwidth to keep the processor core running along
with activity on all of the on-chip and external peripherals.
By integrating a rich set of industry-leading system peripherals
and memory, Blackfin processors are the platform of choice for
next-generation applications that require RISC-like programmability, multimedia support, and leading-edge signal
processing in one integrated package.
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors include an on-chip voltage regulator in support of the dynamic power management
capability. The voltage regulator provides a range of core voltage levels when supplied from VDDEXT. The voltage regulator can
be bypassed at the user’s discretion.
LOW POWER ARCHITECTURE
BLACKFIN PROCESSOR CORE
Blackfin processors provide world-class power management
and performance. Blackfin processors are designed in a low
power and low voltage design methodology and feature on-chip
dynamic power management, the ability to vary both the voltage
and frequency of operation to significantly lower overall power
consumption. Reducing both voltage and frequency can result
in a substantial reduction in power consumption as compared
to reducing only the frequency of operation. This translates into
longer battery life for portable appliances.
As shown in Figure 2 on Page 5, the Blackfin processor core
contains two 16-bit multipliers, two 40-bit accumulators, two
40-bit ALUs, four video ALUs, and a 40-bit shifter. The computation units process 8-, 16-, or 32-bit data from the register file.
SYSTEM INTEGRATION
Each MAC can perform a 16-bit by 16-bit multiply in each
cycle, accumulating the results into the 40-bit accumulators.
Signed and unsigned formats, rounding, and saturation are
supported.
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors are highly integrated
system-on-a-chip solutions for the next generation of embedded network connected applications. By combining industrystandard interfaces with a high performance signal processing
core, users can develop cost-effective solutions quickly without
the need for costly external components. The system peripherals
include a high speed USB OTG (On-the-Go) controller with
integrated PHY, CAN 2.0B controllers, TWI controllers, UART
ports, SPI ports, serial ports (SPORTs), ATAPI controller,
SD/SDIO controller, a real-time clock, a watchdog timer, LCD
controller, and multiple enhanced parallel peripheral interfaces.
BLACKFIN PROCESSOR PERIPHERALS
The ADSP-BF54x processors contain a rich set of peripherals
connected to the core via several high bandwidth buses, providing flexibility in system configuration as well as excellent overall
system performance (see Figure 1 on Page 1). The generalpurpose peripherals include functions such as UARTs, SPI,
TWI, timers with pulse width modulation (PWM) and pulse
measurement capability, general-purpose I/O pins, a real-time
clock, and a watchdog timer. This set of functions satisfies a
wide variety of typical system support needs and is augmented
by the system expansion capabilities of the part. The ADSPBF54x processors contain dedicated network communication
modules and high speed serial and parallel ports, an interrupt
controller for flexible management of interrupts from the onchip peripherals or external sources, and power management
control functions to tailor the performance and power characteristics of the processor and system to many application
scenarios.
All of the peripherals, except for general-purpose I/O, CAN,
TWI, real-time clock, and timers, are supported by a flexible
DMA structure. There are also separate memory DMA channels
dedicated to data transfers between the processor's various
Rev. E |
The compute register file contains eight 32-bit registers. When
performing compute operations on 16-bit operand data, the
register file operates as 16 independent 16-bit registers. All
operands for compute operations come from the multiported
register file and instruction constant fields.
The ALUs perform a traditional set of arithmetic and logical
operations on 16- or 32-bit data. In addition, many special
instructions are included to accelerate various signal processing
tasks. These include bit operations such as field extract and population count, modulo 232 multiply, divide primitives, saturation
and rounding, and sign/exponent detection. The set of video
instructions include byte alignment and packing operations,
16-bit and 8-bit adds with clipping, 8-bit average operations,
and 8-bit subtract/absolute value/accumulate (SAA) operations.
Also provided are the compare/select and vector search
instructions.
For certain instructions, two 16-bit ALU operations can be performed simultaneously on register pairs (a 16-bit high half and
16-bit low half of a compute register). By also using the second
ALU, quad 16-bit operations are possible.
The 40-bit shifter can perform shifts and rotates and is used to
support normalization, field extract, and field deposit
instructions.
The program sequencer controls the flow of instruction execution, including instruction alignment and decoding. For
program flow control, the sequencer supports PC relative and
indirect conditional jumps (with static branch prediction), and
subroutine calls. Hardware is provided to support zero-overhead looping. The architecture is fully interlocked, meaning that
the programmer need not manage the pipeline when executing
instructions with data dependencies.
The address arithmetic unit provides two addresses for simultaneous dual fetches from memory. It contains a multiported
register file consisting of four sets of 32-bit index, modify,
Page 4 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
length, and base registers (for circular buffering), and eight
additional 32-bit pointer registers (for C-style indexed stack
manipulation).
The architecture provides three modes of operation: user mode,
supervisor mode, and emulation mode. User mode has
restricted access to certain system resources, thus providing a
protected software environment, while supervisor mode has
unrestricted access to the system and core resources.
Blackfin processors support a modified Harvard architecture in
combination with a hierarchical memory structure. Level 1 (L1)
memories are those that typically operate at the full processor
speed with little or no latency. At the L1 level, the instruction
memory holds instructions only. The two data memories hold
data, and a dedicated scratchpad data memory stores stack and
local variable information.
The Blackfin processor instruction set has been optimized so
that 16-bit opcodes represent the most frequently used instructions, resulting in excellent compiled code density. Complex
DSP instructions are encoded into 32-bit opcodes, representing
fully featured multifunction instructions. Blackfin processors
support a limited multi-issue capability, where a 32-bit instruction can be issued in parallel with two 16-bit instructions,
allowing the programmer to use many of the core resources in a
single instruction cycle.
In addition, multiple L1 memory blocks are provided, offering a
configurable mix of SRAM and cache. The memory management unit (MMU) provides memory protection for individual
tasks that may be operating on the core and can protect system
registers from unintended access.
The Blackfin processor assembly language uses an algebraic syntax for ease of coding and readability. The architecture has been
optimized for use in conjunction with the C/C++ compiler,
resulting in fast and efficient software implementations.
ADDRESS ARITHMETIC UNIT
I3
L3
B3
M3
I2
L2
B2
M2
I1
L1
B1
M1
I0
L0
B0
M0
SP
FP
P5
DAG1
P4
P3
DAG0
P2
DA1 32
DA0 32
P1
TO MEMORY
P0
32
PREG
32
RAB
SD 32
LD1 32
LD0 32
ASTAT
32
32
R7.H
R6.H
R7.L
R6.L
R5.H
R5.L
R4.H
R4.L
R3.H
R3.L
R2.H
R2.L
R1.H
R1.L
R0.H
R0.L
SEQUENCER
ALIGN
16
16
8
8
8
8
DECODE
BARREL
SHIFTER
40
40
A0
32
40
40
A1
32
DATA ARITHMETIC UNIT
Figure 2. Blackfin Processor Core
Rev. E |
Page 5 of 102 |
March 2014
LOOP BUFFER
CONTROL
UNIT
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
MEMORY ARCHITECTURE
The ADSP-BF54x processors view memory as a single unified
4G byte address space, using 32-bit addresses. All resources,
including internal memory, external memory, and I/O control
registers, occupy separate sections of this common address
space. The memory portions of this address space are arranged
in a hierarchical structure to provide a good cost/performance
balance of some very fast, low-latency on-chip memory as cache
or SRAM, and larger, lower-cost and performance off-chip
memory systems. See Figure 3 on Page 6.
0xFFFF FFFF
CORE MMR REGISTERS (2M BYTES)
0x FFE0 0000
SYSTEM MMR REGISTERS (2M BYTES)
0x FFC0 0000
RESERVED
0x FFB0 1000
SCRATCHPAD SRAM (4K BYTES)
0xFFB0 0000
RESERVED
0xFFA2 4000
L1 ROM (64K BYTE)
0xFFA1 4000
RESERVED
The on-chip L1 memory system is the highest-performance
memory available to the Blackfin processor. The off-chip memory system, accessed through the external bus interface unit
(EBIU), provides expansion with flash memory, SRAM, and
double-rate SDRAM (standard or mobile DDR), optionally
accessing up to 768M bytes of physical memory.
0x FFA0 C000
INSTRUCTION BANK B SRA M (16K BYTES)
0x FFA0 8000
INSTRUCTION BANK A SRA M (32K BYTES)
0xFFA0 0000
RESERVED
0xFF90 8000
DATA BANK B SRAM / CACHE (16K BYTES)
0x FF90 4000
DATA BANK B SRAM (16 K BYTES)
Most of the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors also include an L2
SRAM memory array which provides up to 128K bytes of high
speed SRAM, operating at one half the frequency of the core and
with slightly longer latency than the L1 memory banks (for
information on L2 memory in each processor, see Table 1). The
L2 memory is a unified instruction and data memory and can
hold any mixture of code and data required by the system
design. The Blackfin cores share a dedicated low latency 64-bit
data path port into the L2 SRAM memory.
0xFF90 0000
RESERVED
0xFF80 8000
DATA BANK A SRAM / CACHE (16K BYTES)
0xFF80 4000
DATA BANK A SRAM (16 K BYTES)
0x FF80 0000
RESERVED
0xFEB2 0000
L2 SRAM (128K BYTES)
0xFEB0 0000
RESERVED
0xEF00 1000
B OOT ROM (4K BYTES)
0xEF00 0000
The memory DMA controllers (DMAC1 and DMAC0) provide
high-bandwidth data-movement capability. They can perform
block transfers of code or data between the internal memory
and the external memory spaces.
ASYNC MEMORY BANK 3 (64M BYTES)
0x 2C00 0000
ASYNC MEMORY BANK 2 (64M BYTES)
0x2800 0000
ASYNC MEMORY BANK 1 (64M BYTES)
0x 2400 0000
ASYNC MEMORY BANK 0 (64M BYTES)
0x2000 0000
The ADSP-BF54x processors have several blocks of on-chip
memory providing high bandwidth access to the core.
TOP OF LAST
DDR PAGE
The first block is the L1 instruction memory, consisting of
64K bytes of SRAM, of which 16K bytes can be configured as a
four-way set-associative cache or as SRAM. This memory is
accessed at full processor speed.
The third memory block is a 4K byte scratchpad SRAM, which
runs at the same speed as the L1 memories. It is only accessible
as data SRAM and cannot be configured as cache memory.
The fourth memory block is the factory programmed L1
instruction ROM, operating at full processor speed. This ROM
is not customer-configurable.
The fifth memory block is the L2 SRAM, providing up to 128K
bytes of unified instruction and data memory, operating at one
half the frequency of the core.
Finally, there is a 4K byte boot ROM connected as L3 memory.
It operates at full SCLK rate.
Rev. E |
RESERVED
DDR MEM BANK 1 (8M BYTES to 256M BYTES)
EXTERNAL MEMORY MAP
RESERVED
0x3000 0000
Internal (On-Chip) Memory
The second on-chip memory block is the L1 data memory, consisting of 64K bytes of SRAM, of which 32K bytes can be
configured as a two-way set-associative cache or as SRAM. This
memory block is accessed at full processor speed.
INTERNAL MEMORY MAP
INSTRUCTION SRAM / CACHE (16K BYTES)
0xFFA1 0000
DDR MEM BANK 0 (8M BYTES to 256M BYTES)
0x 0000 0000
Figure 3. ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Internal/External Memory Map1
1
For ADSP-BF544 processors, L2 SRAM is 64K Bytes
(0xFEB0000–0xFEB0FFFF). For ADSP-BF542 processors, there is no L2
SRAM.
External (Off-Chip) Memory
Through the external bus interface unit (EBIU), the
ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide glueless connectivity
to external 16-bit wide memories, such as DDR and mobile
DDR SDRAM, SRAM, NOR flash, NAND flash, and FIFO
devices. To provide the best performance, the bus system of the
DDR and mobile DDR interface is completely separate from the
other parallel interfaces. Furthermore, the DDR controller supports either standard DDR memory or mobile DDR memory.
See the Ordering Guide on Page 101 for details. Throughout
this document, references to “DDR” are intended to cover both
the standard and mobile DDR standards.
Page 6 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
The DDR memory controller can gluelessly manage up to two
banks of double-rate synchronous dynamic memory (DDR and
mobile DDR SDRAM). The 16-bit interface operates at the
SCLK frequency, enabling a maximum throughput of 532M
bytes/s. The DDR and mobile DDR controller is augmented
with a queuing mechanism that performs efficient bursts into
the DDR and mobile DDR. The controller is an industry standard DDR and mobile DDR SDRAM controller with each bank
supporting from 64M bit to 512M bit device sizes and 4-, 8-, or
16-bit widths. The controller supports up to 256M bytes per
external bank. With 2 external banks, the controller supports up
to 512M bytes total. Each bank is independently programmable
and is contiguous with adjacent banks regardless of the sizes of
the different banks or their placement.
Traditional 16-bit asynchronous memories, such as SRAM,
EPROM, and flash devices, can be connected to one of the four
64M byte asynchronous memory banks, represented by four
memory select strobes. Alternatively, these strobes can function
as bank-specific read or write strobes preventing further glue
logic when connecting to asynchronous FIFO devices. See the
Ordering Guide on Page 101 for a list of specific products that
provide support for DDR memory.
In addition, the external bus can connect to advanced flash
device technologies, such as:
• Support for SLC (single level cell) NAND flash devices
unlimited in size, with page sizes of 256 bytes and 512
bytes. Larger page sizes can be supported in software.
• The ability to release external bus interface pins during
long accesses.
• Support for internal bus requests of 16 bits or 32 bits.
• A DMA engine to transfer data between internal memory
and a NAND flash device.
One-Time-Programmable Memory
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors have 64K bits of onetime-programmable (OTP) non-volatile memory that can be
programmed by the developer only one time. It includes the
array and logic to support read access and programming. Additionally, its pages can be write protected.
OTP enables developers to store both public and private data
on-chip. In addition to storing public and private key data for
applications requiring security, it also allows developers to store
completely user-definable data such as a customer ID, product
ID, or a MAC address. By using this feature, generic parts can be
shipped, which are then programmed and protected by the
developer within this non-volatile memory. The OTP memory
can be accessed through an API provided by the on-chip ROM.
• Page-mode NOR flash devices
I/O Memory Space
• Synchronous burst-mode NOR flash devices
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors do not define a separate
I/O space. All resources are mapped through the flat 32-bit
address space. On-chip I/O devices have their control registers
mapped into memory-mapped registers (MMRs) at addresses
near the top of the 4G byte address space. These are separated
into two smaller blocks, one containing the control MMRs for
all core functions and the other containing the registers needed
for setup and control of the on-chip peripherals outside of the
core. The MMRs are accessible only in supervisor mode and
appear as reserved space to on-chip peripherals.
• NAND flash devices
Customers should consult the Ordering Guide when selecting a
specific ADSP-BF54x component for the intended application.
Products that provide support for mobile DDR memory are
noted in the ordering guide footnotes.
NAND Flash Controller (NFC)
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide a NAND Flash
Controller (NFC) as part of the external bus interface. NAND
flash devices provide high-density, low-cost memory. However,
NAND flash devices also have long random access times, invalid
blocks, and lower reliability over device lifetimes. Because of
this, NAND flash is often used for read-only code storage. In
this case, all DSP code can be stored in NAND flash and then
transferred to a faster memory (such as DDR or SRAM) before
execution. Another common use of NAND flash is for storage
of multimedia files or other large data segments. In this case, a
software file system may be used to manage reading and writing
of the NAND flash device. The file system selects memory segments for storage with the goal of avoiding bad blocks and
equally distributing memory accesses across all address locations. Hardware features of the NFC include:
• Support for page program, page read, and block erase of
NAND flash devices, with accesses aligned to page
boundaries.
Booting
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors contain a small on-chip
boot kernel, which configures the appropriate peripheral for
booting. If the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors are configured
to boot from boot ROM memory space, the processor starts executing from the on-chip boot ROM. For more information, see
Booting Modes on Page 18.
Event Handling
The event controller on the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors
handles all asynchronous and synchronous events to the processors. The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide event
handling that supports both nesting and prioritization. Nesting
allows multiple event service routines to be active simultaneously. Prioritization ensures that servicing of a higher-priority
event takes precedence over servicing of a lower-priority event.
• Error checking and correction (ECC) hardware that facilitates error detection and correction.
• A single 8-bit or 16-bit external bus interface for commands, addresses, and data.
Rev. E |
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Table 3. Core Event Controller (CEC)
The controller provides support for five different types of
events:
Priority
(0 is Highest)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
• Emulation. An emulation event causes the processor to
enter emulation mode, allowing command and control of
the processor via the JTAG interface.
• Reset. This event resets the processor.
• Non-maskable interrupt (NMI). The NMI event can be
generated by the software watchdog timer or by the NMI
input signal to the processor. The NMI event is frequently
used as a power-down indicator to initiate an orderly shutdown of the system.
• Exceptions. Events that occur synchronously to program
flow (that is, the exception is taken before the instruction is
allowed to complete). Conditions such as data alignment
violations and undefined instructions cause exceptions.
• Interrupts. Events that occur asynchronously to program
flow. They are caused by input pins, timers, and other
peripherals, as well as by an explicit software instruction.
Each event type has an associated register to hold the return
address and an associated return-from-event instruction. When
an event is triggered, the state of the processor is saved on the
supervisor stack.
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processor event controller consists
of two stages, the core event controller (CEC) and the system
interrupt controller (SIC). The core event controller works with
the system interrupt controller to prioritize and control all system events. Conceptually, interrupts from the peripherals enter
into the SIC and are then routed directly into the general-purpose interrupts of the CEC.
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide the user with a
very flexible mechanism to control the processing of events. In
the CEC, three registers are used to coordinate and control
events. Each register is 16 bits wide:
• CEC interrupt latch register (ILAT). The ILAT register
indicates when events have been latched. The appropriate
bit is set when the processor has latched the event and
cleared when the event has been accepted into the system.
This register is updated automatically by the controller, but
it may be written only when its corresponding IMASK bit
is cleared.
The CEC supports nine general-purpose interrupts (IVG15–7),
in addition to the dedicated interrupt and exception events. Of
these general-purpose interrupts, the two lowest-priority interrupts (IVG15–14) are recommended to be reserved for software
interrupt handlers, leaving seven prioritized interrupt inputs to
support the peripherals of the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors.
Table 3 describes the inputs to the CEC, identifies their names
in the event vector table (EVT), and lists their priorities.
• CEC interrupt mask register (IMASK). The IMASK register controls the masking and unmasking of individual
events. When a bit is set in the IMASK register, that event is
unmasked and is processed by the CEC when asserted. A
cleared bit in the IMASK register masks the event, preventing the processor from servicing the event even though the
event may be latched in the ILAT register. This register
may be read or written while in supervisor mode. Note that
general-purpose interrupts can be globally enabled and disabled with the STI and CLI instructions, respectively.
System Interrupt Controller (SIC)
Rev. E |
EVT Entry
EMU
RST
NMI
EVX
—
IVHW
IVTMR
IVG7
IVG8
IVG9
IVG10
IVG11
IVG12
IVG13
IVG14
IVG15
Event Control
Core Event Controller (CEC)
The system interrupt controller provides the mapping and routing of events from the many peripheral interrupt sources to the
prioritized general-purpose interrupt inputs of the CEC.
Although the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide a
default mapping, the user can alter the mappings and priorities
of interrupt events by writing the appropriate values into the
interrupt assignment registers (SIC_IARx). The ADSP-BF54x
Hardware Reference Manual, “System Interrupts” chapter
describes the inputs into the SIC and the default mappings into
the CEC.
Event Class
Emulation/Test Control
Reset
Nonmaskable Interrupt
Exception
Reserved
Hardware Error
Core Timer
General Interrupt 7
General Interrupt 8
General Interrupt 9
General Interrupt 10
General Interrupt 11
General Interrupt 12
General Interrupt 13
General Interrupt 14
General Interrupt 15
• CEC interrupt pending register (IPEND). The IPEND register keeps track of all nested events. A set bit in the IPEND
register indicates that the event is currently active or nested
at some level. This register is updated automatically by the
controller but may be read while in supervisor mode.
The SIC allows further control of event processing by providing
three 32-bit interrupt control and status registers. Each register
contains a bit corresponding to each of the peripheral interrupt
events shown in the ADSP-BF54x Hardware Reference Manual,
“System Interrupts” chapter.
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• SIC interrupt mask registers (SIC_IMASKx). These registers control the masking and unmasking of each peripheral
interrupt event. When a bit is set in a register, that peripheral event is unmasked and is processed by the system
when asserted. A cleared bit in the register masks the
peripheral event, preventing the processor from servicing
the event.
• SIC interrupt status registers (SIC_ISRx). As multiple
peripherals can be mapped to a single event, these registers
allow the software to determine which peripheral event
source triggered the interrupt. A set bit indicates the
peripheral is asserting the interrupt, and a cleared bit indicates the peripheral is not asserting the event.
• SIC interrupt wakeup enable registers (SIC_IWRx). By
enabling the corresponding bit in this register, a peripheral
can be configured to wake up the processor, should the
core be idled or in Sleep mode when the event is generated.
(For more information, see Dynamic Power Management
on Page 15.)
Because multiple interrupt sources can map to a single generalpurpose interrupt, multiple pulse assertions can occur simultaneously, before or during interrupt processing for an interrupt
event already detected on this interrupt input. The IPEND register contents are monitored by the SIC as the interrupt
acknowledgement.
The appropriate ILAT register bit is set when an interrupt rising
edge is detected. (Detection requires two core clock cycles.) The
bit is cleared when the respective IPEND register bit is set. The
IPEND bit indicates that the event has entered into the processor pipeline. At this point the CEC recognizes and queues the
next rising edge event on the corresponding event input. The
minimum latency from the rising edge transition of the generalpurpose interrupt to the IPEND output asserted is three core
clock cycles; however, the latency can be much higher, depending on the activity within and the state of the processor.
DMA CONTROLLERS
ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors have multiple, independent
DMA channels that support automated data transfers with minimal overhead for the processor core. DMA transfers can occur
between the ADSP-BF54x processors’ internal memories and
any of the DMA-capable peripherals. Additionally, DMA transfers can be accomplished between any of the DMA-capable
peripherals and external devices connected to the external
memory interfaces, including DDR and asynchronous memory
controllers.
While the USB controller and MXVR have their own dedicated
DMA controllers, the other on-chip peripherals are managed by
two centralized DMA controllers, called DMAC1 (32-bit) and
DMAC0 (16-bit). Both operate in the SCLK domain. Each DMA
controller manages 12 independent peripheral DMA channels,
as well as two independent memory DMA streams. The
DMAC1 controller masters high-bandwidth peripherals over a
dedicated 32-bit DMA access bus (DAB32). Similarly, the
DMAC0 controller masters most serial interfaces over the 16-bit
Rev. E |
DAB16 bus. Individual DMA channels have fixed access priority on the DAB buses. DMA priority of peripherals is managed
by a flexible peripheral-to-DMA channel assignment scheme.
All four DMA controllers use the same 32-bit DCB bus to
exchange data with L1 memory. This includes L1 ROM, but
excludes scratchpad memory. Fine granulation of L1 memory
and special DMA buffers minimize potential memory conflicts
when the L1 memory is accessed simultaneously by the core.
Similarly, there are dedicated DMA buses between the external
bus interface unit (EBIU) and the three DMA controllers
(DMAC1, DMAC0, and USB) that arbitrate DMA accesses to
external memories and the boot ROM.
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ DMA controllers support both 1-dimensional (1D) and 2-dimensional (2D) DMA
transfers. DMA transfer initialization can be implemented from
registers or from sets of parameters called descriptor blocks.
The 2D DMA capability supports arbitrary row and column
sizes up to 64K elements by 64K elements, and arbitrary row
and column step sizes up to ±32K elements. Furthermore, the
column step size can be less than the row step size, allowing
implementation of interleaved data streams. This feature is
especially useful in video applications where data can be deinterleaved on the fly.
Examples of DMA types supported by the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ DMA controllers include:
• A single, linear buffer that stops upon completion
• A circular, auto-refreshing buffer that interrupts on each
full or fractionally full buffer
• 1D or 2D DMA using a linked list of descriptors
• 2D DMA using an array of descriptors, specifying only the
base DMA address within a common page
In addition to the dedicated peripheral DMA channels, the
DMAC1 and DMAC0 controllers each feature two memory
DMA channel pairs for transfers between the various memories
of the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors. This enables transfers
of blocks of data between any of the memories—including
external DDR, ROM, SRAM, and flash memory—with minimal
processor intervention. Like peripheral DMAs, memory DMA
transfers can be controlled by a very flexible descriptor-based
methodology or by a standard register-based autobuffer
mechanism.
The memory DMA channels of the DMAC1 controller
(MDMA2 and MDMA3) can be controlled optionally by the
external DMA request input pins. When used in conjunction
with the External Bus Interface Unit (EBIU), this handshaked
memory DMA (HMDMA) scheme can be used to efficiently
exchange data with block-buffered or FIFO-style devices connected externally. Users can select whether the DMA request
pins control the source or the destination side of the memory
DMA. It allows control of the number of data transfers for
memory DMA. The number of transfers per edge is programmable. This feature can be programmed to allow memory DMA
to have an increased priority on the external bus relative to the
core.
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Host DMA Port Interface
The host DMA port (HOSTDP) facilitates a host device external
to the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors to be a DMA master
and transfer data back and forth. The host device always masters
the transactions, and the processor is always a DMA slave
device.
wake up the ADSP-BF54x processors from deep sleep mode,
and it can wake up the on-chip internal voltage regulator from
the hibernate state.
Connect RTC pins RTXI and RTXO with external components
as shown in Figure 4.
The HOSTDP is enabled through the peripheral access bus.
Once the port has been enabled, the transactions are controlled
by the external host. The external host programs standard DMA
configuration words in order to send/receive data to any valid
internal or external memory location. The host DMA port controller includes the following features:
RTXI
RTXO
R1
X1
C1
• Allows an external master to configure DMA read/write
data transfers and read port status
• Uses a flexible asynchronous memory protocol for its
external interface
C2
SUGGESTED COMPONENTS:
ECLIPTEK EC38J (THROUGH-HOLE PACKAGE)
EPSON MC405 12 pF LOAD (SURFACE-MOUNT PACKAGE)
C1 = 22 pF
C2 = 22 pF
R1 = 10 MΩ
• Allows an 8- or 16-bit external data interface to the host
device
NOTE: C1 AND C2 ARE SPECIFIC TO CRYSTAL SPECIFIED FOR X1.
CONTACT CRYSTAL MANUFACTURER FOR DETAILS. C1 AND C2
SPECIFICATIONS ASSUME BOARD TRACE CAPACITANCE OF 3 pF.
• Supports half-duplex operation
• Supports little/big endian data transfers
• Acknowledge mode allows flow control on host
transactions
Figure 4. External Components for RTC
• Interrupt mode guarantees a burst of FIFO depth host
transactions
WATCHDOG TIMER
REAL-TIME CLOCK
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ real-time clock (RTC)
provides a robust set of digital watch features, including current
time, stopwatch, and alarm. The RTC is clocked by a 32.768 kHz
crystal external to the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors. The
RTC peripheral has dedicated power supply pins so that it can
remain powered up and clocked even when the rest of the processor is in a low-power state. The RTC provides several
programmable interrupt options, including interrupt per second, minute, hour, or day clock ticks, interrupt on
programmable stopwatch countdown, or interrupt at a programmed alarm time.
The 32.768 kHz input clock frequency is divided down to a 1 Hz
signal by a prescaler. The counter function of the timer consists
of four counters: a 60-second counter, a 60-minute counter, a
24-hour counter, and a 32,768-day counter.
When enabled, the alarm function generates an interrupt when
the output of the timer matches the programmed value in the
alarm control register. There are two alarms. The first alarm is
for a time of day. The second alarm is for a day and time of
that day.
The stopwatch function counts down from a programmed value
with one-second resolution. When the stopwatch is enabled and
the counter underflows, an interrupt is generated.
Like the other peripherals, the RTC can wake up the
ADSP-BF54x processor from sleep mode upon generation of
any RTC wakeup event. Additionally, an RTC wakeup event can
Rev. E |
The ADSP-BF54x processors include a 32-bit timer that can be
used to implement a software watchdog function. A software
watchdog can improve system reliability by forcing the processor to a known state through generation of a hardware reset,
non-maskable interrupt (NMI), or general-purpose interrupt if
the timer expires before being reset by software. The programmer initializes the count value of the timer, enables the
appropriate interrupt, and then enables the timer. Thereafter,
the software must reload the counter before it counts to zero
from the programmed value. This protects the system from
remaining in an unknown state where software, which would
normally reset the timer, has stopped running due to an external
noise condition or software error.
If configured to generate a hardware reset, the watchdog timer
resets both the core and the ADSP-BF54x processors’ peripherals. After a reset, software can determine if the watchdog was the
source of the hardware reset by interrogating a status bit in the
watchdog timer control register.
The timer is clocked by the system clock (SCLK) at a maximum
frequency of fSCLK.
TIMERS
There are up to two timer units in the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin
processors. One unit provides eight general-purpose programmable timers, and the other unit provides three. Each timer has
an external pin that can be configured either as a pulse width
modulator (PWM) or timer output, as an input to clock the
timer, or as a mechanism for measuring pulse widths and periods of external events. These timers can be synchronized to an
external clock input on the TMRx pins, an external clock
TMRCLK input pin, or to the internal SCLK.
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The timer units can be used in conjunction with the four
UARTs and the CAN controllers to measure the width of the
pulses in the data stream to provide a software auto-baud detect
function for the respective serial channels.
• Companding in hardware. Each SPORT can perform
A-law or μ-law companding according to ITU recommendation G.711. Companding can be selected on the transmit
and/or receive channel of the SPORT without additional
latencies.
The timers can generate interrupts to the processor core, providing periodic events for synchronization to either the system
clock or to a count of external signals.
• DMA operations with single-cycle overhead. Each SPORT
can receive and transmit multiple buffers of memory data
automatically. The processor can link or chain sequences of
DMA transfers between a SPORT and memory.
In addition to the general-purpose programmable timers,
another timer is also provided by the processor core. This extra
timer is clocked by the internal processor clock and is typically
used as a system tick clock for generation of periodic operating
system interrupts.
• Interrupts. Each transmit and receive port generates an
interrupt upon completing the transfer of a data word or
after transferring an entire data buffer or buffers through
DMA.
UP/DOWN COUNTER AND THUMBWHEEL
INTERFACE
A 32-bit up/down counter is provided that can sense the 2-bit
quadrature or binary codes typically emitted by industrial drives
or manual thumb wheels. The counter can also operate in
general-purpose up/down count modes. Then count direction is
either controlled by a level-sensitive input pin or by two edge
detectors.
A third input can provide flexible zero marker support and can
alternatively be used to input the push-button signal of thumb
wheels. All three pins have a programmable debouncing circuit.
An internal signal forwarded to the timer unit enables one timer
to measure the intervals between count events. Boundary registers enable auto-zero operation or simple system warning by
interrupts when programmable count values are exceeded.
SERIAL PORTS (SPORTS)
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors incorporate up to four
dual-channel synchronous serial ports (SPORT0, SPORT1,
SPORT2, and SPORT3) for serial and multiprocessor communications. The SPORTs support the following features:
• I2S capable operation.
• Bidirectional operation. Each SPORT has two sets of independent transmit and receive pins, enabling up to eight
channels of I2S stereo audio.
• Buffered (8-deep) transmit and receive ports. Each port has
a data register for transferring data words to and from
other processor components and shift registers for shifting
data in and out of the data registers.
• Clocking. Each transmit and receive port can either use an
external serial clock or generate its own, in frequencies
ranging from (fSCLK/131,070) Hz to (fSCLK/2) Hz.
• Word length. Each SPORT supports serial data words from
3 to 32 bits in length, transferred most-significant-bit first
or least-significant-bit first.
• Framing. Each transmit and receive port can run with or
without frame sync signals for each data word. Frame sync
signals can be generated internally or externally, active high
or low, and with either of two pulse widths and early or late
frame sync.
Rev. E |
• Multichannel capability. Each SPORT supports 128 channels out of a 1024-channel window and is compatible with
the H.100, H.110, MVIP-90, and HMVIP standards.
SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE (SPI) PORTS
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors have up to three SPIcompatible ports that allow the processor to communicate with
multiple SPI-compatible devices.
Each SPI port uses three pins for transferring data: two data pins
(master output slave input, SPIxMOSI, and master input-slave
output, SPIxMISO) and a clock pin (serial clock, SPIxSCK). An
SPI chip select input pin (SPIxSS) lets other SPI devices select
the processor, and three SPI chip select output pins per SPI port
SPIxSELy let the processor select other SPI devices. The SPI
select pins are reconfigured general-purpose I/O pins. Using
these pins, the SPI ports provide a full-duplex, synchronous
serial interface, which supports both master/slave modes and
multimaster environments.
The SPI port’s baud rate and clock phase/polarities are programmable, and it has an integrated DMA controller,
configurable to support transmit or receive data streams. The
SPI’s DMA controller can only service unidirectional accesses at
any given time.
The SPI port’s clock rate is calculated as
f SCLK
SPI Clock Rate = -----------------------------------2  SPI_BAUD
Where the 16-bit SPI_BAUD register contains a value of
2 to 65,535.
During transfers, the SPI port transmits and receives simultaneously by serially shifting data in and out on its two serial data
lines. The serial clock line synchronizes the shifting and sampling of data on the two serial data lines.
UART PORTS (UARTS)
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide up to four fullduplex universal asynchronous receiver/transmitter (UART)
ports. Each UART port provides a simplified UART interface to
other peripherals or hosts, supporting full-duplex, DMA-supported, asynchronous transfers of serial data. A UART port
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includes support for five to eight data bits, one or two stop bits,
and none, even, or odd parity. Each UART port supports two
modes of operation:
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ CAN controllers offer
the following features:
• 32 mailboxes (8 receive only, 8 transmit only, 16 configurable for receive or transmit).
• PIO (programmed I/O). The processor sends or receives
data by writing or reading I/O-mapped UART registers.
The data is double-buffered on both transmit and receive.
• Dedicated acceptance masks for each mailbox.
• Additional data filtering on first two bytes.
• DMA (direct memory access). The DMA controller transfers both transmit and receive data. This reduces the
number and frequency of interrupts required to transfer
data to and from memory. Each UART has two dedicated
DMA channels, one for transmit and one for receive. These
DMA channels have lower default priority than most DMA
channels because of their relatively low service rates. Flexible interrupt timing options are available on the transmit
side.
Each UART port’s baud rate, serial data format, error code generation and status, and interrupts are programmable:
• Supporting bit rates ranging from (fSCLK/1,048,576) to
(fSCLK) bits per second.
• Supporting data formats from seven to 12 bits per frame.
• Both transmit and receive operations can be configured to
generate maskable interrupts to the processor.
The UART port’s clock rate is calculated as
f SCLK
UART Clock Rate = ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 1 – EDBO 
16
 UART_Divisor
Where the 16-bit UART divisor comes from the UARTx_DLH
register (most significant 8 bits) and UARTx_DLL register (least
significant eight bits), and the EDBO is a bit in the
UARTx_GCTL register.
In conjunction with the general-purpose timer functions, autobaud detection is supported.
UART1 and UART3 feature a pair of UARTxRTS (request to
send) and UARTxCTS (clear to send) signals for hardware flow
purposes. The transmitter hardware is automatically prevented
from sending further data when the UARTxCTS input is deasserted. The receiver can automatically de-assert its
UARTxRTS output when the enhanced receive FIFO exceeds a
certain high-water level. The capabilities of the UARTs are further extended with support for the Infrared Data Association
(IrDA®) Serial Infrared Physical Layer Link Specification (SIR)
protocol.
CONTROLLER AREA NETWORK (CAN)
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors offer up to two CAN controllers that are communication controllers that implement the
controller area network (CAN) 2.0B (active) protocol. This protocol is an asynchronous communications protocol used in both
industrial and automotive control systems. The CAN protocol is
well suited for control applications due to its capability to communicate reliably over a network since the protocol
incorporates CRC checking, message error tracking, and fault
node confinement.
Rev. E |
• Support for both the standard (11-bit) and extended (29bit) identifier (ID) message formats.
• Support for remote frames.
• Active or passive network support.
• CAN wakeup from hibernation mode (lowest static power
consumption mode).
• Interrupts, including: TX complete, RX complete, error
and global.
The electrical characteristics of each network connection are
very demanding, so the CAN interface is typically divided into
two parts: a controller and a transceiver. This allows a single
controller to support different drivers and CAN networks. The
ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ CAN module represents only
the controller part of the interface. The controller interface supports connection to 3.3 V high speed, fault-tolerant, single-wire
transceivers.
An additional crystal is not required to supply the CAN clock, as
the CAN clock is derived from the processor system clock
(SCLK) through a programmable divider.
TWI CONTROLLER INTERFACE
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors include up to two 2-wire
interface (TWI) modules for providing a simple exchange
method of control data between multiple devices. The modules
are compatible with the widely used I2C bus standard. The TWI
modules offer the capabilities of simultaneous master and slave
operation and support for both 7-bit addressing and multimedia data arbitration. Each TWI interface uses two pins for
transferring clock (SCLx) and data (SDAx), and supports the
protocol at speeds up to 400K bits/sec. The TWI interface pins
are compatible with 5 V logic levels.
Additionally, the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ TWI modules are fully compatible with serial camera control bus (SCCB)
functionality for easier control of various CMOS camera sensor
devices.
PORTS
Because of their rich set of peripherals, the ADSP-BF54x
Blackfin processors group the many peripheral signals to ten
ports—referred to as Port A to Port J. Most ports contain 16
pins, though some have fewer. Many of the associated pins are
shared by multiple signals. The ports function as multiplexer
controls. Every port has its own set of memory-mapped registers to control port muxing and GPIO functionality.
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The following features are supported in the EPPI module:
General-Purpose I/O (GPIO)
Every pin in Port A to Port J can function as a GPIO pin, resulting in a GPIO pin count up to 154. While it is unlikely that all
GPIO pins will be used in an application, as all pins have multiple functions, the richness of GPIO functionality guarantees
unrestrictive pin usage. Every pin that is not used by any function can be configured in GPIO mode on an individual basis.
• Programmable data length: 8 bits, 10 bits, 12 bits, 14 bits,
16 bits, 18 bits, and 24 bits per clock.
After reset, all pins are in GPIO mode by default. Since neither
GPIO output nor input drivers are active by default, unused
pins can be left unconnected. GPIO data and direction control
registers provide flexible write-one-to-set and write-one-toclear mechanisms so that independent software threads do not
need to protect against each other because of expensive readmodify-write operations when accessing the same port.
• Various framed and non-framed operating modes. Frame
syncs can be generated internally or can be supplied by an
external device.
Pin Interrupts
• ITU-656 preamble and status word decode.
Every port pin on ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors can request
interrupts in either an edge-sensitive or a level-sensitive manner
with programmable polarity. Interrupt functionality is decoupled from GPIO operation. Four system-level interrupt
channels (PINT0, PINT1, PINT2 and PINT3) are reserved for
this purpose. Each of these interrupt channels can manage up to
32 interrupt pins. The assignment from pin to interrupt is not
performed on a pin-by-pin basis. Rather, groups of eight pins
(half ports) can be flexibly assigned to interrupt channels.
• Three different modes for ITU-656 receive modes: active
video only, vertical blanking only, and entire field mode.
• Bidirectional and half-duplex port.
• Clock can be provided externally or can be generated
internally.
• Various general-purpose modes with zero to three frame
syncs for both receive and transmit directions.
• ITU-656 status word error detection and correction for
ITU-656 receive modes.
• Horizontal and vertical windowing for GP 2 and 3 frame
sync modes.
• Optional packing and unpacking of data to/from 32 bits
from/to 8, 16 and 24 bits. If packing/unpacking is enabled,
endianness can be changed to change the order of packing/unpacking of bytes/words.
• Optional sign extension or zero fill for receive modes.
Every pin interrupt channel features a special set of 32-bit memory-mapped registers that enables half-port assignment and
interrupt management. This not only includes masking, identification, and clearing of requests, it also enables access to the
respective pin states and use of the interrupt latches regardless
of whether the interrupt is masked or not. Most control registers
feature multiple MMR address entries to write-one-to-set or
write-one-to-clear them individually.
• During receive modes, alternate even or odd data samples
can be filtered out.
• Programmable clipping of data values for 8-bit transmit
modes.
• RGB888 can be converted to RGB666 or RGB565 for transmit modes.
• Various de-interleaving/interleaving modes for receiving/transmitting 4:2:2 YCrCb data.
PIXEL COMPOSITOR (PIXC)
The pixel compositor (PIXC) provides image overlays with
transparent-color support, alpha blending, and color space conversion capabilities for output to TFT LCDs and NTSC/PAL
video encoders. It provides all of the control to allow two data
streams from two separate data buffers to be combined,
blended, and converted into appropriate forms for both LCD
panels and digital video outputs. The main image buffer provides the basic background image, which is presented in the
data stream. The overlay image buffer allows the user to add
multiple foreground text, graphics, or video objects on top of
the main image or video data stream.
ENHANCED PARALLEL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE
(EPPI)
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide up to three
enhanced parallel peripheral interfaces (EPPIs), supporting data
widths up to 24 bits. The EPPI supports direct connection to
TFT LCD panels, parallel analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog converters, video encoders and decoders, image sensor
modules and other general-purpose peripherals.
Rev. E |
• FIFO watermarks and urgent DMA features.
• Clock gating by an external device asserting the clock gating control signal.
• Configurable LCD data enable (DEN) output available on
Frame Sync 3.
USB ON-THE-GO DUAL-ROLE DEVICE
CONTROLLER
The USB OTG dual-role device controller (USBDRC) provides
a low-cost connectivity solution for consumer mobile devices
such as cell phones, digital still cameras, and MP3 players,
allowing these devices to transfer data using a point-to-point
USB connection without the need for a PC host. The USBDRC
module can operate in a traditional USB peripheral-only mode
as well as the host mode presented in the On-the-Go (OTG)
supplement to the USB 2.0 specification. In host mode, the USB
module supports transfers at high speed (480 Mbps), full speed
(12 Mbps), and low speed (1.5 Mbps) rates. Peripheral-only
mode supports the high and full speed transfer rates.
Page 13 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
The USB clock (USB_XI) is provided through a dedicated external crystal or crystal oscillator. See Table 62 for related timing
requirements. If using a fundamental mode crystal to provide
the USB clock, connect the crystal between USB_XI and
USB_XO with a circuit similar to that shown in Figure 7. Use a
parallel-resonant, fundamental mode, microprocessor-grade
crystal. If a third-overtone crystal is used, follow the circuit
guidelines outlined in Clock Signals on Page 17 for third-overtone crystals.
The USB On-the-Go dual-role device controller includes a
Phase Locked Loop with programmable multipliers to generate
the necessary internal clocking frequency for USB. The multiplier value should be programmed based on the USB_XI clock
frequency to achieve the necessary 480 MHz internal clock for
USB high speed operation. For example, for a USB_XI crystal
frequency of 24 MHz, the USB_PLLOSC_CTRL register should
be programmed with a multiplier value of 20 to generate a
480 MHz internal clock.
key is meant to be pressed. It is possible to detect when multiple
keys are pressed simultaneously and to provide limited key resolution capability when this happens.
SECURE DIGITAL (SD)/SDIO CONTROLLER
The SD/SDIO controller is a serial interface that stores data at a
data rate of up to 10M bytes per second using a 4-bit data line.
The SD/SDIO controller supports the SD memory mode only.
The interface supports all the power modes and performs error
checking by CRC.
CODE SECURITY
An OTP/security system, consisting of a blend of hardware and
software, provides customers with a flexible and rich set of code
security features with Lockbox® secure technology. Key features
include:
• OTP memory
• Unique chip ID
ATA/ATAPI-6 INTERFACE
The ATAPI interface connects to CD/DVD and HDD drives
and is ATAPI-6 compliant. The controller implements the
peripheral I/O mode, the multi-DMA mode, and the Ultra
DMA mode. The DMA modes enable faster data transfer and
reduced host management. The ATAPI controller supports
PIO, multi-DMA, and ultra DMA ATAPI accesses. Key features
include:
• Supports PIO modes 0, 1, 2, 3, 4
• Code authentication
• Secure mode of operation
The security scheme is based upon the concept of authentication of digital signatures using standards-based algorithms and
provides a secure processing environment in which to execute
code and protect assets. See Lockbox Secure Technology Disclaimer on Page 23.
MEDIA TRANSCEIVER MAC LAYER (MXVR)
• Supports multiword DMA modes 0, 1, 2
• Supports ultra DMA modes 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 (up to UDMA
100)
• Programmable timing for ATA interface unit
• Supports CompactFlash cards using true IDE mode
By default, the ATAPI_A0-2 address signals and the ATAPI_D0-15 data signals are shared on the asynchronous memory
interface with the asynchronous memory and NAND flash controllers. The data and address signals can be remapped to GPIO
ports F and G, respectively, by setting PORTF_MUX[1:0] to
b#01.
KEYPAD INTERFACE
The keypad interface is a 16-pin interface module that is used to
detect the key pressed in a 8 × 8 (maximum) keypad matrix. The
size of the input keypad matrix is programmable. The interface
is capable of filtering the bounce on the input pins, which is
common in keypad applications. The width of the filtered
bounce is programmable. The module is capable of generating
an interrupt request to the core once it identifies that any key
has been pressed.
The interface supports a press-release-press mode and infrastructure for a press-hold mode. The former mode identifies a
press, release and press of a key as two consecutive presses of the
same key, whereas the latter mode checks the input key’s state in
periodic intervals to determine the number of times the same
The ADSP-BF549 Blackfin processors provide a media transceiver (MXVR) MAC layer, allowing the processor to be
connected directly to a MOST® 1 network through an FOT. See
Figure 5 on Page 15 for an example of a MXVR MOST
connection.
The MXVR is fully compatible with industry-standard standalone MOST controller devices, supporting 22.579 Mbps or
24.576 Mbps data transfer. It offers faster lock times, greater jitter immunity, and a sophisticated DMA scheme for data
transfers. The high speed internal interface to the core and L1
memory allows the full bandwidth of the network to be utilized.
The MXVR can operate as either the network master or as a network slave.
The MXVR supports synchronous data, asynchronous packets,
and control messages using dedicated DMA channels that operate autonomously from the processor core moving data to and
from L1 and/or L2 memory. Synchronous data is transferred to
or from the synchronous data physical channels on the MOST
bus through eight programmable DMA channels. The synchronous data DMA channels can operate in various modes
including modes that trigger DMA operation when data patterns are detected in the receive data stream. Furthermore, two
DMA channels support asynchronous traffic, and two others
support control message traffic.
1
Rev. E |
MOST is a registered trademark of Standard Microsystems, Corp.
Page 14 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Interrupts are generated when a user-defined amount of synchronous data has been sent or received by the processor or
when asynchronous packets or control messages have been sent
or received.
to operate in a low-power state when there is no network activity or when data is not currently being received or transmitted
by the MXVR.
The MXVR clock is provided through a dedicated external crystal or crystal oscillator. The frequency of the external crystal or
crystal oscillator can be 256 Fs, 384 Fs, 512 Fs, or 1024 Fs for
Fs = 38 kHz, 44.1 kHz, or 48 kHz. If using a crystal to provide
the MXVR clock, use a parallel-resonant, fundamental mode,
microprocessor-grade crystal.
The MXVR peripheral can wake up the ADSP-BF549 Blackfin
processor from sleep mode when a wakeup preamble is received
over the network or based on any other MXVR interrupt event.
Additionally, detection of network activity by the MXVR can be
used to wake up the ADSP-BF549 Blackfin processor from the
hibernate state. These features allow the ADSP-BF549 processor
5.0V
1.25V
600Z
RXVCC
VDDINT
ADSP-BF549
10k 6
GND
MOST FOT
RXGND
PG11/MTXON
MOST
NETWORK
600Z
600Z
0.01MF
TXVCC
XN4114
VDDMP
TXGND
0.1MF
GNDMP
27 6
PH5/MTX
TX_DATA
06
RX_DATA
PH6/MRX
MXO
STATUS
PH7/MRXON
24.576MHz
MXI
PC4/RFS0
33 6
L/RCLK
MFS
AUDIO DAC
336
MLF_P
R1
330 6 1%
C1
0.047 MF
2% PPS
PC5/MBCLK
C2
330pF
2% PPS
MCLK
PC1/MMCLK
33 6
BCLK
AUDIO
CHANNELS
PC3/TSCLK0
PC7/RSCLK0
MLF_M
SDATA
PC2/DT0PRI
Figure 5. MXVR MOST Connection
Rev. E |
Sleep
Deep Sleep
Hibernate
Page 15 of 102 |
March 2014
Core
Power
In the active mode, the PLL is enabled but bypassed. Because the
PLL is bypassed, the processor’s core clock (CCLK) and system
clock (SCLK) run at the input clock (CLKIN) frequency. DMA
access is available to appropriately configured L1 memories.
Enabled
Enabled/
Disabled
Enabled
Disabled
Disabled
System
Clock
(SCLK)
Active Operating Mode—Moderate Power Savings
Full On
Active
Core
Clock
(CCLK)
In the full-on mode, the PLL is enabled and is not bypassed,
providing the capability to run at the maximum operational frequency. This is the power-up default execution state in which
maximum performance can be achieved. The processor core
and all enabled peripherals run at full speed.
PLL
Bypassed
Full-On Operating Mode—Maximum Performance
Table 4. Power Settings
PLL
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide five operating
modes, each with a different performance/power profile. In
addition, dynamic power management provides the control
functions to dynamically alter the processor core supply voltage,
further reducing power dissipation. Control of clocking to each
of the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ peripherals also
reduces power consumption. See Table 4 for a summary of the
power settings for each mode.
In the active mode, it is possible to disable the control input to
the PLL by setting the PLL_OFF bit in the PLL control register.
This register can be accessed with a user-callable routine in the
on-chip ROM called bfrom_SysControl(). For more information, see the “Dynamic Power Management” chapter in the
ADSP-BF54x Blackfin Processor Hardware Reference. If disabled, the PLL must be re-enabled before transitioning to the
full-on or sleep modes.
Mode/State
DYNAMIC POWER MANAGEMENT
No
Yes
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
Enabled
On
On
-
Disabled
Disabled
Disabled
Enabled
Disabled
Disabled
On
On
Off
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Sleep Operating Mode—High Dynamic Power Savings
Power Domains
The sleep mode reduces dynamic power dissipation by disabling
the clock to the processor core (CCLK). The PLL and system
clock (SCLK), however, continue to operate in this mode. Typically an external event or RTC activity will wake up the
processor. In the sleep mode, assertion of a wakeup event
enabled in the SIC_IWRx register causes the processor to sense
the value of the BYPASS bit in the PLL control register
(PLL_CTL). If BYPASS is disabled, the processor transitions to
the full on mode. If BYPASS is enabled, the processor transitions to the active mode.
As shown in Table 5, the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors support different power domains. The use of multiple power
domains maximizes flexibility while maintaining compliance
with industry standards and conventions. By isolating the internal logic of the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors into its own
power domain separate from the RTC and other I/O, the processors can take advantage of dynamic power management
without affecting the RTC or other I/O devices. There are no
sequencing requirements for the various power domains.
In the sleep mode, system DMA access to L1 memory is not
supported.
Deep Sleep Operating Mode—Maximum Dynamic Power
Savings
The deep sleep mode maximizes dynamic power savings by disabling the clocks to the processor core (CCLK) and to all
synchronous peripherals (SCLK). Asynchronous peripherals,
such as the RTC, may still be running but will not be able to
access internal resources or external memory. This
powered-down mode can only be exited by assertion of the reset
interrupt (RESET) or by an asynchronous interrupt generated
by the RTC. In deep sleep mode, an asynchronous RTC interrupt causes the processor to transition to the active mode.
Assertion of RESET while in deep sleep mode causes the processor to transition to the full on mode.
Hibernate State—Maximum Static Power Savings
The hibernate state maximizes static power savings by disabling
the voltage and clocks to the processor core (CCLK) and to all
the synchronous peripherals (SCLK). The internal voltage regulator for the processor can be shut off by using the
bfrom_SysControl() function in the on-chip ROM. This sets the
internal power supply voltage (VDDINT) to 0 V to provide the
greatest power savings mode. Any critical information stored
internally (memory contents, register contents, and so on) must
be written to a non-volatile storage device prior to removing
power if the processor state is to be preserved.
Since VDDEXT is still supplied in this mode, all of the external
pins three-state, unless otherwise specified. This allows other
devices that may be connected to the processor to have power
still applied without drawing unwanted current.
The internal supply regulator can be woken up by CAN, by the
MXVR, by the keypad, by the up/down counter, by the USB,
and by some GPIO pins. It can also be woken up by a real-time
clock wakeup event or by asserting the RESET pin. Waking up
from hibernate state initiates the hardware reset sequence.
Table 5. Power Domains
Power Domain
All internal logic, except RTC, DDR, and USB
RTC internal logic and crystal I/O
DDR external memory supply
USB internal logic and crystal I/O
Internal voltage regulator
MXVR PLL and logic
All other I/O
VOLTAGE REGULATION
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors provide an on-chip voltage regulator that can generate processor core voltage levels
from an external supply (see specifications in Operating Conditions on Page 34). Figure 6 on Page 17 shows the typical
external components required to complete the power management system. The regulator controls the internal logic voltage
levels and is programmable with the voltage regulator control
register (VR_CTL) in increments of 50 mV. This register can be
accessed using the bfrom_SysControl() function in the on-chip
ROM. To reduce standby power consumption, the internal voltage regulator can be programmed to remove power to the
processor core while keeping I/O power supplied. While in
hibernate state, VDDEXT, VDDRTC, VDDDDR, VDDUSB, and VDDVR can
still be applied, eliminating the need for external buffers. The
voltage regulator can be activated from this power-down state
by assertion of the RESET pin, which then initiates a boot
sequence. The regulator can also be disabled and bypassed at the
user’s discretion. For all 600 MHz speed grade models and all
automotive grade models, the internal voltage regulator must
not be used and VDDVR must be tied to VDDEXT. For additional
information regarding design of the voltage regulator circuit,
see Switching Regulator Design Considerations for the ADSPBF533 Blackfin Processors (EE-228).
With the exception of the VR_CTL and the RTC registers, all
internal registers and memories lose their content in hibernate
state. State variables may be held in external SRAM or DDR
memory.
Rev. E |
VDD Range
VDDINT
VDDRTC
VDDDDR
VDDUSB
VDDVR
VDDMP
VDDEXT
Page 16 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
BLACKFIN
2.7V TO 3.6V
INPUT VOLTAGE
RANGE
VDDVR
(LOW-INDUCTANCE)
SET OF DECOUPLING
CAPACITORS
CLKOUT
VDDVR
TO PLL CIRCUITRY
EN
CLKBUF
10μH
100nF
+
700
0
VDDINT
+
100μF
EN
FDS9431A
VDDEXT
XTAL
CLKIN
0 *
100μF
10μF
LOW ESR
1M
ZHCS1000
VR OUT
18 pF*
SHORT AND LOWINDUCTANCE WIRE
VR OUT
NOTE: DESIGNER SHOULD MINIMIZE
TRACE LENGTH TO FDS9431A.
18 pF*
FOR OVERTONE
OPERATION ONLY
NOTE: VALUES MARKED WITH * MUST BE CUSTOMIZED
DEPENDING ON THE CRYSTAL AND LAYOUT. PLEASE
ANALYZE CAREFULLY.
GND
Figure 7. External Crystal Connections
Figure 6. Voltage Regulator Circuit
CLOCK SIGNALS
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors can be clocked by an
external crystal, a sine wave input, or a buffered, shaped clock
derived from an external clock oscillator.
If an external clock is used, it should be a TTL-compatible signal
and must not be halted, changed, or operated below the specified frequency during normal operation. This signal is
connected to the processor’s CLKIN pin. When an external
clock is used, the XTAL pin must be left unconnected.
Alternatively, because the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors
include an on-chip oscillator circuit, an external crystal may be
used. For fundamental frequency operation, use the circuit
shown in Figure 7. A parallel-resonant, fundamental frequency,
microprocessor-grade crystal is connected across the CLKIN
and XTAL pins. The on-chip resistance between CLKIN and the
XTAL pin is in the 500 kΩ range. Typically, further parallel
resistors are not recommended. The two capacitors and the
series resistor shown in Figure 7 fine-tune phase and amplitude
of the sine frequency. The 1MOhm pull-up resistor on the
XTAL pin guarantees that the clock circuit is properly held inactive when the processor is in the hibernate state.
The capacitor and resistor values shown in Figure 7 are typical
values only. The capacitor values are dependent upon the crystal
manufacturers’ load capacitance recommendations and the PCB
physical layout. The resistor value depends on the drive level
specified by the crystal manufacturer. System designs should
verify the customized values based on careful investigations on
multiple devices over temperature range.
A third-overtone crystal can be used at frequencies above
25 MHz. The circuit is then modified to ensure crystal operation
only at the third overtone by adding a tuned inductor circuit as
shown in Figure 7. A design procedure for third-overtone operation is discussed in detail in an Application Note, Using Third
Overtone Crystals (EE-168).
the input clock (CLKIN) signal. An on-chip PLL is capable of
multiplying the CLKIN signal by a programmable 0.5× to 64×
multiplication factor (bounded by specified minimum and maximum VCO frequencies). The default multiplier is 8×, but it can
be modified by a software instruction sequence. This sequence
is managed by the bfrom_SysControl() function in the on-chip
ROM.
On-the-fly CCLK and SCLK frequency changes can be applied
by using the bfrom_SysControl() function in the on-chip ROM.
Whereas the maximum allowed CCLK and SCLK rates depend
on the applied voltages VDDINT and VDDEXT, the VCO is always
permitted to run up to the frequency specified by the part’s
speed grade.
The CLKOUT pin reflects the SCLK frequency to the off-chip
world. It functions as a reference for many timing specifications.
While inactive by default, it can be enabled using the
EBIU_AMGCTL register.
DYNAMIC MODIFICATION
REQUIRES PLL SEQUENCING
CLKIN
1, 2, 4, 8
CCLK
1:15
SCLK
VCO
Note: For CCLK and SCLK specifications, see Table 15.
Figure 8. Frequency Modification Methods
All on-chip peripherals are clocked by the system clock (SCLK).
The system clock frequency is programmable by means of the
SSEL3–0 bits of the PLL_DIV register. The values programmed
into the SSEL fields define a divide ratio between the PLL output
(VCO) and the system clock. SCLK divider values are 1 through
15. Table 6 illustrates typical system clock ratios. The default
ratio is 4.
The Blackfin core runs at a different clock rate than the on-chip
peripherals. As shown in Figure 8 on Page 17, the core clock
(CCLK) and system peripheral clock (SCLK) are derived from
Rev. E |
PLL
0.5x - 64x
DYNAMIC MODIFICATION
ON-THE-FLY
Page 17 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 6. Example System Clock Ratios
Signal Name
SSEL3–0
0010
0110
1010
Table 8. Booting Modes (Continued)
Example Frequency Ratios
(MHz)
Divider Ratio
VCO/SCLK
VCO
SCLK
2:1
200
100
6:1
300
50
10:1
500
50
Note that the divisor ratio must be chosen to limit the system
clock frequency to its maximum of fSCLK. The SSEL value can be
dynamically changed without any PLL lock latencies by writing
the appropriate values to the PLL divisor register (PLL_DIV)
using the bfrom_SysControl() function in the on-chip ROM.
The core clock (CCLK) frequency can also be dynamically
changed by means of the CSEL1–0 bits of the PLL_DIV register.
Supported CCLK divider ratios are 1, 2, 4, and 8, as shown in
Table 7. The default ratio is 1. This programmable core clock
capability is useful for fast core frequency modifications.
The maximum CCLK frequency not only depends on the part’s
speed grade, it also depends on the applied VDDINT voltage. See
Table 12 on Page 35 for details.
Table 7. Core Clock Ratios
Signal Name
CSEL1–0
00
01
10
11
Divider Ratio
VCO/CCLK
1:1
2:1
4:1
8:1
Example Frequency Ratios
(MHz)
VCO
CCLK
300
300
300
150
500
125
200
25
BOOTING MODES
BMODE3–0
1000
1001
1010
1011
1100
1101
1110
1111
The boot modes listed in Table 8 provide a number of mechanisms for automatically loading the processor’s internal and
external memories after a reset. By default, all boot modes use
the slowest allowed configuration settings. Default settings can
be altered via the initialization code feature at boot time or by
proper OTP programming at pre-boot time. Some boot modes
require a boot host wait (HWAIT) signal, which is a GPIO output signal that is driven and toggled by the boot kernel at boot
time. If pulled high through an external pull-up resistor, the
HWAIT signal behaves active high and will be driven low when
the processor is ready for data. Conversely, when pulled low,
HWAIT is driven high when the processor is ready for data.
When the boot sequence completes, the HWAIT pin can be
used for other purposes. By default, HWAIT functionality is on
GPIO port B (PB11). However, if PB11 is otherwise utilized in
the system, an alternate boot host wait (HWAITA) signal can be
enabled on GPIO port H (PH7) by programming the
OTP_ALTERNATE_HWAIT bit in the PBS00L OTP
memory page.
The BMODE pins of the reset configuration register, sampled
during power-on resets and software-initiated resets, implement the following modes:
The ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors have many mechanisms
(listed in Table 8) for automatically loading internal and external memory after a reset. The boot mode is specified by four
BMODE input pins dedicated to this purpose. There are two
categories of boot modes: master and slave. In master boot
modes, the processor actively loads data from parallel or serial
memories. In slave boot modes, the processor receives data
from an external host device.
Table 8. Booting Modes
BMODE3–0
0000
0001
0010
0011
0100
0101
0110
0111
Description
Idle-no boot
Boot from 8- or 16-bit external flash memory
Boot from 16-bit asynchronous FIFO
Boot from serial SPI memory (EEPROM or flash)
Boot from SPI host device
Boot from serial TWI memory (EEPROM or flash)
Boot from TWI host
Boot from UART host
Rev. E |
Description
Reserved
Reserved
Boot from DDR SDRAM/Mobile DDR SDRAM
Boot from OTP memory
Reserved
Boot from 8- or 16-bit NAND flash memory via NFC
Boot from 16-bit host DMA
Boot from 8-bit host DMA
Page 18 of 102 |
• Idle-no boot mode (BMODE = 0x0)—In this mode, the
processor goes into the idle state. The idle boot mode helps
to recover from illegal operating modes, in case the OTP
memory is misconfigured.
• Boot from 8- or 16-bit external flash memory—
(BMODE = 0x1)—In this mode, the boot kernel loads the
first block header from address 0x2000 0000 and, depending on instructions contained in the header, the boot kernel
performs an 8- or 16-bit boot or starts program execution
at the address provided by the header. By default, all configuration settings are set for the slowest device possible (3cycle hold time; 15-cycle R/W access times; 4-cycle setup).
The ARDY pin is not enabled by default. It can, however,
be enabled by OTP programming. Similarly, all interface
behavior and timings can be customized through OTP programming. This includes activation of burst-mode or pagemode operation. In this mode, all asynchronous interface
signals are enabled at the port muxing level.
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
• Boot from 16-bit asynchronous FIFO (BMODE = 0x2)—In
this mode, the boot kernel starts booting from address
0x2030 0000. Every 16-bit word that the boot kernel has to
read from the FIFO must be requested by a low pulse on
the DMAR1 pin.
composed of four bytes (0xBF, the value of UART1_DLL,
the value of UART1_DLH, and finally 0x00). The host can
then download the boot stream. The processor deasserts
the UART1RTS output to hold off the host; UART1CTS
functionality is not enabled at boot time.
• Boot from serial SPI memory, EEPROM or flash
(BMODE = 0x3)—8-, 16-, 24- or 32-bit addressable devices
are supported. The processor uses the PE4 GPIO pin to
select a single SPI EEPROM or flash device and uses SPI0
to submit a read command and successive address bytes
(0x00) until a valid 8-, 16-, 24-, or 32-bit addressable device
is detected. Pull-up resistors are required on the SPI0SEL1
and SPI0MISO pins. By default, a value of 0x85 is written to
the SPI0_BAUD register.
• Boot from (DDR) SDRAM (BMODE = 0xA)—In this
mode, the boot kernel starts booting from address
0x0000 0010. This is a warm boot scenario only. The
SDRAM is expected to contain a valid boot stream and the
SDRAM controller must have been configured by the OTP
settings.
• Boot from SPI host device (BMODE = 0x4)—The processor operates in SPI slave mode (using SPI0) and is
configured to receive the bytes of the .LDR file from an SPI
host (master) agent. The HWAIT signal must be interrogated by the host before every transmitted byte. A pull-up
resistor is required on the SPI0SS input. A pull-down resistor on the serial clock (SPI0SCK) may improve signal
quality and booting robustness.
• Boot from serial TWI memory, EEPROM or flash
(BMODE = 0x5)—The processor operates in master mode
(using TWI0) and selects the TWI slave with the unique ID
0xA0. The processor submits successive read commands to
the memory device starting at two-byte internal address
0x0000 and begins clocking data into the processor. The
TWI memory device should comply with Philips I2C Bus
Specification version 2.1 and have the capability to autoincrement its internal address counter such that the contents of the memory device can be read sequentially. By
default, a prescale value of 0xA and CLKDIV value of
0x0811 is used. Unless altered by OTP settings, an I2C
memory that takes two address bytes is assumed. Development tools ensure that data that is booted to memories that
cannot be accessed by the Blackfin core is written to an
intermediate storage place and then copied to the final destination via memory DMA.
• Boot from TWI host (BMODE = 0x6)—The TWI host
agent selects the slave with the unique ID 0x5F. The processor (using TWI0) replies with an acknowledgement, and
the host can then download the boot stream. The TWI host
agent should comply with Philips I2C Bus Specification version 2.1. An I2C multiplexer can be used to select one
processor at a time when booting multiple processors from
a single TWI.
• Boot from UART host (BMODE = 0x7)—In this mode, the
processor uses UART1 as the booting source. Using an
autobaud handshake sequence, a boot-stream-formatted
program is downloaded by the host. The host agent selects
a bit rate within the UART’s clocking capabilities.
When performing the autobaud, the UART expects an “@”
(0x40) character (eight data bits, one start bit, one stop bit,
no parity bit) on the UART1RX pin to determine the bit
rate. It then replies with an acknowledgement, which is
Rev. E |
Page 19 of 102 |
• Boot from 8-bit and 16-bit external NAND flash memory
(BMODE = 0xD)—In this mode, auto detection of the
NAND flash device is performed. The processor configures
PORTJ GPIO pins PJ1 and PJ2 to enable the ND_CE and
ND_RB signals, respectively. For correct device operation,
pull-up resistors are required on both ND_CE (PJ1) and
ND_RB (PJ2) signals. By default, a value of 0x0033 is written to the NFC_CTL register. The booting procedure
always starts by booting from byte 0 of block 0 of the
NAND flash device. In this boot mode, the HWAIT signal
does not toggle. The respective GPIO pin remains in the
high-impedance state.
NAND flash boot supports the following features:
• Device auto detection
• Error detection and correction for maximum
reliability
• No boot stream size limitation
• Peripheral DMA via channel 22, providing efficient
transfer of all data (excluding the ECC parity data)
• Software-configurable boot mode for booting from
boot streams expanding multiple blocks, including
bad blocks
• Software-configurable boot mode for booting from
multiple copies of the boot stream allowing for handling of bad blocks and uncorrectable errors
• Configurable timing via OTP memory
Small page NAND flash devices must have a 512-byte page
size, 32 pages per block, a 16-byte spare area size and a bus
configuration of eight bits. By default, all read requests
from the NAND flash are followed by four address cycles.
If the NAND flash device requires only three address
cycles, then the device must be capable of ignoring the
additional address cycle.
The small page NAND flash device must comply with the
following command set:
Reset: 0xFF
Read lower half of page: 0x00
Read upper half of page: 0x01
Read spare area: 0x50
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
For large page NAND flash devices, the 4-byte electronic
signature is read in order to configure the kernel for booting. This allows support for multiple large page devices.
The fourth byte of the electronic signature must comply
with the specifications in Table 9.
public OTP memory up to page 0xDF (2560 bytes). Since
the start page is programmable, the maximum size of the
boot stream can be extended to 3072 bytes.
• Boot from 16-bit host DMA (BMODE = 0xE)—In this
mode, the host DMA port is configured in 16-bit acknowledge mode with little endian data format. Unlike other
modes, the host is responsible for interpreting the boot
stream. It writes data blocks individually into the host
DMA port. Before configuring the DMA settings for each
block, the host may either poll the ALLOW_CONFIG bit in
HOST_STATUS or wait to be interrupted by the HWAIT
signal. When using HWAIT, the host must still check
ALLOW_CONFIG at least once before beginning to configure the host DMA port. After completing the
configuration, the host is required to poll the READY bit in
HOST_STATUS before beginning to transfer data. When
the host sends an HIRQ control command, the boot kernel
issues a CALL instruction to address 0xFFA0 0000. It is the
host’s responsibility to ensure valid code has been placed at
this address. The routine at address 0xFFA0 0000 can be a
simple initialization routine to configure internal
resources, such as the SDRAM controller, which then
returns using an RTS instruction. The routine may also be
the final application, which will never return to the boot
kernel.
Any configuration from Table 9 that also complies with the
command set listed below is directly supported by the boot
kernel. There are no restrictions on the page size or block
size as imposed by the small-page boot kernel.
Table 9. Byte 4 Electronic Signature Specification
Page Size (excluding D1:D0
spare area)
Spare Area Size
D2
Block Size (excluding D5:4
spare area)
Bus Width
Not Used for
Configuration
D6
00
1K bytes
01
2K bytes
10
4K bytes
11
8K bytes
0
8 bytes/512 bytes
1
16 bytes/512 bytes
00
64K bytes
01
128K bytes
10
256K bytes
11
512K bytes
0
x8
1
x16
• Boot from 8-bit host DMA (BMODE = 0xF)—In this
mode, the host DMA port is configured in 8-bit interrupt
mode with little endian data format. Unlike other modes,
the host is responsible for interpreting the boot stream. It
writes data blocks individually to the host DMA port.
Before configuring the DMA settings for each block, the
host may either poll the ALLOW_CONFIG bit in
HOST_STATUS or wait to be interrupted by the HWAIT
signal. When using HWAIT, the host must still check
ALLOW_CONFIG at least once before beginning to configure the host DMA port. The host will receive an
interrupt from the HOST_ACK signal every time it is
allowed to send the next FIFO depth’s worth (sixteen 32-bit
words) of information. When the host sends an HIRQ control command, the boot kernel issues a CALL instruction to
address 0xFFA0 0000. It is the host's responsibility to
ensure valid code has been placed at this address. The routine at address 0xFFA0 0000 can be a simple initialization
routine to configure internal resources, such as the
SDRAM controller, which then returns using an RTS
instruction. The routine may also be the final application,
which will never return to the boot kernel.
D3, D7
Large page devices must support the following command set:
Reset: 0xFF
Read Electronic Signature: 0x90
Read: 0x00, 0x30 (confirm command)
Large page devices must not support or react to NAND flash
command 0x50. This is a small page NAND flash command
used for device auto detection.
By default, the boot kernel will always issue five address cycles;
therefore, if a large page device requires only four cycles, the
device must be capable of ignoring the additional address cycle.
16-bit NAND flash memory devices must only support the issuing of command and address cycles via the lower eight bits of
the data bus. Devices that use the full 16-bit bus for command
and address cycles are not supported.
For each of the boot modes, a 16-byte header is first read from
an external memory device. The header specifies the number of
bytes to be transferred and the memory destination address.
Multiple memory blocks may be loaded by any boot sequence.
Once all blocks are loaded, program execution commences from
the address stored in the EVT1 register.
• Boot from OTP memory (BMODE = 0xB)—This provides
a standalone booting method. The boot stream is loaded
from on-chip OTP memory. By default, the boot stream is
expected to start from OTP page 0x40 and can occupy all
Prior to booting, the pre-boot routine interrogates the OTP
memory. Individual boot modes can be customized or disabled
based on OTP programming. External hardware, especially
booting hosts, may monitor the HWAIT signal to determine
Rev. E |
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ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
when the pre-boot has finished and the boot kernel starts the
boot process. However, the HWAIT signal does not toggle in
NAND boot mode. By programming OTP memory, the user
can instruct the preboot routine to also customize the PLL, voltage regulator, DDR controller, and/or asynchronous memory
interface controller.
The boot kernel differentiates between a regular hardware reset
and a wakeup-from-hibernate event to speed up booting in the
later case. Bits 6-4 in the system reset configuration (SYSCR)
register can be used to bypass the pre-boot routine and/or boot
kernel in case of a software reset. They can also be used to simulate a wakeup-from-hibernate boot in the software reset case.
The boot process can be further customized by “initialization
code.” This is a piece of code that is loaded and executed prior to
the regular application boot. Typically, this is used to configure
the DDR controller or to speed up booting by managing PLL,
clock frequencies, wait states, and/or serial bit rates.
The boot ROM also features C-callable function entries that can
be called by the user application at run time. This enables second-stage boot or booting management schemes to be
implemented with ease.
INSTRUCTION SET DESCRIPTION
The Blackfin processor family assembly language instruction set
employs an algebraic syntax designed for ease of coding and
readability. The instructions have been specifically tuned to provide a flexible, densely encoded instruction set that compiles to
a very small final memory size. The instruction set also provides
fully featured multifunction instructions that allow the programmer to use many of the processor core resources in a single
instruction. Coupled with many features more often seen on
microcontrollers, this instruction set is very efficient when compiling C and C++ source code. In addition, the architecture
supports both user (algorithm/application code) and supervisor
(O/S kernel, device drivers, debuggers, ISRs) modes of operation, allowing multiple levels of access to core processor
resources.
The assembly language, which takes advantage of the processor’s unique architecture, offers the following advantages:
• Seamlessly integrated DSP/MCU features are optimized for
both 8-bit and 16-bit operations.
• A multi-issue load/store modified-Harvard architecture,
which supports two 16-bit MAC or four 8-bit ALU + two
load/store + two pointer updates per cycle.
• All registers, I/O, and memory are mapped into a unified
4G byte memory space, providing a simplified programming model.
• Microcontroller features, such as arbitrary bit and bit-field
manipulation, insertion, and extraction; integer operations
on 8-, 16-, and 32-bit data-types; and separate user and
supervisor stack pointers.
• Code density enhancements, which include intermixing of
16- and 32-bit instructions (no mode switching, no code
segregation). Frequently used instructions are encoded in
16 bits.
Rev. E |
DEVELOPMENT TOOLS
Analog Devices supports its processors with a complete line of
software and hardware development tools, including integrated
development environments (which include CrossCore® Embedded Studio and/or VisualDSP++®), evaluation products,
emulators, and a wide variety of software add-ins.
Integrated Development Environments (IDEs)
For C/C++ software writing and editing, code generation, and
debug support, Analog Devices offers two IDEs.
The newest IDE, CrossCore Embedded Studio, is based on the
EclipseTM framework. Supporting most Analog Devices processor families, it is the IDE of choice for future processors,
including multicore devices. CrossCore Embedded Studio
seamlessly integrates available software add-ins to support real
time operating systems, file systems, TCP/IP stacks, USB stacks,
algorithmic software modules, and evaluation hardware board
support packages. For more information visit
www.analog.com/cces.
The other Analog Devices IDE, VisualDSP++, supports processor families introduced prior to the release of CrossCore
Embedded Studio. This IDE includes the Analog Devices VDK
real time operating system and an open source TCP/IP stack.
For more information visit www.analog.com/visualdsp. Note
that VisualDSP++ will not support future Analog Devices
processors.
EZ-KIT Lite Evaluation Board
For processor evaluation, Analog Devices provides wide range
of EZ-KIT Lite® evaluation boards. Including the processor and
key peripherals, the evaluation board also supports on-chip
emulation capabilities and other evaluation and development
features. Also available are various EZ-Extenders®, which are
daughter cards delivering additional specialized functionality,
including audio and video processing. For more information
visit www.analog.com and search on “ezkit” or “ezextender”.
EZ-KIT Lite Evaluation Kits
For a cost-effective way to learn more about developing with
Analog Devices processors, Analog Devices offer a range of EZKIT Lite evaluation kits. Each evaluation kit includes an EZ-KIT
Lite evaluation board, directions for downloading an evaluation
version of the available IDE(s), a USB cable, and a power supply.
The USB controller on the EZ-KIT Lite board connects to the
USB port of the user’s PC, enabling the chosen IDE evaluation
suite to emulate the on-board processor in-circuit. This permits
the customer to download, execute, and debug programs for the
EZ-KIT Lite system. It also supports in-circuit programming of
the on-board Flash device to store user-specific boot code,
enabling standalone operation. With the full version of CrossCore Embedded Studio or VisualDSP++ installed (sold
separately), engineers can develop software for supported EZKITs or any custom system utilizing supported Analog Devices
processors.
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ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Software Add-Ins for CrossCore Embedded Studio
Analog Devices offers software add-ins which seamlessly integrate with CrossCore Embedded Studio to extend its capabilities
and reduce development time. Add-ins include board support
packages for evaluation hardware, various middleware packages, and algorithmic modules. Documentation, help,
configuration dialogs, and coding examples present in these
add-ins are viewable through the CrossCore Embedded Studio
IDE once the add-in is installed.
(EE-68) on the Analog Devices website (www.analog.com)—use
site search on “EE-68.” This document is updated regularly to
keep pace with improvements to emulator support.
MXVR BOARD LAYOUT GUIDELINES
The MXVR Loop Filter RC network is connected between the
MLF_P and MLF_M pins in the following manner:
Capacitors:
• C1: 0.047 μF (PPS type, 2% tolerance recommended)
Board Support Packages for Evaluation Hardware
• C2: 330 pF (PPS type, 2% tolerance recommended)
Software support for the EZ-KIT Lite evaluation boards and EZExtender daughter cards is provided by software add-ins called
Board Support Packages (BSPs). The BSPs contain the required
drivers, pertinent release notes, and select example code for the
given evaluation hardware. A download link for a specific BSP is
located on the web page for the associated EZ-KIT or EZExtender product. The link is found in the Product Download
area of the product web page.
Middleware Packages
Resistor:
• R1: 330 Ω (1% tolerance)
The RC network should be located physically close to the
MLF_P and MLF_M pins on the board.
The RC network should be shielded using GNDMP traces.
Avoid routing other switching signals near the RC network to
avoid crosstalk.
MXI driven with external clock oscillator IC:
Analog Devices separately offers middleware add-ins such as
real time operating systems, file systems, USB stacks, and
TCP/IP stacks. For more information see the following web
pages:
• MXI should be driven with the clock output of a clock
oscillator IC running at a frequency of 49.152 MHz or
45.1584 MHz.
• MXO should be left unconnected.
• www.analog.com/ucos3
• Avoid routing other switching signals near the oscillator
and clock output trace to avoid crosstalk. When not possible, shield traces with ground.
• www.analog.com/ucfs
• www.analog.com/ucusbd
MXI/MXO with external crystal:
• www.analog.com/lwip
• The crystal must be a fundamental mode crystal running at
a frequency of 49.152 MHz or 45.1584 MHz.
Algorithmic Modules
To speed development, Analog Devices offers add-ins that perform popular audio and video processing algorithms. These are
available for use with both CrossCore Embedded Studio and
VisualDSP++. For more information visit www.analog.com and
search on “Blackfin software modules” or “SHARC software
modules”.
• The crystal and load capacitors should be placed physically
close to the MXI and MXO pins on the board.
• Board trace capacitance on each lead should not be more
than 3 pF.
• Trace capacitance plus load capacitance should equal the
load capacitance specification for the crystal.
Designing an Emulator-Compatible DSP Board (Target)
For embedded system test and debug, Analog Devices provides
a family of emulators. On each JTAG DSP, Analog Devices supplies an IEEE 1149.1 JTAG Test Access Port (TAP). In-circuit
emulation is facilitated by use of this JTAG interface. The emulator accesses the processor’s internal features via the
processor’s TAP, allowing the developer to load code, set breakpoints, and view variables, memory, and registers. The
processor must be halted to send data and commands, but once
an operation is completed by the emulator, the DSP system is set
to run at full speed with no impact on system timing. The emulators require the target board to include a header that supports
connection of the DSP’s JTAG port to the emulator.
• Avoid routing other switching signals near the crystal and
components to avoid crosstalk. When not possible, shield
traces and components with ground.
VDDMP/GNDMP—MXVR PLL power domain:
For details on target board design issues including mechanical
layout, single processor connections, signal buffering, signal termination, and emulator pod logic, see the Engineer-to-Engineer
Note “Analog Devices JTAG Emulation Technical Reference”
Rev. E |
Page 22 of 102 |
• Route VDDMP and GNDMP with wide traces or as isolated
power planes.
• Drive VDDMP to same level as VDDINT.
• Place a ferrite bead between the VDDINT power plane and the
VDDMP pin for noise isolation.
• Locally bypass VDDMP with 0.1 μF and 0.01 μF decoupling
capacitors to GNDMP.
• Avoid routing switching signals near to VDDMP and GNDMP
traces to avoid crosstalk.
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
LOCKBOX SECURE TECHNOLOGY DISCLAIMER
Fiber optic transceiver (FOT) connections:
• Keep the traces between the ADSP-BF549 processor and
the FOT as short as possible.
• The receive data trace connecting the FOT receive data
output pin to the ADSP-BF549 PH6/MRX input pin should
have a 0 Ω series termination resistor placed close to the
FOT receive data output pin. Typically, the edge rate of the
FOT receive data signal driven by the FOT is very slow, and
further degradation of the edge rate is not desirable.
• The transmit data trace connecting the ADSP-BF549
PH5/MTX output pin to the FOT transmit data input pin
should have a 27 Ω series termination resistor placed close
to the ADSP-BF549 PH5/MTX pin.
• The receive data trace and the transmit data trace between
the ADSP-BF549 processor and the FOT should not be
routed close to each other in parallel over long distances to
avoid crosstalk.
Analog Devices products containing Lockbox Secure Technology are warranted by Analog Devices as detailed in the Analog
Devices Standard Terms and Conditions of Sale. To our knowledge, the Lockbox secure technology, when used in accordance
with the data sheet and hardware reference manual specifications, provides a secure method of implementing code and data
safeguards. However, Analog Devices does not guarantee that
this technology provides absolute security. ACCORDINGLY,
ANALOG DEVICES HEREBY DISCLAIMS ANY AND ALL
EXPRESS AND IMPLIED WARRANTIES THAT THE LOCKBOX SECURE TECHNOLOGY CANNOT BE BREACHED,
COMPROMISED, OR OTHERWISE CIRCUMVENTED AND
IN NO EVENT SHALL ANALOG DEVICES BE LIABLE FOR
ANY LOSS, DAMAGE, DESTRUCTION, OR RELEASE OF
DATA, INFORMATION, PHYSICAL PROPERTY, OR INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The following publications that describe the ADSP-BF54x
Blackfin processors (and related processors) can be ordered
from any Analog Devices sales office or accessed electronically
on www.analog.com:
• ADSP-BF54x Blackfin Processor Hardware Reference, Volume 1 and Volume 2
• Blackfin Processor Programming Reference
• ADSP-BF542/BF544/BF547/BF548/BF549
Blackfin Anomaly List
RELATED SIGNAL CHAINS
A signal chain is a series of signal-conditioning electronic components that receive input (data acquired from sampling either
real-time phenomena or from stored data) in tandem, with the
output of one portion of the chain supplying input to the next.
Signal chains are often used in signal processing applications to
gather and process data or to apply system controls based on
analysis of real-time phenomena. For more information about
this term and related topics, see the "signal chain" entry in
Wikipedia or the Glossary of EE Terms on the Analog Devices
website.
Analog Devices eases signal processing system development by
providing signal processing components that are designed to
work together well. A tool for viewing relationships between
specific applications and related components is available on the
www.analog.com website.
The Application Signal Chains page in the Circuits from the
LabTM site (http://www.analog.com/circuits) provides:
• Graphical circuit block diagram presentation of signal
chains for a variety of circuit types and applications
• Drill down links for components in each chain to selection
guides and application information
• Reference designs applying best practice design techniques
Rev. E |
Page 23 of 102 |
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ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
PIN DESCRIPTIONS
The ADSP-BF54x processor pin multiplexing scheme is shown
in Table 10.
Table 10. Pin Multiplexing
Primary Pin
Function
(Number of
Pins)1, 2
Port A
GPIO (16 pins)
First Peripheral
Function
Second Peripheral
Function
Third Peripheral
Function
SPORT2 (8 pins)
TMR4 (1 pin)
TMR5 (1 pin)
TMR6 (1 pin)
TMR7 (1 pin)
TACI7 (1 pin)
TACLK7–0 (8 pins)
Interrupts (16 pins)
TACI2-3 (2 pins)
Interrupts (15 pins)
SPORT3 (8 pins)
Port B
GPIO (15 pins)
Port C
GPIO (16 pins)
TWI1 (2 pins)
UART2 or 3 CTL (2 pins)
UART2 (2 pins)
UART3 (2 pins)
SPI2 SEL1-3 (3 pins)
TMR0–2 (3 pins)
SPI2 (4 pins)
TMR3 (1 pin)
SPORT0 (8 pins)
Fourth Peripheral
Function
HWAIT (1 pin)
Interrupts (8 pins)3
MXVR MMCLK, MBCLK
(2 pins)
SDH (6 pins)
Port D
GPIO (16 pins)
Port E
GPIO (16 pins)
PPI1 D0–15 (16 pins)
SPI0 (7 pins)
UART0 TX (1 pin)
UART0 RX (1 pin)
UART0 or 1 CTL (2 pins)
PPI1 CLK,FS (3 pins)
TWI0 (2 pins)
Port F
GPIO (16 pins)
Port G
GPIO (16 pins)
Interrupt Capability
Interrupts (8 pins)
Host D0–15 (16 pins)
Keypad
Row 4–6
Col 4–7 (7 pins)
Keypad R7 (1 pin)
SPORT1 (8 pins)
PPI0 D18– 23 (6 pins)
Interrupts (8 pins)
PPI2 D0–7 (8 pins)
Keypad
Row 0–3
Col 0–3 (8 pins)
Interrupts (8 pins)
TACI0 (1 pin)
Interrupts (8 pins)
Interrupts (8 pins)
PPI0 D0–15 (16 pins)
ATAPI D0-15A
Interrupts (8 pins)
Interrupts (8 pins)
PPI0 CLK,FS (3 pins)
DATA 16–17 (2 pins)
TMRCLK (1 pin)
ATAPI A0-2A
Host CTL (3 pins)
MXVR MTXON (1 pin)
Interrupts (8 pins)
SPI1 SEL1–3 (3 pins)
SPI1 (4 pins)
CAN0 (2 pins)
CAN1 (2 pins)
Rev. E |
PPI2 CLK,FS (3 pins)
TACI4-5 (2 pins)
Page 24 of 102 |
March 2014
CZM (1 pin)
Interrupts (8 pins)
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 10. Pin Multiplexing (Continued)
Primary Pin
Function
(Number of
Pins)1, 2
Port H
GPIO (14 pins)
First Peripheral
Function
Second Peripheral
Function
Third Peripheral
Function
UART1 (2 pins)
ATAPI_RESET (1 pin)
HOST_ADDR (1 pin)
PPI0-1_FS3 (2 pins)
TMR8 (1 pin)
TMR9 (1 pin)
HOST_ACK (1 pin)
TMR10 (1 pin)
TACI1 (1 pin)
PPI2_FS3 (1 pin)
Counter Down/Gate
(1 pin)
Counter Up/Dir
(1 pin)
DMAR 0–1 (2 pins)
MXVR MRX, MTX,
MRXON/GPW
(3 pins)4
AMC Addr 4-9 (6 pins)
Port I
GPIO (16 pins)
Fourth Peripheral
Function
Interrupt Capability
Interrupts (8 pins)
TACI8–10 (3 pins)
TACLK8–10 (3 pins)
HWAITA
Interrupts (6 pins)
Async Addr10–25
(16 pins)
Interrupts (8 pins)
Interrupts (8 pins)
Port J
GPIO (14 pins)
Async CTL and MISC
Interrupts (8 pins)
Interrupts (6 pins)
1
Port connections may be inputs or outputs after power up depending on the model and boot mode chosen.
All port connections always power up as inputs for some period of time and require resistive termination to a safe condition if used as outputs in the system.
3
A total of 32 interrupts at once are available from ports C through J, configurable in byte-wide blocks.
4
GPW functionality available when MXVR is not present or unused.
2
Pin definitions for the ADSP-BF54x processors are listed in
Table 11. In order to maintain maximum function and reduce
package size and ball count, some balls have dual, multiplexed
functions. In cases where ball function is reconfigurable, the
default state is shown in plain text, while the alternate function
is shown in italics.
All pins are three-stated during and immediately after reset,
with the exception of the external memory interface, asynchronous and synchronous memory control, and the buffered XTAL
output pin (CLKBUF). On the external memory interface, the
control and address lines are driven high, with the exception of
CLKOUT, which toggles at the system clock rate. During hibernate, all outputs are three-stated unless otherwise noted in
Table 11.
All I/O pins have their input buffers disabled with the exception
of the pins that need pull-ups or pull-downs, as noted in
Table 11.
It is strongly advised to use the available IBIS models to ensure
that a given board design meets overshoot/undershoot and signal integrity requirements.
Additionally, adding a parallel termination to CLKOUT may
prove useful in further enhancing signal integrity. Be sure to
verify overshoot/undershoot and signal integrity specifications
on actual hardware.
Rev. E |
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ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
Driver
Type2
PA0/TFS2
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Transmit Frame Sync
C
PA1/DT2SEC/TMR4
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Transmit Data Secondary/Timer 4
C
PA2/DT2PRI
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Transmit Data Primary
C
PA3/TSCLK2
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Transmit Serial Clock
A
PA4/RFS2
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Receive Frame Sync
C
PA5/DR2SEC/TMR5
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Receive Data Secondary/Timer 5
C
PA6/DR2PRI
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Receive Data Primary
C
PA7/RSCLK2/TACLK0
I/O GPIO/SPORT2 Receive Serial Clock/Alternate Input Clock 0
A
PA8/TFS3/TACLK1
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Transmit Frame Sync/Alternate Input Clock 1
C
PA9/DT3SEC/TMR6
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Transmit Data Secondary/Timer 6
C
PA10/DT3PRI/TACLK2
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Transmit Data Primary/Alternate Input Clock 2
C
PA11/TSCLK3/TACLK3
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Transmit Serial Clock/Alternate Input Clock 3
A
PA12/RFS3/TACLK4
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Receive Frame Sync/Alternate Input Clock 4
C
PA13/DR3SEC/TMR7/TACLK5
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Receive Data Secondary/Timer 7/Alternate Input Clock 5
C
PA14/DR3PRI/TACLK6
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Receive Data Primary/Alternate Input Clock 6
C
PA15/RSCLK3/TACLK7 and TACI7
I/O GPIO/SPORT3 Receive Serial Clock/Alt Input Clock 7 and Alt Capture Input 7 A
Pin Name
Port A: GPIO/SPORT2–3/TMR4–7
Port B: GPIO/TWI1/UART2–3/SPI2/TMR0–3
PB0/SCL1
I/O GPIO/TWI1 Serial Clock (Open-drain output: requires a pull-up resistor.) E
PB1/SDA1
I/O GPIO/TWI1 Serial Data (Open-drain output: requires a pull-up resistor.) E
PB2/UART3RTS
I/O GPIO/UART3 Request to Send
C
PB3/UART3CTS
I/O GPIO/UART3 Clear to Send
A
PB4/UART2TX
I/O GPIO/UART2 Transmit
A
PB5/UART2RX/TACI2
I/O GPIO/UART2 Receive/Alternate Capture Input 2
A
PB6/UART3TX
I/O GPIO/UART3 Transmit
A
PB7/UART3RX/TACI3
I/O GPIO/UART3 Receive/Alternate Capture Input 3
A
PB8/SPI2SS/TMR0
I/O GPIO/SPI2 Slave Select Input/Timer 0
A
PB9/SPI2SEL1/TMR1
I/O GPIO/SPI2 Slave Select Enable 1/Timer 1
A
PB10 SPI2SEL2/TMR2
I/O GPIO/SPI2 Slave Select Enable 2/Timer 2
A
PB11/SPI2SEL3/TMR3/ HWAIT
I/O GPIO/SPI2 Slave Select Enable 3/Timer 3/Boot Host Wait
A
PB12/SPI2SCK
I/O GPIO/SPI2 Clock
A
PB13/SPI2MOSI
I/O GPIO/SPI2 Master Out Slave In
C
PB14/SPI2MISO
I/O GPIO/SPI2 Master In Slave Out
C
Rev. E |
Page 26 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions (Continued)
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
Driver
Type2
PC0/TFS0
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Transmit Frame Sync
C
PC1/DT0SEC/MMCLK
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Transmit Data Secondary/MXVR Master Clock
C
PC2/DT0PRI
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Transmit Data Primary
C
PC3/TSCLK0
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Transmit Serial Clock
A
PC4/RFS0
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Receive Frame Sync
C
PC5/DR0SEC/MBCLK
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Receive Data Secondary/MXVR Bit Clock
C
PC6/DR0PRI
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Receive Data Primary
C
PC7/RSCLK0
I/O GPIO/SPORT0 Receive Serial Clock
C
PC8/SD_D0
I/O GPIO/SD Data Bus
A
PC9/SD_D1
I/O GPIO/SD Data Bus
A
PC10/SD_D2
I/O GPIO/SD Data Bus
A
PC11/SD_D3
I/O GPIO/SD Data Bus
A
PC12/SD_CLK
I/O GPIO/SD Clock Output
A
PC13/SD_CMD
I/O GPIO/SD Command
A
PD0/PPI1_D0/HOST_D8/ TFS1/PPI0_D18
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/SPORT1 Transmit Frame Sync/PPI0 Data
C
PD1/PPI1_D1/HOST_D9/ DT1SEC/PPI0_D19
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/SPORT1 Transmit Data Secondary/PPI0 Data C
PD2/PPI1_D2/HOST_D10/ DT1PRI/PPI0_D20
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/SPORT1 Transmit Data Primary/PPI0 Data
C
PD3/PPI1_D3/HOST_D11/ TSCLK1/PPI0_D21
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/SPORT1 Transmit Serial Clock/PPI0 Data
A
PD4/PPI1_D4/HOST_D12/RFS1/PPI0_D22
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/SPORT1 Receive Frame Sync/PPI0 Data
C
PD5/PPI1_D5/HOST_D13/DR1SEC/PPI0_D23
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/SPORT1 Receive Data Secondary/PPI0 Data C
PD6/PPI1_D6/HOST_D14/DR1PRI
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/SPORT1 Receive Data Primary
C
PD7/PPI1_D7/HOST_D15/RSCLK1
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data /Host DMA/SPORT1 Receive Serial Clock
A
PD8/PPI1_D8/HOST_D0/ PPI2_D0/KEY_ROW0
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Row Input
A
PD9/PPI1_D9/HOST_D1/PPI2_D1/KEY_ROW1
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Row Input
A
PD10/PPI1_D10/HOST_D2/PPI2_D2/KEY_ROW2
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Row Input
A
PD11/PPI1_D11/HOST_D3/PPI2_D3/KEY_ROW3
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Row Input
A
PD12/PPI1_D12/HOST_D4/PPI2_D4/KEY_COL0
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Column Output
A
PD13/PPI1_D13/HOST_D5/PPI2_D5/KEY_COL1
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Column Output
A
PD14/PPI1_D14/HOST_D6/PPI2_D6/KEY_COL2
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Column Output
A
PD15/PPI1_D15/HOST_D7/PPI2_D7/KEY_COL3
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Data/Host DMA/PPI2 Data/Keypad Column Output
A
Pin Name
Port C: GPIO/SPORT0/SD Controller/MXVR (MOST)
Port D: GPIO/PPI0–2/SPORT 1/Keypad/Host DMA
Rev. E |
Page 27 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions (Continued)
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
Driver
Type2
I/O GPIO/SPI0 Clock/Keypad Column Output
A
I/O GPIO/SPI0 Master In Slave Out/Keypad Row Input
C
PE2/SPI0MOSI/KEY_COL6
I/O GPIO/SPI0 Master Out Slave In/Keypad Column Output
C
PE3/SPI0SS/KEY_ROW5
I/O GPIO/SPI0 Slave Select Input/Keypad Row Input
A
I/O GPIO/SPI0 Slave Select Enable 1/Keypad Column Output
A
PE5/SPI0SEL2/KEY_ROW4
I/O GPIO/SPI0 Slave Select Enable 2/Keypad Row Input
A
PE6/SPI0SEL3/KEY_COL4
I/O GPIO/SPI0 Slave Select Enable 3/Keypad Column Output
A
PE7/UART0TX/KEY_ROW7
I/O GPIO/UART0 Transmit/Keypad Row Input
A
PE8/UART0RX/TACI0
I/O GPIO/UART0 Receive/Alternate Capture Input 0
A
PE9/UART1RTS
I/O GPIO/UART1 Request to Send
A
PE10/UART1CTS
I/O GPIO/UART1 Clear to Send
A
PE11/PPI1_CLK
I/O GPIO / PPI1Clock
A
PE12/PPI1_FS1
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Frame Sync 1
A
PE13/PPI1_FS2
I/O GPIO/PPI1 Frame Sync 2
A
PE14/SCL0
I/O GPIO/TWI0 Serial Clock (Open-drain output: requires a pull-up resistor.) E
PE15/SDA0
I/O GPIO/TWI0 Serial Data (Open-drain output: requires a pull-up resistor.) E
Pin Name
Port E: GPIO/SPI0/UART0-1/PPI1/TWI0/Keypad
PE0/SPI0SCK/KEY_COL73
PE1/SPI0MISO/KEY_ROW6
PE4/SPI0SEL1/KEY_COL
3
3
Port F: GPIO/PPI0/Alternate ATAPI Data
PF0/PPI0_D0/ATAPI_D0A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF1/PPI0_D1/ATAPI_D1A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF2/PPI0_D2/ATAPI_D2A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF3/PPI0_D3/ATAPI_D3A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF4/PPI0_D4/ATAPI_D4A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF5/PPI0_D5/ATAPI_D5A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF6/PPI0_D6/ATAPI_D6A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF7/PPI0_D7/ATAPI_D7A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF8/PPI0_D8/ATAPI_D8A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF9/PPI0_D9/ATAPI_D9A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF10/PPI0_D10/ATAPI_D10A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF11/PPI0_D11/ATAPI_D11A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF12/PPI0_D12/ATAPI_D12A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF13/PPI0_D13/ATAPI_D13A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF14/PPI0_D14/ATAPI_D14A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
PF15/PPI0_D15/ATAPI_D15A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Data
A
Rev. E |
Page 28 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions (Continued)
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
Driver
Type2
PG0/PPI0_CLK/TMRCLK
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Clock/External Timer Reference
A
PG1/PPI0_FS1
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Frame Sync 1
A
PG2/PPI0_FS2/ATAPI_A0A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Frame Sync 2/Alternate ATAPI Address
A
PG3/PPI0_D16/ATAPI_A1A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Address
A
PG4/PPI0_D17/ATAPI_A2A
I/O GPIO/PPI0 Data/Alternate ATAPI Address
A
PG5/SPI1SEL1/HOST_CE/PPI2_FS2/CZM
I/O GPIO/SPI1 Slave Select/Host DMA Chip Enable/PPI2 Frame Sync 2/Counter A
Zero Marker
PG6/SPI1SEL2/HOST_RD/PPI2_FS1
I/O GPIO/SPI1 Slave Select/ Host DMA Read/PPI2 Frame Sync 1
A
PG7/SPI1SEL3/HOST_WR/PPI2_CLK
I/O GPIO/SPI1 Slave Select/Host DMA Write/PPI2 Clock
A
PG8/SPI1SCK
I/O GPIO/SPI1 Clock
C
PG9/SPI1MISO
I/O GPIO/SPI1 Master In Slave Out
C
PG10/SPI1MOSI
I/O GPIO/SPI1 Master Out Slave In
C
PG11/SPI1SS/MTXON
I/O GPIO/SPI1 Slave Select Input/MXVR Transmit Phy On
A
PG12/CAN0TX
I/O GPIO/CAN0 Transmit
A
PG13/CAN0RX/TACI4
I/O GPIO/CAN0 Receive/Alternate Capture Input 4
A
PG14/CAN1TX
I/O GPIO/CAN1 Transmit
A
PG15/CAN1RX/TACI5
I/O GPIO/CAN1 Receive/Alternate Capture Input 5
A
PH0/UART1TX/PPI1_FS3_DEN
I/O GPIO/UART1 Transmit/PPI1 Frame Sync 3
A
PH1/UART1RX/PPI0_FS3_DEN/TACI1
I/O GPIO/UART 1 Receive/ PPI0 Frame Sync 3/Alternate Capture Input 1
A
PH2/ATAPI_RESET/TMR8/PPI2_FS3_DEN
I/O GPIO/ATAPI Interface Hard Reset Signal/Timer 8/PPI2 Frame Sync 3
A
PH3/HOST_ADDR/TMR9/CDG
I/O GPIO/HOST Address/Timer 9/Count Down and Gate
A
PH4/HOST_ACK/TMR10/CUD
I/O GPIO/HOST Acknowledge/Timer 10/Count Up and Direction
A
PH5/MTX/DMAR0/TACI8 and TACLK8
I/O GPIO/MXVR Transmit Data/Ext. DMA Request/Alt Capt. In. 8 /Alt In. Clk 8 C
Pin Name
Port G: GPIO/PPI0/SPI1/PPI2/Up-Down
Counter/CAN0–1/Host DMA/MXVR (MOST)/ATAPI
Port H:
GPIO/AMC/EXTDMA/UART1/PPI0–2/ATAPI/UpDown Counter/TMR8-10/Host DMA/MXVR (MOST)
PH6/MRX/DMAR1/TACI9 and TACLK9
PH7/MRXON/GPW/TACI10 and TACLK10/HWAITA
PH8/A46
PH9/A5
6
I/O GPIO/MXVR Receive Data/Ext. DMA Request/Alt Capt. In. 9 /Alt In. Clk 9
4,5
A
I/O GPIO/MXVR Receive Phy On /Alt Capt. In. 10 /Alt In. Clk 10/Alternate Boot A
Host Wait
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PH10/A6
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PH11/A7
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PH12/A8
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PH13/A9
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
Rev. E |
Page 29 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions (Continued)
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
Driver
Type2
PI0/A106
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI1/A11
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI2/A12
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI3/A13
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI4/A14
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI5/A15
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI6/A16
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI7/A17
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI8/A18
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI9/A19
6
Pin Name
Port I: GPIO/AMC
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI10/A20
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI11/A21
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI12/A22
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI13/A23
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
PI14/A24
6
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access
A
I/O GPIO/Address Bus for Async Access/ NOR clock
A
I/O GPIO/ Async Ready/NOR Wait
A
I/O GPIO/NAND Chip Enable
A
PJ2/ND_RB
I/O GPIO/NAND Ready Busy
A
PJ3/ATAPI_DIOR
I/O GPIO/ATAPI Read
A
PJ4/ATAPI_DIOW
I/O GPIO/ATAPI Write
A
PJ5/ATAPI_CS0
I/O GPIO/ATAPI Chip Select/Command Block
A
PJ6/ATAPI_CS1
I/O GPIO/ATAPI Chip Select
A
PJ7/ATAPI_DMACK
I/O GPIO/ATAPI DMA Acknowledge
A
PJ8/ATAPI_DMARQ
I/O GPIO/ATAPI DMA Request
A
PJ9/ATAPI_INTRQ
I/O GPIO/Interrupt Request from the Device
A
PJ10/ATAPI_IORDY
I/O GPIO/ATAPI Ready Handshake
A
I/O GPIO/Bus Request
A
I/O GPIO/Bus Grant
A
I/O GPIO/Bus Grant Hang
A
PI15/A25/NR_CLK
6
Port J: GPIO/AMC/ATAPI
PJ0/ARDY/WAIT
PJ1/ND_CE
PJ11/BR
8
PJ12/BG
6
6
PJ13/BGH
7
Rev. E |
Page 30 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions (Continued)
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
Driver
Type2
DA0–12
O
DDR Address Bus
D
DBA0–1
O
DDR Bank Active Strobe
D
DQ0–15
I/O DDR Data Bus
D
DQS0–1
I/O DDR Data Strobe
D
DQM0–1
O
DDR Data Mask for Reads and Writes
D
DCLK0–1
O
DDR Output Clock
D
DCLK0–1
O
DDR Complementary Output Clock
D
DCS0–1
O
DDR Chip Selects
D
9
O
DDR Clock Enable (Requires a pull-down if hibernate with DDR selfrefresh is used.)
D
DRAS
O
DDR Row Address Strobe
D
DCAS
O
DDR Column Address Strobe
D
DWE
O
DDR Write Enable
D
DDR_VREF
I
DDR Voltage Reference
DDR_VSSR
I
DDR Voltage Reference Shield (Must be connected to GND.)
A1-3
O
Address Bus for Async and ATAPI Addresses
D0-15/ND_D0-15/ATAPI_D0-15
I/O Data Bus for Async, NAND and ATAPI Accesses
AMS0–3
O
Bank Selects (Pull high with a resistor when used as chip select. Require A
pull-ups if hibernate is used.)
ABE0 /ND_CLE
O
Byte Enables:Data Masks for Asynchronous Access/NAND Command
Latch Enable
ABE1/ND_ALE
O
Byte Enables:Data Masks for Asynchronous Access/NAND Address Latch A
Enable
AOE/NR_ADV
O
Output Enable/NOR Address Data Valid
A
ARE
O
Read Enable/NOR Output Enable
A
AWE
O
Write Enable
A
I
Determines if an 80-pin cable is connected to the host. (Pull high or low
when unused.)
Pin Name
DDR Memory Interface
DCLKE
Asynchronous Memory Interface
ATAPI Controller Pins
ATAPI_PDIAG
High Speed USB OTG Pins
USB_DP
I/O USB D+ Pin (Pull low when unused.)
USB_DM
I/O USB D– Pin (Pull low when unused.)
USB_XI
C
Clock XTAL Input (Pull high or low when unused.)
C
Clock XTAL Output (Leave unconnected when unused.)
I
USB OTG ID Pin (Pull high when unused.)
USB_XO
USB_ID
10
Rev. E |
Page 31 of 102 |
March 2014
A
A
A
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions (Continued)
Driver
Type2
Pin Name
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
USB_VBUS11
I/O USB VBUS Pin (Pull high or low when unused.)
USB_VREF
A
USB Voltage Reference (Connect to GND through a 0.1 μF capacitor or
leave unconnected when not used.)
USB_RSET
A
USB Resistance Set (Connect to GND through an unpopulated
resistor pad.)
MFS
O
MXVR Frame Sync (Leave unconnected when unused.)
MLF_P
A
MXVR Loop Filter Plus (Leave unconnected when unused.)
MLF_M
A
MXVR Loop Filter Minus (Leave unconnected when unused.)
MXI
C
MXVR Crystal Input (Pull high or low when unused.)
MXO
C
MXVR Crystal Output (Pull high or low when unused.)
I
Boot Mode Strap 0–3
TDI
I
JTAG Serial Data In
TDO
O
JTAG Serial Data Out
TRST
I
JTAG Reset (Pull low when unused.)
TMS
I
JTAG Mode Select
TCK
I
JTAG Clock
EMU
O
Emulation Output
O
External FET/BJT Drivers (Always connect together to reduce signal
impedance.)
RTXO
C
RTC Crystal Output (Leave unconnected when unused. Does not threestate during hibernate.)
RTXI
C
RTC Crystal Input (Pull high or low when unused.)
CLKIN
C
Clock/Crystal Input
CLKOUT
O
Clock Output
XTAL
C
Crystal Output (If CLKBUF is enabled, does not three-state during
hibernate.)
CLKBUF
O
Buffered Oscillator Output (If enabled, does not three-state during
hibernate.)
EXT_WAKE
O
External Wakeup from Hibernate Output (Does not three-state during A
hibernate.)
RESET
I
Reset
NMI
I
Non-maskable Interrupt (Pull high when unused.)
MXVR (MOST) Interface
C
Mode Control Pins
BMODE0–3
JTAG Port Pins
C
C
Voltage Regulator
VROUT0, VROUT1
Real Time Clock
Clock (PLL) Pins
Rev. E |
Page 32 of 102 |
B
March 2014
C
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 11. Pin Descriptions (Continued)
Pin Name
I/O1 Function (First/Second/Third/Fourth)
Driver
Type2
Supplies
VDDINT
VDDEXT
P
Internal Power Supply
12
P
External Power Supply
12
P
External DDR Power Supply
12
P
External USB Power Supply
12
P
RTC Clock Supply
P
Internal Voltage Regulator Power Supply (Connect to VDDEXT
when unused.)
G
Ground
P
MXVR PLL Power Supply. (Must be driven to same level as VDDINT. Connect
to VDDINT when unused or when MXVR is not present.)
G
MXVR PLL Ground (Connect to GND when unused or when MXVR is not
present.)
VDDDDR
VDDUSB
VDDRTC
VDDVR
13
GND
VDDMP
12
GNDMP12
1
I = Input, O = Output, P =Power, G = Ground, C = Crystal, A = Analog.
Refer to Table 62 on Page 88 through Table 71 on Page 89 for driver types.
3
To use the SPI memory boot, SPI0SCK should have a pulldown, SPI0MISO should have a pullup, and SPI0SEL1 is used as the CS with a pullup.
4
HWAIT/HWAITA should be pulled high or low to configure polarity. See Booting Modes on Page 18.
5
GPW functionality is available when MXVR is not present or unused.
6
This pin should not be used as GPIO if booting in mode 1.
7
This pin should always be enabled as ND_CE in software and pulled high with a resistor when using NAND flash.
8
This pin should always be enabled as BR in software and pulled high to enable asynchronous access.
9
This pin must be pulled low through a 10kOhm resistor if self-refresh mode is desired during hibernate state or deep-sleep mode.
10
If the USB is used in device mode only, the USB_ID pin should be either pulled high or left unconnected.
11
This pin is an output only during initialization of USB OTG session request pulses in peripheral mode. Therefore, host mode or OTG type A mode requires that an external
voltage source of 5 V, at 8 mA or more per the OTG specification, be applied to this pin. Other OTG modes require that this external voltage be disabled.
12
To ensure proper operation, the power pins should be driven to their specified level even if the associated peripheral is not used in the application.
13
This pin must always be connected. If the internal voltage regulator is not being used, this pin may be connected to VDDEXT. Otherwise it should be powered according to the
VDDVR specification. For automotive grade models, the internal voltage regulator must not be used and this pin must be tied to VDDEXT.
2
Rev. E |
Page 33 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
SPECIFICATIONS
OPERATING CONDITIONS
Parameter
VDDINT1, 2
VDDEXT3
Internal Supply Voltage
Internal Supply Voltage
Internal Supply Voltage
External Supply Voltage
External Supply Voltage
External Supply Voltage
VDDUSB
VDDMP
USB External Supply Voltage
MXVR PLL Supply Voltage
MXVR PLL Supply Voltage
VDDRTC
Real Time Clock Supply Voltage
Real Time Clock Supply Voltage
VDDDDR
VDDVR4
VIH
VIHDDR
VIH5V12
VIHTWI
VIHUSB
VIL
VIL5V
VILDDR
VILTWI
VDDR_VREF
TJ14
DDR Memory Supply Voltage
DDR Memory Supply Voltage
Internal Voltage Regulator
Supply Voltage
High Level Input Voltage5, 6
High Level Input Voltage7
High Level Input Voltage7
High Level Input Voltage8
High Level Input Voltage 9, 13
High Level Input Voltage10
Low Level Input Voltage5, 11
Low Level Input Voltage12
Low Level Input Voltage12
Low Level Input Voltage7
Low Level Input Voltage7
Low Level Input Voltage9, 13
DDR_VREF Pin Input Voltage
Junction Temperature
(400/533 MHz)
Junction Temperature
(600 MHz)
Junction Temperature
(400 MHz)
Conditions
Nonautomotive grade models
Automotive and extended temp
grade models
Mobile DDR SDRAM models
Nonautomotive 3.3 V I/O
Nonautomotive 2.5 V I/O
Automotive and extended temp
grade models
Min
0.9
1.0
1.14
2.7
2.25
2.7
3.0
0.9
1.0
Nonautomotive grade models
Automotive and extended temp
grade models
Nonautomotive grade models
Automotive and extended temp
grade models
DDR SDRAM models
Mobile DDR SDRAM models
3.3
Unit
V
V
1.31
3.6
2.75
3.6
V
V
V
V
3.6
1.43
1.38
V
V
V
3.3
3.6
3.6
V
V
2.5
1.8
2.7
2.6
1.875
3.3
2.7
1.95
3.6
V
V
V
3.6
VDDDDR + 0.3
VDDDDR + 0.3
5.5
5.5
5.25
0.6
0.8
0.6
VDDR_VREF – 0.15
VDDR_VREF – 0.125
0.3 × VDDEXT
0.51 × VDDDDR
+105
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
V
º
C
2.0
VDDR_VREF + 0.15
VDDR_VREF + 0.125
2.0
0.7 × VDDEXT
VDDEXT = minimum
3.3 V I/O, VDDEXT = minimum
2.5 V I/O, VDDEXT = minimum
DDR SDRAM models
Mobile DDR SDRAM models
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
–0.3
0.49 × VDDDDR
–40
1
3.3
2.5
3.3
Max
1.43
1.38
2.25
2.7
VDDEXT = maximum
DDR SDRAM models
Mobile DDR SDRAM models
VDDEXT = maximum
VDDEXT = maximum
400-Ball CSP_BGA @TAMBIENT =
–40ºC to +85ºC
400-Ball CSP_BGA @TAMBIENT =
0ºC to +70ºC
400-Ball CSP_BGA @TAMBIENT =
–40ºC to +105ºC
Nominal
0.50 × VDDDDR
0
+90
º
C
–40
+125
º
C
See Table 12 on Page 35 for frequency/voltage specifications.
VDDINT maximum is 1.10 V during one-time-programmable (OTP) memory programming operations.
3
VDDEXT minimum is 3.0 V and maximum is 3.6 V during OTP memory programming operations.
4
Use of the internal voltage regulator is not supported on 600 MHz speed grade models or on automotive grade models. An external voltage regulator must be used.
5
Bidirectional pins (D15–0, PA15–0, PB14–0, PC15–0, PD15–0, PE15–0, PF15–0, PG15–0, PH13–0, PI15–0, PJ14–0) and input pins (ATAPI_PDIAG, USB_ID, TCK, TDI, TMS,
TRST, CLKIN, RESET, NMI, and BMODE3–0) of the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors are 3.3 V-tolerant (always accept up to 3.6 V maximum VIH). Voltage compliance (on
outputs, VOH) is limited by the VDDEXT supply voltage. The regulator can generate VDDINT at levels of 0.90 V to 1.30 V with -5% to +5% tolerance.
6
Parameter value applies to all input and bidirectional pins except PB1-0, PE15-14, PG15–11, PH7-6, DQ0-15, and DQS0-1.
7
Parameter value applies to pins DQ0–15 and DQS0–1.
8
PB1-0, PE15-14, PG15-11, and PH7-6 are 5.0 V-tolerant (always accept up to 5.5 V maximum VIH when power is applied to VDDEXT pins). Voltage compliance (on output VOH) is
limited by VDDEXT supply voltage.
9
SDA and SCL are 5.0 V tolerant (always accept up to 5.5 V maximum VIH). Voltage compliance on outputs (VOH) is limited by the VDDEXT supply voltage.
2
Rev. E |
Page 34 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
10
Parameter value applies to USB_DP, USB_DM, and USB_VBUS pins. See Absolute Maximum Ratings on Page 40.
Parameter value applies to all input and bidirectional pins, except PB1-0, PE15-14, PG15–11, and PH7-6.
12
Parameter value applies to pins PG15–11 and PH7-6.
13
Parameter value applies to pins PB1-0 and PE15-14. Consult the I2C specification version 2.1 for the proper resistor value and other open drain pin electrical parameters.
14
TJ must be in the range: 0°C < TJ < 55°C during OTP memory programming operations.
11
Table 12 and Table 15 describe the voltage/frequency requirements for the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ clocks. Take
care in selecting MSEL, SSEL, and CSEL ratios so as not to
exceed the maximum core clock and system clock. Table 14
describes the phase-locked loop operating conditions.
Table 12. Core Clock (CCLK) Requirements—533 MHz and 600 MHz Speed Grade1
Parameter
fCCLK
1
2
Core Clock Frequency
Max CCLK
Frequency
600
533
500
444
400
333
Internal Regulator Setting2
N/A2
1.25 V
1.20 V
1.10 V
1.00 V
0.95 V
Min VDDINT
1.30 V
1.188 V
1.14 V
1.045 V
0.95 V
0.90 V
Unit
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
See the Ordering Guide on Page 101.
Use of an internal voltage regulator is not supported on automotive grade and 600 MHz speed grade models. Internal regulator setting should be used as recommended nominal
VDDINT for external regulator.
Table 13. Core Clock (CCLK) Requirements—400 MHz Speed Grade1
Parameter
fCCLK
1
2
Core Clock Frequency
Internal Regulator Setting2
1.20 V
1.10 V
1.00 V
0.95 V
Min VDDINT
1.14 V
1.045 V
0.95 V
0.90 V
Max CCLK
Frequency
400
364
333
300
Unit
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
See Ordering Guide on Page 101.
Use of an internal voltage regulator is not supported on automotive grade models. Internal regulator setting should be used as recommended nominal VDDINT for external
regulator.
Table 14. Phase-Locked Loop Operating Conditions
Parameter
fVCO
Min
50
Voltage Controlled Oscillator (VCO) Frequency
Max
Maximum fCCLK
Unit
MHz
Table 15. System Clock Requirements
Parameter
fSCLK
fSCLK
fSCLK
Condition
VDDINT  1.14 V1, Non-extended temperature grades
VDDINT  1.14 V1, Non-extended temperature grades
VDDINT  1.0 V1, Extended temperature grade
DDR SDRAM Models
Max
1332
100
100
1
fSCLK must be less than or equal to fCCLK.
Rounded number. Actual test specification is SCLK period of 7.5 ns. See Table 25 on Page 43.
3
Rounded number. Actual test specification is SCLK period of 8.33 ns.
4
VDDINT must be greater than or equal to 1.14 V for mobile DDR SDRAM models. See Operating Conditions on Page 34.
2
Rev. E |
Page 35 of 102 |
March 2014
Mobile DDR SDRAM Models
Min
Max
1203
1332
4
N/A
N/A4
N/A
N/A
Unit
MHz
MHz
MHz
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Parameter
VOH
VOHDDR
VOL
VOLDDR
IIH
IIHP
IIHDDR_VREF
IIL8
IOZH9
IOZL11
CIN
IDDDEEPSLEEP13
IDDSLEEP
IDD-IDLE
High Level Output
Voltage for 3.3 V I/O3
High Level Output
Voltage for 2.5 V I/O3
High Level Output
Voltage for DDR
SDRAM4
High Level Output
Voltage for Mobile
DDR SDRAM4
Low Level Output
Voltage for 3.3 V I/O3
Low Level Output
Voltage for 2.5 V I/O3
Low Level Output
Voltage for DDR
SDRAM4
Low Level Output
Voltage for Mobile
DDR SDRAM4
High Level Input
Current5
High Level Input
Current6
High Level Input
Current for DDR
SDRAM7
High Level Input
Current for Mobile
DDR SDRAM7
Low Level Input
Current
Three-State Leakage
Current10
Three-State Leakage
Current10
Input Capacitance12
Nonautomotive 400 MHz1
Min
Typ
Max
2.4
All Other Devices2
Min
Typ
Max
2.4
Unit
V
2.0
2.0
V
VDDDDR = 2.5 V,
IOH = –8.1 mA
1.74
1.74
V
VDDDDR = 1.8 V,
IOH = –0.1 mA
1.62
1.62
V
Test Conditions
VDDEXT = 2.7 V,
IOH = –0.5 mA
VDDEXT = 2.25 V,
IOH = –0.5 mA
VDDEXT = 2.7 V,
IOL = 2.0 mA
VDDEXT = 2.25 V,
IOL = 2.0 mA
0.4
0.4
V
0.4
0.4
V
VDDDDR = 2.5 V,
IOL = 8.1 mA
0.56
0.56
V
VDDDDR = 1.8 V,
IOL = 0.1 mA
0.18
0.18
V
VDDEXT =3.6 V,
VIN = VIN Max
VDDEXT =3.6 V,
VIN = VIN Max
VDDDDR =2.7 V,
VIN = 0.51 × VDDDDR
10.0
10.0
μA
50.0
50.0
μA
30.0
30.0
μA
VDDDDR =1.95 V,
VIN = 0.51 × VDDDDR
30.0
30.0
μA
VDDEXT =3.6 V, VIN = 0 V
10.0
10.0
μA
VDDEXT =3.6 V,
VIN = VIN Max
VDDEXT =3.6 V, VIN = 0 V
10.0
10.0
μA
10.0
10.0
μA
812
pF
412
fIN = 1 MHz,
TAMBIENT = 25°C,
VIN = 2.5 V
VDDINT Current in Deep VDDINT = 1.0 V,
Sleep Mode
fCCLK = 0 MHz,
fSCLK = 0 MHz,
TJ = 25°C, ASF = 0.00
VDDINT Current in Sleep VDDINT = 1.0 V,
Mode
fSCLK = 25 MHz,
TJ = 25°C
VDDINT Current in Idle VDDINT = 1.0 V,
fCCLK = 50 MHz,
TJ = 25°C,
ASF = 0.47
Rev. E |
Page 36 of 102 |
812
412
22
37
mA
35
50
mA
44
59
mA
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Parameter
IDD-TYP
VDDINT Current
IDD-TYP
VDDINT Current
IDD-TYP
VDDINT Current
IDD-TYP
VDDINT Current
IDDHIBERNATE13, 14 Hibernate State
Current
IDDRTC
IDDUSB-FS
VDDRTC Current
VDDUSB Current in
Full/Low Speed Mode
IDDUSB-HS
VDDUSB Current in High
Speed Mode
IDDDEEPSLEEP13, 15 VDDINT Current in Deep
Sleep Mode
IDDSLEEP13, 15
VDDINIT Current in Sleep
Mode
IDDINT15, 17
VDDINT Current
Test Conditions
VDDINT = 1.10 V,
fCCLK = 300 MHz,
fSCLK = 25 MHz,
TJ = 25°C,
ASF = 1.00
VDDINT = 1.20 V,
fCCLK = 400 MHz,
fSCLK = 25 MHz,
TJ = 25°C,
ASF = 1.00
VDDINT = 1.25 V,
fCCLK = 533 MHz,
fSCLK = 25 MHz,
TJ = 25°C,
ASF = 1.00
VDDINT = 1.35 V,
fCCLK = 600 MHz,
fSCLK = 25 MHz,
TJ = 25°C,
ASF = 1.00
VDDEXT = VDDVR = VDDUSB
= 3.30 V,
VDDDDR = 2.5 V,
TJ = 25°C,
CLKIN= 0 MHz with
voltage regulator off
(VDDINT = 0 V)
VDDRTC = 3.3 V, TJ = 25°C
VDDUSB = 3.3 V,
TJ = 25°C, Full Speed
USB Transmit
VDDUSB = 3.3 V,
TJ = 25°C, High Speed
USB Transmit
fCCLK = 0 MHz,
fSCLK = 0 MHz
fCCLK = 0 MHz,
fSCLK > 0 MHz
Nonautomotive 400 MHz1
Min
Typ
Max
145
All Other Devices2
Min
Typ
Max
178
Unit
mA
199
239
mA
301
mA
360
mA
60
60
μA
20
9
20
9
μA
mA
25
25
mA
fCCLK > 0 MHz,
fSCLK > 0 MHz
Table 16
Table 17 mA
IDDDEEPSLEEP
+ (0.77 ×
VDDINT ×
fSCLK)16
IDDSLEEP +
(Table 19 ×
ASF)
IDDDEEPSLEEP mA16
+ (0.77 ×
VDDINT ×
fSCLK)16
IDDSLEEP + mA
(Table 19 ×
ASF)
1
Applies to all nonautomotive 400 MHz speed grade models and all extended temperature grade models. See Ordering Guide.
Applies to all 533 MHz and 600 MHz speed grade models and automotive 400 MHz speed grade models. See Ordering Guide.
3
Applies to output and bidirectional pins, except USB_VBUS and the pins listed in table note 4.
4
Applies to pins DA0–12, DBA0–1, DQ0–15, DQS0–1, DQM0–1, DCLK1–2, DCLK1–2, DCS0–1, DCLKE, DRAS, DCAS, and DWE.
5
Applies to all input pins except JTAG inputs.
6
Applies to JTAG input pins (TCK, TDI, TMS, TRST).
7
Applies to DDR_VREF pin.
8
Absolute value.
9
For DDR pins (DQ0-15, DQS0-1), test conditions are VDDDDR = Maximum, VIN = VDDDDR Maximum.
10
Applies to three-statable pins.
11
For DDR pins (DQ0-15, DQS0-1), test conditions are VDDDDR = Maximum, VIN = 0 V.
12
Guaranteed, but not tested.
2
Rev. E |
Page 37 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
13
See the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin Processor Hardware Reference Manual for definition of sleep, deep sleep, and hibernate operating modes.
Includes current on VDDEXT, VDDUSB, VDDVR, and VDDDDR supplies. Clock inputs are tied high or low.
15
Guaranteed maximum specifications.
16
Unit for VDDINT is V (volts). Unit for fSCLK is MHz. Example: 1.2 V, 133 MHz would be 0.77 × 1.2 × 133 = 122.9 mA added to IDDDEEPSLEEP.
17
See Table 18 for the list of IDDINT power vectors covered.
14
Total power dissipation has two components:
IDDINT specifies the total power specification for the listed test
conditions, including the dynamic component as a function of
voltage (VDDINT) and frequency (Table 19).
• Static, including leakage current
• Dynamic, due to transistor switching characteristics
Many operating conditions can also affect power dissipation,
including temperature, voltage, operating frequency, and processor activity. Electrical Characteristics on Page 36 shows the
current dissipation for internal circuitry (VDDINT). IDDDEEPSLEEP
specifies static power dissipation as a function of voltage
(VDDINT) and temperature (see Table 16 and Table 17), and
There are two parts to the dynamic component. The first part is
due to transistor switching in the core clock (CCLK) domain.
This part is subject to an activity scaling factor (ASF) which represents application code running on the processor core and
L1/L2 memories (Table 18). The ASF is combined with the
CCLK frequency and VDDINT dependent data in Table 19 to calculate this part. The second part is due to transistor switching in
the system clock (SCLK) domain, which is included in the IDDINT
specification equation.
Table 16. Static Current—Low Power Process (mA)1
2
TJ (°C)
–40
0
25
45
55
70
85
100
105
115
125
1
2
0.90 V
11.9
20.1
31.2
47.0
58.6
80.7
107.0
153.9
171.7
210.1
257.9
0.95 V
13.5
22.3
34.2
51.0
63.1
86.6
114.3
163.0
181.5
221.4
270.9
1.00 V
15.5
24.7
37.5
55.5
68.3
93.0
122.5
173.3
192.7
234.2
285.9
1.05 V
17.7
27.8
41.3
60.6
74.1
100.2
131.5
184.8
205.1
248.6
302.5
1.10 V
20.3
31.1
45.6
66.0
80.3
108.1
141.2
197.0
218.3
263.7
314.6
Voltage (VDDINT)2
1.15 V 1.20 V 1.25 V
23.3
26.8
30.6
34.9
39.3
44.2
50.3
55.7
61.7
72.0
78.8
86.1
87.1
94.9
103.0
116.7
125.9
136.0
151.7
163.1
175.3
210.0
224.1
239.0
232.4
247.5
263.6
279.9
297.3
311.0
334.0
354.3
375.7
1.30 V
35.0
49.6
68.2
94.2
112.0
146.8
188.5
255.1
280.9
331.1
399.2
1.35 V
39.9
55.7
75.4
102.9
122.0
158.7
202.7
272.4
299.3
352.5
423.8
1.38 V
43.2
59.8
80.3
108.9
128.4
166.4
211.8
283.4
308.7
366.3
439.6
1.40 V
45.5
62.5
83.6
112.8
132.8
171.6
218.0
290.8
314.9
N/A
N/A
1.43 V
49.5
67.2
88.6
118.2
140.0
179.5
226.7
300.6
325.7
N/A
N/A
1.40 V
64.0
125.8
203.3
293.6
354.6
463.9
602.0
758.5
821.6
1.43 V
70.4
135.0
218.0
312.0
374.0
489.0
629.0
793.0
864.0
Values are guaranteed maximum IDDDEEPSLEEP for 400 MHz speed-grade devices.
Valid temperature and voltage ranges are model-specific. See Operating Conditions on Page 34.
Table 17. Static Current—Automotive 400 MHz and All 533 MHz/600 MHz Speed Grade Devices (mA)1
2
TJ (°C)
–40
0
25
45
55
70
85
100
105
1
2
0.90 V
19.7
45.2
80.0
124.2
154.6
209.8
281.8
366.5
403.8
0.95 V
22.1
49.9
87.5
134.8
167.2
225.6
301.3
390.5
428.3
1.00 V
24.8
55.2
96.2
147.1
181.7
243.9
323.5
419.4
459.5
1.05 V
27.9
61.3
105.8
160.7
197.7
264.1
350.2
452.1
494.3
1.10 V
31.4
67.9
116.4
175.3
214.9
285.8
378.5
486.9
531.7
Voltage (VDDINT)2
1.15 V 1.20 V 1.25 V
35.4
39.9
45.0
75.3
83.5
92.6
127.9
140.4
154.1
191.2
208.6
227.3
233.8
254.2
276.1
309.4
334.8
363.5
408.9
442.1
477.9
524.4
564.8
608.2
571.9
614.9
661.5
1.30 V
50.6
102.6
169.2
247.6
299.7
394.3
516.5
654.8
711.1
1.35 V
57.0
113.6
185.4
269.6
325.9
427.7
557.5
704.7
763.9
Values are guaranteed maximum IDDDEEPSLEEP for automotive 400 MHz and all 533 MHz and 600 MHz speed grade devices.
Valid temperature and voltage ranges are model-specific. See Operating Conditions on Page 34.
Rev. E |
Page 38 of 102 |
March 2014
1.38 V
61.2
121.0
196.1
284.0
343.1
449.4
584.2
737.0
798.5
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 18. Activity Scaling Factors1
IDDINT Power Vector
IDD-PEAK
IDD-HIGH
IDD-TYP
IDD-APP
IDD-NOP
IDD-IDLE
1
Activity Scaling Factor (ASF)
1.29
1.24
1.00
0.87
0.74
0.47
See Estimating Power for ADSP-BF534/BF536/BF537 Blackfin Processors
(EE-297). The power vector information also applies to the ADSPBF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549 processors.
Table 19. Dynamic Current in CCLK Domain (mA, with ASF = 1.0)1
Voltage (VDDINT)2
fCCLK
(MHz)2
100
200
300
400
500
533
600
1
2
0.90 V
29.7
55.3
80.8
N/A
N/A
N/A
N/A
0.95 V
31.6
58.9
85.8
112.2
N/A
N/A
N/A
1.00 V
33.9
62.5
91.0
119.4
N/A
N/A
N/A
1.05 V
35.7
66.0
96.0
125.5
N/A
N/A
N/A
1.10 V
37.9
70.0
101.3
132.4
N/A
N/A
N/A
1.15 V
40.5
74.0
107.0
139.6
171.9
N/A
N/A
1.20 V
42.9
78.3
112.8
146.9
180.6
191.9
N/A
1.25 V
45.5
82.5
118.7
154.6
189.9
201.6
N/A
1.30 V
48.2
86.7
124.6
162.3
199.1
211.5
233.1
1.35 V
50.8
91.3
130.9
170.0
205.7
218.0
241.4
1.38 V
52.0
93.3
133.8
173.8
210.3
222.8
246.7
1.40 V
53.5
95.6
137.0
177.8
213.0
225.7
252.7
1.43 V
54.6
97.6
140.0
181.6
217.6
230.5
258.1
The values are not guaranteed as stand-alone maximum specifications. They must be combined with static current per the equations of Electrical Characteristics on Page 36.
Valid frequency and voltage ranges are model-specific. See Operating Conditions on Page 34.
Rev. E |
Page 39 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Stresses greater than those listed in Table 20 may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only.
Functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions greater than those indicated in the operational sections of
this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum
rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. Table 21 details the maximum duty cycle for input
transient voltage.
the Total Current Pin Groups table. Note that the VOL and VOH
specifications have separate per-pin maximum current requirements, see the Electrical Characteristics table.
Table 22. Total Current Pin Groups
Group
1
2
Table 20. Absolute Maximum Ratings
3
Internal (Core) Supply Voltage (VDDINT)
External (I/O) Supply Voltage (VDDEXT)
Input Voltage1, 2, 3
Output Voltage Swing
IOH/IOL Current per Single Pin4
IOH/IOL Current per Pin Group4
Storage Temperature Range
Junction Temperature Underbias
–0.3 V to +1.43 V
–0.3 V to +3.8 V
–0.5 V to +3.6 V
–0.5 V to VDDEXT +0.5 V
40 mA (max)
80 mA (max)
–65ºC to +150ºC
+125ºC
1
Applies to all bidirectional and input only pins except PB1-0, PE15-14,
PG15–11, and PH7-6, where the absolute maximum input voltage range is
–0.5 V to +5.5 V.
2
Pins USB_DP, USB_DM, and USB_VBUS are 5 V-tolerant when VDDUSB is
powered according to the operating conditions table. If VDDUSB supply
voltage does not meet the specification in the operating conditions table, these
pins could suffer long-term damage when driven to +5 V. If this condition is
seen in the application, it can be corrected with additional circuitry to use the
external host to power only the VDDUSB pins. Contact factory for application
detail and reliability information.
3
Applies only when VDDEXT is within specifications. When VDDEXT is outside
specifications, the range is VDDEXT ± 0.2 V.
4
For more information, see description preceding Table 22.
Table 21. Maximum Duty Cycle for Input1 Transient
Voltage
VIN Max (V)2
3.63
3.80
3.90
4.00
4.10
4.20
4.30
VIN Min (V)
–0.33
–0.50
–0.60
–0.70
–0.80
–0.90
–1.00
Maximum Duty Cycle
100%
48%
30%
20%
10%
8%
5%
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
Pins in Group
PA0, PA1, PA2, PA3, PA4, PA5, PA6, PA7, PA8, PA9, PA10,
PA11
PA12, PA13, PA14, PA15, PB8, PB9, PB10, PB11, PB12,
PB13, PB14
PB0, PB1, PB2, PB3, PB4, PB5, PB6, PB7, BMODE0,
BMODE1, BMODE2, BMODE3
TCK, TDI, TDO, TMS, TRST, PD14, EMU
PD8, PD9, PD10, PD11, PD12, PD13, PD15
PD0, PD1, PD2, PD3, PD4, PD5, PD6, PD7
PE11, PE12, PE13, PF12, PF13, PF14, PF15, PG3, PG4
PF4, PF5, PF6, PF7, PF8, PF9, PF10, PF11
PF0, PF1, PF2, PF3, PG0, PG1, PG2
PC0, PC1, PC2, PC3, PC4, PC5, PC6, PC7
PH5, PH6, PH7
A1, A2, A3
PH8, PH9, PH10, PH11, PH12, PH13
PI0, PI1, PI2, PI3, PI4, PI5, PI6, PI7
PI8, PI9, PI10, PI11, PI12, PI13, PI14, PI15
AMS0, AMS1, AMS2, AMS3, AOE, CLKBUF, NMI
CLKIN, XTAL, RESET, RTXI, RTXO, ARE, AWE
D0, D1, D2, D3, D4, D5, D6, D7
D8, D9, D10, D11, D12
D13, D14, D15, ABE0, ABE1
EXT_WAKE, CLKOUT, PJ11, PJ12, PJ13
PJ0, PJ1, PJ2, PJ3, PJ4, PJ5, PJ6, PJ7, ATAPI_PDIAG
PJ8, PJ9, PJ10, PE7, PG12, PG13
PE0, PE1, PE2, PE4, PE5, PE6, PE8, PE9, PE10, PH3, PH4
PH0, PH2, PE14, PE15, PG5, PG6, PG7, PG8, PG9, PG10,
PG11
PC8, PC9, PC10, PC11, PC12, PC13, PE3, PG14, PG15, PH1
1
Does not apply to CLKIN. Absolute maximum for pins PB1-0, PE15-14, PG1511, and PH7-6 is +5.5V.
2
Only one of the listed options can apply to a particular design.
The Absolute Maximum Ratings table specifies the maximum
total source/sink (IOH/IOL) current for a group of pins. Permanent damage can occur if this value is exceeded. To understand
this specification, if pins PA4, PA3, PA2, PA1 and PA0 from
group 1 in the Total Current Pin Groups table were sourcing or
sinking 2 mA each, the total current for those pins would be
10 mA. This would allow up to 70 mA total that could be
sourced or sunk by the remaining pins in the group without
damaging the device. For a list of all groups and their pins, see
Rev. E |
Page 40 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ESD SENSITIVITY
ESD (electrostatic discharge) sensitive device.
Charged devices and circuit boards can discharge
without detection. Although this product features
patented or proprietary protection circuitry, damage
may occur on devices subjected to high energy ESD.
Therefore, proper ESD precautions should be taken to
avoid performance degradation or loss of functionality.
PACKAGE INFORMATION
The information presented in Figure 9 and Table 23 provides
information related to specific product features. For a complete
listing of product offerings, see the Ordering Guide on
Page 101.
a
ADSP-BF54x(M)
tppZ-cc
vvvvvv.x-q n.n
#yyww country_of_origin
B
Figure 9. Product Information on Package
Table 23. Package Information
Brand Key
BF54x
(M)
t
pp
Z
cc
vvvvvv.x-q
n.n
#
yyww
Description
x = 2, 4, 7, 8 or 9
Mobile DDR Indicator (Optional)
Temperature Range
Package Type
RoHS Compliant Part (Optional)
See Ordering Guide
Assembly Lot Code
Silicon Revision
RoHS Compliant Designation
Date Code
Rev. E |
Page 41 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
TIMING SPECIFICATIONS
Timing specifications are detailed in this section.
Clock and Reset Timing
Table 24 and Figure 10 describe Clock Input and Reset Timing.
Table 25 and Figure 11 describe Clock Out Timing.
Table 24. Clock Input and Reset Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
CLKIN Period1, 2, 3, 4
tCKIN
tCKINL
CLKIN Low Pulse2
tCKINH
CLKIN High Pulse2
tBUFDLAY
CLKIN to CLKBUF Delay
tWRST
RESET Asserted Pulsewidth Low5
tRHWFT
RESET High to First HWAIT/HWAITA Transition (Boot Host Wait Mode)6, 7, 8, 9
RESET High to First HWAIT/HWAITA Transition (Reset Output Mode)7, 10, 11
Min
Max
Unit
20.0
8.0
8.0
100.0
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
10
11 tCKIN
6100 tCKIN + 7900 tSCLK
6100 tCKIN
7000 tCKIN
1
Combinations of the CLKIN frequency and the PLL clock multiplier must not exceed the allowed fVCO, fCCLK, and fSCLK settings discussed in Table 15 and Table 12 on Page 35.
Applies to PLL bypass mode and PLL non-bypass mode.
3
CLKIN frequency and duty cycle must not change on the fly.
4
If the DF bit in the PLL_CTL register is set, then the maximum tCKIN period is 50 ns.
5
Applies after power-up sequence is complete. See Table 26 and Figure 12 for more information about power-up reset timing.
6
Maximum value not specified due to variation resulting from boot mode selection and OTP memory programming.
7
Values specified assume no invalidation preboot settings in OTP page PBS00L. Invalidating a PBS set will increase the value by 1875 tCKIN (typically).
8
Applies only to boot modes BMODE=1, 2, 4, 6, 7, 10, 11, 14, 15.
9
Use default tSCLK value unless PLL is reprogrammed during preboot. In case of PLL reprogramming use the new tSCLK value and add PLL_LOCKCNT settle time.
10
When enabled by OTP_RESETOUT_HWAIT bit. If regular HWAIT is not required in an application, the OTP_RESETOUT_HWAIT bit in the same page instructs the
HWAIT or HWAITA to simulate reset output functionality. Then an external resistor is expected to pull the signal to the reset level, as the pin itself is in high performance
mode during reset.
11
Variances are mainly dominated by PLL programming instructions in PBS00L page and boot code differences between silicon revisions. The earlier is bypassed in boot
mode BMODE = 0. Maximum value assumes PLL programming instructions do not cause the SCLK frequency to decrease.
2
tCKIN
CLKIN
tCKINL
tBUFDLAY
tCKINH
CLKBUF
tWRST
RESET
tRHWFT
HWAIT (A)
Figure 10. Clock and Reset Timing
Rev. E |
Page 42 of 102 |
March 2014
tBUFDLAY
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 25. Clock Out Timing
Parameter
Switching Characteristics
tSCLK
CLKOUT Period1, 2
CLKOUT Width High
tSCLKH
tSCLKL
CLKOUT Width Low
1
2
Min
Max
7.5
2.5
2.5
Unit
ns
ns
ns
The tSCLK value is the inverse of the fSCLK specification. Reduced supply voltages affect the best-case value of 7.5 ns listed here.
The tSCLK value does not account for the effects of jitter.
tSCLK
CLKOUT
tSCLKL
tSCLKH
Figure 11. CLKOUT Interface Timing
Table 26. Power-Up Reset Timing
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirement
tRST_IN_PWR
RESET Deasserted After the VDDINT, VDDEXT, VDDDDR,VDDUSB,VDDRTC,VDDVR,VDDMP, and
CLKIN Pins Are Stable and Within Specification
In Figure 12, VDD_SUPPLIES is VDDINT, VDDEXT, VDDDDR, VDDUSB,
VDDRTC, VDDVR, and VDDMP.
tRST_IN_PWR
RESET
CLKIN
V
DD_SUPPLIES
Figure 12. Power-Up Reset Timing
Rev. E |
Page 43 of 102 |
March 2014
3500 × tCKIN
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Asynchronous Memory Read Cycle Timing
Table 27 and Table 28 on Page 45 and Figure 13 and Figure 14
on Page 45 describe asynchronous memory read cycle operations for synchronous and for asynchronous ARDY.
Table 27. Asynchronous Memory Read Cycle Timing with Synchronous ARDY
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirements
tSDAT
DATA15–0 Setup Before CLKOUT
5.0
ns
tHDAT
DATA15–0 Hold After CLKOUT
0.8
ns
tSARDY
ARDY Setup Before the Falling Edge of CLKOUT
5.0
ns
tHARDY
ARDY Hold After the Falling Edge of CLKOUT
0.0
ns
Switching Characteristics
tDO
Output Delay After CLKOUT1
tHO
Output Hold After CLKOUT1
1
6.0
0.3
Output pins include AMS3–0, ABE1–0, ADDR19–1, AOE, and ARE.
SETUP
2 CYCLES
PROGRAMMED READ
ACCESS 4 CYCLES
ACCESS EXTENDED
3 CYCLES
HOLD
1 CYCLE
CLKOUT
tDO
tHO
AMSx
ABE1–0
ADDR19–1
AOE
tDO
tHO
ARE
tSARDY
tHARDY
tHARDY
ARDY
tSARDY
tSDAT
tHDAT
DATA 15–0
Figure 13. Asynchronous Memory Read Cycle Timing with Synchronous ARDY
Rev. E |
Page 44 of 102 |
March 2014
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 28. Asynchronous Memory Read Cycle Timing with Asynchronous ARDY
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirements
tSDAT
DATA15–0 Setup Before CLKOUT
5.0
tHDAT
DATA15–0 Hold After CLKOUT
0.8
tDANR
ARDY Negated Delay from AMSx Asserted1
tHAA
ARDY Asserted Hold After ARE Negated
ns
ns
(S + RA – 2) × tSCLK ns
0.0
ns
Switching Characteristics
tDO
Output Delay After CLKOUT2
tHO
Output Hold After CLKOUT2
1
2
6.0
0.3
ns
S = number of programmed setup cycles, RA = number of programmed read access cycles.
Output pins include AMS3–0, ABE1–0, ADDR19–1, AOE, and ARE.
SETUP
2 CYCLES
PROGRAMMED READ
ACCESS 4 CYCLES
ACCESS EXTENDED
3 CYCLES
HOLD
1 CYCLE
CLKOUT
tDO
tHO
AMSx
ABE1–0
ADDR19–1
AOE
tDO
tHO
ARE
tDANR
tHAA
ARDY
tSDAT
tHDAT
DATA 15–0
Figure 14. Asynchronous Memory Read Cycle Timing with Asynchronous ARDY
Rev. E |
Page 45 of 102 |
March 2014
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Asynchronous Memory Write Cycle Timing
Table 29 and Table 30 on Page 47 and Figure 15 and Figure 16
on Page 47 describe asynchronous memory write cycle operations for synchronous and for asynchronous ARDY.
Table 29. Asynchronous Memory Write Cycle Timing with Synchronous ARDY
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirements
tSARDY
ARDY Setup Before the Falling Edge of CLKOUT
5.0
ns
tHARDY
ARDY Hold After the Falling Edge of CLKOUT
0.0
ns
Switching Characteristics
tDDAT
DATA15–0 Disable After CLKOUT
tENDAT
DATA15–0 Enable After CLKOUT
tDO
Output Delay After CLKOUT
tHO
Output Hold After CLKOUT1
1
6.0
0.0
1
Output pins include AMS3–0, ABE1–0, ADDR19–1, and AWE.
SETUP
2 CYCLES
PROGRAMMED ACCESS
WRITE ACCESS EXTEND HOLD
2 CYCLES
1 CYCLE 1 CYCLE
CLKOUT
tDO
tHO
AMSx
ABE1–0
ADDR19–1
tDO
tHO
AWE
tSARDY tHARDY
ARDY
tENDAT
ns
6.0
0.3
tSARDY
tHARDY
tDDAT
DATA 15–0
Figure 15. Asynchronous Memory Write Cycle Timing with Synchronous ARDY
Rev. E |
Page 46 of 102 |
March 2014
ns
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 30. Asynchronous Memory Write Cycle Timing with Asynchronous ARDY
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirements
tDANW
ARDY Negated Delay from AMSx Asserted1
tHAA
ARDY Asserted Hold After AWE Negated
(S + WA – 2) × tSCLK ns
0.0
ns
Switching Characteristics
tDDAT
DATA15–0 Disable After CLKOUT
tENDAT
DATA15–0 Enable After CLKOUT
tDO
Output Delay After CLKOUT
tHO
Output Hold After CLKOUT2
1
2
6.0
0.0
2
ns
6.0
0.3
S = number of programmed setup cycles, WA = number of programmed write access cycles.
Output pins include AMS3–0, ABE1–0, ADDR19–1, AOE, and AWE.
SETUP
2 CYCLES
PROGRAMMED
WRITE ACCESS
2 CYCLES
ACCESS
EXTENDED
2 CYCLES
HOLD
1 CYCLE
CLKOUT
tDO
tHO
AMSx
ABE1–0
ADDR19–1
tDO
tHO
AWE
tDANW
tHAA
ARDY
tENDAT
tDDAT
DATA 15–0
Figure 16. Asynchronous Memory Write Cycle Timing with Asynchronous ARDY
Rev. E |
Page 47 of 102 |
March 2014
ns
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
DDR SDRAM/Mobile DDR SDRAM Clock and Control Cycle Timing
Table 31 and Figure 17 describe DDR SDRAM/mobile DDR
SDRAM clock and control cycle timing.
Table 31. DDR SDRAM/Mobile DDR SDRAM Clock and Control Cycle Timing
Parameter
Switching Characteristics
tCK1
DCK0-1 Period, Non-Extended Temperature Grade Models
DCK0-1 Period, Extended Temperature Grade Models
tCH
DCK0-1 High Pulse Width
tCL
DCK0-1 Low Pulse Width
tAS2, 3
Address and Control Output SETUP Time Relative to CK
2, 3
tAH
Address and Control Output HOLD Time Relative to CK
tOPW2, 3
Address and Control Output Pulse Width
DDR SDRAM
Min
Max
Mobile DDR SDRAM
Min
Max
Unit
7.50
10.00
0.45
0.45
1.00
1.00
2.20
7.50
N/A
0.45
0.45
1.00
1.00
2.30
ns
ns
tCK
tCK
ns
ns
ns
0.55
0.55
1
The tCK specification does not account for the effects of jitter.
Address pins include DA0-12 and DBA0-1.
3
Control pins include DCS0-1, DCLKE, DRAS, DCAS, and DWE.
2
tCK
tCH
tCL
DCK0-1
tAS
tAH
ADDRESS
CONTROL
tOPW
NOTE: CONTROL = DCS0-1, DCLKE, DRAS, DCAS, AND DWE.
ADDRESS = DA0-12 AND DBA0-1.
Figure 17. DDR SDRAM /Mobile DDR SDRAM Clock and Control Cycle Timing
Rev. E |
Page 48 of 102 |
March 2014
8.33
N/A
0.55
0.55
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
DDR SDRAM/Mobile DDR SDRAM Timing
Table 32 and Figure 18/Figure 19 describe DDR
SDRAM/mobile DDR SDRAM read cycle timing.
Table 32. DDR SDRAM/Mobile DDR SDRAM Read Cycle Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tAC
Access Window of DQ0-15 to DCK0-1
tDQSCK
Access Window of DQS0-1 to DCK0-1
tDQSQ
DQS0-1 to DQ0-15 Skew, DQS0-1 to Last
DQ0-15 Valid
tQH
DQ0-15 to DQS0-1 Hold, DQS0-1 to First
DQ0-15 to Go Invalid
tRPRE
tRPST
1
2
DQS0-1 Read Preamble
DQS0-1 Read Postamble
DDR SDRAM
Min
Mobile DDR SDRAM
Min
Max
Max
–1.25
–1.25
+1.25
+1.25
0.90
tCK/2 – 1.251
tCK/2 – 1.752
0.9
0.4
0.0
0.0
tCK/2 – 1.25
1.1
0.6
0.9
0.4
For 7.50 ns  tCK < 10 ns.
For tCK  10 ns.
tDQSCK
DCK0-1
tAC
DQS0-1
tRPRE
tRPST
DQ0-15
Dn
Dn+1
Dn+2
Dn+3
tDQSQ
tQH
Figure 18. DDR SDRAM Controller Read Cycle Timing
tDQSCK
DCK0-1
tAC
tRPRE
tRPST
DQS0-1
DQ0-15
Dn
Dn+1
Dn+2
Dn+3
tDQSQ
tQH
Figure 19. Mobile DDR SDRAM Controller Read Cycle Timing
Rev. E |
Page 49 of 102 |
6.00
6.00
0.85
March 2014
Unit
ns
ns
ns
ns
1.1
0.6
tCK
tCK
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
DDR SDRAM/Mobile DDR SDRAM Write Cycle Timing
Table 33 and Figure 20 describe DDR SDRAM/mobile DDR
SDRAM write cycle timing.
Table 33. DDR SDRAM/Mobile DDR SDRAM Write Cycle Timing
DDR SDRAM
Min
Parameter
Switching Characteristics
tDQSS
Write CMD to First DQS0-1
tDS
DQ0-15/DQM0-1 Setup to DQS0-1
tDH
DQ0-15/DQM0-1 Hold to DQS0-1
DQS0-1 Falling to DCK0-1 Rising (DQS0-1 Setup)
tDSS
tDSH
DQS0-1 Falling from DCK0-1 Rising (DQS0-1 Hold)
tDQSH
DQS0-1 High Pulse Width
tDQSL
DQS0-1 Low Pulse Width
tWPRE
DQS0-1 Write Preamble
tWPST
DQS0-1 Write Postamble
tDOPW
DQ0-15 and DQM0-1 Output Pulse Width (for Each)
Max
0.75
0.90
0.90
0.20
0.20
0.35
0.35
0.25
0.40
1.75
1.25
0.60
Mobile DDR SDRAM
Min
Max
Unit
0.75
0.90
0.90
0.20
0.20
0.40
0.40
0.25
0.40
1.75
tCK
ns
ns
tCK
tCK
tCK
tCK
tCK
tCK
ns
1.25
0.60
0.60
0.60
DCK0-1
tDSS
tDSH
tDQSS
DQS0-1
tWPRE
tDQSL
tDQSH
tWPST
tDOPW
DQ0-15/DQM0-1
Dn
tDS
CONTROL
Dn+1
Dn+2
tDH
Write CMD
NOTE: CONTROL = DCS0-1, DCLKE, DRAS, DCAS, AND DWE.
Figure 20. DDR SDRAM /Mobile DDR SDRAM Controller Write Cycle Timing
Rev. E |
Page 50 of 102 |
March 2014
Dn+3
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
External Port Bus Request and Grant Cycle Timing
Table 34 and Table 35 on Page 52 and Figure 21 and Figure 22
on Page 52 describe external port bus request and grant cycle
operations for synchronous and for asynchronous BR.
Table 34. External Port Bus Request and Grant Cycle Timing with Synchronous BR
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirements
tBS
BR Asserted to CLKOUT Low Setup
5.0
ns
tBH
CLKOUT Low to BR Deasserted Hold Time
0.0
ns
Switching Characteristics
tSD
CLKOUT Low to AMSx, Address, and ARE/AWE Disable
5.0
ns
tSE
CLKOUT Low to AMSx, Address, and ARE/AWE Enable
5.0
ns
tDBG
CLKOUT Low to BG Asserted Output Delay
4.0
ns
tEBG
CLKOUT Low to BG Deasserted Output Hold
4.0
ns
tDBH
CLKOUT Low to BGH Asserted Output Delay
3.6
ns
tEBH
CLKOUT Low to BGH Deasserted Output Hold
3.6
ns
CLKOUT
tBS
tBH
BR
tSD
tSE
tSD
tSE
tSD
tSE
AMSx
ADDR 19-1
ABE1-0
AWE
ARE
t DBG
tEBG
tDBH
tEBH
BG
BGH
Figure 21. External Port Bus Request and Grant Cycle Timing with Synchronous BR
Rev. E |
Page 51 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 35. External Port Bus Request and Grant Cycle Timing with Asynchronous BR
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirement
tWBR
BR Pulsewidth
2 × tSCLK
ns
Switching Characteristics
tSD
CLKOUT Low to AMSx, Address, and ARE/AWE Disable
5.0
ns
tSE
CLKOUT Low to AMSx, Address, and ARE/AWE Enable
5.0
ns
tDBG
CLKOUT Low to BG Asserted Output Delay
4.0
ns
tEBG
CLKOUT Low to BG Deasserted Output Hold
4.0
ns
tDBH
CLKOUT Low to BGH Asserted Output Delay
3.6
ns
tEBH
CLKOUT Low to BGH Deasserted Output Hold
3.6
ns
CLKOUT
tWBR
BR
tSD
tSE
tSD
tSE
tSD
tSE
AMSx
ADDR 19-1
ABE1-0
AWE
ARE
t DBG
tEBG
tDBH
tEBH
BG
BGH
Figure 22. External Port Bus Request and Grant Cycle Timing with Asynchronous BR
Rev. E |
Page 52 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
NAND Flash Controller Interface Timing
Table 36 and Figure 23 on Page 54 through Figure 27 on
Page 56 describe NAND flash controller interface operations. In
the figures, ND_DATA is ND_D0–D15.
Table 36. NAND Flash Controller Interface Timing
Parameter
Write Cycle
Switching Characteristics
tCWL
ND_CE Setup Time to AWE Low
tCH
ND_CE Hold Time from AWE High
tCLEWL
ND_CLE Setup Time High to AWE Low
tCLH
ND_CLE Hold Time from AWE High
tALEWL
ND_ALE Setup Time Low to AWE Low
ND_ALE Hold Time from AWE High
tALH
tWP1
AWE Low to AWE High
tWHWL
AWE High to AWE Low
tWC1
AWE Low to AWE Low
tDWS1
Data Setup Time for a Write Access
tDWH
Data Hold Time for a Write Access
Read Cycle
Switching Characteristics
tCRL
ND_CE Setup Time to ARE Low
tCRH
ND_CE Hold Time from ARE High
1
tRP
ARE Low to ARE High
tRHRL
ARE High to ARE Low
tRC1
ARE Low to ARE Low
Timing Requirements
tDRS
Data Setup Time for a Read Transaction
tDRH
Data Hold Time for a Read Transaction
Write Followed by Read
Switching Characteristic
tWHRL
AWE High to ARE Low
1
Min
Page 53 of 102 |
Unit
1.0 × tSCLK – 4
3.0 × tSCLK – 4
0.0
2.5 × tSCLK – 4
0.0
2.5 × tSCLK – 4
(WR_DLY +1.0) × tSCLK – 4
4.0 × tSCLK – 4
(WR_DLY +5.0) × tSCLK – 4
(WR_DLY +1.5) × tSCLK – 4
2.5 × tSCLK – 4
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
1.0 × tSCLK – 4
3.0 × tSCLK – 4
(RD_DLY +1.0) × tSCLK – 4
4.0 × tSCLK – 4
(RD_DLY + 5.0) × tSCLK – 4
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
8.0
0.0
ns
ns
5.0 × tSCLK – 4
ns
WR_DLY and RD_DLY are defined in the NFC_CTL register.
Rev. E |
Max
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
tCWL
tCH
ND_CE
ND_CLE
tCLEWL
tCLH
tALEWL
tALH
ND_ALE
tWP
AWE
tDWH
tDWS
ND_DATA
Figure 23. NAND Flash Controller Interface Timing—Command Write Cycle
tCWL
ND_CE
tCLEWL
ND_CLE
ND_ALE
tALH
tALEWL
tALH
tALEWL
tWP
tWHWL
tWP
AWE
tWC
tDWS
tDWH
tDWS
ND_DATA
Figure 24. NAND Flash Controller Interface Timing—Address Write Cycle
Rev. E |
Page 54 of 102 |
March 2014
tDWH
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
tCWL
ND_CE
tCLEWL
ND_CLE
tALEWL
ND_ALE
tWP
tWC
AWE
tWP
tDWS
tWHWL
tDWH
tDWS
tDWH
ND_DATA
Figure 25. NAND Flash Controller Interface Timing—Data Write Operation
tCRL
tCRH
ND_CE
ND_CLE
ND_ALE
tRP
tRC
ARE
tRHRL
tRP
tDRS
tDRH
tDRS
ND_DATA
Figure 26. NAND Flash Controller Interface Timing—Data Read Operation
Rev. E |
Page 55 of 102 |
March 2014
tDRH
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
tCLWL
ND_CE
ND_CLE
tCLEWL
tCLH
tWP
AWE
tWHRL
tRP
ARE
tDWS
tDWH
tDRS
tDRH
ND_DATA
Figure 27. NAND Flash Controller Interface Timing—Write Followed by Read Operation
Rev. E |
Page 56 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Synchronous Burst AC Timing
Table 37 and Figure 28 on Page 57 describe Synchronous Burst
AC operations.
Table 37. Synchronous Burst AC Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tNDS
DATA15-0 Setup Before NR_CLK
tNDH
DATA15-0 Hold After NR_CLK
tNWS
WAIT Setup Before NR_CLK
tNWH
WAIT Hold After NR_CLK
Switching Characteristics
tNDO
AMSx, ABE1-0, ADDR19-1, NR_ADV, NR_OE Output Delay After NR_CLK
tNHO
ABE1-0, ADDR19-1 Output Hold After NR_CLK
Min
ns
ns
ns
ns
6.0
–3.0
ns
ns
tNDO
tNDO
tNDO
tNHO
AMSx
ABE1-0
tNHO
ADDR19-1
tNDH
tNDH
tNDS
DATA15-0
tNDS
Dn
Dn+1
Dn+2
Dn+3
tNDO
tNDO
NR_ADV
tNWS
tNWH
WAIT
tNDO
tNDO
NR_OE
NOTE: NR_CLK dotted line represents a free running version of NR_CLK that is not visible on the NR_CLK pin.
Figure 28. Synchronous Burst AC Interface Timing
Rev. E |
Page 57 of 102 |
March 2014
Unit
4.0
2.0
8.0
0.0
NR_CLK
tNDO
Max
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
External DMA Request Timing
Table 38 and Figure 29 describe the external DMA request timing operations.
Table 38. External DMA Request Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tDS
DMARx Asserted to CLKOUT High Setup
tDH
CLKOUT High to DMARx Deasserted Hold Time
tDMARACT
DMARx Active Pulse Width
tDMARINACT
DMARx Inactive Pulse Width
Min
6.0
0.0
1.0 × tSCLK
1.75 × tSCLK
CLKOUT
tDS
tDH
DMAR0/1
(ACTIVE LOW)
tDMARACT
tDMARINACT
DMAR0/1
(ACTIVE HIGH)
Figure 29. External DMA Request Timing
Rev. E |
Page 58 of 102 |
March 2014
Max
Unit
ns
ns
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Enhanced Parallel Peripheral Interface Timing
Table 39 and Figure 32 on Page 60, Figure 30 on Page 59,
Figure 33 on Page 60, and Figure 31 on Page 59 describe
enhanced parallel peripheral interface timing operations.
Table 39. Enhanced Parallel Peripheral Interface Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
PPIx_CLK Width
tPCLKW
tPCLK
PPIx_CLK Period
Timing Requirements—GP Input and Frame Capture Modes
tSFSPE
External Frame Sync Setup Before PPIx_CLK
tHFSPE
External Frame Sync Hold After PPIx_CLK
tSDRPE
Receive Data Setup Before PPIx_CLK
Receive Data Hold After PPIx_CLK
tHDRPE
Switching Characteristics—GP Output and Frame Capture Modes
tDFSPE
Internal Frame Sync Delay After PPIx_CLK
tHOFSPE
Internal Frame Sync Hold After PPIx_CLK
tDDTPE
Transmit Data Delay After PPIx_CLK
tHDTPE
Transmit Data Hold After PPIx_CLK
DATA SAMPLED /
FRAME SYNC SAMPLED
Min
ns
ns
ns
ns
9.9
tPCLKW
tPCLK
PPI_FS1/2
tSDRPE
tHDRPE
PPI_DATA
Figure 30. EPPI GP Rx Mode with External Frame Sync Timing
DATA DRIVEN /
FRAME SYNC SAMPLED
PPI_CLK
tHFSPE
tPCLKW
PPI_FS1/2
tDDTPE
tHDTPE
PPI_DATA
Figure 31. EPPI GP Tx Mode with External Frame Sync Timing
Rev. E |
0.9
1.9
1.6
1.5
2.4
tHFSPE
tSFSPE
ns
ns
2.4
DATA SAMPLED /
FRAME SYNC SAMPLED
Page 59 of 102 |
March 2014
tPCLK
Unit
6.0
13.3
10.5
PPI_CLK
tSFSPE
Max
ns
ns
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
FRAME SYNC
DRIVEN
DATA
SAMPLED
PPI_CLK
tHOFSPE
tDFSPE
tPCLKW
tPCLK
PPI_FS1/2
tSDRPE
tHDRPE
PPI_DATA
Figure 32. EPPI GP Rx Mode with Internal Frame Sync Timing
FRAME SYNC
DRIVEN
DATA
DRIVEN
tPCLK
PPI_CLK
tHOFSPE
tDFSPE
tPCLKW
PPI_FS1/2
tDDTPE
tHDTPE
PPI_DATA
Figure 33. EPPI GP Tx Mode with Internal Frame Sync Timing
Rev. E |
Page 60 of 102 |
March 2014
DATA
DRIVEN
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Serial Ports Timing
Table 40 through Table 43 on Page 63 and Figure 34 on Page 62
through Figure 37 on Page 64 describe serial port operations.
Table 40. Serial Ports—External Clock
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirements
tSFSE
TFSx/RFSx Setup Before TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Externally Generated TFSx/RFSx)1
tHFSE
TFSx/RFSx Hold After TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Externally Generated TFSx/RFSx)
tSDRE
Receive Data Setup Before RSCLKx1
tHDRE
Receive Data Hold After RSCLKx
tSCLKEW
TSCLKx/RSCLKx Width
1
1
3.0
ns
3.0
ns
3.0
ns
3.0
ns
4.5
ns
2
ns
tSCLKE
TSCLKx/RSCLKx Period
15.0
tSUDTE
Start-Up Delay From SPORT Enable To First External TFSx
4 × tSCLKE
ns
tSUDRE
Start-Up Delay From SPORT Enable To First External RFSx
4 × tRCLKE
ns
Switching Characteristics
tDFSE
TFSx/RFSx Delay After TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Internally Generated TFSx/RFSx)3
tHOFSE
TFSx/RFSx Hold After TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Internally Generated TFSx/RFSx)3
tDDTE
Transmit Data Delay After TSCLKx
tHDTE
Transmit Data Hold After TSCLKx3
10.0
0.0
3
ns
ns
10.0
0.0
ns
ns
1
Referenced to sample edge.
For receive mode with external RSCLKx and external RFSx only, the maximum specification is 11.11 ns (90 MHz).
3
Referenced to drive edge.
2
Table 41. Serial Ports—Internal Clock
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Timing Requirements
tSFSI
TFSx/RFSx Setup Before TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Externally Generated TFSx/RFSx)1
tHFSI
TFSx/RFSx Hold After TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Externally Generated TFSx/RFSx)
tSDRI
Receive Data Setup Before RSCLKx1
tHDRI
Receive Data Hold After RSCLKx
1
1
10.0
ns
–1.5
ns
10.0
ns
–1.5
ns
Switching Characteristics
tDFSI
TFSx/RFSx Delay After TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Internally Generated TFSx/RFSx)2
tHOFSI
TFSx/RFSx Hold After TSCLKx/RSCLKx (Internally Generated TFSx/RFSx)2
tDDTI
Transmit Data Delay After TSCLKx2
tHDTI
Transmit Data Hold After TSCLKx2
–2.0
ns
tSCLKIW
TSCLKx/RSCLKx Width
4.5
ns
Referenced to sample edge.
2
Referenced to drive edge.
Page 61 of 102 |
March 2014
ns
ns
3.0
1
Rev. E |
3.0
–1.0
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
TSCLKx
(INPUT)
tSUDTE
TFSx
(INPUT)
RSCLKx
(INPUT)
tSUDRE
RFSx
(INPUT)
FIRST
TSCLKx/RSCLKx
EDGE AFTER
SPORT ENABLED
Figure 34. Serial Port Start-Up with External Clock and Frame Sync
DATA RECEIVE—INTERNAL CLOCK
DATA RECEIVE—EXTERNAL CLOCK
DRIVE EDGE
DRIVE EDGE
SAMPLE EDGE
SAMPLE EDGE
tSCLKE
tSCLKEW
tSCLKIW
RSCLKx
RSCLKx
tDFSE
tDFSI
tHOFSI
tHOFSE
RFSx
(OUTPUT)
RFSx
(OUTPUT)
tSFSI
tHFSI
RFSx
(INPUT)
tSFSE
tHFSE
tSDRE
tHDRE
RFSx
(INPUT)
tSDRI
tHDRI
DRx
DRx
DATA TRANSMIT—INTERNAL CLOCK
DRIVE EDGE
DATA TRANSMIT—EXTERNAL CLOCK
SAMPLE EDGE
DRIVE EDGE
tSCLKIW
SAMPLE EDGE
t SCLKEW
TSCLKx
tSCLKE
TSCLKx
tD FSI
tDFSE
tHOFSI
tHOFSE
TFSx
(OUTPUT)
TFSx
(OUTPUT)
tSFSI
tHFSI
TFSx
(INPUT)
tSFSE
TFSx
(INPUT)
tDDTI
tDDTE
tHDTI
tHDTE
DTx
DTx
Figure 35. Serial Ports
Rev. E |
Page 62 of 102 |
March 2014
tHFSE
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 42. Serial Ports—Enable and Three-State
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Switching Characteristics
tDTENE
Data Enable Delay from External TSCLKx1
tDDTTE
Data Disable Delay from External TSCLKx
tDTENI
Data Enable Delay from Internal TSCLKx1
tDDTTI
Data Disable Delay from Internal TSCLKx
0
ns
1, 2, 3
10
ns
–2
ns
1, 2, 3
3
ns
1
Referenced to drive edge.
2
Applicable to multichannel mode only.
3
TSCLKx is tied to RSCLKx.
DRIVE EDGE
DRIVE EDGE
TSCLKx
tDTENE/I
tDDTTE/I
DTx
Figure 36. Serial Ports—Enable and Three-State
Table 43. Serial Ports—External Late Frame Sync
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
10.0
ns
Switching Characteristics
tDDTLFSE
tDTENLFSE
1
2
Data Delay from Late External TFSx or External RFSx in multi-channel mode with MFD = 011, 2
Data Enable from External RFSx in multi-channel mode with MFD = 0
1, 2
In multichannel mode, TFSx enable and TFSx valid follow tDTENLFS and tDDTLFSE.
If external RFS/TFS setup to RSCLK/TSCLK > tSCLKE/2, then tDDTE/I and tDTENE/I apply; otherwise tDDTLFSE and tDTENLFS apply.
Rev. E |
Page 63 of 102 |
March 2014
0
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
EXTERNAL RFSx IN MULTI-CHANNEL MODE
SAMPLE
DRIVE
EDGE
EDGE
DRIVE
EDGE
RSCLKx
RFSx
tDDTLFSE
tDTENLFSE
1ST BIT
DTx
LATE EXTERNAL TFSx
DRIVE
EDGE
SAMPLE
EDGE
DRIVE
EDGE
TSCLKx
TFSx
tDDTLFSE
1ST BIT
DTx
Figure 37. Serial Ports—External Late Frame Sync
Rev. E |
Page 64 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Port—Master Timing
Table 44 and Figure 38 describe SPI port master operations.
Table 44. Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Port—Master Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tSSPIDM
Data Input Valid to SPIxSCK Edge (Data Input Setup)
tHSPIDM
SPIxSCK Sampling Edge to Data Input Invalid
Switching Characteristics
tSDSCIM
SPIxSELy Low to First SPIxSCK Edge
tSPICHM
SPIxSCK High Period
tSPICLM
SPIxSCK Low Period
tSPICLK
SPIxSCK Period
tHDSM
Last SPIxSCK Edge to SPIxSELy High
Sequential Transfer Delay
tSPITDM
tDDSPIDM
SPIxSCK Edge to Data Out Valid (Data Out Delay)
tHDSPIDM
SPIxSCK Edge to Data Out Invalid (Data Out Hold)
Min
Max
9.0
–1.5
ns
ns
2tSCLK –1.5
2tSCLK –1.5
2tSCLK –1.5
4tSCLK –1.5
2tSCLK –1.5
2tSCLK–1.5
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
6
–1.0
SPIxSELy
(OUTPUT)
tSDSCIM
tSPICLM
tSPICHM
tSPICLK
tHDSM
SPIxSCK
(OUTPUT)
tDDSPIDM
tHDSPIDM
SPIxMOSI
(OUTPUT)
tSSPIDM
CPHA = 1
tHSPIDM
SPIxMISO
(INPUT)
tHDSPIDM
tDDSPIDM
SPIxMOSI
(OUTPUT)
CPHA = 0
tSSPIDM
tHSPIDM
SPIxMISO
(INPUT)
Figure 38. Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Port—Master Timing
Rev. E |
Page 65 of 102 |
March 2014
Unit
tSPITDM
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Port—Slave Timing
Table 45 and Figure 39 describe SPI port slave operations.
Table 45. Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Port—Slave Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tSPICHS
SPIxSCK High Period
tSPICLS
SPIxSCK Low Period
SPIxSCK Period
tSPICLK
tHDS
Last SPIxSCK Edge to SPIxSS Not Asserted
tSPITDS
Sequential Transfer Delay
tSDSCI
SPIxSS Assertion to First SPIxSCK Edge
tSSPID
Data Input Valid to SPIxSCK Edge (Data Input Setup)
tHSPID
SPIxSCK Sampling Edge to Data Input Invalid
Switching Characteristics
tDSOE
SPIxSS Assertion to Data Out Active
tDSDHI
SPIxSS Deassertion to Data High Impedance
tDDSPID
SPIxSCK Edge to Data Out Valid (Data Out Delay)
tHDSPID
SPIxSCK Edge to Data Out Invalid (Data Out Hold)
Min
Max
2tSCLK –1.5
2tSCLK –1.5
4tSCLK
2tSCLK –1.5
2tSCLK –1.5
2tSCLK –1.5
1.6
1.6
0
0
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
8
8
10
0
SPIxSS
(INPUT)
tSDSCI
tSPICLS
tSPICHS
tHDS
tSPICLK
SPIxSCK
(INPUT)
tDSOE
tDDSPID
tDDSPID
tHDSPID
tDSDHI
SPIxMISO
(OUTPUT)
CPHA = 1
tSSPID
tHSPID
SPIxMOSI
(INPUT)
tDSOE
tHDSPID
tDDSPID
tDSDHI
SPIxMISO
(OUTPUT)
CPHA = 0
tSSPID
SPIxMOSI
(INPUT)
Figure 39. Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Port—Slave Timing
Rev. E |
Page 66 of 102 |
March 2014
tHSPID
Unit
tSPITDS
ns
ns
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Universal Asynchronous Receiver-Transmitter
(UART) Ports—Receive and Transmit Timing
The UART ports have a maximum baud rate of SCLK/16. There
is some latency between the generation of internal UART interrupts and the external data operations. These latencies are
negligible at the data transmission rates for the UART. For more
information, see the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin Processor Hardware
Reference.
General-Purpose Port Timing
Table 46 and Figure 40 describe general-purpose
port operations.
Table 46. General-Purpose Port Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirement
tWFI
General-Purpose Port Pin Input Pulse Width
Switching Characteristic
tGPOD
General-Purpose Port Pin Output Delay from CLKOUT Low
Min
tSCLK + 1
–0.3
CLKOUT
tGPOD
GPIO OUTPUT
tWFI
GPIO INPUT
Figure 40. General-Purpose Port Timing
Rev. E |
Page 67 of 102 |
Max
March 2014
Unit
ns
+6
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Timer Clock Timing
Table 47 and Figure 41 describe timer clock timing.
Table 47. Timer Clock Timing
Parameter
Switching Characteristic
tTODP
Timer Output Update Delay After PPI_CLK High
Min
PPI_CLK
tTODP
TMRx OUTPUT
Figure 41. Timer Clock Timing
Rev. E |
Page 68 of 102 |
March 2014
Max
Unit
15
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Timer Cycle Timing
Table 48 and Figure 42 describe timer expired operations. The
input signal is asynchronous in “width capture mode” and
“external clock mode” and has an absolute maximum input frequency of (fSCLK/2) MHz.
Table 48. Timer Cycle Timing
Parameter
Timing Characteristics
tWL
Timer Pulse Width Input Low1
tWH
Timer Pulse Width Input High1
Timer Input Setup Time Before CLKOUT Low2
tTIS
tTIH
Timer Input Hold Time After CLKOUT Low2
Switching Characteristics
tHTO
Timer Pulse Width Output
tTOD
Timer Output Delay After CLKOUT High
1
2
Min
1× tSCLK
1× tSCLK
6.5
–1
1× tSCLK
The minimum pulse widths apply for TMRx signals in width capture and external clock modes.
Either a valid setup and hold time or a valid pulse width is sufficient. There is no need to resynchronize timer flag inputs.
CLKOUT
tTOD
TMRx OUTPUT
tTIS
tTIH
tHTO
TMRx INPUT
tWH,tWL
Figure 42. Timer Cycle Timing
Rev. E |
Max
Page 69 of 102 |
March 2014
Unit
ns
ns
ns
ns
(232 – 1) × tSCLK
6
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Up/Down Counter/Rotary Encoder Timing
Table 49 and Figure 43 describe up/down counter/rotary
encoder timing.
Table 49. Up/Down Counter/Rotary Encoder Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tWCOUNT
CUD/CDG/CZM Input Pulse Width
tCIS
CUD/CDG/CZM Input Setup Time Before CLKOUT High1
tCIH
CUD/CDG/CZM Input Hold Time After CLKOUT High1
1
Min
tSCLK + 1
7.2
0.0
Either a valid setup and hold time or a valid pulse width is sufficient. There is no need to resynchronize counter inputs.
CLKOUT
tCIS
tCIH
CUD/CDG/CZM
tWCOUNT
Figure 43. Up/Down Counter/Rotary Encoder Timing
Rev. E |
Page 70 of 102 |
March 2014
Max
Unit
ns
ns
ns
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
SD/SDIO Controller Timing
Table 50 and Figure 44 describe SD/SDIO controller timing.
Table 51 and Figure 45 describe SD/SDIO controller (highspeed mode) timing.
Table 50. SD/SDIO Controller Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Input Setup Time
tISU
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Input Hold Time
tIH
Switching Characteristics
SD_CLK Frequency During Data Transfer Mode1
fPP
SD_CLK Frequency During Identification Mode1
fPP
tWL
SD_CLK Low Time
SD_CLK High Time
tWH
SD_CLK Rise Time
tTLH
tTHL
SD_CLK Fall Time
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Output Delay Time During Data Transfer Mode
tODLY
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Output Delay Time During Identification Mode
1
2
Min
Max
Unit
7.2
2
0
1002
15
15
–1
–1
ns
ns
20
400
MHz
kHz
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
10
10
+14
+50
tPP=1/fPP.
Spec can be 0 kHz, meaning to stop the clock. The given minimum frequency range is for cases where a continuous clock is required.
VOH (MIN)
tPP
SD_CLK
tTHL
tISU
tTLH
tWL
tIH
tWH
INPUT
tODLY
OUTPUT
NOTES:
1 INPUT INCLUDES SD_Dx AND SD_CMD SIGNALS.
2 OUTPUT INCLUDES SD_Dx AND SD_CMD SIGNALS.
Figure 44. SD/SDIO Controller Timing
Rev. E |
Page 71 of 102 |
March 2014
VOL (MAX)
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 51. SD/SDIO Controller Timing (High Speed Mode)
Parameter
Timing Requirements
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Input Setup Time
tISU
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Input Hold Time
tIH
Switching Characteristics
SD_CLK Frequency During Data Transfer Mode1
fPP
SD_CLK Low Time
tWL
SD_CLK High Time
tWH
tTLH
SD_CLK Rise Time
SD_CLK Fall Time
tTHL
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Output Delay Time During Data Transfer Mode
tODLY
tOH
SD_Dx and SD_CMD Output Hold Time
1
Min
Max
Unit
7.2
2
0
9.5
9.5
ns
ns
40
MHz
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
3
3
2
2.5
tPP=1/fPP.
VOH (MIN)
tPP
SD_CLK
tTHL
tISU
tTLH
tWL
tIH
VOL (MAX)
tWH
INPUT
tODLY
tOH
OUTPUT
NOTES:
1 INPUT INCLUDES SD_Dx AND SD_CMD SIGNALS.
2 OUTPUT INCLUDES SD_Dx AND SD_CMD SIGNALS.
Figure 45. SD/SDIO Controller Timing (High Speed Mode)
Rev. E |
Page 72 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
MXVR Timing
Table 52 and Table 53 describe the MXVR timing requirements.
Figure 5 illustrates the MOST connection.
Table 52. MXVR Timing—MXI Center Frequency Requirements
Parameter
fMXI_256
fMXI_384
fMXI_512
fMXI_1024
Fs = 38 kHz
9.728
14.592
19.456
38.912
MXI Center Frequency (256 Fs)
MXI Center Frequency (384 Fs)
MXI Center Frequency (512 Fs)
MXI Center Frequency (1024 Fs)
Fs = 44.1 kHz
11.2896
16.9344
22.5792
45.1584
Fs = 48 kHz
12.288
18.432
24.576
49.152
Unit
MHz
MHz
MHz
MHz
Min
Max
Unit
–50
–300
+40
+50
+300
+60
ppm
ppm
%
Table 53. MXVR Timing— MXI Clock Requirements
Parameter
Timing Requirements
FSMXI
MXI Clock Frequency Stability
FTMXI
MXI Frequency Tolerance Over Temperature
DCMXI
MXI Clock Duty Cycle
Rev. E |
Page 73 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
HOSTDP A/C Timing-Host Read Cycle
Table 54 and Figure 46 describe the HOSTDP A/C host read
cycle timing requirements.
Table 54. Host Read Cycle Timing Requirements
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tSADRDL
HOST_ADDR and HOST_CE Setup Before HOST_RD Falling Edge
tHADRDH HOST_ADDR and HOST_CE Hold After HOST_RD Rising Edge
tRDWL
HOST_RD Pulse Width Low (ACK Mode)
HOST_RD Pulse Width Low (INT Mode)
tRDWH
HOST_RD Pulse Width High or Time Between HOST_RD Rising Edge and
HOST_WR Falling Edge
tDRDHRDY HOST_RD Rising Edge Delay After HOST_ACK Rising Edge (ACK Mode)
Switching Characteristics
tSDATRDY HOST_D15–0 Valid Prior HOST_ACK Rising Edge (ACK Mode)
tDRDYRDL HOST_ACK Falling Edge After HOST_CE (ACK Mode)
tRDYPRD
HOST_ACK Low Pulse-Width for Read Access (ACK Mode)
tDDARWH HOST_D15–0 Disable After HOST_RD
tACC
HOST_D15–0 Valid After HOST_RD Falling Edge (INT Mode)
tHDARWH HOST_D15–0 Hold After HOST_RD Rising Edge
1
Min
Max
Unit
4
2.5
tDRDYRDL + tRDYPRD + tDRDHRDY
1.5 × tSCLK + 8.7
2 × tSCLK
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
0
ns
tSCLK – 4.0
11.25
NM1
8.0
1.5 × tSCLK
1.0
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
NM (Not Measured) — This parameter is based on tSCLK. It is not measured because the number of SCLK cycles for which HOST_ACK remains low depends on the Host
DMA FIFO status. This is system design dependent.
HOST_ADDR
HOST_CE
tSADRDL
tHADRDH
tRDWL
HOST_RD
tSDATRDY
tACC
tRDWH
tDDARWH
tHDARWH
HOST_DATA
tDRDYRDL
tDRDHRDY
tRDYPRD
HOST_ACK
In Figure 46, HOST_DATA is HOST_D0–D15.
Figure 46. HOSTDP A/C—Host Read Cycle
Rev. E |
Page 74 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
HOSTDP A/C Timing-Host Write Cycle
Table 55 and Figure 47 describe the HOSTDP A/C host write
cycle timing requirements.
Table 55. Host Write Cycle Timing Requirements
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tSADWRL
HOST_ADDR/HOST_CE Setup Before HOST_WR Falling Edge
tHADWRH
HOST_ADDR/HOST_CE Hold After HOST_WR Rising Edge
tWRWL
HOST_WR Pulse Width Low (ACK Mode)
HOST_WR Pulse Width Low (INT Mode)
HOST_WR Pulse Width High or Time Between HOST_WR Rising Edge
tWRWH
and HOST_RD Falling Edge
tDWRHRDY
HOST_WR Rising Edge Delay After HOST_ACK Rising Edge (ACK Mode)
HOST_D15–0 Hold After HOST_WR Rising Edge
tHDATWH
tSDATWH
HOST_D15–0 Setup Before HOST_WR Rising Edge
Switching Characteristics
tDRDYWRL
HOST_ACK Falling Edge After HOST_CE Asserted (ACK Mode)
tRDYPWR
HOST_ACK Low Pulse-Width for Write Access (ACK Mode)
1
Min
Max
Unit
4
2.5
tDRDYWRL + tRDYPRD + tDWRHRDY
1.5 × tSCLK + 8.7
2 × tSCLK
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
0
2.5
3.5
ns
ns
ns
11.25
NM1
ns
ns
NM (not measured)—This parameter is based on tSCLK. It is not measured because the number of SCLK cycles for which HOST_ACK remains low depends on the Host DMA
FIFO status. This is system design dependent.
HOST_ADDR
HOST_CE
tSADWRL
tWRWL
tHADWRH
tWRWH
HOST_WR
tSDATWH
tHDATWH
HOST_DATA
tDRDYWRL
tRDYPWR
tDWRHRDY
HOST_ACK
In Figure 47, HOST_DATA is HOST_D0–D15.
Figure 47. HOSTDP A/C- Host Write Cycle
Rev. E |
Page 75 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ATA/ATAPI-6 Interface Timing
The following tables and figures specify ATAPI timing parameters. For detailed parameter descriptions, refer to the ATAPI
specification (ANSI INCITS 361-2002). Table 58 to Table 61
include ATAPI timing parameter equations. System designers
should use these equations along with the parameters provided
in Table 56 and Table 57. ATAPI timing control registers
should be programmed such that ANSI INCITS 361-2002 specifications are met for the desired transfer type and mode.
Table 56. ATA/ATAPI-6 Timing Parameters
Parameter
tSK1
Difference in output delay after CLKOUT for ATAPI output pins1
tOD
Output delay after CLKOUT for outputs1
tSUD
ATAPI_D0-15 or ATAPI_D0-15A Setup Before CLKOUT
ATAPI_IORDY Setup Before CLKOUT
tSUI
tSUDU
ATAPI_D0-15 or ATAPI_D0-15A Setup Before ATAPI_IORDY (UDMA-in only)
tHDU
ATAPI_D0-15 or ATAPI_D0-15A Hold After ATAPI_IORDY (UDMA-in only)
1
Min
Max
6
12
6
6
2
2.6
Unit
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
ATAPI output pins include ATAPI_CS0, ATAPI_CS1, A1-3, ATAPI_DIOR, ATAPI_DIOW, ATAPI_DMACK, ATAPI_D0-15, ATAPI_A0-2A, and ATAPI_D0-15A.
Table 57. ATA/ATAPI-6 System Timing Parameters
Parameter
Maximum difference in board propagation delay between any 2 ATAPI output pins1
tSK2
tBD
Maximum board propagation delay.
tSK3
Maximum difference in board propagation delay during a read between ATAPI_IORDY and ATAPI_D015/ATAPI_D0-15A.
tSK4
Maximum difference in ATAPI cable propagation delay between output pin group A and output pin
group B2
tCDD
ATAPI cable propagation delay for ATAPI_D0-15 and ATAPI_D0-15A signals.
ATAPI cable propagation delay for ATAPI_DIOR, ATAPI_DIOW, ATAPI_IORDY, and ATAPI_DMACK signals.
tCDC
1
2
Source
System Design
System Design
System Design
ATAPI Cable Specification
ATAPI Cable Specification
ATAPI Cable Specification
ATAPI output pins include ATAPI_CS0, ATAPI_CS1, A1-3, ATAPI_DIOR, ATAPI_DIOW, ATAPI_DMACK, ATAPI_D0-15, ATAPI_A0-2A, and ATAPI_D0-15A.
Output pin group A includes ATAPI_DIOR, ATAPI_DIOW, and ATAPI_DMACK. Output pin group B includes ATAPI_CS0, ATAPI_CS1, A1-3, ATAPI_D0-15,
ATAPI_A0-2A, and ATAPI_D0-15A.
Rev. E |
Page 76 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Register and PIO
Table 58 and Figure 48 describe the ATAPI register and the PIO
data transfer timing. The material in this figure is adapted from
ATAPI-6 (INCITS 361-2002[R2007] and is used with permission of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) on
behalf of the Information Technology Industry Council
(“ITIC”). Copies of ATAPI-6 (INCITS 361-2002 [R2007] can be
purchased from ANSI.
Table 58. ATAPI Register and PIO Data Transfer Timing
ATAPI Parameter/Description
Cycle time
t0
t1
ATAPI_ADDR valid to
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW setup
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW pulse width
t2
t2i
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW recovery time
t3
ATAPI_DIOW data setup
ATAPI_DIOW data hold
t4
t5
ATAPI_DIOR data setup
t6
ATAPI_DIOR data hold
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW to ATAPI_ADDR
t9
valid hold
ATAPI_IORDY setup time
tA
1
ATAPI_REG/PIO_TIM_x Timing Register
Setting1
Timing Equation
T2_PIO, TEOC_PIO
(T2_PIO + TEOC_PIO) × tSCLK
T1
T1 × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
T2_PIO
TEOC_PIO
T2_PIO
T4
N/A
N/A
TEOC_PIO
T2_PIO × tSCLK
TEOC_PIO × tSCLK
T2_PIO × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
T4 × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
tOD + tSUD + 2 × tBD + tCDD + tCDC
0
TEOC_PIO × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
T2_PIO
T2_PIO × tSCLK – (tOD + tSUI + 2 × tCDC + 2 × tBD)
ATAPI timing register setting should be programmed with a value that guarantees parameter compliance with the ATA ANSI specification for the ATA device mode of
operation.
Note that in Figure 48 ATAPI_ADDR pins include A1-3, ATAPI_CS0, and ATAPI_CS1. Alternate ATAPI port
ATAPI_ADDR pins include ATAPI_A0A, ATAPI_A1A, ATAPI_A2A, ATAPI_CS0, and ATAPI_CS1. Note that an alternate
ATAPI_D0-15 port bus is ATAPI_D0-15A.
t0
ATAPI
ADDR
t1
t9
t2
t2i
ATAPI_DIOR/
ATAPI_DIOW
ATAPI_D0–15
(WRITE)
t3
t4
ATAPI_D0–15
(READ)
tA
t5
ATAPI_IORDY
ATAPI_IORDY
Figure 48. REG and PIO Data Transfer Timing
Rev. E |
Page 77 of 102 |
March 2014
t6
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ATAPI Multiword DMA Transfer Timing
Table 59 and Figure 49 through Figure 52 describe the ATAPI
multiword DMA transfer timing. The material in these figures is
adapted from ATAPI-6 (INCITS 361-2002[R2007] and is used
with permission of the American National Standards Institute
(ANSI) on behalf of the Information Technology Industry
Council (“ITIC”). Copies of ATAPI-6 (INCITS 361-2002
[R2007] can be purchased from ANSI.
Table 59. ATAPI Multiword DMA Transfer Timing
ATAPI Parameter/Description
t0
Cycle time
tD
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW asserted
Pulse Width
tF
ATAPI_DIOR data hold
ATAPI_DIOW data setup
tG(write)
tG(read)
ATAPI_DIOR data setup
tH
ATAPI_DIOW data hold
tI
ATAPI_DMACK to
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW setup
tJ
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW to
ATAPI_DMACK hold
tKR
ATAPI_DIOR negated pulse width
tKW
ATAPI_DIOW negated pulse width
tLR
ATAPI_DIOR to ATAPI_DMARQ delay
tM
ATAPI_CS0-1 valid to
ATAPI_DIOR/ATAPI_DIOW
tN
ATAPI_CS0-1 hold
1
ATAPI_MULTI_TIM_x Timing Register
Setting1
Timing Equation
TD, TK
(TD + TK) × tSCLK
TD
TD × tSCLK
N/A
TD
TD
TK
TM
0
TD × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
tOD + tSUD + 2 × tBD + tCDD + tCDC
TK × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
TM × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
TK, TEOC_MDMA
(TK + TEOC_MDMA) × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
TKR
TKW
N/A
TM
TKR × tSCLK
TKW × tSCLK
(TD + TK) × tSCLK – (tOD + 2 × tBD + 2 × tCDC)
TM × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
TK, TEOC_MDMA
(TK + TEOC_MDMA) × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
ATAPI timing register setting should be programmed with a value that guarantees parameter compliance with the ATA ANSI specification for an ATA device mode of
operation.
Rev. E |
Page 78 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Note that in Figure 49 an alternate ATAPI_D0–15 port bus is
ATAPI_D0–15A.
ATAPI_CS0
ATAPI_CS1
tM
ATAPI_DMARQ
tI
ATAPI_DMACK
tD
ATAPI_DIOR
ATAPI_DIOW
tG
tF
ATAPI_D0–15
(READ)
tG
tH
ATAPI_D0–15
(WRITE)
Figure 49. Initiating a Multiword DMA Data Burst
ATAPI_CS0
ATAPI_CS1
ATAPI_DMARQ
ATAPI_DMACK
t0
ATAPI_DIOR
ATAPI_DIOW
tD
tK
ATAPI_D0–15
(READ)
tG
tF
tG
tF
ATAPI_D0–15
(WRITE)
tG
tH
tG
Figure 50. Sustained Multiword DMA Data Burst
Rev. E |
Page 79 of 102 |
March 2014
tH
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ATAPI_CS0
ATAPI_CS1
tN
ATAPI_DMARQ
tLR
ATAPI_DMACK
tKR
tKW
tD
tJ
ATAPI_DIOR
ATAPI_DIOW
t0
ATAPI_D0–15
(READ)
tG
tF
tG
tH
ATAPI_D0–15
(WRITE)
Figure 51. Device Terminating a Multiword DMA Data Burst
ATAPI_CS0
ATAPI_CS1
tN
ATAPI_DMARQ
ATAPI_DMACK
tKR
tKW
tD
tJ
ATAPI_DIOR
ATAPI_DIOW
t0
ATAPI_D0–15
(READ)
tG
tF
ATAPI_D0–15
(WRITE)
tG
Figure 52. Host Terminating a Multiword DMA Data Burst
Rev. E |
Page 80 of 102 |
March 2014
tH
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ATAPI Ultra DMA Data-In Transfer Timing
Table 60 and Figure 53 through Figure 56 describe the ATAPI
ultra DMA data-in data transfer timing. The material in these
figures is adapted from ATAPI-6 (INCITS 361-2002[R2007]
and is used with permission of the American National Stan-
dards Institute (ANSI) on behalf of the Information Technology
Industry Council (“ITIC”). Copies of ATAPI-6 (INCITS 3612002[R2007] can be purchased from ANSI.
Table 60. ATAPI Ultra DMA Data-In Transfer Timing
ATAPI Parameter
tDS
Data setup time at host
tDH
Data hold time at host
tCVS
CRC word valid setup time at host
tCVH
CRC word valid hold time at host
tLI
Limited interlock time
tMLI
Interlock time with minimum
tAZ
Maximum time allowed for output drivers to
release
tZAH
Minimum delay time required for output
tENV2
ATAPI_DMACK to ATAPI_DIOR/DIOW
ATAPI_DMACK to ATAPI_DIOR/DIOW
tRP
tACK
Setup and hold times for ATAPI_DMACK
1
2
ATAPI_ULTRA_TIM_x Timing
Register Setting1
N/A
N/A
TDVS
TACK
N/A
TZAH, TCVS
N/A
Timing Equation
TSK3 + tSUDU
TSK3 + tHDU
TDVS × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
TACK × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
2 × tBD + 2 × tSCLK + tOD
(TZAH + TCVS) × tSCLK – (4 × tBD + 4 × tSCLK + 2 × tOD)
0
TZAH
TENV
TRP
TACK
2 × tSCLK + TZAH × tSCLK + tSCLK
(TENV × tSCLK) +/– (tSK1 + tSK2)
TRP × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2 + tSK4)
TACK × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
ATAPI Timing Register Setting should be programmed with a value that guarantees parameter compliance with the ATA ANSI specification for ATA device mode of operation.
This timing equation can be used to calculate both the minimum and maximum tENV.
Rev. E |
Page 81 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
In Figure 53 and Figure 54 an alternate ATAPI_D0–15 port bus
is ATAPI_D0–15A.
Also note that ATAPI_ADDR pins include A1-3, ATAPI_CS0,
and ATAPI_CS1. Alternate ATAPI port ATAPI _ADDR pins
include ATAPI_A0A, ATAPI_A1A, ATAPI_A2A, ATAPI_CS0,
and ATAPI_CS1.
ATAPI_DMARQ
ATAPI_DMACK
tACK
tENV
tACK
tENV
ATAPI_DIOW
ATAPI_DIOR
ATAPI_IORDY
tAZ
ATAPI_D0–15
tACK
ATAPI ADDR
Figure 53. Initiating an Ultra DMA Data-In Burst
ATAPI_IORDY
tDH
tDS
tDS
tDH
ATAPI_D0–15
Figure 54. Sustained Ultra DMA Data-In Burst
Rev. E |
Page 82 of 102 |
March 2014
tDH
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ATAPI_DMARQ
ATAPI_DMACK
tLI
tLI
tMLI
tACK
ATAPI_DIOW
tLI
tACK
ATAPI_DIOR
ATAPI_IORDY
tAZ
tCVS
tCVH
ATAPI_D0–15
tZAH
tACK
ATAPI ADDR
Figure 55. Device Terminating an Ultra DMA Data-In Burst
ATAPI_DMARQ
tLI
tMLI
ATAPI_DMACK
tACK
ATAPI_DIOW
tZAH
tRP
tACK
ATAPI_DIOR
tLI
ATAPI_IORDY
tCVS
tCVH
ATAPI_D0–15
tACK
ATAPI ADDR
Figure 56. Host Terminating an Ultra DMA Data-In Burst
Rev. E |
Page 83 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ATAPI Ultra DMA Data-Out Transfer Timing
Table 61 and Figure 57 through Figure 60 describes the ATAPI
ultra DMA data-out transfer timing. The material in these figures is adapted from ATAPI-6 (INCITS 361-2002[R2007] and is
used with permission of the American National Standards Insti-
tute (ANSI) on behalf of the Information Technology Industry
Council (“ITIC”). Copies of ATAPI-6 (INCITS 361-2002
[R2007] can be purchased from ANSI.
Table 61. ATAPI Ultra DMA Data-Out Transfer Timing
ATAPI Parameter
tCYC2
Cycle time
t2CYC
Two cycle time
tDVS
Data valid setup time at sender
tDVH
Data valid hold time at sender
tCVS
CRC word valid setup time at host
tCVH
CRC word valid hold time at host
tDZFS
Time from data output released-to-driving to first
strobe timing
tLI
Limited interlock time
tMLI
Interlock time with minimum
ATAPI_DMACK to ATAPI_DIOR/DIOW
tENV3
tRFS
Ready to final strobe time
tACK
Setup and Hold time for ATAPI_DMACK
tSS
Time from STROBE edge to assertion of ATAPI_DIOW
ATAPI_ULTRA_TIM_x Timing
Register Setting1
TDVS, TCYC_TDVS
TDVS, TCYC_TDVS
TDVS
TCYC_TDVS
TDVS
TACK
TDVS
Timing Equation
(TDVS + TCYC_TDVS) × tSCLK
2 × (TDVS + TCYC_TDVS) × tSCLK
TDVS × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
TCYC_TDVS × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
TDVS × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
TACK × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
TDVS × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
N/A
TMLI
TENV
N/A
TACK
TSS
2 × tBD + 2 × tSCLK + tOD
TMLI × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
(TENV × tSCLK) +/– (tSK1 + tSK2)
2 × tBD + 2 × tSCLK + tOD
TACK × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
TSS × tSCLK – (tSK1 + tSK2)
1
ATAPI Timing Register Setting should be programmed with a value that guarantees parameter compliance with the ATA ANSI specification for ATA device mode of operation.
ATA/ATAPI-6 compliant functionality with limited speed.
3
This timing equation can be used to calculate both the minimum and maximum tENV.
2
Rev. E |
Page 84 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
In Figure 57 and Figure 58 an alternate ATAPI_D0–15 port bus
is ATAPI_D0–15A.
ATAPI_DMARQ
ATAPI_DMACK
tENV
ATAPI_DIOW
tLI
ATAPI_IORDY
tACK
ATAPI_DIOR
tDZFS
tDVS
tDVH
ATAPI_D0–15
tACK
ATAPI ADDR
Figure 57. Initiating an Ultra DMA Data-Out Burst
t2CYC
tCYC
tCYC
t2CYC
ATAPI_DIOR
tDVH
tDVS
tDVH
tDVS
ATAPI_D0–15
Figure 58. Sustained Ultra DMA Data-Out Burst
Rev. E |
Page 85 of 102 |
March 2014
tDVH
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
ATAPI_DMARQ
ATAPI_DMACK
tLI
tLI
tMLI
tACK
ATAPI_DIOW
tSS
tLI
ATAPI_IORDY
tACK
ATAPI_DIOR
tCVS
tCVH
ATAPI_D0–15
tACK
ATAPI ADDR
Figure 59. Host terminating an Ultra DMA Data-Out Burst
ATAPI_DMARQ
ATAPI_DMACK
tLI
tMLI
tACK
tLI
tMLI
tACK
ATAPI_DIOW
ATAPI_IORDY
tRFS
ATAPI_DIOR
tCVS
tCVH
ATAPI_D0–15
tACK
ATAPI ADDR
Figure 60. Device Terminating an Ultra DMA Data-Out Burst
Rev. E |
Page 86 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
USB On-The-Go-Dual-Role Device Controller Timing
Table 62 describes the USB On-The-Go Dual-Role Device Controller timing requirements.
Table 62. USB On-The-Go Dual-Role Device Controller Timing Requirements
Parameter
Timing Requirements
fUSB
USB_XI frequency
FSUSB
USB_XI Clock Frequency Stability
Min
Max
Unit
9
–50
33.3
+50
MHz
ppm
Min
Max
Unit
JTAG Test And Emulation Port Timing
Table 63 and Figure 61 describe JTAG port operations.
Table 63. JTAG Port Timing
Parameter
Timing Requirements
tTCK
TCK Period
tSTAP
TDI, TMS Setup Before TCK High
tHTAP
TDI, TMS Hold After TCK High
tSSYS
System Inputs Setup Before TCK High1
System Inputs Hold After TCK High1
tHSYS
tTRSTW
TRST Pulse-Width2 (measured in TCK cycles)
Switching Characteristics
tDTDO
TDO Delay from TCK Low
tDSYS
System Outputs Delay After TCK Low3
20
4
4
4
11
4
0
1
ns
ns
ns
ns
ns
tTCK
10
16.5
ns
ns
System inputs = PA15–0, PB14–0, PC13–0, PD15–0, PE15–0, PF15–0, PG15–0, PH13–0, PI15–0, PJ13–0, DQ15–0, DQS1–0, D15–0, ATAPI_PDIAG, RESET, NMI, and
BMODE3–0.
50 MHz Maximum.
3
System outputs = PA15–0, PB14–0, PC13–0, PD15–0, PE15–0, PF15–0, PG15–0, PH13–0, PI15–0, PJ13–0, DQ15–0, DQS1–0, D15–0, DA12–0, DBA1–0, DQM1–0,
DCLK0-1, DCLK0–1, DCS1–0, DCLKE, DRAS, DCAS, DWE, AMS3–0, ABE1–0, AOE, ARE, AWE, CLKOUT, A3–1, and MFS.
2
tTCK
TCK
tSTAP
tHTAP
TMS
TDI
tDTDO
TDO
tSSYS
tHSYS
SYSTEM
INPUTS
tDSYS
SYSTEM
OUTPUTS
Figure 61. JTAG Port Timing
Rev. E |
Page 87 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
OUTPUT DRIVE CURRENTS
200
Figure 62 through Figure 71 show typical current-voltage characteristics for the output drivers of the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin
processors. The curves represent the current drive capability of
the output drivers as a function of output voltage.
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
100
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
80
VOH
2.25V, +105°C
60
3.3V, +25°C
3.6V, –40°C
100
50
0
–50
–100
–150
2.5V, +25°C
2.7V, +105°C
VOL
3.3V, +25°C
–200
40
3.6V, –40°C
2.75V, –40°C
–250
0
20
0.5
1.0
0
1.5
2.0
2.5
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
3.0
3.5
4.0
Figure 65. Drive Current B (High VDDEXT)
–20
–40
VOL
60
–60
1.0
2.75V, –40°C
1.5
2.0
2.5
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
0.5
3.0
Figure 62. Drive Current A (Low VDDEXT)
150
2.7V, +105°C
100
2.75V, –40°C
20
0
–20
–40
2.25V, +105°C
VOL
3.3V, +25°C
VOH
VOH
2.5V, +25°C
40
2.5V, +25°C
–100
0
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
2.25V, +105°C
2.25V, +105°C
–80
2.5V, +25°C
–60
2.75V, –40°C
3.6V, –40°C
50
–80
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
3.0
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
0
Figure 66. Drive Current C (Low VDDEXT)
–50
–100
2.7V, +105°C
VOL
80
3.3V, +25°C
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
3.0
3.5
4.0
Figure 63. Drive Current A (High VDDEXT)
150
2.25V, +105°C
2.5V, +25°C
100
OUTPUT CURRENT (mA)
–150
0
2.7V, +105°C
VOH
3.3V, +25°C
3.6V, –40°C
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
VOH
2.7V, +105°C
150
VOH
60
3.6V, –40°C
40
20
0
–20
–40
–60
2.75V, –40°C
2.7V, +105°C
VOL
–80
50
3.3V, +25°C
3.6V, –40°C
–100
0
0.5
0
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
OUTPUT VOLTAGE (V)
3.0
Figure 67. Drive Current C (High VDDEXT)
–50
–100
2.25V, +105°C
VOL
2.5V, +25°C
2.75V, –40°C
–150
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
2.5
3.0
Figure 64. Drive Current B (Low VDDEXT)
Rev. E |
Page 88 of 102 |
March 2014
3.5
4.0
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
50
0
2.7V, –40°C
30
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
VOH
2.5V, +105°C 2.6V, +25°C
40
20
10
0
–10
–20
–10
–20
–30
–40
2.7V, +105°C
–50
–60
–30
–70
–40
2.5V, –105°C
2.6V, +25°C
–50
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
3.6V, –40°C
–80
2.7V, –40°C
2.0
3.0
2.5
–90
0
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
0.5
Figure 68. Drive Current D (DDR SDRAM)
1.8V, +105°C
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
40
VOH
1.875V, +25°C
30
1.95V, –40°C
20
10
0
–10
–20
–30
1.8V, +105°C
VOL
1.875V, +25°C
–50
0
0.25
0.5
0.75
1.0
1.95V, –40°C
1.5
1.25
1.75
2.0
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
Figure 69. Drive Current D (Mobile DDR SDRAM)
10
SOURCE CURRENT (mA)
0
–10
–20
–30
2.25V, +105°C
–40
VOL
–50
2.5V, +25°C
2.75V, –40°C
–60
0
0.5
1.0
1.5
2.0
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
SOURCE VOLTAGE (V)
3.0
Figure 71. Drive Current E (High VDDEXT)
50
–40
3.3V, +25°C
VOL
VOL
2.5
3.0
Figure 70. Drive Current E (Low VDDEXT)
Rev. E |
Page 89 of 102 |
March 2014
3.5
4.0
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
TEST CONDITIONS
All timing parameters appearing in this data sheet were measured under the conditions described in this section. Figure 72
shows the measurement point for AC measurements (except
output enable/disable). The measurement point VMEAS is
VDDEXT/2 or VDDDDR/2, depending on the pin under test.
INPUT
OR
OUTPUT
tDIS_MEASURED
tDIS
tENA_MEASURED
tENA
VOH
(MEASURED)
VOH (MEASURED) V
VOH(MEASURED)
VTRIP(HIGH)
VOL (MEASURED) + V
VTRIP(LOW)
VOL (MEASURED)
VOL
(MEASURED)
VMEAS
VMEAS
REFERENCE
SIGNAL
tDECAY
Figure 72. Voltage Reference Levels for AC Measurements
(Except Output Enable/Disable)
tTRIP
OUTPUT STOPS DRIVING
OUTPUT STARTS DRIVING
HIGH IMPEDANCE STATE
Output Enable Time
Figure 73. Output Enable/Disable
Output pins are considered to be enabled when they have made
a transition from a high-impedance state to the point when they
start driving. The output enable time tENA is the interval from
the point when a reference signal reaches a high or low voltage
level to the point when the output starts driving as shown in the
output enable/disable diagram (Figure 73). The time, tENA_MEASURED, is the interval from the point when the reference signal
switches to the point when the output voltage reaches either
1.75 V (output high) or 1.25 V (output low). Time tTRIP is the
interval from when the output starts driving to when the output
reaches the 1.25 V or 1.75 V trip voltage. Time tENA is calculated
as shown in the equation:
t ENA = t ENA_MEASURED – t TRIP
Example System Hold Time Calculation
To determine the data output hold time in a particular system,
first calculate tDECAY using the equation given above. Choose V
to be the difference between the ADSP-BF54x Blackfin processors’ output voltage and the input threshold for the device
requiring the hold time. A typical V will be 0.4 V. CL is the total
bus capacitance (per data line), and IL is the total leakage or
three-state current (per data line). The hold time will be tDECAY
plus the minimum disable time (for example, tDDAT for an asynchronous memory write cycle).
CAPACITIVE LOADING
Output delays and holds are based on standard capacitive loads
of an average of 6 pF on all balls (see Figure 74).
If multiple pins (such as the data bus) are enabled, the measurement value is that of the first pin to start driving.
VLOAD is equal to VDDEXT/2 or VDDDDR/2, depending on the pin
under test.
Output Disable Time
Output pins are considered to be disabled when they stop driving, go into a high-impedance state, and start to decay from
their output high or low voltage. The time for the voltage on the
bus to decay by V is dependent on the capacitive load, CL and
the load current, IL. This decay time can be approximated by the
equation:
TESTER PIN ELECTRONICS
50Ω
VLOAD
T1
45Ω
70Ω
ZO = 50Ω (impedance)
TD = 4.04 ± 1.18 ns
50Ω
t DECAY =  C L V   I L
DUT
OUTPUT
0.5pF
4pF
2pF
400Ω
The output disable time tDIS is the difference between tDIS_MEASURED and tDECAY as shown in Figure 73. The time tDIS_MEASURED is
the interval from when the reference signal switches to when the
output voltage decays V from the measured output high or
output low voltage. The time tDECAY is calculated with test loads
CL and IL, and with V equal to 0.25 V.
NOTES:
THE WORST-CASE TRANSMISSION LINE DELAY IS SHOWN AND CAN BE USED
FOR THE OUTPUT TIMING ANALYSIS TO REFELECT THE TRANSMISSION LINE
EFFECT AND MUST BE CONSIDERED. THE TRANSMISSION LINE (TD), IS FOR
LOAD ONLY AND DOES NOT AFFECT THE DATA SHEET TIMING SPECIFICATIONS.
ANALOG DEVICES RECOMMENDS USING THE IBIS MODEL TIMING FOR A GIVEN
SYSTEM REQUIREMENT. IF NECESSARY, A SYSTEM MAY INCORPORATE
EXTERNAL DRIVERS TO COMPENSATE FOR ANY TIMING DIFFERENCES.
Figure 74. Equivalent Device Loading for AC Measurements
(Includes All Fixtures)
Rev. E |
Page 90 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
TYPICAL RISE AND FALL TIMES
12
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
Figure 75 through Figure 86 on Page 93 show how output rise
time varies with capacitance. The delay and hold specifications
given should be derated by a factor derived from these figures.
The graphs in these figures may not be linear outside the ranges
shown.
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
14
12
RISE TIME
10
10
RISE TIME
8
FALL TIME
6
4
2
FALL TIME
8
0
0
50
6
100
150
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
200
250
Figure 77. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver B at VDDEXT = 2.25 V
4
2
0
50
100
150
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
200
250
10
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
0
Figure 75. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver A at VDDEXT = 2.25 V
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
12
10
RISE TIME
8
FALL TIME
9
8
RISE TIME
7
6
FALL TIME
5
4
3
2
1
6
0
0
4
100
150
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
200
250
Figure 78. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver B at VDDEXT = 3.65 V
2
0
50
0
50
100
150
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
200
250
Figure 76. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver A at VDDEXT = 3.65 V
Rev. E |
Page 91 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
6
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
30
25
RISE TIME
20
15
FALL TIME
10
5
RISE/FALL TIME
4
3
2
5
1
0
0
50
100
150
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
200
0
0
250
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
Figure 79. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver C at VDDEXT = 2.25 V
Figure 82. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver D DDR SDRAM at VDDDDR = 2.7 V
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
20
18
16
RISE TIME
14
12
FALL TIME
10
8
6
4
4
3.5
3
RISE/FALL TIME
2.5
2
1.5
1
.5
0
0
10
20
0
0
50
100
150
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
200
40
50
60
70
Figure 83. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver D Mobile DDR SDRAM at VDDDDR = 1.8 V
250
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
Figure 80. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver C at VDDEXT = 3.65 V
RISE AND FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
30
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
2
6
5
4
RISE/FALL TIME
3
2
4
3.5
3
RISE/FALL TIME
2.5
2
1.5
1
.5
0
0
1
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
Figure 84. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver D Mobile DDR SDRAM at VDDDDR = 1.95 V
Figure 81. Typical Rise and Fall Times (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver D DDR SDRAM at VDDDDR = 2.5 V
Rev. E |
Page 92 of 102 |
March 2014
70
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS
132
To determine the junction temperature on the application
printed circuit board use
FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
128
T J = T CASE +   JT  P D 
124
FALL TIME
where:
120
TJ =junction temperature (°C)
116
TCASE = case temperature (°C) measured by customer at top center of package.
112
JT = from Table 64
108
0
50
100
150
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
200
250
PD = power dissipation. (See Table 17 on Page 38 for a method
to calculate PD.)
Values of JA are provided for package comparison and printed
circuit board design considerations. JA can be used for a first
order approximation of TJ by the equation
Figure 85. Typical Fall Time (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver E at VDDEXT = 2.7 V
T J = T A +   JA  P D 
124
120
FALL TIME ns (10% to 90%)
where:
116
TA = ambient temperature (°C)
FALL TIME
112
108
104
100
0
50
100
150
200
LOAD CAPACITANCE (pF)
Figure 86. Typical Fall Time (10% to 90%) vs. Load Capacitance for
Driver E at VDDEXT = 3.65 V
250
Table 64 lists values for JC and JB parameters. These values are
provided for package comparison and printed circuit board
design considerations. Airflow measurements in Table 64 comply with JEDEC standards JESD51-2 and JESD51-6, and the
junction-to-board measurement complies with JESD51-8. The
junction-to-case measurement complies with MIL-STD-883
(Method 1012.1). All measurements use a 2S2P JEDEC
testboard.
Table 64. Thermal Characteristics, 400-Ball CSP_BGA
Parameter
θJA
θJB
θJC
ψJT
Rev. E |
Page 93 of 102 |
March 2014
Condition
0 linear m/s air flow
1 linear m/s air flow
2 linear m/s air flow
0 linear m/s air flow
1 linear m/s air flow
2 linear m/s air flow
Typical
18.4
15.8
15.0
9.75
6.37
0.27
0.60
0.66
Unit
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
°C/W
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
400-BALL CSP_BGA PACKAGE
Table 65 lists the CSP_BGA package by signal for the
ADSP-BF549. Table 66 on Page 97 lists the CSP_BGA package
by ball number.
Table 65. 400-Ball CSP_BGA Ball Assignment (Alphabetical by Signal)
Signal
A1
A2
A3
ABE0
ABE1
AMS0
AMS1
AMS2
AMS3
AOE
ARE
ATAPI_PDIAG
AWE
BMODE0
BMODE1
BMODE2
BMODE3
CLKBUF
CLKIN
CLKOUT
D0
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
D11
D12
D13
D14
D15
DA0
DA1
DA2
DA3
Ball No.
B2
A2
B3
C17
C16
A10
D9
B10
D10
C10
B12
P19
D12
W1
W2
W3
W4
D11
A11
L16
D13
C13
B13
B15
A15
B16
A16
B17
C14
C15
A17
D14
D15
E15
E14
D17
G19
G17
E20
G18
Signal
DA4
DA5
DA6
DA7
DA8
DA9
DA10
DA11
DA12
DBA0
DBA1
DCAS
DCLK0
DCLK0
DCLK1
DCLK1
DCLKE
DCS0
DCS1
DDR_VREF
DDR_VSSR
DQ0
DQ1
DQ2
DQ3
DQ4
DQ5
DQ6
DQ7
DQ8
DQ9
DQ10
DQ11
DQ12
DQ13
DQ14
DQ15
DQM0
DQM1
DQS0
Ball No.
G16
F19
D20
C20
F18
E19
B20
F17
D19
H17
H16
F16
E16
D16
C18
D18
B18
C19
B19
M20
N20
L18
M19
L19
L20
L17
K16
K20
K17
K19
J20
K18
H20
J19
J18
J17
J16
G20
H19
F20
Rev. E |
Signal
DQS1
DRAS
DWE
EMU
EXT_WAKE
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
Page 94 of 102 |
March 2014
Ball No.
H18
E17
E18
R5
M18
A1
A13
A20
B11
D1
D4
E3
F3
F6
F14
G9
G10
G11
H7
H8
H9
H10
H11
H12
J7
J8
J9
J10
J11
J12
K7
K8
K9
K10
K11
K12
K13
L7
L8
L9
Signal
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GNDMP
MFS
MLF_M
Ball No.
L10
L11
L12
L13
L14
M6
M7
M8
M9
M10
M11
M12
M13
M14
N6
N7
N8
N9
N10
N11
N12
N13
N14
P8
P9
P10
P11
P12
P13
R9
R13
R14
R16
U8
V6
Y1
Y20
E7
E6
F4
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 65. 400-Ball CSP_BGA Ball Assignment (Alphabetical by Signal) (Continued)
Signal
MLF_P
MXI
MXO
NMI
PA0
PA1
PA2
PA3
PA4
PA5
PA6
PA7
PA8
PA9
PA10
PA11
PA12
PA13
PA14
PA15
PB0
PB1
PB2
PB3
PB4
PB5
PB6
PB7
PB8
PB9
PB10
PB11
PB12
PB13
PB14
PC0
PC1
PC2
PC3
PC4
Ball No.
E4
C2
C1
C11
U12
V12
W12
Y12
W11
V11
Y11
U11
U10
Y10
Y9
V10
Y8
W10
Y7
W9
W5
Y2
T6
U6
Y4
Y3
W6
V7
W8
V8
U7
W7
Y6
V9
Y5
H2
J3
J2
H1
G2
Signal
PC5
PC6
PC7
PC8
PC9
PC10
PC11
PC12
PC13
PD0
PD1
PD2
PD3
PD4
PD5
PD6
PD7
PD8
PD9
PD10
PD11
PD12
PD13
PD14
PD15
PE0
PE1
PE2
PE3
PE4
PE5
PE6
PE7
PE8
PE9
PE10
PE11
PE12
PE13
PE14
Ball No.
G1
J5
H3
Y14
V13
U13
W14
Y15
W15
P3
P4
R1
R2
T1
R3
T2
R4
U1
U2
T3
V1
T4
V2
U4
U3
V19
T17
U18
V14
Y16
W20
W19
R17
V20
U19
T18
P2
M5
P5
U16
Rev. E |
Signal
PE15
PF0
PF1
PF2
PF3
PF4
PF5
PF6
PF7
PF8
PF9
PF10
PF11
PF12
PF13
PF14
PF15
PG0
PG1
PG2
PG3
PG4
PG5
PG6
PG7
PG8
PG9
PG10
PG11
PG12
PG13
PG14
PG15
PH0
PH1
PH2
PH3
PH4
PH5
PH6
Page 95 of 102 |
Ball No.
W17
K3
J1
K2
K1
L2
L1
L4
K4
L3
M1
M2
M3
M4
N4
N1
N2
J4
K5
L5
N3
P1
V15
Y17
W16
V16
Y19
Y18
U15
P16
R18
Y13
W13
W18
U14
V17
V18
U17
C3
D6
March 2014
Signal
PH7
PH8
PH9
PH10
PH11
PH12
PH13
PI0
PI1
PI2
PI3
PI4
PI5
PI6
PI7
PI8
PI9
PI10
PI11
PI12
PI13
PI14
PI15
PJ0
PJ1
PJ2
PJ3
PJ4
PJ5
PJ6
PJ7
PJ8
PJ9
PJ10
PJ11
PJ12
PJ13
RESET
RTXI
RTXO
Ball No.
H4
D5
C4
C7
C5
D7
C6
A3
B4
A4
B5
A5
B6
A6
B7
A7
C8
B8
A8
A9
C9
D8
B9
R20
N18
M16
T20
N17
U20
P18
N16
R19
P17
T19
M17
P20
N19
C12
A14
B14
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 65. 400-Ball CSP_BGA Ball Assignment (Alphabetical by Signal) (Continued)
Signal
TCK
TDI
TDO
TMS
TRST
USB_DM
USB_DP
USB_ID
USB_RSET
USB_VBUS
USB_VREF
USB_XI
USB_XO
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
Ball No.
V3
V5
V4
U5
T5
E2
E1
G3
D3
D2
B1
F1
F2
F10
F11
F12
G15
H13
H14
H15
Signal
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
Ball No.
J14
J15
K14
K15
E5
E9
E10
E11
E12
F7
F8
F13
G5
G6
G7
G14
H5
H6
K6
M15
Rev. E |
Signal
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
Page 96 of 102 |
Ball No.
N5
N15
P15
R6
R7
R8
R15
T7
T8
T9
T10
T11
T12
T13
T14
T15
T16
F9
G8
G12
March 2014
Signal
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDMP
VDDRTC
VDDUSB
VDDUSB
VDDVR
VROUT0
VROUT1
XTAL
Ball No.
G13
J6
J13
L6
L15
P6
P7
P14
R10
R11
R12
U9
E8
E13
F5
G4
F15
A18
A19
A12
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 66 lists the CSP_BGA package by ball number for the
ADSP-BF549. Table 65 on Page 94 lists the CSP_BGA package
by signal.
Table 66. 400-Ball CSP_BGA Ball Assignment (Numerical by Ball Number)
Ball No.
A1
A2
A3
A4
A5
A6
A7
A8
A9
A10
A11
A12
A13
A14
A15
A16
A17
A18
A19
A20
B1
B2
B3
B4
B5
B6
B7
B8
B9
B10
B11
B12
B13
B14
B15
B16
B17
B18
B19
B20
Signal
GND
A2
PI0
PI2
PI4
PI6
PI8
PI11
PI12
AMS0
CLKIN
XTAL
GND
RTXI
D4
D6
D10
VROUT0
VROUT1
GND
USB_VREF
A1
A3
PI1
PI3
PI5
PI7
PI10
PI15
AMS2
GND
ARE
D2
RTXO
D3
D5
D7
DCLKE
DCS1
DA10
Ball No.
C1
C2
C3
C4
C5
C6
C7
C8
C9
C10
C11
C12
C13
C14
C15
C16
C17
C18
C19
C20
D1
D2
D3
D4
D5
D6
D7
D8
D9
D10
D11
D12
D13
D14
D15
D16
D17
D18
D19
D20
Signal
MXO
MXI
PH5
PH9
PH11
PH13
PH10
PI9
PI13
AOE
NMI
RESET
D1
D8
D9
ABE1
ABE0
DCLK1
DCS0
DA7
GND
USB_VBUS
USB_RSET
GND
PH8
PH6
PH12
PI14
AMS1
AMS3
CLKBUF
AWE
D0
D11
D12
DCLK0
D15
DCLK1
DA12
DA6
Rev. E |
Ball No.
E1
E2
E3
E4
E5
E6
E7
E8
E9
E10
E11
E12
E13
E14
E15
E16
E17
E18
E19
E20
F1
F2
F3
F4
F5
F6
F7
F8
F9
F10
F11
F12
F13
F14
F15
F16
F17
F18
F19
F20
Page 97 of 102 |
March 2014
Signal
USB_DP
USB_DM
GND
MLF_P
VDDEXT
MFS
GNDMP
VDDMP
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDRTC
D14
D13
DCLK0
DRAS
DWE
DA9
DA2
USB_XI
USB_XO
GND
MLF_M
VDDUSB
GND
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDINT
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDEXT
GND
VDDVR
DCAS
DA11
DA8
DA5
DQS0
Ball No.
G1
G2
G3
G4
G5
G6
G7
G8
G9
G10
G11
G12
G13
G14
G15
G16
G17
G18
G19
G20
H1
H2
H3
H4
H5
H6
H7
H8
H9
H10
H11
H12
H13
H14
H15
H16
H17
H18
H19
H20
Signal
PC5
PC4
USB_ID
VDDUSB
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDINT
GND
GND
GND
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDEXT
VDDDDR
DA4
DA1
DA3
DA0
DQM0
PC3
PC0
PC7
PH7
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
DBA1
DBA0
DQS1
DQM1
DQ11
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 66. 400-Ball CSP_BGA Ball Assignment (Numerical by Ball Number) (Continued)
Ball No.
J1
J2
J3
J4
J5
J6
J7
J8
J9
J10
J11
J12
J13
J14
J15
J16
J17
J18
J19
J20
K1
K2
K3
K4
K5
K6
K7
K8
K9
K10
K11
K12
K13
K14
K15
K16
K17
K18
K19
K20
Signal
PF1
PC2
PC1
PG0
PC6
VDDINT
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
VDDINT
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
DQ15
DQ14
DQ13
DQ12
DQ9
PF3
PF2
PF0
PF7
PG1
VDDEXT
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
VDDDDR
VDDDDR
DQ5
DQ7
DQ10
DQ8
DQ6
Ball No.
L1
L2
L3
L4
L5
L6
L7
L8
L9
L10
L11
L12
L13
L14
L15
L16
L17
L18
L19
L20
M1
M2
M3
M4
M5
M6
M7
M8
M9
M10
M11
M12
M13
M14
M15
M16
M17
M18
M19
M20
Signal
PF5
PF4
PF8
PF6
PG2
VDDINT
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
VDDINT
CLKOUT
DQ4
DQ0
DQ2
DQ3
PF9
PF10
PF11
PF12
PE12
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
VDDEXT
PJ2
PJ11
EXT_WAKE
DQ1
DDR_VREF
Rev. E |
Ball No.
N1
N2
N3
N4
N5
N6
N7
N8
N9
N10
N11
N12
N13
N14
N15
N16
N17
N18
N19
N20
P1
P2
P3
P4
P5
P6
P7
P8
P9
P10
P11
P12
P13
P14
P15
P16
P17
P18
P19
P20
Page 98 of 102 |
March 2014
Signal
PF14
PF15
PG3
PF13
VDDEXT
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
VDDEXT
PJ7
PJ4
PJ1
PJ13
DDR_VSSR
PG4
PE11
PD0
PD1
PE13
VDDINT
VDDINT
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
GND
VDDINT
VDDEXT
PG12
PJ9
PJ6
ATAPI_PDIAG
PJ12
Ball No.
R1
R2
R3
R4
R5
R6
R7
R8
R9
R10
R11
R12
R13
R14
R15
R16
R17
R18
R19
R20
T1
T2
T3
T4
T5
T6
T7
T8
T9
T10
T11
T12
T13
T14
T15
T16
T17
T18
T19
T20
Signal
PD2
PD3
PD5
PD7
EMU
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
GND
VDDINT
VDDINT
VDDINT
GND
GND
VDDEXT
GND
PE7
PG13
PJ8
PJ0
PD4
PD6
PD10
PD12
TRST
PB2
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
VDDEXT
PE1
PE10
PJ10
PJ3
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
Table 66. 400-Ball CSP_BGA Ball Assignment (Numerical by Ball Number) (Continued)
Ball No.
U1
U2
U3
U4
U5
U6
U7
U8
U9
U10
U11
U12
U13
U14
U15
U16
U17
U18
U19
U20
Signal
PD8
PD9
PD15
PD14
TMS
PB3
PB10
GND
VDDINT
PA8
PA7
PA0
PC10
PH1
PG11
PE14
PH4
PE2
PE9
PJ5
Ball No.
V1
V2
V3
V4
V5
V6
V7
V8
V9
V10
V11
V12
V13
V14
V15
V16
V17
V18
V19
V20
Signal
PD11
PD13
TCK
TDO
TDI
GND
PB7
PB9
PB13
PA11
PA5
PA1
PC9
PE3
PG5
PG8
PH2
PH3
PE0
PE8
Ball No.
W1
W2
W3
W4
W5
W6
W7
W8
W9
W10
W11
W12
W13
W14
W15
W16
W17
W18
W19
W20
Figure 87 shows the top view of the BGA ball configuration.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20
V
A
V
B
R
C
D
G
S
S
S
E
S
S
S
F
S
G
S
S
H
S
S
J
S
S
K
S
S
S
L
R
M
G
N
P
R
T
U
V
W
Y
KEY:
VDDINT
S
SUPPLIES: VDDDDR, VDDMP, VDDUSB , VDDRTC , VDDVR
VDDEXT
R
REFERENCES: DDR_VREF , USB_VREF
GND
G
GROUNDS: GNDMP, DDR_VSSR
NC
V
VROUT
I/O SIGNALS
Figure 87. 400-Ball CSP_BGA Configuration (Top View)
Rev. E |
Page 99 of 102 |
March 2014
Signal
BMODE0
BMODE1
BMODE2
BMODE3
PB0
PB6
PB11
PB8
PA15
PA13
PA4
PA2
PG15
PC11
PC13
PG7
PE15
PH0
PE6
PE5
Ball No.
Y1
Y2
Y3
Y4
Y5
Y6
Y7
Y8
Y9
Y10
Y11
Y12
Y13
Y14
Y15
Y16
Y17
Y18
Y19
Y20
Signal
GND
PB1
PB5
PB4
PB14
PB12
PA14
PA12
PA10
PA9
PA6
PA3
PG14
PC8
PC12
PE4
PG6
PG10
PG9
GND
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS
Dimensions for the 17 mm × 17 mm CSP_BGA package in
Figure 88 are shown in millimeters.
A1 BALL
CORNER
17.20
17.00 SQ
16.80
20 18 16 14 12 10 8 6 4 2
19 17 15 13 11 9 7 5 3 1
A
C
E
G
15.20
BSC SQ
J
L
N
0.80
BSC
R
U
W
0.90
REF
TOP VIEW
1.70
1.59
1.44
B
D
F
H
K
M
P
T
V
Y
BOTTOM VIEW
DETAIL A
DETAIL A
1.36
1.26
1.16
0.33 NOM
0.28 MIN
0.50
COPLANARITY
0.12
0.45
0.40
BALL DIAMETER
SEATING
PLANE
COMPLIANT TO JEDEC STANDARDS MO-275-MMAB-1.
Figure 88. 400-Ball, 17 mm  17 mm CSP_BGA (Chip Scale Package Ball Grid Array) (BC-400-1)
SURFACE-MOUNT DESIGN
Table 67 is provided as an aid to PCB design. For industry-standard design recommendations, refer to IPC-7351, Generic
Requirements for Surface-Mount Design and Land Pattern
Standard.
Table 67. BGA Data for Use with Surface-Mount Design
Package
Package
Ball Attach Type
400-Ball CSP_BGA (Chip Scale Package Ball Grid Array) BC-400-1 Solder Mask Defined
Rev. E |
Page 100 of 102 |
March 2014
Package
Solder Mask Opening
0.40 mm Diameter
Package
Ball Pad Size
0.50 mm Diameter
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
AUTOMOTIVE PRODUCTS
The ADSP-BF542, ADSP-BF544, and the ADSP-BF549 models
are available with controlled manufacturing to support the quality and reliability requirements of automotive applications.
Note that these automotive models may have specifications that
differ from the commercial models and designers should review
the product Specifications section of this data sheet carefully.
Only the automotive grade products shown in Table 68 are
available for use in automotive applications. Contact your local
ADI account representative for specific product ordering information and to obtain the specific Automotive Reliability reports
for these models.
Table 68. Automotive Products
Product Family1, 2
ADBF542WBBCZ4xx
ADBF542WBBCZ5xx
ADBF544WBBCZ5xx
ADBF549WBBCZ5xx
ADBF549MWBBCZ5xx
Temperature Range3
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
Speed Grade (Max)
400 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
Package Description
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
Package Option
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
1
Z = RoHS compliant part.
The use of xx designates silicon revision.
3
Referenced temperature is ambient temperature.
2
ORDERING GUIDE
Model1, 2, 3, 4
ADSP-BF542BBCZ-4A
ADSP-BF542BBCZ-5A
ADSP-BF542MBBCZ-5M
ADSP-BF542KBCZ-6A
ADSP-BF544BBCZ-4A
ADSP-BF544BBCZ-5A
ADSP-BF544MBBCZ-5M
ADSP-BF547BBCZ-5A
ADSP-BF547MBBCZ-5M
ADSP-BF547KBCZ-6A
ADSP-BF547YBC-4A
ADSP-BF547YBCZ-4A
ADSP-BF548MBBCZ-5M
ADSP-BF548BBCZ-5A
ADSP-BF548BBCZ-5AA
Temperature Range5, 6
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
0°C to +70°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
0°C to +70°C
–40°C to +105°C
–40°C to +105°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
–40°C to +85°C
Speed Grade (Max)
400 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
600 MHz
400 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
600 MHz
400 MHz
400 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
533 MHz
1
Package Description
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
400-Ball CSP_BGA
Package Option
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
BC-400-1
Each ADSP-BF54xM model contains a mobile DDR controller and does not support the use of standard DDR memory.
Z = RoHS compliant part.
3
The ADSP-BF549 is available for automotive use only. Please contact your local ADI product representative or authorized distributor for specific automotive product ordering
information.
4
AA = low Alpha Package.
5
Referenced temperature is ambient temperature.
6
Temperature range –40°C to +105°C is classified as extended temperature range.
2
Rev. E |
Page 101 of 102 |
March 2014
ADSP-BF542/ADSP-BF544/ADSP-BF547/ADSP-BF548/ADSP-BF549
©2014 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
D06512-0-3/14(E)
Rev. E |
Page 102 of 102 |
March 2014
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