Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Revision: V1.00 Date: ����������������� November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Table of Contents Features.................................................................................................................. 7 MCU CPU Features....................................................................................................................... 7 MCU Peripheral Features.............................................................................................................. 8 Two Line Power Line Data Transceiver Features.......................................................................... 8 General Description............................................................................................... 9 Selection Table..................................................................................................... 10 Block Diagram...................................................................................................... 10 Pin Assignment.....................................................................................................11 Pin Description.....................................................................................................11 Unbonded MCU Pins................................................................................................................... 13 Internally Connected Pins............................................................................................................ 14 Absolute Maximum Ratings................................................................................ 14 D.C. Characteristics............................................................................................. 15 A.C. Characteristics............................................................................................. 17 OP Amplifier Electrical Characteristics............................................................. 18 Comparator Electrical Characteristics.............................................................. 18 LDO 2.4V............................................................................................................... 19 LDO 3.3V............................................................................................................... 19 Two Line Type Power Line Data Transceiver Characteristics ........................ 19 Power-on Reset Characteristics......................................................................... 20 System Architecture............................................................................................ 21 Clocking and Pipelining................................................................................................................ 21 Program Counter.......................................................................................................................... 22 Stack............................................................................................................................................ 23 Arithmetic and Logic Unit – ALU.................................................................................................. 23 Flash Program Memory....................................................................................... 24 Structure....................................................................................................................................... 24 Special Vectors............................................................................................................................ 24 Look-up Table............................................................................................................................... 25 Table Program Example............................................................................................................... 26 In Circuit Programming................................................................................................................ 27 RAM Data Memory............................................................................................... 28 Structure....................................................................................................................................... 29 Special Function Registers................................................................................. 29 Indirect Addressing Registers – IAR0, IAR1................................................................................ 30 Memory Pointers – MP0, MP1..................................................................................................... 30 Bank Pointer – BP........................................................................................................................ 31 Accumulator – ACC...................................................................................................................... 31 Program Counter Low Register – PCL......................................................................................... 32 Rev. 1.00 2 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Look-up Table Registers – TBLP, TBHP, TBLH............................................................................ 32 Status Register – STATUS........................................................................................................... 32 EEPROM Data Memory........................................................................................ 34 EEPROM Data Memory Structure............................................................................................... 34 EEPROM Registers..................................................................................................................... 34 Reading Data from the EEPROM................................................................................................ 36 Writing Data to the EEPROM....................................................................................................... 36 Write Protection............................................................................................................................ 36 EEPROM Interrupt....................................................................................................................... 36 Programming Considerations....................................................................................................... 37 Programming Examples............................................................................................................... 37 Oscillators............................................................................................................ 38 Oscillator Overview...................................................................................................................... 38 System Clock Configurations....................................................................................................... 38 External Crystal/Ceramic Oscillator – HXT.................................................................................. 39 External Oscillator – EC............................................................................................................... 40 Internal RC Oscillator – HIRC...................................................................................................... 40 External 32.768kHz Crystal Oscillator – LXT............................................................................... 40 LXT Oscillator Low Power Function............................................................................................. 41 Internal 32kHz Oscillator – LIRC.................................................................................................. 42 Supplementary Oscillators........................................................................................................... 42 Operating Modes and System Clocks............................................................... 42 System Clocks............................................................................................................................. 42 System Operation Modes............................................................................................................. 43 Control Register........................................................................................................................... 45 Fast Wake-up............................................................................................................................... 46 Operating Mode Switching........................................................................................................... 47 Standby Current Considerations.................................................................................................. 52 Wake-up....................................................................................................................................... 53 Programming Considerations....................................................................................................... 53 Watchdog Timer................................................................................................... 54 Watchdog Timer Clock Source..................................................................................................... 54 Watchdog Timer Control Register................................................................................................ 54 Watchdog Timer Operation.......................................................................................................... 55 Reset and Initialisation........................................................................................ 56 Reset Functions........................................................................................................................... 56 Reset Initial Conditions................................................................................................................ 59 Input/Output Ports............................................................................................... 62 Pull-high Resistors....................................................................................................................... 62 Port A Wake-up............................................................................................................................ 62 I/O Port Control Registers............................................................................................................ 62 I/O Pin Structures......................................................................................................................... 64 Programming Considerations....................................................................................................... 64 Rev. 1.00 3 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Timer/Event Counters......................................................................................... 66 Configuring the Timer/Event Counter Input Clock Source........................................................... 66 Timer Registers – TMR0, TMR1L, TMR1H.................................................................................. 66 Timer Control Registers – TMR0C, TMR1C................................................................................. 68 Configuring the Timer Mode......................................................................................................... 68 Configuring the Event Counter Mode........................................................................................... 69 Configuring the Pulse Width Measurement Mode........................................................................ 69 Programmable Frequency Divider – PFD.................................................................................... 71 Prescaler...................................................................................................................................... 71 I/O Interfacing............................................................................................................................... 74 Timer/Event Counter Pins Internal Filter...................................................................................... 74 Programming Considerations....................................................................................................... 74 Timer Program Example.............................................................................................................. 75 Pulse Width Modulator........................................................................................ 76 PWM Operation............................................................................................................................ 76 6+2 PWM Mode........................................................................................................................... 77 7+1 PWM Mode........................................................................................................................... 78 PWM Output Control.................................................................................................................... 79 Analog to Digital Converter................................................................................ 80 A/D Overview............................................................................................................................... 80 A/D Converter Register Description............................................................................................. 81 A/D Converter Data Registers – ADRL, ADRH............................................................................ 81 A/D Converter Control Registers – ADCR, ACSR, ADPCR......................................................... 81 A/D Operation.............................................................................................................................. 85 A/D Input Pins.............................................................................................................................. 86 Summary of A/D Conversion Steps.............................................................................................. 87 Programming Considerations....................................................................................................... 88 A/D Transfer Function.................................................................................................................. 88 A/D Programming Example.......................................................................................................... 89 Serial Interface Module – SIM............................................................................. 91 SPI Interface................................................................................................................................ 91 I2C Interface................................................................................................................................. 98 Peripheral Clock Output.................................................................................... 106 Peripheral Clock Operation........................................................................................................ 106 SCOM Function for LCD.................................................................................... 107 LCD Operation........................................................................................................................... 107 LCD Bias Control....................................................................................................................... 107 LDO Function............................................................................................................................. 109 Operational Amplifiers.......................................................................................111 Operational Amplifier Registers...................................................................................................111 Operational Amplifier Operation..................................................................................................113 Operational Amplifier Functions..................................................................................................114 Rev. 1.00 4 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Comparators.......................................................................................................118 Comparator Operation................................................................................................................118 Comparator Registers.................................................................................................................118 Comparator Functions................................................................................................................ 120 Interrupts............................................................................................................ 123 Interrupt Register....................................................................................................................... 123 Interrupt Operation..................................................................................................................... 123 Interrupt Priority.......................................................................................................................... 124 External Interrupt........................................................................................................................ 127 External Peripheral Interrupt...................................................................................................... 129 Timer/Event Counter Interrupt.................................................................................................... 129 SIM Interface Interrupt............................................................................................................... 130 Multi-function Interrupt............................................................................................................... 130 A/D Interrupt............................................................................................................................... 130 Time Base Interrupt.................................................................................................................... 131 Comparator Interrupt.................................................................................................................. 132 EEPROM Interrupt..................................................................................................................... 132 LVD Interrupt.............................................................................................................................. 132 Interrupt Wake-up Function........................................................................................................ 132 Programming Considerations..................................................................................................... 133 Buzzer................................................................................................................. 133 Low Voltage Detector – LVD............................................................................. 135 LVD Register.............................................................................................................................. 135 LVD Operation............................................................................................................................ 136 Voice Output....................................................................................................... 137 Voice Control.............................................................................................................................. 137 Audio Output and Volume Control – DAL, DAH, DACTRL ........................................................ 137 Power Line Data Transceiver ........................................................................... 138 Shared Power Line..................................................................................................................... 139 Data Transmission (From master controller to slave device)..................................................... 139 Data Reception (From slave device to master controller).......................................................... 140 Current Modulator ..................................................................................................................... 140 Application Considerations......................................................................................................... 140 Power Line Data Transceiver Application Circuits...................................................................... 141 Configuration Options....................................................................................... 142 Application Circuits........................................................................................... 143 Instruction Set.................................................................................................... 144 Introduction................................................................................................................................ 144 Instruction Timing....................................................................................................................... 144 Moving and Transferring Data.................................................................................................... 144 Arithmetic Operations................................................................................................................. 144 Logical and Rotate Operation.................................................................................................... 145 Branches and Control Transfer.................................................................................................. 145 Rev. 1.00 5 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit Operations............................................................................................................................ 145 Table Read Operations.............................................................................................................. 145 Other Operations........................................................................................................................ 145 Instruction Set Summary.................................................................................. 146 Table Conventions...................................................................................................................... 146 Instruction Definition......................................................................................... 148 Package Information......................................................................................... 157 20-pin SOP (300mil) Outline Dimensions.................................................................................. 158 Rev. 1.00 6 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Features MCU CPU Features • Operating voltage ♦♦ fSYS= 32.768kHz: 2.2V~5.5V ♦♦ fSYS= 910kHz: 2.2V~5.5V ♦♦ fSYS= 2MHz: 2.2V~5.5V ♦♦ fSYS= 4MHz: 2.2V~5.5V ♦♦ fSYS= 8MHz: 3.3V~5.5V • TinyPowerTM technology for low power operation • Power down and wake-up functions to reduce power consumption • Oscillator types ♦♦ External Crystal – HXT ♦♦ External 32.768kHz Crystal – LXT ♦♦ Internal RC – HIRC ♦♦ Internal 32kHz RC – LIRC ♦♦ External Clock – EC • Multi-mode operation: NORMAL, SLOW, IDLE and SLEEP • Fully integrated internal 910kHz, 2MHz, 4MHz and 8MHz oscillator require no external components • All instructions executed in one or two machine cycles • Table read instructions • 61 or 63 powerful instructions • 6-level subroutine nesting • Bit manipulation instruction Rev. 1.00 7 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver MCU Peripheral Features • Flash Program Memory: 2K×15 ~ 4K×16 • RAM Data Memory: 128×8 ~ 192×8 • True EEPROM Data Memory: 64×8 • Up to 13 bidirectional I/O lines • Watchdog Timer function • Single pin-shared external interrupt • Software controlled 4-SCOM lines LCD COM driver with 1/2 bias • Single 8-bit programmable Timer/Event Counter with overflow interrupt function • Single 16-bit programmable Timer/Event Counter with overflow interrupt function • Dual Time-Base functions for generation of fixed time interrupt signals • Serial Interfaces Module – SPI or I2C • Dual Comparators • Dual Operational Amplifiers • Operational Amplifier output to internal two channel 12-bit ADC • 3-channel 12-bit ADC • 2-channel 8-bit PWM • 12-bit Audio DAC output • PFD/Buzzer for audio frequency generation • Internal 2.4V/3.3V LDO • Low voltage reset function • Low voltage detect function • Package types: 20-pin SOP • Flash program memory can be re-programmed up to 100,000 times • Flash program memory data retention > 10 years • True EEPROM data memory can be re-programmed up to 1,000,000 times • True EEPROM data memory data retention > 10 years Two Line Power Line Data Transceiver Features • Complete Data Transmission on Power Line functions • High Maximum Input Voltage: 42V • Integrated Low Dropout Voltage Regulator • Integrated Voltage Detector for Power Supply Monitoring • Integrated Comparator • Open drain NMOS driver for flexible interfacing • Power and Reset Protection Features • Minimal external component requirements Rev. 1.00 8 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver General Description These devices are Flash Memory TinyPowerTM A/D type 8-bit high performance RISC architecture microcontrollers. Offering users the convenience of Flash Memory multi-programming features, the devices also include wide range of functions and features. Other memory includes an area of RAM Data Memory as well as an area of true EEPROM memory for storage of non-volatile data such as serial numbers, calibration data etc. Analog features include an integrated multi-channel Analog to Digital Converter, dual Operational Amplifiers, dual Comparators, an internal 2.4V or 3.3V low dropout voltage regulator and a 12-bit DAC for voice output applications Communication with the outside world is catered for with a fully integrated SPI or I2C interface, two popular interfaces which provide designers with a means of easy communication with external peripheral hardware. Two Pulse Width Modulators are also included. Protective features such as an internal Watchdog Timer, Low Voltage Reset and Low Voltage Detector coupled with excellent noise immunity and ESD protection ensure that reliable operation is maintained in hostile electrical environments. This series of devices also contain a two line type power line data transceiver. In systems where a master controller controls a number of individual interconnected subsystems such as found in smoke detector systems, water metering systems, solar energy system, etc., the cost of the lengthy interconnecting cabling can be a major factor. By sending data along the power supply lines, the interconnecting cables can be reduced to a simple two line type, thus greatly reducing both cable and installation costs. With the addition of a few external components, this power line data transceiver device contains all the internal components required to provide users with a system for power line data transmission and reception. Data is modulated onto the power line by the simple reduction of the power line voltage for a specific period of time. Power supply voltage changes can be initiated by the master controller for data reception or initiated by the power line data transceiver for data transmission. An internal voltage regulator with a Soft-start and short circuit protection functions ensures that a constant voltage power supply is provided to the interconnected subsystem units while an internal voltage detector monitors the power line voltage level. An internal comparator is used to translate the differential signal into a logic signal for the MCU. A full choice of internal, external, low and high speed oscillator functions are provided including fully integrated system oscillators which require no external components for their implementation. The unique Holtek TinyPower TM technology also gives the devices extremely low current consumption characteristics, an extremely important consideration in the present trend for low power battery powered applications. The usual Holtek MCU features such as power down and wake-up functions, oscillator options, programmable frequency divider, etc. combine to ensure user applications require a minimum of external components. The inclusion of flexible I/O programming features, Time-Base functions along with many other features ensure that the devices will find excellent use in applications such as networked smoke detectors, electronic metering, environmental monitoring, handheld instruments, household appliances, electronically controlled tools, motor driving, home security systems and many others. Rev. 1.00 9 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Selection Table Part No. Program Memory Data Memory Data EEPROM I/O External Interrupt A/D Timer Modules HT45FH23A 2K×15 128×8 64×8 13 1 12-bit×3 8-bit×1 16-bit×1 HT45FH24A 4K×16 192×8 64×8 13 1 12-bit×3 8-bit×1 16-bit×1 Part No. Time Base SIM Comp. Op. Amp. Data Transceiver Stack Package HT45FH23A 2 √ √ √ √ 6 20SOP HT45FH24A 2 √ √ √ √ 6 20SOP Block Diagram The following block diagram illustrates the dual-chip structure of the devices, where an individual MCU and a two-line type power line data transceiver chips are combined into a single package. VCC VIN VDD IO Ports OPA pins (3.3V) OSC pins PB0 RX TRX PB5 TX IS VSS VSS VSS VSS EEPROM Data Me�o�y Flash P�og�a� Me�o�y Low Voltage Detect RAM Data Me�o�y CN TRX IS Inte�nal HIRC/LIRC Oscillato�s Watchdog Ti�e� Flash/EEPROM P�og�a��ing Ci�cuit�y VDD (3.3V) CN Power Line Data Transceiver HT45F23A HT45F24A A/D pins VO VO Inte��upt Cont�olle� 8-�it RISC MCU Co�e Low Voltage Reset Exte�nal HXT/LXT Oscillato�s Reset Ci�cuit Ti�e Base LDO 1�-�it A/D Conve�te� D/A Conve�te� PWM Gene�ato� Rev. 1.00 PFD/ Buzze� D�ive� LCD D�ive� Ti�e�s SIM (SPI/I�C) I/O Co�pa�ato� / Op. A�p. Powe� Line Data T�ansceive� 10 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Pin Assignment PA1/C1OUT/TC0 1 20 VDD PA0/CNP/SCOM0 PC3/XT2 2 19 VSS 3 18 PA2/A1P/C2OUT PC2/XT1 PC1/AN5/OSC1 4 17 PA3/A1N/INT0 5 16 PA4/A1E/TC1 PC0/AN4/OSC2 6 15 PA5/A2P/PFD PB6/AN3/RES 7 14 PA6/A2N/BZ VSS TRX 8 9 13 12 PA7/A2E/BZ CN 10 11 IS VCC HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A 20 SOP-A Note: 1. The HT45FH23A I/O lines, PB0/SDO/INT1, PB5/AN2/PINT and VDD are internally connected to the two line type power line data inputs, TX and VO respectively. PB0~PB5, PC4~PC6 and their pin-shared function pins are not connected to external pins. 2. The HT45FH24A I/O lines, PB0/SDO/INT1, PB5/AN2/PINT and VDD are internally connected to the two line type power line data transceiver inputs, TX and VO respectively. PB0~PB5, PB7, PC4~PC7, PD0~PD1 and their pin-shared function pins are not connected to the external pins. 3. Pin 8 and pin 19 must be connected together in the application PCB. 4. As the INT1 and AN0~AN2 pins for the HT45FH23A and the INT1, AN0~AN2 and AN6~AN7 pins for the HT45FH24A are not connected to their external pin assignments, only one external interrupt and three external A/D channels are available for use Pin Description With the exception of the power pins and some relevant power line data transceiver pins, all pins on these devices can be referenced by their Port name, e.g. PA0, PA1 etc, which refer to the digital I/O function of the pins. However these Port pins are also shared with other function such as the Analog to Digital Converter, Timer Module pins etc. The function of each pin is listed in the following table, however the details behind how each pin is configured is contained in other sections of the datasheet. Pad Name PA0/CNP/ SCOM0 PA1/C1OUT/ TC0 PA2/A1P/ C2OUT PA3/A1N/INT0 Function OPT I/T PA0 PAPU PAWU ST CNP Description CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up — Comparator input SCOM0 LCDC — SCOM Software controlled 1/2 bias LCD COM PA1 PAPU PAWU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up C1OUT CMP1C1 — CMPO Comparator 1 output TC0 — ST PA2 PAPU PAWU ST A1P OPA1C1 OPAI — Timer 0 external clock input CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up — Operational amplifier 1 non-inverting input C2OUT CMP2C1 — CMPO Comparator 2 output PA3 PAPU PAWU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up A1N INT0 Rev. 1.00 CMP1C1 CMPI O/T OPA1C1 OPAI — ST — Operational amplifier 1 inverting input — External Interrupt 0 input 11 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Pad Name PA4/A1E/TC1 PA5/A2P/PFD PA6/A2N/BZ PA7/A2E/BZ PB6/AN3/RES PC0/AN4/OSC2 PC1/AN5/OSC1 PC2/XT1 PC3/XT2 Function OPT I/T PA4 PAPU PAWU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up A1E OPA1C1 — OPAO Operational amplifier 1 output TC1 — ST PA5 PAPU PAWU ST A2P OPA2C1 OPAI O/T — Description Timer 1 external clock input CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up — Operational amplifier 2 non-inverting input PFD MISC — CMOS PFD output PA6 PAPU PAWU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up A2N OPA2C1 OPAI — Operational amplifier 2 inverting input BZ BPCTL — CMOS Buzzer output PA7 PAPU PAWU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and wake-up A2E OPA2C1 — OPAO Operational amplifier 2 output BZ BPCTL — CMOS Complementary buzzer output PB6 PBPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. AN3 ADCR AN — A/D Converter analog input RES CO ST — External reset pin PC0 PCPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. AN4 ADCR AN — OSC2 CO — HXT PC1 PCPU ST A/D Converter analog input HXT oscillator pin CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. AN5 ADCR AN — A/D Converter analog input OSC1 CO HXT — HXT oscillator pin PC2 PCPU ST XT1 CO LXT PC3 PCPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. — LXT oscillator pin CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. XT2 CO — LXT CN CN — AN — IS IS — — TRX — — — Transceiver signal detect/modulate VSS VSS — PWR — Power line data transceiver negative power supply, ground. VCC VCC — PWR — Power line data transceiver LDO Input VDD VDD — PWR — Power line data transceiver LDO output, MCU positive power supply VSS VSS — PWR — Negative power supply, ground. TRX LXT oscillator pin Comparator negative input NMOS Source terminal of constant current NMOS driver Legend: I/T: Input type; O/T: Output type OPT: Optional by configuration option (CO) or register option PWR: Power; CO: Configuration option ST: Schmitt Trigger input; AN: Analog input CMPI: Comparator input; OPAI: Operational Amplifier input CMOS: CMOS output;NMOS: NMOS output CMPO: Comparator output; OPAO: Operational Amplifier output SCOM: Software controlled LCD COM HXT: High frequency crystal oscillator pins LXT: Low frequency crystal oscillator pins Note: The VSS pin should be externally connected to the VSS pin for normal operation. Rev. 1.00 12 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Unbonded MCU Pins Examination of the relevant MCU datasheet will reveal that not all of the MCU I/O port lines are bonded out to external pins. As a result special attention regarding initialisation procedures should be paid to these port lines. Users should ensure that these pins are setup in input states with pull high resistors or in output states with either a high or low levels to avoid additional power consumption resulting from floating input pins. Pin Name Function OPT I/T PB0 PBPU MISC ST General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and output CMOS NMOS structure. NMOS Internally connected to the Power Line Data Transceiver line, RX. SDO — — CMOS SPI data output INT1 — ST PB1 PBPU MISC ST PB0/SDO/INT1 PB1/SDI/SDA PB2/SCK/SCL PB3/AN0/SCS PB4/AN1/AUD/ PCK PB5/AN2/PINT PB7* PC4/VREF/ VCAP/SCOM1 PC5/PWM0/ C1N/SCOM2 PC6/PWM1/ C2P/SCOM3 PC7* PD0/AN6* Rev. 1.00 O/T — Description External interrupt 1 input pin CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and output NMOS NMOS structure. SDI — ST SDA — ST NMOS I2C data — PB2 PBPU MISC ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and output NMOS NMOS structure. SCK — ST SCL — ST NMOS I2C clock PB3 PBPU MISC ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up and output NMOS NMOS structure. AN0 ADCR AN — A/D channel 0 SCS — ST — SPI slave select — SPI data input SPI serial clock PB4 PBPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up AN1 ADCR AN CMOS A/D channel 1 AUD DACTRL — PCK — — CMOS Peripheral clock output PB5 PBPU ST General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up CMOS Internally connected to the Power Line Data Transceiver line, TX. DAO D/A output pin AN2 ADCR AN — A/D channel 2 PINT — ST — Peripheral interrupt PB7 PBPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up PC4 PCPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. VREF ACSR AN — ADC reference input VCAP LDOC — — LDO output capacitor pin. Connect a 0.1µF capacitor. SCOM1 LCDC — SCOM Software controlled 1/2 bias LCD COM PC5 PCPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. PWM0 BPCTL — CMOS PWM0 output pin C1N CMP1C1 CMPI — Comparator 1 inverting input pin SCOM2 LCDC — SCOM Software controlled 1/2 bias LCD COM PC6 PCPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. BPCTL — CMOS PWM1 output pin PWM1 C2P CMP2C1 CMPI — Comparator 2 non-inverting input pin SCOM3 LCDC — SCOM Software controlled 1/2 bias LCD COM PC7 PCPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. PD0 PDPU ST CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. AN6 ADCR AN — A/D channel 6 13 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Pin Name PD1/AN7* Function OPT I/T PD1 PDPU ST AN7 ADCR AN O/T Description CMOS General purpose I/O. Register enabled pull-up. — A/D channel 7 Legend: I/T: Input type; O/T: Output type OPT: Optional by configuration option (CO) or register option ST: Schmitt Trigger input; AN: Analog input; DAO: D/A output CMPI: Comparator input; CMOS: CMOS output NMOS: NMOS output SCOM: Software controlled LCD COM *: PB7, PC7, PD0/AN6 and PD1/AN7 are only existed in the HT45FH24A. Internally Connected Pins Among the pins mentioned in the tables above several pins are not connected to external package pins. These pins are interconnection pins between the MCU and the power line data transceiver chip and are listed in the following table. The description is provided from the power line data transceiver chip standpoint. Power Line Data Transceiver Pin Name Type RX O Comparator output, transmitter signal detect output Internally connected to the MCU I/O line, PB0. TX I Input pin for constant current modulate Internally connected to the MCU I/O line, PB5. VO PWR LDO output Connected to MCU positive power supply, VDD Description Absolute Maximum Ratings Supply Voltage.................................................................................................VSS−0.3V to VSS+6.0V Input Voltage...................................................................................................VSS−0.3V to VDD+0.3V Storage Temperature.....................................................................................................-50˚C to 125˚C Operating Temperature...................................................................................................-40˚C to 85˚C IOL Total.................................................................................................................................... 100mA IOH Total...................................................................................................................................-100mA Total Power Dissipation.......................................................................................................... 500mW Note: These are stress ratings only. Stresses exceeding the range specified under "Absolute Maximum Ratings" may cause substantial damage to these devices. Functional operation of these devices at other conditions beyond those listed in the specification is not implied and prolonged exposure to extreme conditions may affect devices reliability. Rev. 1.00 14 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver D.C. Characteristics Ta=25˚C Symbol VDD Parameter Test Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit fSYS=910kHz, (HXT/HIRC) 2.2 — 5.5 V fSYS=2MHz, (HXT/HIRC) 2.2 — 5.5 V fSYS=4MHz, (HXT/HIRC/EC) 2.2 — 5.5 V fSYS=8MHz (HXT/HIRC/EC) 3.3 — 5.5 V No load, fSYS=fM=455kHz, ADC off, LVR off, Comparator off, OPAs off — 70 110 µA Operating Current (HXT) No load, fSYS=fM= 455kHz, ADC off, LVR on, Comparator on, OPAs off — 100 150 µA Operating Current (HIRC) No load, fM=910kHz, fSYS=fSLOW=455kHz, ADC off, LVR off, Comparator off, OPAs off — 90 135 µA Operating Current (HIRC) No load, fM=910kHz, fSYS=fSLOW=455kHz, ADC off, LVR on, Comparator on, OPAs off — 120 180 µA Operating Current (HIRC) No load, fSYS=fM=910kHz, ADC off, LVR off, Comparator off, OPAs off — 110 170 µA Operating Current (HIRC) No load, fSYS=fM=910kHz, ADC off, LVR on, Comparator on, OPAs off — 160 240 µA Operating Current (HXT) No load, fSYS=fM=1MHz, ADC off, LVR off, Comparator off, OPAs off — 120 180 µA Operating Current (HXT) No load, fSYS=fM=1MHz, ADC off, LVR on, Comparator on, OPAs off — 170 260 µA Operating Current (HXT, HIRC) No load, fSYS=fM=2MHz, ADC off, LVR off, Comparator off, OPAs off — 170 260 µA No load, fSYS=fM=2MHz, ADC off, LVR on, Comparator on, OPAs off — 200 300 µA No load, fSYS=fM=4MHz, ADC off — 420 630 µA — 700 1000 µA No load, fSYS=fM=4MHz, ADC off — 330 500 µA — 550 820 µA — 1.5 3.0 mA No load, fSYS=fSLOW=1MHz, ADC off — 200 300 µA — 400 600 µA No load, fSYS=fSLOW=2MHz, ADC off — 250 375 µA — 560 840 µA No load, fSYS=fSLOW=2MHz, ADC off — 300 450 µA — 680 1020 µA Operating Voltage VDD — Operating Current (HXT) IDD1 3.3V IDD2 3.3V IDD3 3.3V IDD4 3.3V IDD5 3.3V Operating Current (HXT, HIRC) IDD6 IDD7 Operating Current (HXT, HIRC) Operating Current (EC) 3V 5V 3V 5V IDD8 Operating Current (HXT, HIRC) 5V IDD9 Operating Current (Slow Mode, fM=4MHz) (HXT, HIRC) 3V IDD10 Operating Current (Slow Mode, fM=4MHz) (HXT, HIRC) 3V IDD11 Operating Current (Slow Mode, fM=8MHz) (HXT, HIRC) 3V Rev. 1.00 5V 5V 5V Conditions No load, fSYS=fM=8MHz, ADC off 15 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions No load, fSYS=fSLOW=4MHz, ADC off IDD12 Operating Current (Slow Mode, fM=8MHz) (HXT, HIRC) 3V IDD13 Operating Current (fSYS=LXT note 1 or LIRC) 3V ISTB1 Standby Current (Sleep) (fSYS, fSUB, fS, fWDT=off) 3V ISTB2 Standby Current (Sleep) (fSYS Off; fS On; fWDT=fSUB=LXT note 1 or LIRC) 3V ISTB3 Standby Current (Idle) (fSYS Off; fWDT Off; fS=fSUB=LXTnote 1 or LIRC) 3V ISTB4 Standby Current (Idle) (fSYS On, fSYS=fM=4MHz; fWDT Off; fS=fSUB=LXT note 1 or LIRC) 3V VIL1 Input Low Voltage for I/O, TCn and INTn — VIH1 Input High Voltage for I/O, TCn and INTn — VIL2 Input Low Voltage (RES) VIH2 Min. Typ. Max. Unit — 450 800 µA — 1000 1500 µA — 10 20 µA — 20 35 µA — 0.1 1.0 µA — 0.2 2.0 µA — 1.5 3.0 µA — 2.5 5.0 µA No load, system HALT, WDT off — 4 6 µA — 6 9 µA No load, system HALT, WDT off, SPI or I2C on, PCK on, fPCK=fSYS/8 — 260 350 µA — 350 660 µA — 0 — 0.3VDD V — 0.7VDD — VDD V — — 0 — 0.4VDD V Input High Voltage (RES) — — 0.9VDD — VDD V VIL3 Input Low Voltage (PB1~PB3) 5V — — — 1 V VIH3 Input High Voltage (PB1~PB3) 5V — 2 — — V +5% V +5% V 5V 5V 5V 5V 5V 5V VLVR1 VLVR2 VLVR3 No load, WDT off, ADC off No load, system HALT, WDT off No load, system HALT, WDT on VLVR=2.10V Low Voltage Reset — 2.10 VLVR=2.55V -5% VLVR=3.15V 2.55 3.15 VLVR4 VLVR=4.20V 4.20 VLVD1 LVDEN=1, VLVD=2.0V 2.0 VLVD2 LVDEN=1, VLVD=2.2V 2.2 VLVD3 LVDEN=1, VLVD=2.4V 2.4 VLVD4 LVDEN=1, VLVD=2.7V VLVD5 Low Voltage Detector Voltage — LVDEN=1, VLVD=3.0V -5% 2.7 3.0 VLVD6 LVDEN=1, VLVD=3.3V 3.3 VLVD7 LVDEN=1, VLVD=3.6V 3.6 VLVD8 LVDEN=1, VLVD=4.4V IOL I/O Port Sink Current IOH I/O Port Source Current RPH Pull-high Resistance AVDD 3V 5V 3V 5V VOL=0.1VDD VOH=0.9VDD 4.4 6 12 — mA 10 25 — mA -2 -4 — mA -5 -8 — mA 3V — 40 60 80 kΩ 5V — 10 30 50 kΩ A/D Converter Operating Voltage — — 2.7 — 5.5 V VAD A/D Input Voltage — — 0 — VREF V VREF A/D Input Reference Voltage Range — AVDD=5V 2 — VDD V VREF=VDD, tAD=1µs — ±1 ±2 LSB VREF=VDD, tAD=1µs — ±2 ±4 LSB DNL ADC Differential Non-Linearity INL ADC Integral Non-Linearity IADC Additional Power Consumption if A/D Converter is Used Rev. 1.00 3V 5V 3V 5V 3V — — 0.5 1.0 mA 5V — — 1.5 3.0 mA 16 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Symbol Test Conditions Parameter VDD Conditions — — Min. Typ. Max. Unit -3% 1.25 +3% V — 10 15 µA — 20 30 µA VBG Bandgap Reference with Buffer voltage ILVR DC current when LVR or LVD turn on 3V VDD/2 Voltage for LCD COM 5V No load 0.475 0.500 0.525 VDD VLDO/2 Voltage for LCD COM 5V No load 0.475 0.500 0.525 VLDO VSCOM IOUT — 5V Output Current 5V ISEL=0, LCDBUF=0 — 10 — ISEL=1, LCDBUF=0 — 25 — µA µA ISEL=0, LCDBUF=1 — 2 — mA ISEL=1, LCDBUF=1 — 2 — mA Note: 1. tSYS= 1/fSYS; tSUB = 1/fSUB 2. Detailed showing please refer LDO section. A.C. Characteristics Ta=25˚C Symbol fSYS1 fSYS2 fSYS3 fSYS4 fSYS5 Parameter System Clock (HXT, HIRC) 8MHz HIRC 4MHz HIRC 2MHz HIRC 910kHz HIRC Test Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit 2.2V~5.5V 400 — 4000 kHz 3.3V~5.5V 400 — 8000 kHz 3.3V Ta=25˚C -2% 8 +2% MHz 3.3V Ta=-40~85˚C -5% 8 +5% MHz 2.7V~5.5V Ta=-40~85˚C VDD — Conditions -10% 8 +10% MHz 3.3V Ta=25˚C -2% 4 +2% MHz 3.3V Ta=-40~85˚C -5% 4 +5% MHz 2.7V~5.5V Ta=-40~85˚C -10% 4 +10% MHz 3.3V Ta=25˚C -2% 2 +2% MHz 3.3V Ta=-40~85˚C -5% 2 +5% MHz 2.7V~5.5V Ta=-40~85˚C -10% 2 +10% MHz -2% 0.91 +2% MHz 3.3V Ta=25˚C 3.3V Ta=-40~85˚C -5% 0.91 +5% MHz 2.7V~5.5V Ta=-40~85˚C -10% 0.91 +10% MHz fLXT System Clock (LXT) — — — 32.768 — kHz tLIRC 32kHz RC Period 3V — 28.10 31.25 34.40 µs tRES External Reset Low Pulse Width — — 1 — — µs tLVR Low Voltage width to Reset — — 60 120 240 µs tLVD Low Voltage width to Interrupt — — 60 120 240 µs tLVDS LVDO Stable Time 5V — — 100 µs tRSTD System Reset Delay Time — — — 100 — ms tSST1 System start-up timer period (W/O fast start-up) of HXT/TBC — Power up or wake-up from Sleep mode — 1024 — tSYS* note 1 tSST2 System start-up timer period of HIRC, EC — Power up or wake-up from HALT (Idle or Sleep mode) — 1 2 tSYS tSST3 System start-up timer period (With fast start-up) of HXT/TBC — wake-up from Idle mode (fSL=fTBC) — 1 2 tTBC note 2 tSST4 System start-up timer period (With fast start-up) of HXT/TBC — wake-up from Idle mode (fSL=fLIRC) — 1 2 tLIRC Rev. 1.00 LVR disable, LVD enable, VBG is ready 17 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit µs tINT Interrupt Pulse Width — — 1 — — tAD A/D Clock Period — — 0.5 — — µs tADC A/D Conversion Time Note 4 — — — 16 — tAD tON2ST A/D on to A/D Start — 2 — — µs 2.2V~5.5V Note: 1. tSYS=1/fSYS; tSUB=1/fSUB 2. tTBC is period of LXT or LIRC and it will not stop at Idle mode. 3. ADC conversion time (tAD)=n (bits ADC) + 4 (sampling time). The conversion for each bit needs one ADC clock (tAD). OP Amplifier Electrical Characteristics Ta=25˚C Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit D.C. Characteristic VDD Operating voltage — — 2.2 — 5.5 V IDD Quiescent current 5V No load, A1OEN/A2OEN fixed to 0 — 200 350 µA VOPOS Input offset voltage 5V — -5 — +5 mV IOPOS Input offset current — VDD=5V, VCM=1/2VDD, Ta=-40~85˚C — 10 — nA VCM Common Mode Voltage Range — — VSS — VDD-1.4 V PSRR Power Supply Rejection Ratio — — 58 80 — dB CMRR Common Mode Rejection Ratio — 58 80 — dB VDD=5V, VCM=0~VDD-1.4V A.C. Characteristic AOL Open Loop Gain — 60 80 — dB SR Slew Rate+, Rate — No load — — 0.1 — V/µs GBW Gain Band Width — RL=1MΩ, CL=100pF 1 2 — MHz Comparator Electrical Characteristics Ta=25˚C Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions — — Min. Typ. Max. Unit 2.2 — 5.5 V — 20 40 µA — 30 60 µA -10 — +10 mV mV VDDC Comparator Operating Voltage IDDC Comparator Operating Current VCPOS1 Comparator Input Offset Voltage 5V CxOF[4:0]=10000 VCPOS2 Comparator Input Offset Voltage 5V By calibration -4 — +4 VCM Comparator Common Mode Voltage Range — — VSS — VDD-1.4 V AOL Comparator Open Loop Gain — — 60 80 — dB tPD1 Comparator Response Time — With 2mV overdrive — — 2 µs tPD2 Comparator Response Time — With 10mV overdrive — — 1.5 µs Rev. 1.00 3V 5V 18 — November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver LDO 2.4V Ta=25˚C Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit V VDDIN Supply Voltage — — 2.7 — 5.5 VDDOUT Output Voltage — — 2.28 2.40 2.52 V IDD Current Consumption — After startup, no load — 50 70 µA IOUT Output Current 5V VCAP=1µF 200 — 1100 µA LDO 3.3V Ta=25˚C Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit V VDDIN Supply Voltage — — 3.6 — 5.5 VDDOUT Output Voltage — — 3.13 3.30 3.46 V IDD Current Consumption — After startup, no load — 50 70 µA IOUT Output Current 5V VCAP=1µF 200 — 1100 µA Note: 1.This LDO can provide stable power supply for PIR sensor with a 10µF cap. 2. The VREF pin should be connected to 10µF for ADC reference voltage and 10µF for PIR sensor. Two Line Type Power Line Data Transceiver Characteristics Ta = 25°C Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions Typ. Max. Unit VCC Operating Voltage — 7 — 42 V ICC Operating Current — VCC=42V, VDD no Load, — 20 40 μA IOFF Offline Current — VCC=42V, VDD no Load, TRX=0V — 10 20 μA VOFF TRX Offline Voltage — — — — 0.5 V VON TRX Online Voltage — — 4 — — V VT Threshold Voltage — — — VMARK-5.6 — V IMC Modulate Current VIL Input low voltage for TX pin 3.3V VIH Input high voltage for TX pin 3.3V IOL Sink current for RX pin 3.3V VOL=0.1VDD IOH Source current for RX pin 3.3V VOH=0.9VDD RPH Pull-high Resistance for TX Rev. 1.00 — Min. — RS=100Ω — 15 — mA — RS=47Ω — 32 — mA — 0 — 0.2VDD V — 0.8VDD — VDD V 4 8 — mA — — 19 -2 -4 — mA -30% 50 30% kΩ November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Symbol Parameter Test Conditions VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit LDO VOUT Output Voltage 3.3V VCC=7V, ILOAD=10mA 3.2 3.3 3.4 V VCC=10V, ΔVOUT=-3% 60 — — mA VCC=7V, ΔVOUT=-3% 30 — — mA 7V ≤ VIN ≤ 42V, ILOAD=1mA — — 0.2 %/V 3.3V Ta=-40˚C ~ 85˚C, VCC=7V, ILOAD=10mA — ±0.5 ±1 mV/˚C — VCC=7V, ILOAD=10mA — — 40 mV VCC=7V, ILOAD=1mA, 3.3V VOUT=3.3V ± 3% — — 10 ms 0.8 — — mA IOUT Output Current — ΔVLINE Line Regulation — TC Temperature Coefficient ΔVOUT_RIPPLE Output Voltage Ripple tSTART LDO Startup Time IOL Sink current for VDD — VLVD Low voltage detection voltage — — 5.7 6.0 6.3 V VHYS Hysteresis Voltage — — — 0.5 — V TC Temperature coefficient (ΔVLVD/ΔTa) — — ±0.9 — mV/˚C AOL Open loop gain — — 60 80 — dB VHYS Hysteresis — — — 0.15 — V tRP Response time — — — — 5 μs — — — — 5 μs VCC=5V, VOL=0.5V LVD Ta=-40˚C ~ 85˚C Comparator Constant Current Modulator tRP Response Time Power-on Reset Characteristics Ta=25˚C Symbol Test Conditions Parameter VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit VPOR VDD Start Voltage to Ensure Power-on Reset — — — — 100 mV RRVDD VDD raising rate to Ensure Power-on Reset — — 0.035 — — V/ms tPOR Minimum Time for VDD Stays at VPOR to Ensure Power-on Reset — — 1 — — ms Rev. 1.00 20 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver System Architecture A key factor in the high-performance features of the Holtek range of microcontrollers is attributed to the internal system architecture. The devices take advantage of the usual features found within RISC microcontrollers providing increased speed of operation and enhanced performance. The pipelining scheme is implemented in such a way that instruction fetching and instruction execution are overlapped, hence instructions are effectively executed in one cycle, with the exception of branch or call instructions. An 8-bit wide ALU is used in practically all operations of the instruction set. It carries out arithmetic operations, logic operations, rotation, increment, decrement, branch decisions, etc. The internal data path is simplified by moving data through the Accumulator and the ALU. Certain internal registers are implemented in the Data Memory and can be directly or indirectly addressed. The simple addressing methods of these registers along with additional architectural features ensure that a minimum of external components is required to provide a functional I/O and A/D control system with maximum reliability and flexibility. This makes the devices suitable for low-cost, high-volume production for controller applications. Clocking and Pipelining The main system clock, derived from either a Crystal/ Resonator or RC oscillator is subdivided into four internally generated non-overlapping clocks, T1~T4. The Program Counter is incremented at the beginning of the T1 clock during which time a new instruction is fetched. The remaining T2~T4 clocks carry out the decoding and execution functions. In this way, one T1~T4 clock cycle forms one instruction cycle. Although the fetching and execution of instructions takes place in consecutive instruction cycles, the pipelining structure of the microcontroller ensures that instructions are effectively executed in one instruction cycle. The exception to this are instructions where the contents of the Program Counter are changed, such as subroutine calls or jumps, in which case the instruction will take one more instruction cycle to execute. System Clocking and Pipelining Rev. 1.00 21 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver For instructions involving branches, such as jump or call instructions, two instruction cycles are required to complete instruction execution. An extra cycle is required as the program takes one cycle to first obtain the actual jump or call address and then another cycle to actually execute the branch. The requirement for this extra cycle should be taken into account by programmers in timing sensitive applications. Instruction Fetching Program Counter During program execution, the Program Counter is used to keep track of the address of the next instruction to be executed. It is automatically incremented by one each time an instruction is executed except for instructions, such as “JMP” or “CALL” that demand a jump to a nonconsecutive Program Memory address. Note that the Program Counter width varies with the Program Memory capacity depending upon which device is selected. However, it must be noted that only the lower 8 bits, known as the Program Counter Low Register, are directly addressable by the application program. When executing instructions requiring jumps to non-consecutive addresses such as a jump instruction, a subroutine call, interrupt or reset, etc., the microcontroller manages program control by loading the required address into the Program Counter. For conditional skip instructions, once the condition has been met, the next instruction, which has already been fetched during the present instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle takes its place while the correct instruction is obtained. Program Counter Device Program Counter High Byte PCL Register HT45FH23A PC10~PC8 PCL7~PCL0 HT45FH24A PC11~PC8 PCL7~PCL0 The lower byte of the Program Counter, known as the Program Counter Low register or PCL, is available for program control and is a readable and writeable register. By transferring data directly into this register, a short program jump can be executed directly. However, as only this low byte is available for manipulation, the jumps are limited to the present page of memory that is 256 locations. When such program jumps are executed, it should also be noted that a dummy cycle will be inserted. The lower byte of the Program Counter is fully accessible under program control. Manipulating the PCL might cause program branching, so an extra cycle is needed to pre-fetch. Further information on the PCL register can be found in the Special Function Register section. Rev. 1.00 22 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Stack This is a special part of the memory which is used to save the contents of the Program Counter only. The stack is organized into 6 levels and is neither part of the Data or Program Memory space, and is neither readable nor writeable. The activated level is indexed by the Stack Pointer, SP, and is neither readable nor writeable. At a subroutine call or interrupt acknowledge signal, the contents of the Program Counter are pushed onto the stack. At the end of a subroutine or an interrupt routine, signaled by a return instruction, RET or RETI, the Program Counter is restored to its previous value from the stack. After a device reset, the Stack Pointer will point to the top of the stack. If the stack is full and an enabled interrupt takes place, the interrupt request flag will be recorded but the acknowledge signal will be inhibited. When the Stack Pointer is decremented, by RET or RETI, the interrupt will be serviced. This feature prevents stack overflow allowing the programmer to use the structure more easily. However, when the stack is full, a CALL subroutine instruction can still be executed which will result in a stack overflow. Precautions should be taken to avoid such cases which might cause unpredictable program branching. P ro g ra m T o p o f S ta c k S ta c k L e v e l 1 S ta c k L e v e l 2 S ta c k P o in te r B o tto m C o u n te r S ta c k L e v e l 3 o f S ta c k P ro g ra m M e m o ry S ta c k L e v e l 6 Arithmetic and Logic Unit – ALU The arithmetic-logic unit or ALU is a critical area of the microcontroller that carries out arithmetic and logic operations of the instruction set. Connected to the main microcontroller data bus, the ALU receives related instruction codes and performs the required arithmetic or logical operations after which the result will be placed in the specified register. As these ALU calculation or operations may result in carry, borrow or other status changes, the status register will be correspondingly updated to reflect these changes. The ALU supports the following functions: • Arithmetic operations: ADD, ADDM, ADC, ADCM, SUB, SUBM, SBC, SBCM, DAA • Logic operations: AND, OR, XOR, ANDM, ORM, XORM, CPL, CPLA • Rotation RRA, RR, RRCA, RRC, RLA, RL, RLCA, RLC • Increment and Decrement INCA, INC, DECA, DEC • Branch decision, JMP, SZ, SZA, SNZ, SIZ, SDZ, SIZA, SDZA, CALL, RET, RETI Rev. 1.00 23 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Flash Program Memory The Program Memory is the location where the user code or program is stored. For the devices the Program Memory is Flash type, which means it can be programmed and re-programmed a large number of times, allowing the user the convenience of code modification on the same device. By using the appropriate programming tools, this Flash devices offer users the flexibility to conveniently debug and develop their applications while also offering a means of field programming and updating. Structure The Program Memory has a capacity of 2K×15~4K×16 . The Program Memory is addressed by the Program Counter and also contains data, table information and interrupt entries. Table data, which can be setup in any location within the Program Memory, is addressed by separate table pointer registers. Special Vectors Within the Program Memory, certain locations are reserved for special usage such as reset and interrupts. Location 000H This vector is reserved for use by the devices reset for program initialisation. After a device reset is initiated, the program will jump to this location and begin execution. Location 004H This vector is used by the external interrupt 0. If the external interrupt pin receives an active edge, the program will jump to this location and begin execution if the external interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full. Location 008H This vector is used by the external interrupt 1. If the external interrupt pin receives an active edge, the program will jump to this location and begin execution if the external interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full. Location 00CH This internal vector is used by the Timer/Event Counter 0. If a Timer/Event Counter 0 overflow occurs, the program will jump to this location and begin execution if the timer/event counter interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full. Location 010H This internal vector is used by the Timer/Event Counter 1. If a Timer/Event Counter 1 overflow occurs, the program will jump to this location and begin execution if the timer/event counter interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full. Location 014H This internal vector is used by the SIM interrupt. When either an SPI or I2C bus, dependent upon which one is selected, requires data transfer, the program will jump to this location and begin execution if the SIM interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full. Rev. 1.00 24 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Location 018H This internal vector is used by the Multi-function Interrupt. When the Time Base overflows, the A/D converter completes its conversion process, an active edge appears on the External Peripheral interrupt pin, a Comparator output interrupt, an EEPROM Write or Read cycle ends interrupt, or a LVD detection interrupt, the program will jump to this location and begin execution if the relevant interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full. Program Memory Structure Look-up Table Any location within the Program Memory can be defined as a look-up table where programmers can store fixed data. To use the look-up table, the table pointer must first be setup by placing the address of the look up data to be retrieved in the table pointer register, TBLP and TBHP. These registers define the total address of the look-up table. After setting up the table pointer, the table data can be retrieved from the Program Memory using the “TABRDC [m]” or “TABRDL [m]” instructions, respectively. When the instruction is executed, the lower order table byte from the Program Memory will be transferred to the user defined Data Memory register [m] as specified in the instruction. The higher order table data byte from the Program Memory will be transferred to the TBLH special register. Any unused bits in this transferred higher order byte will be read as “0”. The accompanying diagram illustrates the addressing data flow of the look-up table. The following diagram illustrates the addressing data flow of the look-up table: Rev. 1.00 25 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver A d d re s s L a s t p a g e o r T B H P R e g is te r T B L P R e g is te r Instruction TABRDC[m] TABRDL[m] D a ta 1 5 o r 1 6 b its R e g is te r T B L H U s e r S e le c te d R e g is te r H ig h B y te L o w B y te Table Location Bits b11 b10 b9 PC11 PC10 PC9 1 1 1 b8 b7 b6 b5 b4 b3 b2 b1 b0 PC8 @7 @6 @5 @4 @3 @2 @1 @0 1 @7 @6 @5 @4 @3 @2 @1 @0 Table Location Note: PC11~PC8:Current Program Counter bits @7~@0:Table Pointer TBLP bits For the HT45FH23A, the Table address location is 11 bits, i.e. from b10~b0 For the HT45FH24A, the Table address location is 12 bits, i.e. from b11~b0 Table Program Example The accompanying example shows how the table pointer and table data is defined and retrieved from the HT45FH24A device. This example uses raw table data located in the last page which is stored there using the ORG statement. The value at this ORG statement is “0F00H” which refers to the start address of the last page within the 4K Program Memory of the device. The table pointer is setup here to have an initial value of “06H”. This will ensure that the first data read from the data table will be at the Program Memory address “0F06H” or 6 locations after the start of the last page. Note that the value for the table pointer is referenced to the first address of the present page if the “TABRDC [m]” instruction is being used. The high byte of the table data which in this case is equal to zero will be transferred to the TBLH register automatically when the “TABRDL [m]” instruction is executed. Because the TBLH register is a read-only register and cannot be restored, care should be taken to ensure its protection if both the main routine and Interrupt Service Routine use the table read instructions. If using the table read instructions, the Interrupt Service Routines may change the value of TBLH and subsequently cause errors if used again by the main routine. As a rule it is recommended that simultaneous use of the table read instructions should be avoided. However, in situations where simultaneous use cannot be avoided, the interrupts should be disabled prior to the execution of any main routine table-read instructions. Note that all table related instructions require two instruction cycles to complete their operation. Rev. 1.00 26 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Table Read Program Example tempreg1 db ? ; temporary register #1 tempreg2 db ? ; temporary register #2 : : mov a,06h ; initialise table pointer - note that this address is referenced mov tblp,a ; to the last page or present page mov a, 0Fh ; initialise high table pointer mov tbhp, a : : tabrdl tempreg1 ; transfers value in table referenced by table pointer to tempregl ; data at prog. memory address “0F06H” transferred to tempreg1 and TBLH dec tblp ; reduce value of table pointer by one tabrdl tempreg2 ; transfers value in table referenced by table pointer to tempreg2 ; data at prog.memory address “0F05H” transferred to tempreg2 and TBLH ; in this example the data “1AH” is transferred to tempreg1 and data “0FH” ; to register tempreg2 the value “00H” will be transferred to the high ; byte register TBLH : : org F00h ; sets initial address of last page dc 00Ah, 00Bh, 00Ch, 00Dh, 00Eh, 00Fh, 01Ah, 01Bh : : In Circuit Programming The provision of Flash type Program Memory provides the user with a means of convenient and easy upgrades and modifications to their programs on the same devices. As an additional convenience, Holtek has provided a means of programming the microcontroller in-circuit using a 5-pin interface. This provides manufacturers with the possibility of manufacturing their circuit boards complete with a programmed or un-programmed microcontroller, and then programming or upgrading the program at a later stage. This enables product manufacturers to easily keep their manufactured products supplied with the latest program releases without removal and re-insertion of the devices. Programming Pins Function DATA Serial Data Input/Output CLK Serial Clock RES Device Reset VDD Power Supply VSS Ground The Program Memory and EEPROM data memory can both be programmed serially in-circuit using this 5-wire interface. Data is downloaded and uploaded serially on a single pin with an additional line for the clock. Two additional lines are required for the power supply and one line for the reset. The technical details regarding the in-circuit programming of the devices are beyond the scope of this document and will be supplied in supplementary literature. During the programming process the RES pin will be held low by the programmer disabling the normal operation of the microcontroller and taking control of the PA0 and PA2 I/O pins for data and clock programming purposes. The user must there take care to ensure that no other outputs are connected to these two pins. Rev. 1.00 27 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Programmer Pin MCU Pins RES PB6 DATA PA0 CLK PA2 Programmer and MCU Pins W r ite r C o n n e c to r S ig n a ls P r o g r a m m in g P in s W r ite r _ V D D V D D R E S R E S D A T A D A T A C L K C L K W r ite r _ V S S V S S * * * T o o th e r C ir c u it Note: * may be resistor or capacitor. The resistance of * must be greater than 1kΩ or the capacitance of * must be less than 1nF. RAM Data Memory The Data Memory is a volatile area of 8-bit wide RAM internal memory and is the location where temporary information is stored. Data Memory Structure Note: Most of the Data Memory bits can be directly manipulated using the “SET [m].i” and “CLR [m].i” with the exception of a few dedicated bits. The Data Memory can also be accessed through the memory pointer registers. Rev. 1.00 28 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Structure Divided into two sections, the first of these is an area of RAM where special function registers are located. These registers have fixed locations and are necessary for correct operation of the devices. Many of these registers can be read from and written to directly under program control, however, some remain protected from user manipulation. The second area of Data Memory is reserved for general purpose use. All locations within this area are read and write accessible under program control. The overall Data Memory is subdivided into two banks. The Special Purpose Data Memory registers are accessible in all banks, with the exception of the EEC register at address 40H, which is only accessible in Bank 1. Switching between the different Data Memory banks is achieved by setting the Bank Pointer to the correct value. The start address of the Data Memory is the address “00H”. All microcontroller programs require an area of read/write memory where temporary data can be stored and retrieved for use later. It is this area of RAM memory that is known as General Purpose Data Memory. This area of Data Memory is fully accessible by the user program for both read and write operations. By using the “SET [m].i” and “CLR [m].i” instructions individual bits can be set or reset under program control giving the user a large range of flexibility for bit manipulation in the Data Memory. Special Function Registers Most of the Special Function Register details will be described in the relevant functional section, however several registers require a separate description in this section. Special Purpose Data Memory Rev. 1.00 29 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Indirect Addressing Registers – IAR0, IAR1 The Indirect Addressing Registers, IAR0 and IAR1, although having their locations in normal RAM register space, do not actually physically exist as normal registers. The method of indirect addressing for RAM data manipulation uses these Indirect Addressing Registers and Memory Pointers, in contrast to direct memory addressing, where the actual memory address is specified. Actions on the IAR0 and IAR1 registers will result in no actual read or write operation to these registers but rather to the memory location specified by their corresponding Memory Pointer, MP0 or MP1. Acting as a pair, IAR0 with MP0 and IAR1 with MP1, can together access data from the Data Memory. As the Indirect Addressing Registers are not physically implemented, reading the Indirect Addressing Registers indirectly will return a result of “00H” and writing to the registers indirectly will result in no operation. Memory Pointers – MP0, MP1 Two Memory Pointers, known as MP0 and MP1 are provided. These Memory Pointers are physically implemented in the Data Memory and can be manipulated in the same way as normal registers providing a convenient way with which to address and track data. When any operation to the relevant Indirect Addressing Registers is carried out, the actual address that the microcontroller is directed to, is the address specified by the related Memory Pointer. MP0, together with Indirect Addressing Register, IAR0, are used to access data from Bank 0, while MP1 and IAR1 are used to access data from all banks according to BP register. Direct Addressing can only be used with Bank 0, all other Banks must be addressed indirectly using MP1 and IAR1. The following example shows how to clear a section of four Data Memory locations already defined as locations adres1 to adres4. Indirect Addressing Program Example data .section "data" adres1 db ? adres2 db ? adres3 db ? adres4 db ? block db ? code .section at 0 code org 00h start: mov a,04h; mov block,a mov a,offset adres1 ; mov mp0,a ; loop: clr IAR0 ; inc mp0; sdz block; jmp loop continue: setup size of block Accumulator loaded with first RAM address setup memory pointer with first RAM address clear the data at address defined by MP0 increment memory pointer check if last memory location has been cleared The important point to note here is that in the example shown above, no reference is made to specific Data Memory addresses. Rev. 1.00 30 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bank Pointer – BP The Data Memory is divided into two Banks, known as Bank 0 and Bank 1. A Bank Pointer, which is bit 0 of the Bank Pointer register is used to select the required Data Memory bank. Only data in Bank 0 can be directly addressed as data in Bank 1 must be indirectly addressed using Memory Pointer MP1 and Indirect Addressing Register IAR1. Using Memory Pointer MP0 and Indirect Addressing Register IAR0 will always access data from Bank 0, irrespective of the value of the Bank Pointer. Memory Pointer MP1 and Indirect Addressing Register IAR1 can indirectly address data in either Bank 0 or Bank 1 depending upon the value of the Bank Pointer. The Data Memory is initialised to Bank 0 after a reset, except for the WDT time-out reset in the Idle/Sleep Mode, in which case, the Data Memory bank remains unaffected. It should be noted that Special Function Data Memory is not affected by the bank selection, which means that the Special Function Registers can be accessed from within either Bank 0 or Bank 1. Directly addressing the Data Memory will always result in Bank 0 being accessed irrespective of the value of the Bank Pointer. BP Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — — — — — — — DMBP0 R/W — — — — — — — R/W POR — — — — — — — 0 Bit 7 ~ 1 Unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 0 DMBP0: Select Data Memory Banks 0: Bank 0 1: Bank 1 Accumulator – ACC The Accumulator is central to the operation of any microcontroller and is closely related with operations carried out by the ALU. The Accumulator is the place where all intermediate results from the ALU are stored. Without the Accumulator it would be necessary to write the result of each calculation or logical operation such as addition, subtraction, shift, etc., to the Data Memory resulting in higher programming and timing overheads. Data transfer operations usually involve the temporary storage function of the Accumulator; for example, when transferring data between one user defined register and another, it is necessary to do this by passing the data through the Accumulator as no direct transfer between two registers is permitted. Rev. 1.00 31 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Program Counter Low Register – PCL To provide additional program control functions, the low byte of the Program Counter is made accessible to programmers by locating it within the Special Purpose area of the Data Memory. By manipulating this register, direct jumps to other program locations are easily implemented. Loading a value directly into this PCL register will cause a jump to the specified Program Memory location. However, as the register is only 8-bit wide, only jumps within the current Program Memory page are permitted. When such operations are used, note that a dummy cycle will be inserted. Look-up Table Registers – TBLP, TBHP, TBLH These three special function registers are used to control operation of the look-up table which is stored in the Program Memory. TBLP and TBHP are the table pointers and indicate the location where the table data is located. Their value must be setup before any table read commands are executed. Their value can be changed, for example using the “INC” or “DEC” instructions, allowing for easy table data pointing and reading. TBLH is the location where the high order byte of the table data is stored after a table read data instruction has been executed. Note that the lower order table data byte is transferred to a user defined location. Status Register – STATUS This 8-bit register contains the zero flag (Z), carry flag (C), auxiliary carry flag (AC), overflow flag (OV), power down flag (PDF), and watchdog time-out flag (TO). These arithmetic/logical operation and system management flags are used to record the status and operation of the microcontroller. With the exception of the TO and PDF flags, bits in the status register can be altered by instructions like most other registers. Any data written into the status register will not change the TO or PDF flag. In addition, operations related to the status register may give different results due to the different instruction operations. The TO flag can be affected only by a system power-up, a WDT time-out or by executing the “CLR WDT” or “HALT” instruction. The PDF flag is affected only by executing the “HALT” or “CLR WDT” instruction or during a system power-up. The Z, OV, AC and C flags generally reflect the status of the latest operations. In addition, on entering an interrupt sequence or executing a subroutine call, the status register will not be pushed onto the stack automatically. If the contents of the status registers are important and if the interrupt routine can change the status register, precautions must be taken to correctly save it. Note that bits 0~3 of the STATUS register are both readable and writeable bits. Rev. 1.00 32 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver STATUS Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — — TO PDF OV Z AC C R/W — — R R R/W R/W R/W R/W POR — — 0 0 x x x x “x” unknown Rev. 1.00 Bit 7~6 Unimplemented, read as "0" Bit 5 TO: Watchdog Time-Out flag 0: After power up or executing the “CLR WDT” or “HALT” instruction 1: A watchdog time-out occurred. Bit 4 PDF: Power down flag 0: After power up or executing the “CLR WDT” instruction 1: By executing the “HALT” instruction Bit 3 OV: Overflow flag 0: no overflow 1: an operation results in a carry into the highest-order bit but not a carry out of the highest-order bit or vice versa. Bit 2 Z: Zero flag 0: The result of an arithmetic or logical operation is not zero 1: The result of an arithmetic or logical operation is zero Bit 1 AC: Auxiliary flag 0: no auxiliary carry 1: an operation results in a carry out of the low nibbles in addition, or no borrow from the high nibble into the low nibble in subtraction Bit 0 C: Carry flag 0: no carry-out 1: an operation results in a carry during an addition operation or if a borrow does not take place during a subtraction operation C is also affected by a rotate through carry instruction. 33 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver EEPROM Data Memory One of the special features in the devices is its internal EEPROM Data Memory. EEPROM, which stands for Electrically Erasable Programmable Read Only Memory, is by its nature a non-volatile form of memory, with data retention even when its power supply is removed. By incorporating this kind of data memory, a whole new host of application possibilities are made available to the designer. The availability of EEPROM storage allows information such as product identification numbers, calibration values, specific user data, system setup data or other product information to be stored directly within the product microcontroller. The process of reading and writing data to the EEPROM memory has been reduced to a very trivial affair. EEPROM Data Memory Structure The EEPROM Data Memory capacity is 64×8 bits. Unlike the Program Memory and RAM Data Memory, the EEPROM Data Memory is not directly mapped into memory space and is therefore not directly accessible in the same way as the other types of memory. Instead it has to be accessed indirectly through the EEPROM control registers. EEPROM Registers Three registers control the overall operation of the internal EEPROM Data Memory. These are the address register, EEA, the data register, EED and a single control register, EEC. As both the EEA and EED registers are located in Bank 0, they can be directly accessed in the same was as any other Special Function Register. The EEC register however, being located in Bank1, cannot be directly addressed directly and can only be read from or written to indirectly using the MP1 Memory Pointer and Indirect Addressing Register, IAR1. Because the EEC control register is located at address 40H in Bank 1, the MP1 Memory Pointer must first be set to the value 40H and the Bank Pointer register, BP, set to the value, 01H, before any operations on the EEC register are executed. EEPROM Register List Name Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 D0 EEA — — D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 EED D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 EEC — — — — WREN WR RDEN RD EEA Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — — D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 R/W — — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR — — x x x x x x “x” unknown Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 ~ 6 Unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 5 ~ 0 D5~D0: Data EEPROM address Data EEPROM address bit 5 ~ bit 0 34 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver EED Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR x x x x x x x x “x” unknown Bit 7 ~ 0 D7~D0: Data EEPROM data Data EEPROM data bit 7 ~ bit 0 EEC Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Name — — — — R/W — — — — POR — — — — 0 WREN WR RDEN RD R/W R/W R/W R/W 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 ~ 4 Unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 3 WREN: Data EEPROM Write Enable 0: Disable 1: Enable This is the Data EEPROM Write Enable Bit which must be set high before Data EEPROM write operations are carried out. Clearing this bit to zero will inhibit Data EEPROM write operations. Bit 2 WR: EEPROM Write Control 0: Write cycle has finished 1: Activate a write cycle This is the Data EEPROM Write Control Bit and when set high by the application program will activate a write cycle. This bit will be automatically reset to zero by the hardware after the write cycle has finished. Setting this bit high will have no effect if the WREN has not first been set high. Bit 1 RDEN: Data EEPROM Read Enable 0: Disable 1: Enable This is the Data EEPROM Read Enable Bit which must be set high before Data EEPROM read operations are carried out. Clearing this bit to zero will inhibit Data EEPROM read operations. Bit 0 RD: EEPROM Read Control 0: Read cycle has finished 1: Activate a read cycle This is the Data EEPROM Read Control Bit and when set high by the application program will activate a read cycle. This bit will be automatically reset to zero by the hardware after the read cycle has finished. Setting this bit high will have no effect if the RDEN has not first been set high. Note: The WREN, WR, RDEN and RD can not be set to “1” at the same time in one instruction. The WR and RD can not be set to “1” at the same time. Rev. 1.00 35 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Reading Data from the EEPROM To read data from the EEPROM, the read enable bit, RDEN, in the EEC register must first be set high to enable the read function. The EEPROM address of the data to be read must then be placed in the EEA register. If the RD bit in the EEC register is now set high, a read cycle will be initiated. Setting the RD bit high will not initiate a read operation if the RDEN bit has not been set. When the read cycle terminates, the RD bit will be automatically cleared to zero, after which the data can be read from the EED register. The data will remain in the EED register until another read or write operation is executed. The application program can poll the RD bit to determine when the data is valid for reading. Writing Data to the EEPROM The EEPROM address of the data to be written must first be placed in the EEA register and the data placed in the EED register. To write data to the EEPROM, the write enable bit, WREN, in the EEC register must first be set high to enable the write function. After this, the WR bit in the EEC register must be immediately set high to initiate a write cycle. These two instructions must be executed consecutively. The global interrupt bit EMI should also first be cleared before implementing any write operations, and then set again after the write cycle has started. Note that setting the WR bit high will not initiate a write cycle if the WREN bit has not been set. As the EEPROM write cycle is controlled using an internal timer whose operation is asynchronous to microcontroller system clock, a certain time will elapse before the data will have been written into the EEPROM. Detecting when the write cycle has finished can be implemented either by polling the WR bit in the EEC register or by using the EEPROM interrupt. When the write cycle terminates, the WR bit will be automatically cleared to zero by the microcontroller, informing the user that the data has been written to the EEPROM. The application program can therefore poll the WR bit to determine when the write cycle has ended. Write Protection Protection against inadvertent write operation is provided in several ways. After the devices are powered-on the Write Enable bit in the control register will be cleared preventing any write operations. Also at power-on the Bank Pointer, BP, will be reset to zero, which means that Data Memory Bank 0 will be selected. As the EEPROM control register is located in Bank 1, this adds a further measure of protection against spurious write operations. During normal program operation, ensuring that the Write Enable bit in the control register is cleared will safeguard against incorrect write operations. EEPROM Interrupt The EEPROM write or read interrupt is generated when an EEPROM write or read cycle has ended. The EEPROM interrupt must first be enabled by setting the EE2I bit in the relevant interrupt register. However as the EEPROM is contained within a Multi-function Interrupt, the associated multifunction interrupt enable bit must also be set. When an EEPROM write cycle ends, the E2F request flag and its associated multi-function interrupt request flag will both be set. If the global, EEPROM and Multi-function interrupts are enabled and the stack is not full, a jump to the associated Multifunction Interrupt vector will take place. When the interrupt is serviced only the Multi-function interrupt flag will be automatically reset, the EEPROM interrupt flag must be manually reset by the application program. Rev. 1.00 36 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Programming Considerations Care must be taken that data is not inadvertently written to the EEPROM. Protection can be Periodic by ensuring that the Write Enable bit is normally cleared to zero when not writing. Also the Bank Pointer could be normally cleared to zero as this would inhibit access to Bank 1 where the EEPROM control register exist. Although certainly not necessary, consideration might be given in the application program to the checking of the validity of new write data by a simple read back process. When writing data the WR bit must be set high immediately after the WREN bit has been set high, to ensure the write cycle executes correctly. The global interrupt bit EMI should also be cleared before a write cycle is executed and then re-enabled after the write cycle starts. Note that the devices should not enter the IDLE or SLEEP mode until the EEPROM read or write operation is totally complete. Otherwise, the EEPROM read or write operation will fail. Programming Examples Reading data from the EEPROM – polling method MOV A, EEPROM_ADRES MOV EEA, A MOV A, 040H MOV MP1, A MOV A, 01H MOV BP, A SET IAR1.1 SET IAR1.0 BACK: SZ IAR1.0 JMP BACK CLR IAR1 CLR BP MOV A, EED MOV READ_DATA, A ; user defined address ; setup memory pointer MP1 ; MP1 points to EEC register ; setup Bank Pointer ; set RDEN bit, enable read operations ; start Read Cycle - set RD bit ; check for read cycle end ; disable EEPROM read/write ; move read data to register Writing Data to the EEPROM – polling method MOV A, EEPROM_ADRES MOV EEA, A MOV A, EEPROM_DATA MOV EED, A MOV A, 040H MOV MP1, A MOV A, 01H MOV BP, A CLR EMI SET IAR1.3 SET IAR1.2 SET EMI BACK: SZ IAR1.2 JMP BACK CLR IAR1 CLR BP Rev. 1.00 ; user defined address ; user defined data ; setup memory pointer MP1 ; MP1 points to EEC register ; setup Bank Pointer ; set WREN bit, enable write operations ; start Write Cycle - set WR bit ; check for write cycle end ; disable EEPROM read/write 37 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Oscillators Various oscillator options offer the user a wide range of functions according to their various application requirements. The flexible features of the oscillator functions ensure that the best optimisation can be achieved in terms of speed and power saving. Oscillator selections and operation are selected through a combination of configuration options and registers. Oscillator Overview In addition to being the source of the main system clock the oscillators also provide clock sources for the Watchdog Timer and Time Base Interrupts. External oscillators requiring some external components as well as fully integrated internal oscillators, requiring no external components, are provided to form a wide range of both fast and slow system oscillators. All oscillator options are selected through the configuration options. The higher frequency oscillators provide higher performance but carry with it the disadvantage of higher power requirements, while the opposite is of course true for the lower frequency oscillators. With the capability of dynamically switching between fast and slow system clock, the devices have the flexibility to optimize the performance/ power ratio, a feature especially important in power sensitive portable applications. Type Name Freq. External Crystal HXT 400kHz~8MHz Internal High Speed RC HIRC 910kHz, 2/4/8MHz External Clock EC 400kHz~8MHz External Low Speed Crystal LXT 32.768kHz Internal Low Speed RC LIRC 32kHz Pins OSC1/OSC2 — OSC1 XT1/XT2 — Oscillator Types System Clock Configurations There are five methods of generating the system clock, three high speed oscillators and two low speed oscillators. The high speed oscillators are the external crystal/ ceramic oscillator, external RC network oscillator, external clock and the internal 910kHz, 2MHz, 4MHz or 8MHz RC oscillator. The two low speed oscillators are the internal 32kHz RC oscillator and the external 32.768kHz crystal oscillator. Rev. 1.00 38 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver System Clock Configuration Selecting whether the low or high speed oscillator is used as the system oscillator is implemented using the HLCLK bit and CKS2~CKS0 bits in the SMOD register and as the system clock can be dynamically selected. The actual source clock used for each of the high speed and low speed oscillators is chosen via configuration options. The frequency of the slow speed or high speed system clock is also determined using the HLCLK bit and CKS2~CKS0 bits in the SMOD register. Note that two oscillator selections must be made namely one high speed and one low speed system oscillators. It is not possible to choose a no-oscillator selection for either the high or low speed oscillator. External Crystal/Ceramic Oscillator – HXT The External Crystal/ Ceramic System Oscillator is one of the high frequency oscillator choices, which is selected via configuration option. For most crystal oscillator configurations, the simple connection of a crystal across OSC1 and OSC2 will create the necessary phase shift and feedback for oscillation, without requiring external capacitors. However, for some crystal types and frequencies, to ensure oscillation, it may be necessary to add two small value capacitors, C1 and C2. Using a ceramic resonator will usually require two small value capacitors, C1 and C2, to be connected as shown for oscillation to occur. The values of C1 and C2 should be selected in consultation with the crystal or resonator manufacturer’s specification. For oscillator stability and to minimise the effects of noise and crosstalk, it is important to ensure that the crystal and any associated resistors and capacitors along with interconnecting lines are all located as close to the MCU as possible. Rev. 1.00 39 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Crystal/Resonator Oscillator – HXT Crystal Oscillator C1 and C2 Values Crystal Frequency C1 C2 8MHz 0pF 0pF 4MHz 0pF 0pF 1MHz 100pF 100pF Note:C1 and C2 values are for guidance only. Crystal Recommended Capacitor Values External Oscillator – EC The system clock can also be supplied by an externally supplied clock giving users a method of synchronising their external hardware to the microcontroller operation. This is selected using a configuration option and supplying the clock on pin OSC1. Pin OSC2 should be left floating if the external oscillator is used. The internal oscillator circuit contains a filter circuit to reduce the possibility of erratic operation due to noise on the oscillator pin, however as the filter circuit consumes a certain amount of power, a configuration option exists to turn this filter off. Not using the internal filter should be considered in power sensitive applications and where the externally supplied clock is of a high integrity and supplied by a low impedance source. Internal RC Oscillator – HIRC The internal RC oscillator is a fully integrated system oscillator requiring no external components. The internal RC oscillator has four fixed frequencies of either 910kHz, 2MHz, 4MHz or 8MHz. Device trimming during the manufacturing process and the inclusion of internal frequency compensation circuits are used to ensure that the influence of the power supply voltage, temperature and process variations on the oscillation frequency are minimised. As a result, at a power supply of 3.3V and at a temperature of 25˚C degrees, the fixed oscillation frequency of 910kHz, 2MHz, 4MHz or 8MHz will have a tolerance within 2%. Note that if this internal system clock option is selected, as it requires no external pins for its operation, I/O pins PC0 and PC1 are free for use as normal I/O pins. External 32.768kHz Crystal Oscillator – LXT The External 32.768kHz Crystal System Oscillator is one of the low frequency oscillator choices, which is selected via configuration option. This clock source has a fixed frequency of 32.768kHz and requires a 32.768kHz crystal to be connected between pins XT1 and XT2. The external resistor and capacitor components connected to the 32.768kHz crystal are necessary to provide oscillation. For applications where precise frequencies are essential, these components may be required to provide frequency compensation due to different crystal manufacturing tolerances. During power-up there is a time delay associated with the LXT oscillator waiting for it to start-up. Rev. 1.00 40 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver C1 XT1 Inte�nal RC Oscillato� RP 3�.�68kHz Internal Oscillator Circuit XT� C� To inte�nal ci�cuits �ote: 1. RP� C1 and C� a�e �equi�ed. �. Although not shown pins have a pa�asitic capacitance of a�ound �pF. External LXT Oscillator When the microcontroller enters the SLEEP or IDLE Mode, the system clock is switched off to stop microcontroller activity and to conserve power. However, in many microcontroller applications it may be necessary to keep the internal timers operational even when the microcontroller is in the SLEEP or IDLE Mode. To do this, another clock, independent of the system clock, must be provided. However, for some crystals, to ensure oscillation and accurate frequency generation, it is necessary to add two small value external capacitors, C1 and C2. The exact values of C1 and C2 should be selected in consultation with the crystal or resonator manufacturer's specification. The external parallel feedback resistor, Rp, is required. Some configuration options determine if the XT1/XT2 pins are used for the LXT oscillator or as I/O pins. • If the LXT oscillator is not used for any clock source, the XT1/XT2 pins can be used as normal I/O pins. • If the LXT oscillator is used for any clock source, the 32.768kHz crystal should be connected to the XT1/XT2 pins. For oscillator stability and to minimise the effects of noise and crosstalk, it is important to ensure that the crystal and any associated resistors and capacitors along with interconnecting lines are all located as close to the MCU as possible. LXT Oscillator C1 and C2 Values Crystal Frequency C1 C2 32.768kHz 10pF 10pF Note: 1. C1 and C2 values are for guidance only. 2. RP=5M~10MΩ is recommended. 32.768kHz Crystal Recommended Capacitor Values LXT Oscillator Low Power Function The LXT oscillator can function in one of two modes, the Quick Start Mode and the Low Power Mode. The mode selection is executed using the LXTLP bit in the TBC register. LXTLP Bit LXT Mode 0 Quick Start 1 Low-power After power on the LXTLP bit will be automatically cleared to zero ensuring that the LXT oscillator is in the Quick Start operating mode. In the Quick Start Mode the LXT oscillator will power up and stabilise quickly. However, after the LXT oscillator has fully powered up it can be placed into the Low-power mode by setting the LXTLP bit high. The oscillator will continue to run but with reduced current consumption, as the higher current consumption is only required during the LXT oscillator start-up. In power sensitive applications, such as battery applications, where power Rev. 1.00 41 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver consumption must be kept to a minimum, it is therefore recommended that the application program sets the LXTLP bit high about 2 seconds after power-on. It should be noted that, no matter what condition the LXTLP bit is set to, the LXT oscillator will always function normally, the only difference is that it will take more time to start up if in the Lowpower mode. Internal 32kHz Oscillator – LIRC The Internal 32kHz System Oscillator is one of the low frequency oscillator choices, which is selected via configuration option. It is a fully integrated RC oscillator with a typical frequency of 32kHz at 5V, requiring no external components for its implementation. Device trimming during the manufacturing process and the inclusion of internal frequency compensation circuits are used to ensure that the influence of the power supply voltage, temperature and process variations on the oscillation frequency are minimised. As a result, at a power supply of 5V and at a temperature of 25˚C degrees, the fixed oscillation frequency of 32kHz will have a tolerance within 10%. Supplementary Oscillators The low speed oscillators, in addition to providing a system clock source are also used to provide a clock source to two other device functions. These are the Watchdog Timer and the Time Base Interrupts. Operating Modes and System Clocks Present day applications require that their microcontrollers have high performance but often still demand that they consume as little power as possible, conflicting requirements that are especially true in battery powered portable applications. The fast clocks required for high performance will by their nature increase current consumption and of course vice-versa, lower speed clocks reduce current consumption. As Holtek has provided the devices with both high and low speed clock sources and the means to switch between them dynamically, the user can optimise the operation of their microcontroller to achieve the best performance/power ratio. System Clocks The devices have many different clock sources for both the CPU and peripheral function operation. By providing the user with a wide range of clock options using configuration options and register programming, a clock system can be configured to obtain maximum application performance. The main system clock, can come from either a high frequency, fH, or low frequency, fL, source, and is selected using the HLCLK bit and CKS2~CKS0 bits in the SMOD register. The high speed system clock can be sourced from either an HXT, EC or HIRC oscillator, selected via a configuration option. The low speed system clock source can be sourced from internal clock fL. If fL is selected then it can be sourced by either the LXT or LIRC oscillators, selected via a configuration option. The other choice, which is a divided version of the high speed system oscillator has a range of fH/2~fH/64. There are two additional internal clocks for the peripheral circuits, the substitute clock, fSUB, and the Period Time Clock, fTBC. Each of these internal clocks are sourced by either the LXT or LIRC oscillators, selected via configuration options. The fSUB clock is used to provide a substitute clock for the microcontroller just after a wake-up has occurred to enable faster wake-up times. Together with fSYS/4 it is also used as one of the clock sources for the Watchdog timer. The fTB clock is used as a source for the Time Base 0/1 interrupt functions. Rev. 1.00 42 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver System Operation Modes There are six different modes of operation for the microcontroller, each one with its own special characteristics and which can be chosen according to the specific performance and power requirements of the application. There are two modes allowing normal operation of the microcontroller, the NORMAL Mode and SLOW Mode. The remaining four modes, the SLEEP0, SLEEP1, IDLE0 and IDLE1 Mode are used when the microcontroller CPU is switched off to conserve power. Device Clock Configurations Note: When the system clock source fSYS is switched to fL from fH, the high speed oscillation will stop to conserve the power. Thus there is no fH~fH/64 for peripheral circuit to use. Rev. 1.00 43 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Description Operation Mode CPU fSYS fSUB fS fTBC NORMAL Mode On fH~ fH/64 On On On SLOW Mode On fL On On On IDLE0 Mode Off Off On On/Off On IDLE1 Mode Off On On On On SLEEP0 Mode Off Off Off Off Off SLEEP1 Mode Off Off On On Off NORMAL Mode As the name suggests this is one of the main operating modes where the microcontroller has all of its functions operational and where the system clock is provided by one of the high speed oscillators. This mode operates allowing the microcontroller to operate normally with a clock source will come from one of the high speed oscillators, either the HXT, HIRC or EC oscillators. The high speed oscillator will however first be divided by a ratio ranging from 1 to 64, the actual ratio being selected by the CKS2~CKS0 and HLCLK bits in the SMOD register. Although a high speed oscillator is used, running the microcontroller at a divided clock ratio reduces the operating current. SLOW Mode This is also a mode where the microcontroller operates normally although now with a slower speed clock source. The clock source used will be from one of the low speed oscillators, either the LXT or the LIRC. Running the microcontroller in this mode allows it to run with much lower operating currents. In the SLOW Mode, the fH is off. SLEEP0 Mode The SLEEP Mode is entered when an HALT instruction is executed and when the IDLEN bit in the SMOD register is low. In the SLEEP0 mode the CPU will be stopped, and the fSUB and fS clocks will be stopped too, and the Watchdog Timer function is disabled. In this mode, the LVDEN is must set to “0”. If the LVDEN is set to “1”, it won’t enter the SLEEP0 Mode. SLEEP1 Mode The SLEEP Mode is entered when an HALT instruction is executed and when the IDLEN bit in the SMOD register is low. In the SLEEP1 mode the CPU will be stopped. However the fSUB and fS clocks will continue to operate if the LVDEN is “1” or the Watchdog Timer function is enabled and if its clock source is chosen via configuration option to come from the fSUB. IDLE0 Mode The IDLE0 Mode is entered when a HALT instruction is executed and when the IDLEN bit in the SMOD register is high and the FSYSON bit in the WDTC register is low. In the IDLE0 Mode the system oscillator will be inhibited from driving the CPU but some peripheral functions will remain operational such as the Watchdog Timer, Time Base 0 and SIM. In the IDLE0 Mode, the system oscillator will be stopped. In the IDLE0 Mode the Watchdog Timer clock, fS, will either be on or off depending upon the fS clock source. If the source is fSYS/4 then the fS clock will be off, and if the source comes from fSUB then fS will be on. Rev. 1.00 44 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver IDLE1 Mode The IDLE1 Mode is entered when an HALT instruction is executed and when the IDLEN bit in the SMOD register is high and the FSYSON bit in the WDTC register is high. In the IDLE1 Mode the system oscillator will be inhibited from driving the CPU but may continue to provide a clock source to keep some peripheral functions operational such as the Watchdog Timer, Time Base 0 and SIM. In the IDLE1 Mode, the system oscillator will continue to run, and this system oscillator may be high speed or low speed system oscillator. In the IDLE1 Mode the Watchdog Timer clock, fS, will be on. If the source is fSYS/4 then the fS clock will be on, and if the source comes from fSUB then fS will be on. Control Register A single register, SMOD, is used for overall control of the internal clocks within the devices. SMOD Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name CKS2 CKS1 CKS0 FSTEN LTO HTO IDLEN HLCLK R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R R R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 Bit 7~5 CKS2~CKS0: The system clock selection when HLCLK is “0” 000: fL (fLXT or fLIRC) 001: fL (fLXT or fLIRC) 010: fH/64 011: fH/32 100: fH/16 101: fH/8 110: fH/4 111: fH/2 These three bits are used to select which clock is used as the system clock source. In addition to the system clock source, which can be either the LXT or LIRC, a divided version of the high speed system oscillator can also be chosen as the system clock source. Bit 4 FSTEN: Fast Wake-up Control (only for HXT) 0: Disable 1: Enable This is the Fast Wake-up Control bit which determines if the fSUB clock source is initially used after the devices wake up. When the bit is high, the fSUB clock source can be used as a temporary system clock to provide a faster wake up time as the fSUB clock is available. Bit 3 LTO: Low speed system oscillator ready flag 0: Not ready 1: Ready This is the low speed system oscillator ready flag which indicates when the low speed system oscillator is stable after power on reset or a wake-up has occurred. The flag will be low when in the SLEEP0 Mode but after a wake-up has occurred, the flag will change to a high level after 1024 clock cycles if the LXT oscillator is used and 1~2 clock cycles if the LIRC oscillator is used. 45 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 2 HTO: High speed system oscillator ready flag 0: Not ready 1: Ready This is the high speed system oscillator ready flag which indicates when the high speed system oscillator is stable. This flag is cleared to “0” by hardware when the devices are powered on and then changes to a high level after the high speed system oscillator is stable. Therefore this flag will always be read as “1” by the application program after devices power-on. The flag will be low when in the SLEEP or IDLE0 Mode but after a wake-up has occurred, the flag will change to a high level after 1024 clock cycles if the HXT oscillator is used and after 15~16 clock cycles if the HIRC oscillator is used. Bit 1 IDLEN: IDLE Mode control 0: Disable 1: Enable This is the IDLE Mode Control bit and determines what happens when the HALT instruction is executed. If this bit is high, when a HALT instruction is executed the devices will enter the IDLE Mode. In the IDLE1 Mode the CPU will stop running but the system clock will continue to keep the peripheral functions operational, if FSYSON bit is high. If FSYSON bit is low, the CPU and the system clock will all stop in IDLE0 mode. If the bit is low the devices will enter the SLEEP Mode when a HALT instruction is executed. Bit 0 HLCLK: system clock selection 0: fH/2 ~ fH/64 or fL 1: fH This bit is used to select if the fH clock or the fH/2 ~ fH/64 or fL clock is used as the system clock. When the bit is high the fH clock will be selected and if low the fH/2~fH/64 or fL clock will be selected. When system clock switches from the fH clock to the fL clock and the fH clock will be automatically switched off to conserve power. Fast Wake-up To minimise power consumption the devices can enter the SLEEP or IDLE0 Mode, where the system clock source to the devices will be stopped. However when the devices are woken up again, it can take a considerable time for the original system oscillator to restart, stabilise and allow normal operation to resume. To ensure the devices are up and running as fast as possible a Fast Wakeup function is provided, which allows fSUB, namely either the LXT or LIRC oscillator, to act as a temporary clock to first drive the system until the original system oscillator has stabilised. As the clock source for the Fast Wake-up function is fSUB, the Fast Wake-up function is only available in the SLEEP1 and IDLE0 modes. When the devices are woken up from the SLEEP0 mode, the Fast Wake-up function has no effect because the fSUB clock is stopped. The Fast Wake-up enable/disable function is controlled using the FSTEN bit in the SMOD register. If the HXT oscillator is selected as the NORMAL Mode system clock, and if the Fast Wake-up function is enabled, then it will take one to two tSUB clock cycles of the LIRC or LXT oscillator for the system to wake-up. The system will then initially run under the fSUB clock source until 1024 HXT clock cycles have elapsed, at which point the HTO flag will switch high and the system will switch over to operating from the HXT oscillator. If the EC or HIRC oscillators or LIRC oscillator is used as the system oscillator then it will take 15~16 clock cycles of the EC or HIRC or 1~2 cycles of the LIRC to wake up the system from the SLEEP or IDLE0 Mode. The Fast Wake-up bit, FSTEN will have no effect in these cases. Rev. 1.00 46 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver System FSTEN Oscillator Bit 0 HXT 1 Wake-up Time (SLEEP0 Mode) Wake-up Time (SLEEP1 Mode) Wake-up Time (IDLE0 Mode) Wake-up Time (IDLE1 Mode) 1024 HXT cycles 1024 HXT cycles 1024 HXT cycles 1~2 fSUB cycles (System runs with fSUB first for 1024 1~2 HXT cycles HXT cycles and then switches over to run with the HXT clock) 1~2 HXT cycles 15~16 EC cycles 15~16 EC cycles EC X HIRC X LIRC X 1~2 LIRC cycles 1~2 LIRC cycles 1~2 LIRC cycles LXT X 1024 LXT cycles 1024 LXT cycles 1~2 LXT cycles 15~16 HIRC cycles 15~16 HIRC cycles 1~2 EC cycles 1~2 HIRC cycles Wake-Up Times Note that if the Watchdog Timer is disabled, which means that the LXT and LIRC are all both off, then there will be no Fast Wake-up function available when the devices wake-up from the SLEEP0 Mode. Operating Mode Switching The devices can switch between operating modes dynamically allowing the user to select the best performance/power ratio for the present task in hand. In this way microcontroller operations that do not require high performance can be executed using slower clocks thus requiring less operating current and prolonging battery life in portable applications. In simple terms, Mode Switching between the NORMAL Mode and SLOW Mode is executed using the HLCLK bit and CKS2~CKS0 bits in the SMOD register while Mode Switching from the NORMAL/SLOW Modes to the SLEEP/IDLE Modes is executed via the HALT instruction. When a HALT instruction is executed, whether the devices enter the IDLE Mode or the SLEEP Mode is determined by the condition of the IDLEN bit in the SMOD register and FSYSON in the WDTC register. When the HLCLK bit switches to a low level, which implies that clock source is switched from the high speed clock source, fH, to the clock source, fH/2~fH/64 or fL. If the clock is from the fL, the high speed clock source will stop running to conserve power. When this happens it must be noted that the fH/16 and fH/64 internal clock sources will also stop running, which may affect the operation of other internal functions such as the SIM. The accompanying flowchart shows what happens when the devices move between the various operating modes. Rev. 1.00 47 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver NORMAL Mode to SLOW Mode Switching When running in the NORMAL Mode, which uses the high speed system oscillator, and therefore consumes more power, the system clock can switch to run in the SLOW Mode by set the HLCLK bit to “0” and set the CKS2~CKS0 bits to “000” or “001” in the SMOD register. This will then use the low speed system oscillator which will consume less power. Users may decide to do this for certain operations which do not require high performance and can subsequently reduce power consumption. The SLOW Mode is sourced from the LXT or the LIRC oscillators and therefore requires these oscillators to be stable before full mode switching occurs. This is monitored using the LTO bit in the SMOD register. Rev. 1.00 48 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Rev. 1.00 49 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver SLOW Mode to NORMAL Mode Switching In SLOW Mode the system uses either the LXT or LIRC low speed system oscillator. To switch back to the NORMAL Mode, where the high speed system oscillator is used, the HLCLK bit should be set to “1” or HLCLK bit is “0”, but CKS2~CKS0 is set to “010”, “011”, “100”, “101”, “110” or “111”. As a certain amount of time will be required for the high frequency clock to stabilise, the status of the HTO bit is checked. The amount of time required for high speed system oscillator stabilization depends upon which high speed system oscillator type is used. Rev. 1.00 50 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Entering the SLEEP0 Mode There is only one way for the devices to enter the SLEEP0 Mode and that is to execute the "HALT" instruction in the application program with the IDLEN bit in SMOD register equal to “0” and the WDT and LVD both off. When this instruction is executed under the conditions described above, the following will occur: • The system clock, WDT clock and Time Base clock will be stopped and the application program will stop at the “HALT” instruction. • The Data Memory contents and registers will maintain their present condition. • The WDT will be cleared and stopped no matter if the WDT clock source originates from the fSUB clock or from the system clock. • The I/O ports will maintain their present conditions. • In the status register, the Power Down flag, PDF, will be set and the Watchdog time-out flag, TO, will be cleared. Entering the SLEEP1 Mode There is only one way for the devices to enter the SLEEP1 Mode and that is to execute the “HALT” instruction in the application program with the IDLEN bit in SMOD register equal to “0” and the WDT or LVD on. When this instruction is executed under the conditions described above, the following will occur: • The system clock and Time Base clock will be stopped and the application program will stop at the “HALT” instruction, but the WDT or LVD will remain with the clock source coming from the fSUB clock. • The Data Memory contents and registers will maintain their present condition. • The WDT will be cleared and resume counting if the WDT clock source is selected to come from the fSUB clock as the WDT is enabled. • The I/O ports will maintain their present conditions. • In the status register, the Power Down flag, PDF, will be set and the Watchdog time-out flag, TO, will be cleared. Entering the IDLE0 Mode There is only one way for the devices to enter the IDLE0 Mode and that is to execute the “HALT” instruction in the application program with the IDLEN bit in SMOD register equal to “1” and the FSYSON bit in WDTC register equal to “0”. When this instruction is executed under the conditions described above, the following will occur: • The system clock will be stopped and the application program will stop at the “HALT” instruction, but the Time Base clock and fSUB clock will be on. • The Data Memory contents and registers will maintain their present condition. • The WDT will be cleared and resume counting if the WDT clock source is selected to come from the fSUB clock and the WDT is enabled. The WDT will stop if its clock source originates from the system clock. • The I/O ports will maintain their present conditions. • In the status register, the Power Down flag, PDF, will be set and the Watchdog time-out flag, TO, will be cleared. Rev. 1.00 51 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Entering the IDLE1 Mode There is only one way for the devices to enter the IDLE1 Mode and that is to execute the “HALT” instruction in the application program with the IDLEN bit in SMOD register equal to “1” and the FSYSON bit in WDTC register equal to “1”. When this instruction is executed under the with conditions described above, the following will occur: • The system clock and Time Base clock and fSUB clock will be on and the application program will stop at the “HALT” instruction. • The Data Memory contents and registers will maintain their present condition. • The WDT will be cleared and resume counting if the WDT is enabled regardless of the WDT clock source which originates from the fSUB clock or from the system clock. • The I/O ports will maintain their present conditions. • In the status register, the Power Down flag, PDF, will be set and the Watchdog time-out flag, TO, will be cleared. Standby Current Considerations As the main reason for entering the SLEEP or IDLE Mode is to keep the current consumption of the devices to as low a value as possible, perhaps only in the order of several micro-amps except in the IDLE1 Mode, there are other considerations which must also be taken into account by the circuit designer if the power consumption is to be minimised. Special attention must be made to the I/O pins on the devices. All high-impedance input pins must be connected to either a fixed high or low level as any floating input pins could create internal oscillations and result in increased current consumption. This also applies to devices which has different package types, as there may be unbonbed pins. These must either be setup as outputs or if setup as inputs must have pull-high resistors connected. Care must also be taken with the loads, which are connected to I/O pins, which are setup as outputs. These should be placed in a condition in which minimum current is drawn or connected only to external circuits that do not draw current, such as other CMOS inputs. Also note that additional standby current will also be required if the configuration options have enabled the LXT or LIRC oscillator. In the IDLE1 Mode the system oscillator is on, if the system oscillator is from the high speed system oscillator, the additional standby current will also be perhaps in the order of several hundred microamps. Rev. 1.00 52 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Wake-up After the system enters the SLEEP or IDLE Mode, it can be woken up from one of various sources listed as follows: • An external reset • An external falling edge on Port A • A system interrupt • A WDT overflow If the system is woken up by an external reset, the devices will experience a full system reset, however, if the devices are woken up by a WDT overflow, a Watchdog Timer reset will be initiated. Although both of these wake-up methods will initiate a reset operation, the actual source of the wake-up can be determined by examining the TO and PDF flags. The PDF flag is cleared by a system power-up or executing the clear Watchdog Timer instructions and is set when executing the “HALT” instruction. The TO flag is set if a WDT time-out occurs, and causes a wake-up that only resets the Program Counter and Stack Pointer, the other flags remain in their original status. Each pin on Port A can be setup using the PAWU register to permit a negative transition on the pin to wake-up the system. When a Port A pin wake-up occurs, the program will resume execution at the instruction following the “HALT” instruction. If the system is woken up by an interrupt, then two possible situations may occur. The first is where the related interrupt is disabled or the interrupt is enabled but the stack is full, in which case the program will resume execution at the instruction following the “HALT” instruction. In this situation, the interrupt which woke-up the devices will not be immediately serviced, but will rather be serviced later when the related interrupt is finally enabled or when a stack level becomes free. The other situation is where the related interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full, in which case the regular interrupt response takes place. If an interrupt request flag is set high before entering the SLEEP or IDLE Mode, the wake-up function of the related interrupt will be disabled. Programming Considerations The HXT and LXT oscillators both use the same SST counter. For example, if the system is woken up from the SLEEP0 Mode and both the HXT and LXT oscillators need to start-up from an off state. The LXT oscillator uses the SST counter after HXT oscillator has finished its SST period. • If the devices are woken up from the SLEEP0 Mode to the NORMAL Mode, the high speed system oscillator needs an SST period. The devices will execute first instruction after HTO is “1”. At this time, the LXT oscillator may not be stability if fSUB is from LXT oscillator. The same situation occurs in the power-on state. The LXT oscillator is not ready yet when the first instruction is executed. • If the devices are woken up from the SLEEP1 Mode to NORMAL Mode, and the system clock source is from HXT oscillator and FSTEN is “1”, the system clock can be switched to the LXT or LIRC oscillator after wake up. • There are peripheral functions, such as WDT, TMs and SIM, for which the fSYS is used. If the system clock source is switched from fH to fL, the clock source to the peripheral functions mentioned above will change accordingly. • The on/off condition of fSUB and fS depends upon whether the WDT is enabled or disabled as the WDT clock source is selected from fSUB. Rev. 1.00 53 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Watchdog Timer The Watchdog Timer is provided to prevent program malfunctions or sequences from jumping to unknown locations, due to certain uncontrollable external events such as electrical noise. Watchdog Timer Clock Source The Watchdog Timer clock source is provided by the internal clock, fS, which is in turn supplied by one of two sources selected by configuration option: fSUB or fSYS/4. The fSUB clock can be sourced from either the LXT or LIRC oscillators, again chosen via a configuration option. The Watchdog Timer source clock is then subdivided by a ratio of 213 to 220 to give longer timeouts, the actual value being chosen using the WS2~WS0 bits in the WDTC register. The LIRC internal oscillator has an approximate period of 32kHz at a supply voltage of 5V. However, it should be noted that this specified internal clock period can vary with VDD, temperature and process variations. The LXT oscillator is supplied by an external 32.768kHz crystal. The other Watchdog Timer clock source option is the fSYS/4 clock. The Watchdog Timer clock source can originate from its own internal LIRC oscillator, the LXT oscillator or fSYS/4. It is divided by a value of 213 to 220, using the WS2~WS0 bits in the WDTC register to obtain the required Watchdog Timer time-out period. Watchdog Timer Control Register A single register, WDTC, controls the required timeout period as well as the enable/disable operation. This register together with several configuration options control the overall operation of the Watchdog Timer. WDTC Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 Name FSYSON WS2 WS1 WS0 3 2 1 0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 WDTEN3 WDTEN2 WDTEN1 WDTEN0 Bit 7 FSYSON: fSYS Control in IDLE Mode 0: Disable 1: Enable Bit 6 ~ 4 WS2, WS1, WS0: WDT time-out period selection 000: 213/fS 001: 214/fS 010: 215/fS 011: 216/fS 100: 217/fS 101: 218/fS 110: 219/fS 111: 220/fS These three bits determine the division ratio of the Watchdog Timer source clock, which in turn determines the timeout period. Bit 3 ~ 0 WDTEN3, WDTEN2, WDTEN1, WDTEN0: WDT Software Control 1010: Disable Other: Enable 54 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Watchdog Timer Operation The Watchdog Timer operates by providing devices reset when their timer overflows. This means that in the application program and during normal operation the user has to strategically clear the Watchdog Timer before it overflows to prevent the Watchdog Timer from executing a reset. This is done using the clear watchdog instructions. If the program malfunctions for whatever reason, jumps to an unkown location, or enters an endless loop, these clear instructions will not be executed in the correct manner, in which case the Watchdog Timer will overflow and reset the devices. Some of the Watchdog Timer options, such as enable/disable, clock source selection and clear instruction type are selected using configuration options. In addition to a configuration option to enable/disable the Watchdog Timer, there are also four bits, WDTEN3~WDTEN0, in the WDTC register to offer an additional enable/disable control of the Watchdog Timer. To disable the Watchdog Timer, as well as the configuration option being set to disable, the WDTEN3~WDTEN0 bits must also be set to a specific value of “1010”. Any other values for these bits will keep the Watchdog Timer enabled, irrespective of the configuration enable/disable setting. After power on these bits will have the value of “1010”. If the Watchdog Timer is used it is recommended that they are set to a value of “0101” for maximum noise immunity. Note that if the Watchdog Timer has been disabled, then any instruction relating to its operation will result in no operation. WDT Configuration Option WDTEN3~WDTEN0 Bits WDT Enable WDT Enable xxxx WDT Disable Except 1010 Enable WDT Disable 1010 Disable Watchdog Timer Enable/Disable Control Under normal program operation, a Watchdog Timer time-out will initialise devices reset and set the status bit TO. However, if the system is in the SLEEP or IDLE Mode, when a Watchdog Timer time-out occurs, the TO bit in the status register will be set and only the Program Counter and Stack Pointer will be reset. Three methods can be adopted to clear the contents of the Watchdog Timer. The first is an external hardware reset, which means a low level on the RES pin, the second is using the Watchdog Timer software clear instructions and the third is via a HALT instruction. There are two methods of using software instructions to clear the Watchdog Timer, one of which must be chosen by configuration option. The first option is to use the single “CLR WDT” instruction while the second is to use the two commands “CLR WDT1” and “CLR WDT2”. For the first option, a simple execution of “CLR WDT” will clear the WDT while for the second option, both “CLR WDT1” and “CLR WDT2” must both be executed alternately to successfully clear the Watchdog Timer. Note that for this second option, if “CLR WDT1” is used to clear the Watchdog Timer, successive executions of this instruction will have no effect, only the execution of a “CLR WDT2” instruction will clear the Watchdog Timer. Similarly after the “CLR WDT2” instruction has been executed, only a successive “CLR WDT1” instruction can clear the Watchdog Timer. The maximum time out period is when the 220 division ratio is selected. As an example, with a 32.768kHz LXT oscillator as its source clock, this will give a maximum watchdog period of around 32 seconds for the 220 division ratio, and a minimum timeout of 250ms for the 213 division ration. If the fSYS/4 clock is used as the Watchdog Timer clock source, it should be noted that when the system enters the SLEEP or IDLE0 Mode, then the instruction clock is stopped and the Watchdog Timer may lose its protecting purposes. For systems that operate in noisy environments, using the fSUB clock source is strongly recommended. Rev. 1.00 55 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Reset and Initialisation A reset function is a fundamental part of any microcontroller ensuring that the devices can be set to some predetermined condition irrespective of outside parameters. The most important reset condition is after power is first applied to the microcontroller. In this case, internal circuitry will ensure that the microcontroller, after a short delay, will be in a well defined state and ready to execute the first program instruction. After this power-on reset, certain important internal registers will be set to defined states before the program commences. One of these registers is the Program Counter, which will be reset to zero forcing the microcontroller to begin program execution from the lowest Program Memory address. In addition to the power-on reset, situations may arise where it is necessary to forcefully apply a reset condition when the microcontroller is running. One example of this is where after power has been applied and the microcontroller is already running, the RES line is forcefully pulled low. In such a case, known as a normal operation reset, some of the microcontroller registers remain unchanged allowing the microcontroller to proceed with normal operation after the reset line is allowed to return high. Another type of reset is when the Watchdog Timer overflows and resets the microcontroller. All types of reset operations result in different register conditions being setup. Another reset exists in the form of a Low Voltage Reset, LVR, where a full reset, similar to the RES reset is implemented in situations where the power supply voltage falls below a certain threshold. Reset Functions There are five ways in which a microcontroller reset can occur, through events occurring both internally and externally: Power-on Reset The most fundamental and unavoidable reset is the one that occurs after power is first applied to the microcontroller. As well as ensuring that the Program Memory begins execution from the first memory address, a power-on reset also ensures that certain other registers are preset to known conditions. All the I/O port and port control registers will power up in a high condition ensuring that all pins will be first set to inputs. Note: tRSTD is power-on delay, typical time=100ms Power-On Reset Timing Chart Rev. 1.00 56 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver RES Pin As the reset pin is shared with PB.6, the reset function must be selected using a configuration option. Although the microcontroller has an internal RC reset function, if the VDD power supply rise time is not fast enough or does not stabilise quickly at power-on, the internal reset function may be incapable of providing proper reset operation. For this reason it is recommended that an external RC network is connected to the RES pin, whose additional time delay will ensure that the RES pin remains low for an extended period to allow the power supply to stabilise. During this time delay, normal operation of the microcontroller will be inhibited. After the RES line reaches a certain voltage value, the reset delay time tRSTD is invoked to provide an extra delay time after which the microcontroller will begin normal operation. The abbreviation SST in the figures stands for System Start-up Timer. For most applications a resistor connected between VDD and the RES pin and a capacitor connected between VSS and the RES pin will provide a suitable external reset circuit. Any wiring connected to the RES pin should be kept as short as possible to minimise any stray noise interference. For applications that operate within an environment where more noise is present the Enhanced Reset Circuit shown is recommended. Note: “*” It is recommended that this component is added for added ESD protection. “**” It is recommended that this component is added in environments where power line noise is significant. External RES Circuit More information regarding external reset circuits is located in Application Note HA0075E on the Holtek website. Pulling the RES Pin low using external hardware will also execute devices reset. In this case, as in the case of other resets, the Program Counter will reset to zero and program execution initiated from this point. RES Reset Timing Chart Rev. 1.00 57 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Low Voltage Reset – LVR The microcontroller contains a low voltage reset circuit in order to monitor the supply voltage of the devices, which is selected via a configuration option. If the supply voltage of the devices drop to within a range of 0.9V~VLVR such as might occur when changing the battery, the LVR will automatically reset the devices internally. The LVR includes the following specifications: For a valid LVR signal, a low voltage, i.e., a voltage in the range between 0.9V~VLVR must exist for greater than the value tLVR specified in the A.C. characteristics. If the low voltage state does not exceed tLVR, the LVR will ignore it and will not perform a reset function. One of a range of specified voltage values for VLVR can be selected using configuration options. Note: tRSTD is power-on delay, typical time=100ms Low Voltage Reset Timing Chart Watchdog Time-out Reset during Normal Operation The Watchdog time-out Reset during normal operation is the same as a hardware RES pin reset except that the Watchdog time-out flag TO will be set to “1”. Note: tRSTD is power-on delay, typical time=100ms WDT Time-out Reset during Normal Operation Timing Chart Watchdog Time-out Reset during SLEEP or IDLE Mode The Watchdog time-out Reset during SLEEP or IDLE Mode is a little different from other kinds of reset. Most of the conditions remain unchanged except that the Program Counter and the Stack Pointer will be cleared to “0” and the TO flag will be set to “1”. Refer to the A.C. Characteristics for tSST details. Note: The tSST is 15~16 clock cycles if the system clock source is provided by EC, HIRC. The tSST is 1024 clock for HXT or LXT. The tSST is 1~2 clock for LIRC. WDT Time-out Reset during Idle/Sleep Timing Chart Rev. 1.00 58 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Reset Initial Conditions The different types of reset described affect the reset flags in different ways. These flags, known as PDF and TO are located in the status register and are controlled by various microcontroller operations, such as the SLEEP or IDLE Mode function or Watchdog Timer. The reset flags are shown in the table: TO PDF 0 0 Power-on reset RESET Conditions u u RES or LVR reset during NORMAL or SLOW Mode operation 1 u WDT time-out reset during NORMAL or SLOW Mode operation 1 1 WDT time-out reset during IDLE or SLEEP Mode operation Note: “u” stands for unchanged The following table indicates the way in which the various components of the microcontroller are affected after a power-on reset occurs. Item Condition After RESET Program Counter Reset to zero Interrupts All interrupts will be disabled WDT Clear after reset, WDT begins counting Timer/Event Counter Timer Counter will be turned off Input/Output Ports I/O ports will be setup as inputs Stack Pointer Stack Pointer will point to the top of the stack The different kinds of resets all affect the internal registers of the microcontroller in different ways. To ensure reliable continuation of normal program execution after a reset occurs, it is important to know what condition the microcontroller is in after a particular reset occurs. The following table describes how each type of reset affects each of the microcontroller internal registers. Note that where more than one package type exists the table will reflect the situation for the larger package type. Rev. 1.00 59 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver HT45FH23A HT45FH24A Power-on Reset PCL ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 MP0 ● ● xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu MP1 ● ● xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu BP ● ● - - - - - - - 0 - - - - - - - 0 - - - - - - - 0 - - - - - - - u ACC ● ● xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu TBLP ● ● xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu TBLH ● - xxx xxxx - uuu uuuu - uuu uuuu - uuu uuuu xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu - - - - - xxx - - - - - uuu - - - - - uuu - - - - - uuu Register TBLH TBHP ● ● TBHP RES or LVR Reset WDT Time-out (Normal Operation) WDT Time-out (Idle/Sleep) ● - - - - xxxx - - - - uuuu - - - - uuuu - - - - uuuu STATUS ● ● - - 00 xxxx - - uu uuuu - - 1u uuuu - - 11 u u u u SMOD ● ● 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 uuuu uuuu LVDC ● ● - - 00 - 000 - - 00 - 000 - - 00 - 000 - -uu - uuu INTEDGE ● ● - - - - 0000 - - - - 0000 - - - - 0000 - - - - uuuu WDTC ● ● 0 111 1 0 1 0 0 111 1 0 1 0 0 111 1 0 1 0 uuuu uuuu INTC0 ● ● - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - uuu uuuu INTC1 ● ● - 000 - 000 - 000 - 000 - 000 - 000 - uuu - uuu MFIC0 ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu MFIC1 ● ● - 000 - 000 - 000 - 000 - 000 - 000 - uuu - uuu PA ● ● 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PAC ● ● 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PB ● - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - uuu uuuu 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - uuu uuuu 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - uuu uuuu 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - 111 1111 - uuu uuuu PB PBC ● ● PBC PC ● ● PC PCC ● ● PCC ● 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PD ● - - - - - - 11 - - - - - - 11 - - - - - - 11 - - - - - -uu PDC ● - - - - - - 11 - - - - - - 11 - - - - - - 11 - - - - - -uu PAWU ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu PAPU ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu PBPU ● - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - uuu uuuu 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - uuu uuuu PBPU PCPU ● ● PCPU ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu PDPU ● - - - - - -00 - - - - - -00 - - - - - -00 - - - - - -uu PWM0 ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu PWM1 ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu MISC ● ● 0000 - - 00 0000 - - 00 0000 - - 00 uuuu - - uu ADPCR ● - -00 0000 - -00 0000 - -00 0000 - -uu uuuu ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu ADPCR ADRL ● ● xxxx - - - - xxxx - - - - xxxx - - - - uuuu - - - - ADRH ● ● xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu Rev. 1.00 60 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver HT45FH24A ADCR HT45FH23A Register ● ADCR Power-on Reset RES or LVR Reset WDT Time-out (Normal Operation) WDT Time-out (Idle/Sleep) 01 - - -000 01 - - -000 01 - - -000 uu - - -uuu ● 01 - - 0000 01 - - 0000 01 - - 0000 uu - - uuuu ACSR ● ● 100 - - 000 100 - - 000 100 - - 000 uuu - - uuu SIMC0 ● ● 111 0 0 0 0 - 111 0 0 0 0 - 111 0 0 0 0 - uuuu uuuu SIMC1 ● ● 1000 0001 1000 0001 1000 0001 uuuu uuuu SIMD ● ● xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu SIMA/SIMC2 ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu TMR0 ● ● xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu TMR0C ● ● 00- 0 1000 00- 0 1000 00- 0 1000 uu- u uuuu TMR1L ● ● xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu TMR1H ● ● xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu TMR1C ● ● 0000 1- - - 0000 1- - - 0000 1- - - uuuu u- - - EEA ● ● xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu EED ● ● xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu EEC ● ● - - - - 0000 - - - - 0000 - - - - 0000 - - - - uuuu LCDC ● ● - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - 000 0000 - uuu uuuu LDOC ● ● - - -0 0000 - - -0 0000 - - -0 0000 - - -u uuuu DACTRL ● ● 000 - - - -0 000 - - - -0 000 - - - -0 uuu - - - -u DAL ● ● 0000 - - - - 0000 - - - - 0000 - - - - uuuu - - - - DAH ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu CMP1C0 ● ● 0001 0000 0001 0000 0001 0000 uuuu uuuu CMP1C1 ● ● 1- - - 0010 1- - - 0010 1- - - 0010 1- - - uuuu CMP2C0 ● ● 0001 0000 0001 0000 0001 0000 uuuu uuuu CMP2C1 ● ● 00 - - 0010 00 - - 0010 00 - - 0010 uu- - uuuu OPA1C0 ● ● 0- - - - - - - 0- - - - - - - 0- - - - - - - u- - - - - - - OPA1C1 ● ● 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 uuuu uuuu OPA2C0 ● ● 0- - - - - - - 0- - - - - - - 0- - - - - - - u- - - - - - - OPA2C1 ● ● 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 0 0 0 0 11 0 0 uuuu uuuu OPA2C2 ● ● 00 - - 0000 00 - - 0000 00 - - 0000 uu - - uuuu TBC ● ● 0 0 11 0 111 0 0 11 0 111 0 0 11 0 111 uuuu uuuu BPCTL ● ● 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000 uuuu uuuu Note: “-“ not implemented “u” means “unchanged” “x” means “unknown” Rev. 1.00 61 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Input/Output Ports Holtek microcontrollers offer considerable flexibility on their I/O ports. With the input or output designation of every pin fully under user program control, pull-high selections for all ports and wake-up selections on certain pins, the user is provided with an I/O structure to meet the needs of a wide range of application possibilities. The devices provide bidirectional input/output lines labeled with port names PA~PD. These I/O ports are mapped to the RAM Data Memory with specific addresses as shown in the Special Purpose Data Memory table. All of these I/O ports can be used for input and output operations. For input operation, these ports are non-latching, which means the inputs must be ready at the T2 rising edge of instruction “MOV A, [m]”, where m denotes the port address. For output operation, all the data is latched and remains unchanged until the output latch is rewritten. Pull-high Resistors Many product applications require pull-high resistors for their switch inputs usually requiring the use of an external resistor. To eliminate the need for these external resistors, when configured as an input have the capability of being connected to an internal pull-high resistor. These pull-high resistors are selectable via a register known as PAPU, PBPU, PCPU and PDPU located in the Data Memory. The pull-high resistors are implemented using weak PMOS transistors. Port A Wake-up The HALT instruction forces the microcontroller into the SLEEP or IDLE Mode which preserves power, a feature that is important for battery and other low-power applications. Various methods exist to wake-up the microcontroller, one of which is to change the logic condition on one of the Port A pins from high to low. This function is especially suitable for applications that can be woken up via external switches. Each pin on Port A can be selected individually to have this wake-up feature using the PAWU register. I/O Port Control Registers Each I/O port has its own control register known as PAC~PDC, to control the input/output configuration. With this control register, each CMOS output or input can be reconfigured dynamically under software control. Each pin of the I/O ports is directly mapped to a bit in its associated port control register. For the I/O pin to function as an input, the corresponding bit of the control register must be written as a a “1”. This will then allow the logic state of the input pin to be directly read by instructions. When the corresponding bit of the control register is written as a “0”, the I/O pin will be setup as a CMOS output. If the pin is currently setup as an output, instructions can still be used to read the output register. However, it should be noted that the program will in fact only read the status of the output data latch and not the actual logic status of the output pin. Rev. 1.00 62 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver PAWU, PAPU, PA, PAC, PBPU, PB, PBC, PCPU, PC, PCC, PD, PDC Registers • HT45FH23A Register Name PAWU PAPU PA PAC PBPU PB PBC PCPU PC PCC Bit 7 PAWU7 PAPU7 PA7 PAC7 — — — — — — 6 PAWU6 PAPU6 PA6 PAC6 PBPU6 PB6 PBC6 PCPU6 PC6 PCC6 5 PAWU5 PAPU5 PA5 PAC5 PBPU5 PB5 PBC5 PCPU5 PC5 PCC5 4 PAWU4 PAPU4 PA4 PAC4 PBPU4 PB4 PBC4 PCPU4 PC4 PCC4 3 PAWU3 PAPU3 PA3 PAC3 PBPU3 PB3 PBC3 PCPU3 PC3 PCC3 2 PAWU2 PAPU2 PA2 PAC2 PBPU2 PB2 PBC2 PCPU2 PC2 PCC2 1 PAWU1 PAPU1 PA1 PAC1 PBPU1 PB1 PBC1 PCPU1 PC1 PCC1 0 PAWU0 PAPU0 PA0 PAC0 PBPU0 PB0 PBC0 PCPU0 PC0 PCC0 “—”: Unimplemented, read as “0” PAWUn: PA wake-up function enable 0: disable 1: enable PAPUn/PBPUn/PCPUn: Pull-high function enable 0: disable 1: enable PACn/PBCn/PCCn: I/O type selection 0: output 1: input Note: The HT45FH23A I/O lines, as the PB0~PB5 and PC4~PC6 are not connected to the external pins, it is recommended to set these pins as I/O input with pull-high resistor, or as I/O output high or output low via the related I/O port control bits. • HT45FH24A Bit Register Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 PAWU PAPU PA PAC PBPU PB PBC PCPU PC PCC PDPU PD PDC PAWU7 PAPU7 PA7 PAC7 PBPU7 PB7 PBC7 PCPU7 PC7 PCC7 — — — PAWU6 PAPU6 PA6 PAC6 PBPU6 PB6 PBC6 PCPU6 PC6 PCC6 — — — PAWU5 PAPU5 PA5 PAC5 PBPU5 PB5 PBC5 PCPU5 PC5 PCC5 — — — PAWU4 PAPU4 PA4 PAC4 PBPU4 PB4 PBC4 PCPU4 PC4 PCC4 — — — PAWU3 PAPU3 PA3 PAC3 PBPU3 PB3 PBC3 PCPU3 PC3 PCC3 — — — PAWU2 PAPU2 PA2 PAC2 PBPU2 PB2 PBC2 PCPU2 PC2 PCC2 — — — PAWU1 PAPU1 PA1 PAC1 PBPU1 PB1 PBC1 PCPU1 PC1 PCC1 PDPU1 PD1 PDC1 PAWU0 PAPU0 PA0 PAC0 PBPU0 PB0 PBC0 PCPU0 PC0 PCC0 PDPU0 PD0 PDC0 “—”: Unimplemented, read as “0” PAWUn: PA wake-up function enable 0: disable 1: enable PAPUn/PBPUn/PCPUn/PDPUn: Pull-high function enable 0: disable 1: enable Rev. 1.00 63 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver PACn/PBCn/PCCn/PDCn: I/O type selection 0: output 1: input Note: As the PB0~PB5, PB7, PC4~PC7 and PD0~PD1 are not connected to the external pins, it is recommended to set these pins as I/O input with pull-high resistor, or as I/O output high or output low via the related I/O port control bits. Port B NMOS Open Drain Control Register Port B pins PB0~PB3 can be setup as open drain structures. This is implemented using the ODE0~ODE3 bits in the MISC register. • MISC Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name ODE3 ODE2 ODE1 ODE0 — — PFDSEL PFDEN R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — — R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 — — 0 0 Bit 7 ODE3: PB3 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 6 ODE2: PB2 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 5 ODE1: PB1 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 4 ODE0: PB0 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 3~2 Unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 1~0 PFDSEL, PFDEN: PFD related control – described elsewhere The PB0~PB3 are not connected to the external pins. I/O Pin Structures The accompanying diagram illustrates the internal structures of some generic I/O pin types. As the exact logical construction of the I/O pin will differ from these drawings, they are supplied as a guide only to assist with the functional understanding of the I/O pins. The wide range of pin-shared structures does not permit all types to be shown. Programming Considerations Within the user program, one of the first things to consider is port initialisation. After a reset, all of the I/O data and port control registers will be set high. This means that all I/O pins will default to an input state, the level of which depends on the other connected circuitry and whether pull-high selections have been chosen. If the port control registers, PAC~PDC, are then programmed to setup some pins as outputs, these output pins will have an initial high output value unless the associated port data registers, PA~PD, are first programmed. Selecting which pins are inputs and which are outputs can be achieved byte-wide by loading the correct values into the appropriate port control register or by programming individual bits in the port control register using the “SET[m].i” and “CLR[m].i” instructions. Note that when using these bit control instructions, a read-modify-write operation takes place. The microcontroller must first read in the data on the entire port, modify it to the required new bit values and then rewrite this data back to the output ports. Rev. 1.00 64 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Note that when the device is powered on the PC1/AN5/OSC1 and PC0/AN4/OSC2 pins will experience a high level output between 1 and 2 volts for a period of tRSTD. It is important to take this into account for any connected external hardware devices. Read Modify Write Timing Port A has the additional capability of providing wake-up functions. When the devices are in the SLEEP or IDLE Mode, various methods are available to wake the devices up. One of these is a high to low transition of any of the Port A pins. Single or multiple pins on Port A can be setup to have this function. In addition, the Port B pins also provide Open Drain I/O structure options which can be controlled by the specific register. Generic Input/Output Ports Rev. 1.00 65 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Timer/Event Counters The provision of timers form an important part of any microcontroller, giving the designer a means of carrying out time related functions. The devices contain one 8-bit and one 16-bit count-up timer respectively. As each timer has four different operating modes, they can be configured to operate as a general timer, an external event counter, an internal event counter for comparator, or as a pulse width measurement device. The provision of a prescaler to the clock circuitry of the 8-bit Timer/ Event Counter also gives added range to this timer. There are two types of registers related to the Timer/Event Counters. The first are the registers that contain the actual value of the Timer/Event Counter and into which an initial value can be preloaded. Reading from these registers retrieves the contents of the Timer/Event Counter. The second type of associated register is the Timer Control Register which defines the timer options and determines how the Timer/Event Counter is to be used. The Timer/Event Counters can have the their clock configured to come from an internal clock source. In addition, their clock source can also be configured to come from an external timer pin. Configuring the Timer/Event Counter Input Clock Source The internal timer’s clock can originate from various sources. The system clock source is used when the Timer/Event Counter is in the timer mode or in the pulse width measurement mode. For Timer/ Event Counter 0 this internal clock source is fSYS which is also divided by a prescaler, the division ratio of which is conditioned by the Timer Control Register, TMR0C, bits T0PSC0~ T0PSC2. For Timer/Event Counter 1 this internal clock source can be chosen from a combination of internal clocks using a configuration option and the T1S bit in the TMR1C register. An external clock source is used when the timer is in the event counting mode, the clock source being provided on an external timer pin TC0 or TC1, depending upon which timer is used. Depending upon the condition of the T0E or T1E bit, each high to low, or low to high transition on the external timer pin will increment the counter by one. Timer Registers – TMR0, TMR1L, TMR1H The timer registers are special function registers located in the Special Purpose Data Memory and is the place where the actual timer value is stored. For the 8-bit Timer/Event Counter 0, this register is known as TMR0. For 16-bit Timer/Event Counter 1, the timer registers are known as TMR1L and TMR1H. The value in the timer registers increases by one each time an internal clock pulse is received or an external transition occurs on the external timer pin. The timer will count from the initial value loaded by the preload register to the full count of FFH for the 8-bit timer or FFFFH for the 16-bit timer at which point the timer overflows and an internal interrupt signal is generated. The timer value will then be reset with the initial preload register value and continue counting. To achieve a maximum full range count of FFH for the 8-bit timer or FFFFH for the 16-bit timer, the preload registers must first be cleared to all zeros. It should be noted that after power-on, the preload register will be in an unknown condition. Note that if the Timer/Event Counter is switched off and data is written to its preload registers, this data will be immediately written into the actual timer registers. However, if the Timer/Event Counter is enabled and counting, any new data written into the preload data registers during this period will remain in the preload registers and will only be written into the timer registers the next time an overflow occurs. Rev. 1.00 66 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver 8-bit Timer/Event Counter 0 Structure 16-bit Timer/Event Counter 1 Structure Note:1. The PFD clock source, PFD0 or PFD1, which is from Timer0 or Timer1, is selected by PFDSEL bit in MISC register. 2. The output is controlled by PA5 data. 3. CMP1X is comparator 1 output. 4. CMP2X is comparator 2 output. For the 16-bit Timer/Event Counter which has both low byte and high byte timer registers, accessing these registers is carried out in a specific way. It must be noted when using instructions to preload data into the low byte timer register, namely TMR1L, the data will only be placed in a low byte buffer and not directly into the low byte timer register. The actual transfer of the data into the low byte timer register is only carried out when a write to its associated high byte timer register, namely TMR1H, is executed. On the other hand, using instructions to preload data into the high byte timer register will result in the data being directly written to the high byte timer register. At the same time the data in the low byte buffer will be transferred into its associated low byte timer register. For this reason, the low byte timer register should be written first when preloading data into the 16-bit timer registers. It must also be noted that to read the contents of the low byte timer register, a read to the high byte timer register must be executed first to latch the contents of the low byte timer register into its associated low byte buffer. After this has been done, the low byte timer register can be read in the normal way. Note that reading the low byte timer register will result in reading the previously latched contents of the low byte buffer and not the actual contents of the low byte timer register. Rev. 1.00 67 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Timer Control Registers – TMR0C, TMR1C The flexible features of the Holtek microcontroller Timer/Event Counters enable them to operate in four different modes, the options of which are determined by the contents of their respective control register. It is the Timer Control Register together with its corresponding timer registers that control the full operation of the Timer/Event Counters. Before the timers can be used, it is essential that the appropriate Timer Control Register is fully programmed with the right data to ensure its correct operation, a process that is normally carried out during program initialisation. To choose which of the four modes the timer is to operate in, either in the timer mode, the external event counting mode, the internal event counter mode, or the pulse width measurement mode, bits 7 and 6 of the Timer Control Register, which are known as the bit pair T0M1/T0M0 or T1M1/T1M0 respectively, depending upon which timer is used, must be set to the required logic levels. The timeron bit, which is bit 4 of the Timer Control Register and known as T0ON or T1ON, depending upon which timer is used, provides the basic on/off control of the respective timer. Setting the bit high allows the counter to run, clearing the bit stops the counter. For timers that have prescalers, bits 0~2 of the Timer Control Register determine the division ratio of the input clock prescaler. The prescaler bit settings have no effect if an external clock source is used. If the timer is in the event count or pulse width measurement mode, the active transition edge level type is selected by the logic level of bit 3 of the Timer Control Register which is known as T0E or T1E depending upon which timer is used. An additional T1S bit in the TMR1C register is used to determine the clock source for Timer/ Event Counter 1. Configuring the Timer Mode In this mode, the Timer/Event Counter can be utilised to measure fixed time intervals, providing an internal interrupt signal each time the Timer/Event Counter overflows. To operate in this mode, the Operating Mode Select bit pair, T0M1/T0M0 or T1M1/T1M0, in the Timer Control Register must be set to the correct value as shown.Control Register Operating Mode Select Bits for the Timer Mode Bit7 Bit6 1 0 In this mode the internal clock, fSYS, is used as the internal clock for 8-bit Timer/Event Counter 0 and fSUB or fSYS/4 is used as the internal clock for 16-bit Timer/Event Counter 1. However, the clock source, fSYS, for 8-bit timer is further divided by a prescaler, the value of which is determined by the Prescaler Rate Select bits T0PSC2~T0PSC0, which are bits 2~0 in the Timer Control Register. After the other bits in the Timer Control Register have been setup, the enable bit T0ON or T1ON, which is bit 4 of the Timer Control Register, can be set high to enable the Timer/Event Counter to run. Each time an internal clock cycle occurs, the Timer/Event Counter increments by one. When it is full and overflows, an interrupt signal is generated and the Timer/Event Counter will reload the value already loaded into the preload register and continue counting. The interrupt can be disabled by ensuring that the Timer/Event Counter Interrupt Enable bit in the Interrupt Control Register, INTC0, is reset to zero. Timer Mode Timing Chart Rev. 1.00 68 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Configuring the Event Counter Mode In this mode, a number of internally changing logic events, occurring on the internal comparators output, can be recorded by the Timer/Event Counter. To operate in this mode, the Operating Mode Select bit pair, T0M1/T0M0 or T1M1/T1M0, in the Timer Control Register must be set to the correct value as shown. Control Register Operating Mode Select Bits for the Event Counter Mode Bit7 Bit6 0 0/1 In this mode, the comparator output, CMP1X or CMP2X, is used as the Timer/Event Counter clock source, however it is not divided by the internal prescaler. After the other bits in the Timer Control Register have been setup, the enable bit T0ON or T1ON, which is bit 4 of the Timer Control Register, can be set high to enable the Timer/Event Counter to run. If the Active Edge Select bit T0E or T1E, which is bit 3 of the Timer Control Register, is low, the Timer/Event Counter will increment each time the external timer pin receives a low to high transition. If the Active Edge Select bit is high, the counter will increment each time the external timer pin receives a high to low transition. When it is full and overflows, an interrupt signal is generated and the Timer/Event Counter will reload the value already loaded into the preload register and continue counting. The interrupt can be disabled by ensuring that the Timer/Event Counter Interrupt Enable bit in the Interrupt Control Register, INTC0, is reset to zero. It should be noted that in the internal event counting mode, even if the microcontroller is in the Power Down Mode, the Timer/Event Counter will continue to record externally changing logic events on the timer input pin. As a result when the timer overflows it will generate a timer interrupt and corresponding wake-up source. Event Counter Mode Timing Chart (TnE=1) Configuring the Pulse Width Measurement Mode In this mode, the Timer/Event Counter can be utilised to measure the width of external pulses applied to the external timer pin. To operate in this mode, the Operating Mode Select bit pair, T0M1/ T0M0 or T1M1/T1M0, in the Timer Control Register must be set to the correct value as shown. Control Register Operating Mode Select Bits for the Pulse Width Measurement Mode Bit7 Bit6 1 1 In this mode the internal clock, fSYS, is used as the internal clock for 8-bit Timer/Event Counter 0 and fSUB or fSYS/4 is used as the internal clock for 16-bit Timer/Event Counter 1. However, the clock source, fSYS, for 8-bit timer is further divided by a prescaler, the value of which is determined by the Prescaler Rate Select bits T0PSC2~T0PSC0, which are bits 2~0 in the Timer Control Register. After the other bits in the Timer Control Register have been setup, the enable bit T0ON or T1ON, which is bit 4 of the Timer Control Register, can be set high to enable the Timer/Event Counter, however it will not actually start counting until an active edge is received on the external timer pin. Rev. 1.00 69 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver If the Active Edge Select bit T0E or T1E, which is bit 3 of the Timer Control Register, is low, once a high to low transition has been received on the external timer pin, TMR0 or TMR1, the Timer/Event Counter will start counting until the external timer pin returns to its original high level. At this point the enable bit will be automatically reset to zero and the Timer/Event Counter will stop counting. If the Active Edge Select bit is high, the Timer/Event Counter will begin counting once a low to high transition has been received on the external timer pin and stop counting when the external timer pin returns to its original low level. As before, the enable bit will be automatically reset to zero and the Timer/Event Counter will stop counting. It is important to note that in the Pulse Width Measurement Mode, the enable bit is automatically reset to zero when the external control signal on the external timer pin returns to its original level, whereas in the other two modes the enable bit can only be reset to zero under program control. The residual value in the Timer/Event Counter, which can now be read by the program, therefore represents the length of the pulse received on the external timer pin. As the enable bit has now been reset, any further transitions on the external timer pin will be ignored. Not until the enable bit is again set high by the program can the timer begin further pulse width measurements. In this way, single shot pulse measurements can be easily Made. It should be noted that in this mode the Timer/Event Counter is controlled by logical transitions on the external timer pin and not by the logic level. When the Timer/Event Counter is full and overflows, an interrupt signal is generated and the Timer/Event Counter will reload the value already loaded into the preload register and continue counting. The interrupt can be disabled by ensuring that the Timer/Event Counter Interrupt Enable bit in the Interrupt Control Register, INTC0, is reset to zero. As the external timer pin is shared with an I/O pin, to ensure that the pin is configured to operate as a pulse width measurement pin, two things have to happen. The first is to ensure that the Operating Mode Select bits in the Timer Control Register place the Timer/Event Counter in the Pulse Width Measurement Mode, the second is to ensure that the port control register configures the pin as an input. Pulse Width Capture Mode Timing Chart (TnE=0) Rev. 1.00 70 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Programmable Frequency Divider – PFD The Programmable Frequency Divider provides a means of producing a variable frequency output suitable for applications requiring a precise frequency generator. The PFD output is pin-shared with the I/O pin PA5. The PFD function is enabled via PFDEN bit in MISC register, however, if not enabled, the pin can operate as a normal I/O pin. The clock source for the PFD circuit can originate from either the timer 0 or timer 1 overflow signal selected via PFDSELbit in MISC register. The output frequency is controlled by loading the required values into the timer registers and prescaler registers to give the required division ratio. The timer will begin to count-up from this preload register value until full, at which point an overflow signal is generated, causing the PFD output to change state. The timer will then be automatically reloaded with the preload register value and continue counting-up. For the PFD output to function, it is essential that the corresponding bit of the Port A control register PAC bit 5 is setup as an output. If setup as an input the PFD output will not function, however, the pin can still be used as a normal input pin. The PFD output will only be activated if bit PA5 is set to “1”. This output data bit is used as the on/off control bit for the PFD output. Note that the PFD output will be low if the PA5 output data bit is cleared to “0”. Using this method of frequency generation, and if a crystal oscillator is used for the system clock, very precise values of frequency can be generated. PFD Output Control Prescaler Bits T0PSC0~T0PSC2 of the TMR0C register can be used to define the pre-scaling stages of the internal clock sources of the Timer/Event Counter 0. The Timer/Event Counter overflow signal can be used to generate signals for the PFD and Timer Interrupt. Rev. 1.00 71 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver TMR0C Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name T0M1 T0M0 — T0ON T0E T0PSC2 T0PSC1 T0PSC0 R/W R/W R/W — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 — 0 1 0 0 0 Bit 7~6 T0M1, T0M0: Timer 0 operation mode selection 00: event counter mode, the input signal is from Comparator 1 output 01: event counter mode, the input signal is from TC0 pin 10: timer mode 11: pulse width capture mode Bit 5 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 4 T0ON: Timer/Event Counter counting enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 3 T0E: Event counter active edge selection 0: count on raising edge 1: count on falling edge Pulse Width Capture active edge selection 0: start counting on falling edge, stop on rasing edge 1: start counting on raising edge, stop on falling edge Bit 2~0 T0PSC2, T0PSC1, T0PSC0: Timer prescaler rate selection Timer internal clock= 000: fSYS 001: fSYS/2 010: fSYS/4 011: fSYS/8 100: fSYS/16 101: fSYS/32 110: fSYS/64 111: fSYS/128 72 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver TMR1C Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name T1M1 T1M0 T1S T1ON T1E — — — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — — — POR 0 0 0 0 1 — — — Bit 7~6 T1M1, T1M0: Timer1 operation mode selection 00: event counter mode, the input signal is from Comparator 2 output 01: event counter mode, the input signal is from TC1 pin 10: timer mode 11: pulse width capture mode Bit 5 T1S: timer clock source 0: fSYS/4 1: fSUB, LXT or LIRC Bit 4 T1ON: Timer/event counter counting enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 3 T1E: Event counter active edge selection 0: count on raising edge 1: count on falling edge Pulse width capture active edge selection 0: start counting on falling edge, stop on rasing edge 1: start counting on raising edge, stop on falling edge Bit 2~0 unimplemented, read as “0” MISC Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name ODE3 ODE2 ODE1 ODE0 — — PFDSEL PFDEN R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — — R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 — — 0 0 Bit 7 ODE3: PB3 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 6 ODE2: PB2 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 5 ODE1: PB1 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 4 ODE0: PB0 Open Drain Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 3~2 Unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 1 PFDSEL: PFD clock selection 0: Timer 0 output 1: Timer 1 output Bit 0 PFDEN: PFD function control 0: PFD disable 1: PFD enable 73 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver I/O Interfacing The Timer/Event Counter, when configured to run in the event counter or pulse width measurement mode, require the use of the external pin for correct operation. As this pin is a shared pin it must be configured correctly to ensure it is setup for use as a Timer/Event Counter input and not as a normal I/O pin. This is implemented by ensuring that the mode select bits in the Timer/Event Counter control register, select either the event counter or pulse width measurement mode. Additionally the Port Control Register must be set high to ensure that the pin is setup as an input. Any pull-high resistor on this pin will remain valid even if the pin is used as a Timer/Event Counter input. Timer/Event Counter Pins Internal Filter The external Timer/Event Counter pins are connected to an internal filter to reduce the possibility of unwanted event counting events or inaccurate pulse width measurements due to adverse noise or spikes on the external Timer/Event Counter input signal. As this internal filter circuit will consume a limited amount of power, a configuration option is provided to switch off the filter function, an option which may be beneficial in power sensitive applications, but in which the integrity of the input signal is high. Care must be taken when using the filter on/off configuration option as it will be applied not only to both external Timer/Event Counter pins but also to the external interrupt input pins. Individual Timer/Event Counter or external interrupt pins cannot be selected to have a filter on/off function. Programming Considerations When configured to run in the timer mode, the internal system clock is used as the timer clock source and is therefore synchronised with the overall operation of the microcontroller. In this mode when the appropriate timer register is full, the microcontroller will generate an internal interrupt signal directing the program flow to the respective internal interrupt vector. For the pulse width measurement mode, the internal system clock is also used as the timer clock source but the timer will only run when the correct logic condition appears on the external timer input pin. As this is an external event and not synchronized with the internal timer clock, the microcontroller will only see this external event when the next timer clock pulse arrives. As a result, there may be small differences in measured values requiring programmers to take this into account during programming. The same applies if the timer is configured to be in the event counting mode, which again is an external event and not synchronised with the internal system or timer clock. When the Timer/Event Counter is read, or if data is written to the preload register, the clock is inhibited to avoid errors, however as this may result in a counting error, this should be taken into account by the programmer. Care must be taken to ensure that the timers are properly initialised before using them for the first time. The associated timer enable bits in the interrupt control register must be properly set otherwise the internal interrupt associated with the timer will remain inactive. The edge select, timer mode and clock source control bits in timer control register must also be correctly set to ensure the timer is properly configured for the required application. It is also important to ensure that an initial value is first loaded into the timer registers before the timer is switched on; this is because after power-on the initial values of the timer registers are unknown. After the timer has been initialised the timer can be turned on and off by controlling the enable bit in the timer control register. Note that setting the timer enable bit high to turn the timer on, should only be executed after the timer mode bits have been properly setup. Setting the timer enable bit high together with a mode bit modification, may lead to improper timer operation if executed as a single timer control register byte write instruction. Rev. 1.00 74 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver When the Timer/Event counter overflows, its corresponding interrupt request flag in the interrupt control register will be set. If the timer interrupt is enabled this will in turn generate an interrupt signal. However irrespective of whether the interrupts are enabled or not, a Timer/Event counter overflow will also generate a wake-up signal if the devices are in a Power-down condition. This situation may occur if the Timer/Event Counter is in the Event Counting Mode and if the external signal continues to change state. In such a case, the Timer/Event Counter will continue to count these external events and if an overflow occurs the devices will be woken up from its Power-down condition. To prevent such a wake-up from occurring, the timer interrupt request flag should first be set high before issuing the HALT instruction to enter the Power Down Mode. Timer Program Example This program example shows how the Timer/Event Counter registers are setup, along with how the interrupts are enabled and managed. Note how the Timer/Event Counter is turned on, by setting bit 4 of the Timer Control Register. The Timer/Event Counter can be turned off in a similar way by clearing the same bit. This example program sets the Timer/Event Counter to be in the timer mode, which uses the internal system clock as the clock source. org 04h; external interrupt vector org 0ch ; Timer/Event Counter 0 interrupt vector jmp tmrint ; jump here when the Timer/Event Counter 0 overflows : org 20h; main program ; internal Timer/Event Counter 0 interrupt routine : tmrint: ; Timer/Event Counter 0 main program placed here : reti: : begin: ; setup Timer 0 registers mov a,09bh; setup Timer 0 preload value mov tmr0,a; mov a,081h ; setup Timer 0 control register mov tmr0c,a ; timer mode and prescaler set to /2 ; setup interrupt register mov a,009h ; enable master interrupt and timer interrupt mov intc0,a set tmr0c.4 ; start Timer/Event Counter 0 - note mode bits must be previously ; setup Rev. 1.00 75 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Pulse Width Modulator The devices contain two channels of 8-bit PWM function respectively. Useful for such applications such as motor speed control, the PWM function provides outputs with a fixed frequency but with a duty cycle that can be varied by setting particular values into the corresponding PWM register. PWM Operation A single register, known as PWMn and located in the Data Memory is assigned to each Pulse Width Modulator channel. It is here that the 8-bit value, which represents the overall duty cycle of one modulation cycle of the output waveform, should be placed. To increase the PWM modulation frequency, each modulation cycle is subdivided into two or four individual modulation subsections, known as the 7+1 mode or 6+2 mode respectively. The required mode and the on/off control for each PWM channel is selected using the BPCTL register. Note that when using the PWM, it is only necessary to write the required value into the PWMn register and select the required mode setup and on/off control using the BPCTL registers, the subdivision of the waveform into its sub-modulation cycles is implemented automatically within the microcontroller hardware. The PWM clock source is the system clock fSYS. This method of dividing the original modulation cycle into a further 2 or 4 sub-cycles enable the generation of higher PWM frequencies which allow a wider range of applications to be served. The difference between what is known as the PWM cycle frequency and the PWM modulation frequency should be understood. As the PWM clock is the system clock, fSYS, and as the PWM value is 8-bits wide, the overall PWM cycle frequency is fSYS/256. However, when in the 7+1 mode of operation the PWM modulation frequency will be fSYS/128, while the PWM modulation frequency for the 6+2 mode of operation will be fSYS/64. PWM Modulation PWM Cycle Frequency PWM Cycle Duty fSYS/256 [PWM]/256 fSYS/64 for (6+2) bits mode fSYS/128for (7+1) bits mode BPCTL Register Bit Name 7 6 5 PMODE PWM1EN PWM0EN 4 3 2 1 0 BC1 BC0 BZ2 BZ1 BZ0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 PMODE: PWM type selection 0: 7+1 mode 1: 6+2 mode Bit 6 PWM1EN: PWM1 or the other pin-shared functions 0: the other pin-shared functions 1: PWM1 Bit 5 PWM0EN: PWM0 or the other pin-shared functions 0: the other pin-shared functions 1: PWM0 Bit 4~0 Buzzer output and I/O configuration selection, described elsewhere It should be noted that the PWM0 and PWM1 are not connected to the external pins. Rev. 1.00 76 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver 6+2 PWM Mode Each full PWM cycle, as it is controlled by an 8-bit PWM register, has 256 clock periods. However, in the 6+2 PWM mode, each PWM cycle is subdivided into four individual sub-cycles known as modulation cycle 0 ~ modulation cycle 3, denoted as i in the table. Each one of these four sub-cycles contains 64 clock cycles. In this mode, a modulation frequency increase of four is achieved. The 8-bit PWM register value, which represents the overall duty cycle of the PWM waveform, is divided into two groups. The firs mrnr t group which consists of bit2~bit7 is denoted here as the DC value. The second group which consists of bit0~bit1 is known as the AC value. In the 6+2 PWM mode, the duty cycle value of each of the four modulation sub-cycles is shown in the following table. Parameter AC (0~3) DC (Duty Cycle) i<AC DC+1 64 i≥AC DC 64 Modulation cycle i (i=0~3) 6+2 Mode Modulation Cycle Values The following diagram illustrates the waveforms associated with the 6+2 mode of PWM operation. It is important to note how the single PWM cycle is subdivided into 4 individual modulation cycles, numbered from 0~3 and how the AC value is related to the PWM value. 6+2 PWM Mode PWM Register for 6+2 Mode Rev. 1.00 77 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver 7+1 PWM Mode Each full PWM cycle, as it is controlled by an 8-bit PWM register, has 256 clock periods. However, in the 7+1 PWM mode, each PWM cycle is subdivided into two individual sub-cycles known as modulation cycle 0 ~ modulation cycle 1, denoted as i in the table. Each one of these two sub-cycles contains 128 clock cycles. In this mode, a modulation frequency increase of two is achieved. The 8-bit PWM register value, which represents the overall duty cycle of the PWM waveform, is divided into two groups. The first group which consists of bit1~bit7 is denoted here as the DC value. The second group which consists of bit0 is known as the AC value. In the 7+1 PWM mode, the duty cycle value of each of the two modulation sub-cycles is shown in the following table. Parameter AC (0~1) DC (Duty Cycle) i<AC DC+1 128 i≥AC DC 128 Modulation cycle i (i=0~1) 7+1 Mode Modulation Cycle Values The following diagram illustrates the waveforms associated with the 7+1 mode PWM operation. It is important to note how the single PWM cycle is subdivided into 2 individual modulation cycles, numbered 0 and 1 and how the AC value is related to the PWM value. 7+1 PWM Mode PWM Register for 7+1 Mode Rev. 1.00 78 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver PWM Output Control The PWM outputs are pin-shared with the I/O pins PC5 and PC6. To operate as a PWM output and not as an I/O pin, the correct bits must be set in the BPCTL register. A high value must be written to the PWM0EN or PWM1EN to select the corresponding PWM. A zero value must also be written to the corresponding bit in the I/O port control register PCC5 and PCC6 to ensure that the corresponding PWM output pin is setup as an output. After these two initial steps have been carried out, and of course after the required PWM value has been written into the PWMn register, writing a high value to the corresponding bit in the output data register PC5 and PC6 will enable the PWM data to appear on the pin. Writing a zero value will disable the PWM output function and force the output low. In this way, the Port data output registers can be used as an on/off control for the PWM function. Note that if the BPCTL register has selected the PWM function, but a high value has been written to its corresponding bit in the PCC control register to configure the pin as an input, then the pin can still function as a normal input line, with pull-high resistor options. PWM Programming Example The following sample program shows how the PWM0 output is setup and controlled. mov a,64h ; setup PWM value of decimal 100 mov pwm0,a clr bpctl.7 ; select the 7+1 PWM mode set bpctl.5 ; select PWM0 clr pcc.5 ; setup pin PC5 set pc.5 ; enable the PWM output : : clr pc.5 ; disable the PWM output pin,PC5 forced low Rev. 1.00 79 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Analog to Digital Converter The need to interface to real world analog signals is a common requirement for many electronic systems. However, to properly process these signals by a microcontroller, they must first be converted into digital signals by A/D converters. By integrating the A/D conversion electronic circuitry into the microcontroller, the need for external components is reduced significantly with the corresponding follow-on benefits of lower costs and reduced component space requirements. A/D Overview The devices contain an 8/10-channel analog to digital converter which can directly interface to external analog signals, such as that from sensors or other control signals and convert these signals directly into either a 12-bit digital value. Part No. Input Channels A/D Channel Select Bits Input Pins HT45FH23A 3+2 (from OPA1 and OPA2 output pins) ACS2~ACS0 AN3~AN5 HT45FH24A 3+2 (from OPA1 and OPA2 output pins) ACS3~ACS0 AN3~AN5 Note: 1. For the HT45FH23A, AN0~AN2 pins are not connected to the external pins. 2. For the HT45FH24A, AN0~AN2 and AN6~AN7 pins are not connected to the external pins. The accompanying block diagram shows the overall internal structure of the A/D converter, together with its associated registers. Note: "*" AN0~AN2 and VREF/VCAP pins are not connected to the external pins and internally used only. HT45FH23A A/D Converter Structure Note: "*" AN0~AN2, AN6~AN7 and VREF/VCAP pins are not connected to the external pins and internally used only. HT45FH24A A/D Converter Structure Rev. 1.00 80 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver A/D Converter Register Description Overall operation of the A/D converter is controlled using five registers. A read only register pair exists to store the ADC data 12-bit value. The remaining three registers are control registers which setup the operating and control function of the A/D converter. Bit Register Name 7 ADCR START ACSR — ADPCR — — 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 EOCB — — — ACS2 ACS1 ACS0 ADONB VRSEL — — ADCS2 ADCS1 ADCS0 PCR5 PCR4 PCR3 PCR2 PCR1 PCR0 1 0 A/D Converter Register List – HT45FH23A Bit Register Name 7 ADCR START ACSR — ADPCR PCR7 PCR6 6 5 4 3 2 EOCB — — ACS3 ACS2 ACS1 ACS0 ADONB VRSEL — — ADCS2 ADCS1 ADCS0 PCR5 PCR4 PCR3 PCR2 PCR1 PCR0 A/D Converter Register List – HT45FH24A A/D Converter Data Registers – ADRL, ADRH As the devices contain an internal 12-bit A/D converter respectively, they require two data registers to store the converted value. These are a high byte register, known as ADRH, and a low byte register, known as ADRL. After the conversion process takes place, these registers can be directly read by the microcontroller to obtain the digitised conversion value. D0~D11 are the A/D conversion result data bits. Any unused bits will be read as zero. ADRH ADRL 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 0 0 0 0 A/D Data Registers A/D Converter Control Registers – ADCR, ACSR, ADPCR To control the function and operation of the A/D converter, three control registers known as ADCR, ACSR and ADPCR are provided. These 8-bit registers define functions such as the selection of which analog channel is connected to the internal A/D converter, the digitised data format, the A/D clock source as well as controlling the start function and monitoring the A/D converter end of conversion status. The ACS3~ACS0 bits in the ADCR register define the ADC input channel number. As the devices contain only one actual analog to digital converter hardware circuit for the HT45FH24A, each of the individual 5 analog inputs, which include 3 external A/D channels and 2 internal OPA outputs, must be routed to the converter. It is the function of the ACS3~ACS0 bits to determine which analog channel input pin is actually connected to the internal A/D converter. The ADPCR control register contains the PCR7~PCR0 bits which determine which pins on Port B, Port C and Port D are used as analog inputs for the A/D converter input and which pins are not to be used as the A/D converter input. Setting the corresponding bit high will select the A/D input function, clearing the bit to zero will select either the I/O or other pin-shared function. When the pin is selected to be an A/D input, its original function whether it is an I/O or other pin-shared function will be removed. In addition, any internal pull-high resistors connected to these pins will be automatically removed if the pin is selected to be an A/D input. Rev. 1.00 81 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver ADCR Register • HT45FH23A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name START EOCB — — — ACS2 ACS1 ACS0 R/W R/W R — — — R/W R/W R/W POR 0 1 — — — 0 0 0 Bit 7 START: Start the A/D conversion 0→1→0: start 0→1: reset the A/D converter and set EOCB to “1” This bit is used to initiate an A/D conversion process. The bit is normally low but if set high and then cleared low again, the A/D converter will initiate a conversion process. When the bit is set high the A/D converter will be reset. Bit 6 EOCB: End of A/D conversion flag 0: A/D conversion ended 1: A/D conversion in progress This read only flag is used to indicate when an A/D conversion process has completed. When the conversion process is running the bit will be high. Bit 5~3 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 2~0 ACS2 ~ ACS0: Select A/D channel 000: AN0 001: AN1 010: AN2 011: AN3 100: AN4 101: AN5 110: connect Op Amp 1 output (A1E) 111: connect Op Amp 2 output (A2E) These are the A/D channel select control bits. As there is only one internal hardware A/D converter each of the eight A/D inputs must be routed to the internal converter using these bits. It should be noted that the AN0~AN2 are not connected to the external pins. • HT45FH24A Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name START EOCB — — ACS3 ACS2 ACS1 ACS0 R/W R/W R — — R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 1 — — 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 START: Start the A/D conversion 0→1→0: start 0→1: reset the A/D converter and set EOCB to “1” This bit is used to initiate an A/D conversion process. The bit is normally low but if set high and then cleared low again, the A/D converter will initiate a conversion process. When the bit is set high the A/D converter will be reset. Bit 6 EOCB: End of A/D conversion flag 0: A/D conversion ended 1: A/D conversion in progress This read only flag is used to indicate when an A/D conversion process has completed. When the conversion process is running the bit will be high. Bit 5~4 unimplemented, read as “0” 82 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 3~0 ACS3 ~ ACS0: Select A/D channel 0000: AN0 0001: AN1 0010: AN2 0011: AN3 0100: AN4 0101: AN5 0110: connect Op Amp 1 output (A1E) 0111: connect Op Amp 2 output (A2E) 1000: AN6 1001: AN7 These are the A/D channel select control bits. As there is only one internal hardware A/D converter each of the ten A/D inputs must be routed to the internal converter using these bits. It should be noted that the AN0~AN2 are not connected to the external pins. ACSR Register Bit Rev. 1.00 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — ADONB VRSEL R/W — R/W R/W — — ADCS2 ADCS1 ADCS0 — — R/W R/W POR 1 0 0 — R/W — 0 0 0 Bit 7 unimplemented, read as “1” Bit 6 ADONB: ADC module power on/off control bit 0: ADC module power on 1: ADC module power off This bit controls the power to the A/D internal function. This bit should be cleared to zero to enable the A/D converter. If the bit is set high then the A/D converter will be switched off reducing the devices power consumption. As the A/D converter will consume a limited amount of power,even when not executing a conversion, this may be an important consideration in power sensitive battery powered applications. Note: 1. it is recommended to set ADONB=1 before entering IDLE/SLEEP Mode for saving power. 2. ADONB=1 will power down the ADC module. Bit 5 VRSEL: Selecte ADC reference voltage 0: Internal ADC power 1: VREF pin or LDO output (2.4V/3.3V) This bit is used to select the reference voltage for the A/D converter. If the bit is high, then the A/D converter reference voltage is supplied on the external VREF pin or LDO output (2.4V/3.3V). If the pin is low, then the internal reference is used which is taken from the power supply pin VDD. It should be noted that the VREF/VCAP is not connected to the external pin. Bit 4~3 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 2~0 ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0: Select ADC clock source 000: fSYS/2 001: fSYS/8 010: fSYS/32 011: Undefined 100: fSYS 101: fSYS/4 110: fSYS/16 111: Undefined These three bits are used to select the clock source for the A/D converter. 83 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver ADPCR Register • HT45FH23A Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — — PCR5 PCR4 PCR3 PCR2 PCR1 PCR0 R/W — — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR — — 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7~6 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 5 PCR5: Define PC1 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN5 Bit 4 PCR4: Define PC0 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN4 Bit 3 PCR3: Define PB6 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN3 Bit 2 PCR2: Define PB5 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN2 Bit 1 PCR1: Define PB4 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN1 Bit 0 PCR0: Define PB3 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN0 It should be noted that the PB3/AN0/SCS, PB4/AN1/AUD/PCK and PB5/AN2/PINT are not connected to the external pins. • HT45FH24A Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name PCR7 PCR6 PCR5 PCR4 PCR3 PCR2 PCR1 PCR0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 PCR7: Define PD1 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN7 Bit 6 PCR6: Define PD0 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN6 Bit 5 PCR5: Define PC1 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN5 Bit 4 PCR4: Define PC0 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN4 Bit 3 PCR3: Define PB6 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN3 Bit 2 PCR2: Define PB5 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN2 84 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 1 PCR1: Define PB4 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN1 Bit 0 PCR0: Define PB3 is A/D input or not 0: Not A/D input 1: A/D input, AN0 It should be noted that the PB3/AN0/SCS, PB4/AN1/AUD/PCK, PB5/AN2/PINT, PD0/AN6, PD1/AN7 pins are not connected to the external pins. A/D Operation The START bit in the ADCR register is used to start and reset the A/D converter. When the microcontroller sets this bit from low to high and then low again, an analog to digital conversion cycle will be initiated. When the START bit is brought from low to high but not low again, the EOCB bit in the ADCR register will be set high and the analog to digital converter will be reset. It is the START bit that is used to control the overall start operation of the internal analog to digital converter. The EOCB bit in the ADCR register is used to indicate when the analog to digital conversion process is complete. This bit will be automatically set to “0” by the microcontroller after a conversion cycle has ended. In addition, the corresponding A/D interrupt request flag will be set in the interrupt control register, and if the interrupts are enabled, an appropriate internal interrupt signal will be generated. This A/D internal interrupt signal will direct the program flow to the associated A/D internal interrupt address for processing. If the A/D internal interrupt is disabled, the microcontroller can be used to poll the EOCB bit in the ADCR register to check whether it has been cleared as an alternative method of detecting the end of an A/D conversion cycle. The clock source for the A/D converter, which originates from the system clock fSYS, can be chosen to be either fSYS or a subdivided version of fSYS. The division ratio value is determined by the ADCS2~ADCS0 bits in the ACSR register. Although the A/D clock source is determined by the system clock fSYS, and by bits ADCS2~ADCS0, there are some limitations on the maximum A/D clock source speed that can be selected. As the minimum value of permissible A/D clock period, tAD, is 0.5µs, care must be taken for system clock frequencies equal to or greater than 4MHz. For example, if the system clock operates at a frequency of 4MHz, the ADCS2~ADCS0 bits should not be set to “100”. Doing so will give A/D clock periods that are less than the minimum A/D clock period which may result in inaccurate A/D conversion values. Refer to the following table for examples, where values marked with an asterisk * show where, depending upon the devices, special care must be taken, as the values may be less than the specified minimum A/D Clock Period. A/D Clock Period (tAD) ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0 = 100 (fSYS) ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0 = 000 (fSYS/2) ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0 = 101 (fSYS/4) ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0 = 001 (fSYS/8) ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0 = 110 (fSYS/16) ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0 = 010 (fSYS/32) ADCS2, ADCS1, ADCS0 = 111 = 011 1MHz 1µs 2µs 4µs 8µs 16µs 32µs Undefined 2MHz 500ns 1µs 2µs 4µs 8µs 16µs Undefined 4MHz 250ns* 500ns 1µs 2µs 4µs 8µs Undefined 8MHz 125ns* 250ns* 500ns 1µs 2µs 4µs Undefined 12MHz 83ns* 167ns* 333ns* 667ns 1.33µs 2.67µs Undefined fSYS A/D Clock Period Examples Rev. 1.00 85 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Controlling the power on/off function of the A/D converter circuitry is implemented using the ADONB bit in the ACSR register. This bit must be zero to power on the A/D converter. When the ADONB bit is cleared to zero to power on the A/D converter internal circuitry a certain delay, as indicated in the timing diagram, must be allowed before an A/D conversion is initiated. Even if no pins are selected for use as A/D inputs by clearing the PCR7~PCR0 bits in the ADPCR register, if the ADONB bit is zero then some power will still be consumed. In power conscious applications it is therefore recommended that the ADONB is set high to reduce power consumption when the A/D converter function is not being used. The reference voltage supply to the A/D Converter can be supplied from either the positive power supply pin, VDD, or from an external reference sources supplied on pin VREF. The desired selection is made using the VRSEL bit. As the VREF pin is pin-shared with other functions, when the VRSEL bit is set high, the VREF pin function will be selected and the other pin functions will be disabled automatically. A/D Input Pins The A/D analog input pins are pin-shared with the I/O pins on Port B Port C and Port D as well as other functions. The PCR7~ PCR0 bits in the ADPCR register, determine whether the input pins are setup as A/D converter analog inputs or whether they have other functions. If the PCR7~ PCR0 bits for its corresponding pin is set high then the pin will be setup to be an A/D converter input and the original pin functions disabled. In this way, pins can be changed under program control to change their function between A/D inputs and other functions. All pull-high resistors, which are setup through register programming, will be automatically disconnected if the pins are setup as A/D inputs. Note that it is not necessary to first setup the A/D pin as an input in the PBC or PCC or PDC port control register to enable the A/D input as when the PCR7~ PCR0 bits enable an A/D input, the status of the port control register will be overridden. Note: 1. The HT45FH23A I/O lines, AN0~AN2 and VREF/VCAP pins are not connected to the external pins. 2. The HT45FH24A I/O lines, AN0~AN2, AN6~AN7 and VREF/VCAP pins are not connected to the external pins. A/D Input Structure The A/D converter has its own reference voltage pin, VREF, however the reference voltage can also be supplied from the power supply pin, a choice which is made through the VRSEL bit in the ACSR register. The analog input values must not be allowed to exceed the value of VREF. Rev. 1.00 86 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Summary of A/D Conversion Steps The following summarises the individual steps that should be executed in order to implement an A/D conversion process. • Step 1 Select the required A/D conversion clock by correctly programming bits ADCS2~ADCS0 in the ACSR register. • Step 2 Enable the A/D by clearing the ADONB bit in the ACSR register to zero. • Step 3 Select which channel is to be connected to the internal A/D converter by correctly programming the ACS3~ACS0 bits which are also contained in the ADCR register. • Step 4 Select which pins are to be used as A/D inputs and configure them by correctly programming the PCR7~PCR0 bits in the ADPCR register. • Step 5 If the interrupts are to be used, the interrupt control registers must be correctly configured to ensure the A/D converter interrupt function is active. The master interrupt control bit, EMI, Mulit-function interrupt bit, and the A/D converter interrupt bit, EADI, must all be set high to do this. • Step 6 The analog to digital conversion process can now be initialised by setting the START bit in the ADCR register from low to high and then low again. Note that this bit should have been originally cleared to zero. • Step 7 To check when the analog to digital conversion process is complete, the EOCB bit in the ADCR register can be polled. The conversion process is complete when this bit goes low. When this occurs the A/D data registers ADRL and ADRH can be read to obtain the conversion value. As an alternative method, if the interrupts are enabled and the stack is not full, the program can wait for an A/D interrupt to occur. Note: When checking for the end of the conversion process, if the method of polling the EOCB bit in the ADCR register is used, the interrupt enable step above can be omitted. The accompanying diagram shows graphically the various stages involved in an analog to digital conversion process and its associated timing. After an A/D conversion process has been initiated by the application program, the microcontroller internal hardware will begin to carry out the conversion, during which time the program can continue with other functions. The time taken for the A/D conversion is 16tAD where tAD is equal to the A/D clock period. Rev. 1.00 87 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver A/D Conversion Timing Programming Considerations During microcontroller operations where the A/D converter is not being used, the A/D internal circuitry can be switched off to reduce power consumption, by setting bit ADONB high in the ACSR register. When this happens, the internal A/D converter circuits will not consume power irrespective of what analog voltage is applied to their input lines. If the A/D converter input lines are used as normal I/Os, then care must be taken as if the input voltage is not at a valid logic level, then this may lead to some increase in power consumption. A/D Transfer Function As the devices contain a 12-bit A/D converter respectively, its full-scale converted digitised value is equal to FFFH. Since the full-scale analog input value is equal to the VDD or VREF voltage, this gives a single bit analog input value of VDD or VREF divided by 4096. 1 LSB= (VDD or VREF) ÷ 4096 The A/D Converter input voltage value can be calculated using the following equation: A/D input voltage = A/D output digital value × (VDD or VREF) ÷ 4096 The diagram shows the ideal transfer function between the analog input value and the digitised output value for the A/D converter. Except for the digitised zero value, the subsequent digitised values will change at a point 0.5 LSB below where they would change without the offset, and the last full scale digitised value will change at a point 1.5 LSB below the VDD or VREF level. Rev. 1.00 88 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver 1.5 LSB FFFH FFEH FFDH A/D Conve�sion Result 03H 0.5 LSB 0�H 01H 0 1 � 3 �093 �09� �095 VDD o� VREF �096 Analog Input Voltage Ideal A/D Transfer Function A/D Programming Example The following two programming examples illustrate how to setup and implement an A/D conversion. In the first example, the method of polling the EOCB bit in the ADCR register is used to detect when the conversion cycle is complete, whereas in the second example, the A/D interrupt is used to determine when the conversion is complete. Example: using an EOCB polling method to detect the end of conversion clr EADI; mov a,01H mov ACSR,a ; ; mov a,FFh ; mov ADPCR,a mov a,03h mov ADCR,a ; : start_conversion: clr START ; set START ; clr START ; polling_EOC: sz EOCB ; jmp polling_EOC ; mov a,ADRL ; mov ADRL_buffer,a ; mov a,ADRH ; mov ADRH_buffer,a ; : : jmp start_conversion ; Rev. 1.00 disable ADC interrupt select fSYS/8 as A/D clock Select VDD as ADC reference voltage and turn on ADONB bit setup ADPCR to configure pins AN0~AN7 enable and connect AN3 channel to A/D converter high pulse on start bit to initiate conversion reset A/D start A/D poll the ADCR0 register EOCB bit to detect end of A/D conversion continue polling read low byte conversion result value save result to user defined register read high byte conversion result value save result to user defined register start next a/d conversion 89 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Example: using the interrupt method to detect the end of conversion clr EADI; mov a,01H mov ACSR,a ; ; mov a,FFh ; mov ADPCR,a mov a,03h mov ADCR,a ; Start_conversion: clr START ; set START ; clr START ; clr ADF ; set EADI; set EMFI ; set EMI ; : : ; ADC_ISR: mov acc_stack,a ; mov a,STATUS mov status_stack,a ; : : mov a,ADRL ; mov adrl_buffer,a ; mov a,ADRH ; mov adrh_buffer,a ; : : EXIT_INT_ISR: mov a,status_stack mov STATUS,a ; mov a,acc_stack ; Clr ADF ; reti Rev. 1.00 disable ADC interrupt select fSYS/8 as A/D clock select VDD as ADC reference voltage and turn on ADONB bit setup ADPCR to configure pins AN0~AN7 enable and connect AN3 channel to A/D converter high pulse on START bit to initiate conversion reset A/D start A/D clear ADC interrupt request flag enable ADC interrupt enable Multi-function interrupt enable global interrupt ADC interrupt service routine save ACC to user defined memory save STATUS to user defined memory read save read save low byte conversion result value result to user defined register high byte conversion result value result to user defined register restore STATUS from user defined memory restore ACC from user defined memory clear ADC interrupt request flag 90 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Serial Interface Module – SIM The devices contain a Serial Interface Module respectively, which includes both the four line SPI interface or the two line I2C interface types, to allow an easy method of communication with external peripheral hardware. Having relatively simple communication protocols, these serial interface types allow the microcontroller to interface to external SPI or I2C based hardware such as sensors, Flash or EEPROM memory, etc. The SIM interface pins are pin-shared with PB0~PB3 pins therefore the SIM interface function must first be selected using a configuration option. As both interface types share the same pins and registers, the choice of whether the SPI or I2C type is used is made using the SIM operating mode control bits, named SIM2~SIM0, in the SIMC0 register. These pull-high resistors of the SIM pin-shared I/O are selected using pull-high control registers, and also if the SIM function is enabled. It should be noted that the SPI and I2C pins are not connected to the external pins and internally used only. SPI Interface The SPI interface is often used to communicate with external peripheral device such as sensors, Flash or EEPROM memory device etc. Originally developed by Motorola, the four line SPI interface is a synchronous serial data interface that has a relatively simple communication protocol simplifying the programming requirements when communicating with external hardware device. The communication is full duplex and operates as a slave/master type, where the devices can be either master or slave. Although the SPI interface specification can control multiple slave device from a single master, but this device provides only one SCS pin. If the master needs to control multiple slave devices from a single master, the master can use I/O pin to select the slave devices. SPI Interface Operation The SPI interface is a full duplex synchronous serial data link. It is a four line interface with pin names SDI, SDO, SCK and SCS. Pins SDI and SDO are the Serial Data Input and Serial Data Output lines, SCK is the Serial Clock line and SCS is the Slave Select line. As the SPI interface pins are pinshared with PB0~PB3 pins and with the I2C function pins, the SPI interface must first be enabled by selecting the SIM enable configuration option and setting the correct bits in the SIMC0 and SIMC2 registers. After the SPI configuration option has been configured it can also be additionally disabled or enabled using the SIMEN bit in the SIMC0 register. Communication between devices connected to the SPI interface is carried out in a slave/master mode with all data transfer initiations being implemented by the master. The Master also controls the clock signal. As the device only contains a single SCS pin only one slave device can be utilized. The SCS pin is controlled by software, set CSEN bit to “1” to enable SCS pin function, set CSEN bit to “0” the SCS pin will be floating state. SPI Master/Slave Connection Rev. 1.00 91 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver The SPI function in this device offers the following features: • Full duplex synchronous data transfer • Both Master and Slave modes • LSB first or MSB first data transmission modes • Transmission complete flag • Rising or falling active clock edge • WCOL and CSEN bit enabled or disable select The status of the SPI interface pins is determined by a number of factors such as whether the device is in the master or slave mode and upon the condition of certain control bits such as CSEN and SIMEN. There are several configuration options associated with the SPI interface. One of these is to enable the SIM function which selects the SIM pins rather than normal I/O pins. Note that if the configuration option does not select the SIM function then the SIMEN bit in the SIMC0 register will have no effect. Another two SPI configuration options determine if the CSEN and WCOL bits are to be used. SPI Registers There are three internal registers which control the overall operation of the SPI interface. These are the SIMD data register and two registers SIMC0 and SIMC2. Note that the SIMC1 register is only used by the I2C interface. Bit Register Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SIMC0 SIM2 SIM1 SIM0 PCKEN PCKP1 PCKP0 SIMEN — SIMD D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 SIMC2 D7 D6 CKPOLB CKEG MLS CSEN WCOL TRF SIM Registers List The SIMD register is used to store the data being transmitted and received. The same register is used by both the SPI and I2C functions. Before the device writes data to the SPI bus, the actual data to be transmitted must be placed in the SIMD register. After the data is received from the SPI bus, the device can read it from the SIMD register. Any transmission or reception of data from the SPI bus must be made via the SIMD register. Rev. 1.00 92 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver • SIMD Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR x x x x x x x x “x” unknown Bit 7~0 D7~D0: SIM Data Register bit7~bit0 There are also two control registers for the SPI interface, SIMC0 and SIMC2. Note that the SIMC2 register also has the name SIMA which is used by the I2C function. The SIMC1 register is not used by the SPI function, only by the I2C function. Register SIMC0 is used to control the enable/disable function and to set the data transmission clock frequency. Although not connected with the SPI function, the SIMC0 register is also used to control the Peripheral Clock Prescaler. Register SIMC2 is used for other control functions such as LSB/MSB selection, write collision flag etc. • SIMC0 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name SIM2 SIM1 SIM0 PCKEN PCKP1 PCKP0 SIMEN — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — POR 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 — Bit 7~5 SIM2, SIM1, SIM0: SIM Operating Mode Control 000: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/4 001: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/16 010: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/64 011: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSUB 100: SPI master mode; SPI clock is Timer 0 output/2 (PFD0) 101: SPI slave mode 110: I2C slave mode 111: Unused mode These bits setup the overall operating mode of the SIM function. As well as selecting if the I2C or SPI function, they are used to control the SPI Master/Slave selection and the SPI Master clock frequency. The SPI clock is a function of the system clock but can also be chosen to be sourced from the Timer 0 or fSUB. If the SPI Slave Mode is selected then the clock will be supplied by an external Master device. Bit 4 PCKEN: PCK Output Pin Control 0: Disable 1: Enable Bit 3~2 PCKP1, PCKP0: Select PCK output pin frequency 00: fSYS 01: fSYS/4 10: fSYS/8 11: Timer 0 output/2 (PFD0) 93 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 1 SIMEN: SIM Control 0: Disable 1: Enable The bit is the overall on/off control for the SIM interface. When the SIMEN bit is cleared to zero to disable the SIM interface, the SDI, SDO, SCK and SCS, or SDA and SCL lines will be in a floating condition and the SIM operating current will be reduced to a minimum value. When the bit is high the SIM interface is enabled. The SIM configuration option must have first enabled the SIM interface for this bit to be effective. If the SIM is configured to operate as an SPI interface via the SIM2~SIM0 bits, the contents of the SPI control registers will remain at the previous settings when the SIMEN bit changes from low to high and should therefore be first initialised by the application program. If the SIM is configured to operate as an I2C interface via the SIM2~SIM0 bits and the SIMEN bit changes from low to high, the contents of the I2C control bits such as HTX and TXAK will remain at the previous settings and should therefore be first initialised by the application program while the relevant I2C flags such as HCF, HAAS, HBB, SRW and RXAK will be set to their default states. Bit 0 unimplemented, read as “0” • SIMC2 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name D7 D6 CKPOLB CKEG MLS CSEN WCOL TRF R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7~6 Undefined bit This bit can be read or written by user software program. Bit 5 CKPOLB: Determines the base condition of the clock line 0: the SCK line will be high when the clock is inactive 1: the SCK line will be low when the clock is inactive The CKPOLB bit determines the base condition of the clock line, if the bit is high, then the SCK line will be low when the clock is inactive. When the CKPOLB bit is low, then the SCK line will be high when the clock is inactive. Bit 4 CKEG: Determines SPI SCK active clock edge type CKPOLB=0 0: SCK is high base level and data capture at SCK rising edge 1: SCK is high base level and data capture at SCK falling edge CKPOLB=1 0: SCK is low base level and data capture at SCK falling edge 1: SCK is low base level and data capture at SCK rising edge The CKEG and CKPOLB bits are used to setup the way that the clock signal outputs and inputs data on the SPI bus. These two bits must be configured before data transfer is executed otherwise an erroneous clock edge may be generated. The CKPOLB bit determines the base condition of the clock line, if the bit is high, then the SCK line will be low when the clock is inactive. When the CKPOLB bit is low, then the SCK line will be high when the clock is inactive. The CKEG bit determines active clock edge type which depends upon the condition of CKPOLB bit. Bit 3 MLS: SPI Data shift order 0: LSB 1: MSB This is the data shift select bit and is used to select how the data is transferred, either MSB or LSB first. Setting the bit high will select MSB first and low for LSB first. 94 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 2 CSEN: SPI SCS pin Control 0: Disable 1: Enable The CSEN bit is used as an enable/disable for the SCS pin. If this bit is low, then the SCS pin will be disabled and placed into a floating condition. If the bit is high the SCS pin will be enabled and used as a select pin. Note that using the CSEN bit can be disabled or enabled via configuration option. Bit 1 WCOL: SPI Write Collision flag 0: No collision 1: Collision The WCOL flag is used to detect if a data collision has occurred. If this bit is high it means that data has been attempted to be written to the SIMD register during a data transfer operation. This writing operation will be ignored if data is being transferred. The bit can be cleared by the application program. Note that using the WCOL bit can be disabled or enabled via configuration option. Bit 0 TRF: SPI Transmit/Receive Complete flag 0: Data is being transferred 1: SPI data transmission is completed The TRF bit is the Transmit/Receive Complete flag and is set “1” automatically when an SPI data transmission is completed, but must set to “0” by the application program. It can be used to generate an interrupt. SPI Communication After the SPI interface is enabled by setting the SIMEN bit high, then in the Master Mode, when data is written to the SIMD register, transmission/reception will begin simultaneously. When the data transfer is complete, the TRF flag will be set automatically, but must be cleared using the application program. In the Slave Mode, when the clock signal from the master has been received, any data in the SIMD register will be transmitted and any data on the SDI pin will be shifted into the SIMD register. The master should output an SCS signal to enable the slave device before a clock signal is provided. The slave data to be transferred should be well prepared at the appropriate moment relative to the SCS signal depending upon the configurations of the CKPOLB bit and CKEG bit. The accompanying timing diagram shows the relationship between the slave data and SCS signal for various configurations of the CKPOLB and CKEG bits. The SPI will continue to function even in the IDLE Mode. Rev. 1.00 95 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver SPI Master Mode Timing SPI Slave Mode Timing-CKEG=0 SPI Slave Mode Timing-CKEG=1 Rev. 1.00 96 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver SPI Transfer Control Flowchart Rev. 1.00 97 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver I2C Interface The I 2C interface is used to communicate with external peripheral device such as sensors, EEPROM memory etc. Originally developed by Philips, it is a two line low speed serial interface for synchronous serial data transfer. The advantage of only two lines for communication, relatively simple communication protocol and the ability to accommodate multiple devices on the same bus has made it an extremely popular interface type for many applications. I2C Master Slave Bus Connection I2C Interface Operation The I2C serial interface is a two line interface, a serial data line, SDA, and serial clock line, SCL. As many devices may be connected together on the same bus, their outputs are both open drain types. For this reason it is necessary that external pull-high resistors are connected to these outputs. Note that no chip select line exists, as each device on the I2C bus is identified by a unique address which will be transmitted and received on the I2C bus. When two devices communicate with each other on the bidirectional I2C bus, one is known as the master device and one as the slave device. Both master and slave can transmit and receive data, however, it is the master device that has overall control of the bus. For these devices, which only operates in slave mode, there are two methods of transferring data on the I2C bus, the slave transmit mode and the slave receive mode. There are several configuration options associated with the I2C interface. One of these is to enable the function which selects the SIM pins rather than normal I/O pins. Note that if the configuration option does not select the SIM function then the SIMEN bit in the SIMC0 register will have no effect. A configuration option exists to allow a clock other than the system clock to drive the I2C interface. Another configuration option determines the debounce time of the I2C interface. This uses the internal clock to in effect add a debounce time to the external clock to reduce the possibility of glitches on the clock line causing erroneous operation. The debounce time, if selected, can be chosen to be either 1 or 2 system clocks. I2C Registers There are three control registers associated with the I2C bus, SIMC0, SIMC1 and SIMA and one data register, SIMD. The SIMD register, which is shown in the above SPI section, is used to store the data being transmitted and received on the I2C bus. Before the microcontroller writes data to the I2C bus, the actual data to be transmitted must be placed in the SIMD register. After the data is received from the I2C bus, the microcontroller can read it from the SIMD register. Any transmission or reception of data from the I2C bus must be made via the SIMD register. Note that the SIMA register also has the name SIMC2 which is used by the SPI function. Bit SIMEN and bits SIM2~SIM0 in register SIMC0 are used by the I2C interface. Rev. 1.00 98 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver S T A R T s ig n a l fro m M a s te r S e n d s la v e a d d r e s s a n d R /W b it fr o m M a s te r A c k n o w le d g e fr o m s la v e S e n d d a ta b y te fro m M a s te r A c k n o w le d g e fr o m s la v e S T O P s ig n a l fro m M a s te r Bit Register Name 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 SIMC0 SIM2 SIM1 SIM0 PCKEN PCKP1 PCKP0 SIMEN — SIMC1 HCF HAAS HBB HTX TXAK SRW IAMWU RXAK SIMD D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 SIMA IICA6 IICA5 IICA4 IICA3 IICA2 IICA1 IICA0 — I2C Registers List • SIMC0 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name SIM2 SIM1 SIM0 PCKEN PCKP1 PCKP0 SIMEN — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — POR 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 — Bit 7~5 SIM2, SIM1, SIM0: Operating Mode Control 000: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/4 001: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/16 010: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/64 011: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSUB 100: SPI master mode; SPI clock is Timer 0 output/2 (PFD0) 101: SPI slave mode 110: I2C slave mode 111: Unused mode These bits setup the overall operating mode of the SIM function. As well as selecting if the I2C or SPI function, they are used to control the SPI Master/Slave selection and the SPI Master clock frequency. The SPI clock is a function of the system clock but can also be chosen to be sourced from the Timer 0 or fSUB. If the SPI Slave Mode is selected then the clock will be supplied by an external Master device. Bit 4 PCKEN: PCK Output Pin Control 0: Disable 1: Enable Bit 3~2 PCKP1, PCKP0: Select PCK output pin frequency 00: fSYS 01: fSYS/4 10: fSYS/8 11: Timer 0 output/2 (PFD0) 99 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 1 SIMEN: SIM Control 0: Disable 1: Enable The bit is the overall on/off control for the SIM interface. When the SIMEN bit is cleared to zero to disable the SIM interface, the SDI, SDO, SCK and SCS, or SDA and SCL lines will be in a floating condition and the SIM operating current will be reduced to a minimum value. When the bit is high the SIM interface is enabled. The SIM configuration option must have first enabled the SIM interface for this bit to be effective. If the SIM is configured to operate as an SPI interface via SIM2~SIM0 bits, the contents of the SPI control registers will remain at the previous settings when the SIMEN bit changes from low to high and should therefore be first initialised by the application program. If the SIM is configured to operate as an I2C interface via the SIM2~SIM0 bits and the SIMEN bit changes from low to high, the contents of the I2C control bits such as HTX and TXAK will remain at the previous settings and should therefore be first initialised by the application program while the relevant I2C flags such as HCF, HAAS, HBB, SRW and RXAK will be set to their default states. Bit 0 unimplemented, read as “0” • SIMC1 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name HCF HAAS HBB HTX TXAK SRW IAMWU RXAK R/W R R R R/W R/W R R/W R POR 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Bit 7 HCF: I2C Bus data transfer completion flag 0: Data is being transferred 1: Completion of an 8-bit data transfer The HCF flag is the data transfer flag. This flag will be zero when data is being transferred. Upon completion of an 8-bit data transfer the flag will go high and an interrupt will be generated. Bit 6 HAAS: I2C Bus address match flag 0: Not address match 1: Address match The HASS flag is the address match flag. This flag is used to determine if the slave device address is the same as the master transmit address. If the addresses match then this bit will be high, if there is no match then the flag will be low. Bit 5 HBB: I2C Bus busy flag 0: I2C Bus is not busy 1: I2C Bus is busy The HBB flag is the I2C busy flag. This flag will be “1” when the I2C bus is busy which will occur when a START signal is detected. The flag will be set to “0” when the bus is free which will occur when a STOP signal is detected. Bit 4 HTX: Select I2C slave device is transmitter or receiver 0: Slave device is the receiver 1: Slave device is the transmitter Bit 3 TXAK: I2C Bus transmit acknowledge flag 0: Slave send acknowledge flag 1: Slave do not send acknowledge flag The TXAK bit is the transmit acknowledge flag. After the slave device receipt of 8-bits of data, this bit will be transmitted to the bus on the 9th clock from the slave device. The slave device must always set TXAK bit to “0” before further data is received. Bit 2 SRW: I2C Slave Read/Write flag 0: Slave device should be in receive mode 1: Slave device should be in transmit mode 100 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver The SRW flag is the I 2C Slave Read/Write flag. This flag determines whether the master device wishes to transmit or receive data from the I2C bus. When the transmitted address and slave address is match, that is when the HAAS flag is set high, the slave device will check the SRW flag to determine whether it should be in transmit mode or receive mode. If the SRW flag is high, the master is requesting to read data from the bus, so the slave device should be in transmit mode. When the SRW flag is zero, the master will write data to the bus, therefore the slave device should be in receive mode to read this data. Bit 1 IAMWU: I2C Address Match Wake-up Control 0: Disable 1: Enable This bit should be set to “1” to enable I2C address match wake up from SLEEP or IDLE Mode. Bit 0 RXAK: I2C Bus Receive acknowledge flag 0: Slave receive acknowledge flag 1: Slave do not receive acknowledge flag The RXAK flag is the receiver acknowledge flag. When the RXAK flag is “0”, it means that a acknowledge signal has been received at the 9th clock, after 8 bits of data have been transmitted. When the slave device in the transmit mode, the slave device checks the RXAK flag to determine if the master receiver wishes to receive the next byte. The slave transmitter will therefore continue sending out data until the RXAK flag is “1”. When this occurs, the slave transmitter will release the SDA line to allow the master to send a STOP signal to release the I2C Bus. The SIMD register is used to store the data being transmitted and received. The same register is used by both the SPI and I2C functions. Before the device writes data to the I2C bus, the actual data to be transmitted must be placed in the SIMD register. After the data is received from the I2C bus, the device can read it from the SIMD register. Any transmission or reception of data from the I2C bus must be made via the SIMD register. • SIMD Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR x x x x x x x x “x” unknown Bit 7~0 D7~D0: SIM Data Register bit7~bit0 • SIMA Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name IICA6 IICA5 IICA4 IICA3 IICA2 IICA1 IICA0 — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — POR x x x x x x x — “x” unknown Rev. 1.00 Bit 7~1 IICA6~ IICA0: I2C slave address IICA6~ IICA0 is the I2C slave address bit 6~ bit 0. The SIMA register is also used by the SPI interface but has the name SIMC2. The SIMA register is the location where the 7-bit slave address of the slave device is stored. Bits 7~ 1 of the SIMA register define the device slave address. Bit 0 is not defined. When a master device, which is connected to the I2C bus, sends out an address, which matches the slave address in the SIMA register, the slave device will be selected. Note that the SIMA register is the same register address as SIMC2 which is used by the SPI interface. Bit 0 Undefined bit This bit can be read or written by user software program. 101 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver I2C Block Diagram I2C Bus Communication Communication on the I2C bus requires four separate steps, a START signal, a slave device address transmission, a data transmission and finally a STOP signal. When a START signal is placed on the I2C bus, all devices on the bus will receive this signal and be notified of the imminent arrival of data on the bus. The first seven bits of the data will be the slave address with the first bit being the MSB. If the address of the slave device matches that of the transmitted address, the HAAS bit in the SIMC1 register will be set and an I2C interrupt will be generated. After entering the interrupt service routine, the slave device must first check the condition of the HAAS bit to determine whether the interrupt source originates from an address match or from the completion of an 8-bit data transfer. During a data transfer, note that after the 7-bit slave address has been transmitted, the following bit, which is the 8th bit, is the read/write bit whose value will be placed in the SRW bit. This bit will be checked by the slave device to determine whether to go into transmit or receive mode. Before any transfer of data to or from the I2C bus, the microcontroller must initialise the bus, the following are steps to achieve this: • Step 1 Set the SIM2~SIM0 and SIMEN bits in the SIMC0 register to “110” and “1” respectively to enable the I2C bus. • Step 2 Write the slave address of the device to the I2C bus address register SIMA. • Step 3 Set the ESIM of the interrupt control register to enable the SIM interrupt. Rev. 1.00 102 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver I2C Bus Initialisation Flow Chart I2C Bus Start Signal The START signal can only be generated by the master device connected to the I2C bus and not by the slave device. This START signal will be detected by all devices connected to the I2C bus. When detected, this indicates that the I2C bus is busy and therefore the HBB bit will be set. A START condition occurs when a high to low transition on the SDA line takes place when the SCL line remains high. Slave Address The transmission of a START signal by the master will be detected by all devices on the I2C bus. To determine which slave device the master wishes to communicate with, the address of the slave device will be sent out immediately following the START signal. All slave devices, after receiving this 7-bit address data, will compare it with their own 7-bit slave address. If the address sent out by the master matches the internal address of the microcontroller slave device, then an internal I2C bus interrupt signal will be generated. The next bit following the address, which is the 8th bit, defines the read/write status and will be saved to the SRW bit of the SIMC1 register. The slave device will then transmit an acknowledge bit, which is a low level, as the 9th bit. The slave device will also set the status flag HAAS when the addresses match. As an I 2C bus interrupt can come from two sources, when the program enters the interrupt subroutine, the HAAS bit should be examined to see whether the interrupt source has come from a matching slave address or from the completion of a data byte transfer. When a slave address is matched, the device must be placed in either the transmit mode and then write data to the SIMD register, or in the receive mode where it must implement a dummy read from the SIMD register to release the SCL line. Rev. 1.00 103 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver I2C Bus Read/Write Signal The SRW bit in the SIMC1 register defines whether the slave device wishes to read data from the I2C bus or write data to the I2C bus. The slave device should examine this bit to determine if it is to be a transmitter or a receiver. If the SRW flag is “1” then this indicates that the master device wishes to read data from the I2C bus, therefore the slave device must be setup to send data to the I2C bus as a transmitter. If the SRW flag is “0” then this indicates that the master wishes to send data to the I2C bus, therefore the slave device must be setup to read data from the I2C bus as a receiver. I2C Bus Slave Address Acknowledge Signal After the master has transmitted a calling address, any slave device on the I 2C bus, whose own internal address matches the calling address, must generate an acknowledge signal. The acknowledge signal will inform the master that a slave device has accepted its calling address. If no acknowledge signal is received by the master then a STOP signal must be transmitted by the master to end the communication. When the HAAS flag is high, the addresses have matched and the slave device must check the SRW flag to determine if it is to be a transmitter or a receiver. If the SRW flag is high, the slave device should be setup to be a transmitter so the HTX bit in the SIMC1 register should be set to “1”. If the SRW flag is low, then the microcontroller slave device should be setup as a receiver and the HTX bit in the SIMC1 register should be set to “0”. I2C Bus Data and Acknowledge Signal The transmitted data is 8-bits wide and is transmitted after the slave device has acknowledged receipt of its slave address. The order of serial bit transmission is the MSB first and the LSB last. After receipt of 8-bits of data, the receiver must transmit an acknowledge signal, level “0”, before it can receive the next data byte. If the slave transmitter does not receive an acknowledge bit signal from the master receiver, then the slave transmitter will release the SDA line to allow the master to send a STOP signal to release the I2C Bus. The corresponding data will be stored in the SIMD register. If setup as a transmitter, the slave device must first write the data to be transmitted into the SIMD register. If setup as a receiver, the slave device must read the transmitted data from the SIMD register. When the slave receiver receives the data byte, it must generate an acknowledge bit, known as TXAK, on the 9th clock. The slave device, which is setup as a transmitter will check the RXAK bit in the SIMC1 register to determine if it is to send another data byte, if not then it will release the SDA line and await the receipt of a STOP signal from the master. Rev. 1.00 104 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Note: * When a slave address is matched, the device must be placed in either the transmit mode and then write data to the SIMD register, or in the receive mode where it must implement a dummy read from the SIMD register to release the SCL line. I2C Communication Timing Diagram I2C Bus ISR Flow Chart Rev. 1.00 105 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Peripheral Clock Output The Peripheral Clock Output allows the device to supply external hardware with a clock signal synchronised to the microcontroller clock. It should be noted that the PCK pin is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Peripheral Clock Operation As the peripheral clock output pin, PCK, is shared with PB4, the required pin function is chosen via PCKEN in the SIMC0 register. The Peripheral Clock function is controlled using the SIMC0 register. The clock source for the Peripheral Clock Output can originate from either the Timer 0 output/2 or a divided ratio of the internal fSYS clock. The PCKEN bit in the SIMC0 register is the overall on/off control, setting PCKEN bit to “1” enables the Peripheral Clock, setting PCKEN bit to “0” disables it. The required division ratio of the system clock is selected using the PCKP1 and PCKP0 bits in the same register. If the device enters the SLEEP Mode this will disable the Peripheral Clock output. SIMC0 Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name SIM2 SIM1 SIM0 PCKEN PCKP1 PCKP0 SIMEN — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — POR 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 — Bit 7~5 Bit 4 Bit 3~2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Rev. 1.00 SIM2, SIM1, SIM0: SIM operating mode control 000: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/4 001: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/16 010: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSYS/64 011: SPI master mode; SPI clock is fSUB 100: SPI master mode; SPI clock is Timer 0 output/2 (PFD0) 101: SPI slave mode 110: I2C slave mode 111: Unused mode These bits setup the overall operating mode of the SIM function. As well as selecting if the I2C or SPI function, they are used to control the SPI Master/Slave selection and the SPI Master clock frequency. The SPI clock is a function of the system clock but can also be chosen to be sourced from the Timer 0 or fSUB. If the SPI Slave Mode is selected then the clock will be supplied by an external Master device. PCKEN: PCK output pin control 0: Disable 1: Enable PCKP1, PCKP0: select PCK output pin frequency 00: fSYS 01: fSYS/4 10: fSYS/8 11: Timer 0 output/2 (PFD0) SIMEN: SIM control 0: Disable 1: Enable The bit is the overall on/off control for the SIM interface. When the SIMEN bit is cleared to zero to disable the SIM interface, the SDI, SDO, SCK and SCS, or SDA and SCL lines will be in a floating condition and the SIM operating current will be reduced to a minimum value. When the bit is high the SIM interface is enabled. The SIM configuration option must have first enabled the SIM interface for this bit to be effective. Note that when the SIMEN bit changes from low to high the contents of the SPI control registers will be in an unknown condition and should therefore be first initialised by the application program. unimplemented, read as “0” 106 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver SCOM Function for LCD The devices have the capability of driving external LCD panels. The common pins for LCD driving, SCOM0~SCOM3, are pin shared with certain pin on the PA0, PC4~PC6 pins. The LCD signals (COM and SEG) are generated using the application program. LCD Operation An external LCD panel can be driven using this device by configuring the PA0 and PC4~PC6 pins as common pins and using other output ports lines as segment pins. The LCD driver function is controlled using the LCDC register which in addition to controlling the overall on/off function also controls the bias voltage setup function. This enables the LCD COM driver to generate the necessary VDD/2 voltage levels for LCD 1/2 bias operation. The LCDEN bit in the LCDC register is the overall master control for the LCD driver, however this bit is used in conjunction with the COMnEN bits to select which I/O pins are used for LCD driving. Note that the Port Control register does not need to first setup the pins as outputs to enable the LCD driver operation. The following block diagram illustrates the functional structure for LCD COM function. LCDBUF Disable LCD SCOM Output Current Generator 10uA 25uA ISEL Buffer SCOM0 ~ SCOM3 LCDBUF LCDBUF Enable COMnEN LCDEN LCD Circuit LCDEN COMnEN 0 X Pin Function Output Level I/O High or Low 1 0 I/O High or Low 1 1 SCOMn VM Output Control LCD Bias Control The LCD COM driver enables two kinds of selection to be provided to suit the requirement of the LCD panel which is being used. The bias resistor choice is implemented using the ISEL bit in the LCDC register. Rev. 1.00 107 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver LCDC Register Bit 7 6 5 4 Name — LCDBUF ISEL LCDEN 3 2 1 0 R/W — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR — 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 COM3EN COM2EN COM1EN COM0EN Bit 7 unimplemented, read as "0" Bit 6 LCDBUF: LCD buffer control bit 0: disable 1: enable Bit 5 ISEL: SCOM operating current selection (VDD=5V) 0: 10µA 1: 25µA Bit 4 LCDEN: LCD control bit 0: disable 1: enable The SCOMn can be enable by COMnEN if LCDEN=1. Bit 3 COM3EN: PC6 or SCOM3 selection 0: GPIO 1: SCOM3 Note: PC6/SCOM3 is not connected to external pin. Bit 2 COM2EN: PC5 or SCOM2 selection 0: GPIO 1: SCOM2 Note: PC5/SCOM2 is not connected to external pin. Bit 1 COM1EN: PC4 or SCOM1 selection 0: GPIO 1: SCOM1 Note: PC4/SCOM1 is not connected to external pin. Bit 0 COM0EN: PA0 or SCOM0 selection 0: GPIO 1: SCOM0 Note: These devices provide the LCD buffer function, which is controlled by LCDBUF flag, to prevent the interference from LCD panel. With this buffer, that will provide more stable reference voltages, VH0/1, VL0/1, for OPA and Comparator. It should be noted that if the LCD SCOM power supply is selected from VLDO or if the LCD panel has larger size, than the LCD buffer should be turned on to have a higher driver current. However, that will cause more power consumption to turn on this buffer. Rev. 1.00 108 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver LDO Function The devices contain a low power voltage regulator implemented in CMOS technology. Using CMOS technology ensures low voltage drop and low quiescent current. There are two fixed output voltages of 2.4V and 3.3V, which can be controlled by a specific register. The internal LDO output combined with various options by register can provide a fixed voltage for the LCD bias voltage, the OPA reference voltage, the ADC reference voltage and as a fixed power supply for external device. LDOC Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — — — VLOE REN1 VRES VSEL LDOEN R/W — — — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR — — — 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7~5 unimplemented, read as "0" Bit 4 VLOE: LDO output voltage control bit 0: disable 1: enable If the VLOE and LDOEN are set to “1”, the LDO will output 2.4V or 3.3V to pin and disable I/O function. Note: VCAP pin is not connected to external pin. Bit 3 REN1: Bias voltage divided resistor control bit 0: disable 1: enable If the REN1is set to “1”, that will turn on the resistor DC path, which will generate bias voltage for OPAs or LCD SCOM. Bit 2 VRES: Divided resistor voltage supply selection bit 0: VDD 1: VLDO Note that the VRES bit will be cleared to 0 by hardware if the LDO is disabled by setting the LDOEN bit low. Bit 1 VSEL: LDO output voltage selection bit 0: 2.4V 1: 3.3V Bit 0 LDOEN: LDO control bit 0: disable 1: enable 109 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver The following block diagram illustrates the functional structure for LDO and divided resister. LDO VDD VSEL LDOEN VLOE VREF/ VCAP OUT VLDO VDD VRES BUF1 SW4 VLDO VDD VRSEL VLDOX VH1 (0.9* VLDOX) A/D Reference Voltage A/D Converter VH0 (0.5+1/16)* VLDOX) Rtotal= 500K or 200K VM(0.5* VLDOX) VL 0 (0.5-1/16)* VLDOX) VL 1 (0.1* VLDOX) REN1 or LCDEN Note: 1. The total resistance of the divided resistor, 500K or 200K, can be selected by the ISEL flag in LCDC register. 2. To disable the LDO function will turn off the BUF1 as well, no matter the LDO output voltage control bit, VLOE, is enabled or not. 3. If the LDO output is as the ADC reference voltage, then the VCAP should be connected a 0.1µF capacitor to ground. 4. If the LDO is disabled, LDOEN=0, then the SW4 will be turned to VDD, no matter VRES flag is “1” or not. Rev. 1.00 110 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Operational Amplifiers There are two fully integrated Operational Amplifiers in the devices, OPA1 and OPA2. These OPAs can be used for signal amplification according to specific user requirements. The OPAs can be disabled or enabled entirely under software control using internal registers. With specific control registers, some OPA related applications can be more flexible and easier to be implemented, such as Unit Gain Buffer, Non-Inverting Amplifier, Inverting Amplifier and various kinds of filters, etc. Operational Amplifier Registers The internal Operational Amplifiers are fully under the control of internal registers, OPA1C0, OPA1C1, OPA2C0, OPA2C1 and OPA2C2. These registers control enable/disable function, input path selection, gain control and polarity. OPA1C0 Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name A1X — — — — — — — R/W R — — — — — — — POR 0 — — — — — — — Bit 7 A1X: Operational amplifier output; positive logic. This bit is read only. Bit 6~0 Undefined OPA1C1 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 Name A1O2CIN A1O2N R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 A1PSEL1 A1PSEL0 3 2 1 0 A1PS A1NS A1OEN A1EN R/W R/W R/W R/W 1 1 0 0 Bit 7 A1O2CIN: OPA1 output to comparator input control bit 0: disable 1: enable The A1O2CIN bit should be set to 1 after the CNPSEL bit is set to 0 to ensure that the OPA1 output is successfully selected as the comparator input. Bit 6 A1O2N: OPA1 output to OPA1 Inverting input control bit 0: disable 1: enable This bit is only available when the A1EN bit is set to 1. If the A1EN bit is set to 0, the A1O2N bit will be cleared to 0 by hardware. Bit 5~4 A1PSEL1, A1PSEL0: OPA1 Non-inverting input selection bit 00: no connection 01: from VH1 (0.9×VLDO) 10: from VM (0.5×VDD or 0.5×VLDO) 11: from VL1 (0.1×VDD or 0.1×VLDO) To select the VH1, VM or VL1 as the OPA1 non-inverting input signal by setting the A2PSEL bit field, the A1PS bit should first be set to 0. Bit 3 A1PS: A1P pin to OPA1 Non-inverting input control bit 0: no connection 1: from A1P pin If this bit is set to 1, the A1PSEL field will be cleared to 0 by hardware. Bit 2 A1NS: A1N pin to OPA1 Inverting input control bit 0: no connection 1: from A1N pin 111 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 1 A1OEN: OPA1 output enable or disable control bit 0: disable 1: enable Note: If OPA1 enable and A1OEN set to 1, the MCU will consumption more DC power (100μA ~ 200μA). Bit 0 A1EN: OPA1 enable or disable control bit 0: disable 1: enable If this bit is set to 0, the A1O2N bits will be cleared to 0 by hardware. OPA2C0 Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name A2X — — — — — — — R/W R — — — — — — — POR 0 — — — — — — — Bit 7 A2X: Operational amplifier output; positive logic. This bit is read only. Bit 6~0 Undefined OPA2C1 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 Name A2O2CIN A2O2N 5 4 R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 3 2 1 0 A2PS A2NS A2OEN A2EN R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W 0 1 1 0 0 A2PSEL1 A2PSEL0 Bit 7 A2O2CIN: OPA2 output to comparator input control bit 0: disable 1: enable The A2O2CIN bit should be set to 1 after the CNPSEL and A1O2CIN bits are set to 0 to ensure that the OPA2 output is successfully selected as the comparator input. Bit 6 A2O2N: OPA2 output to OPA2 Inverting input control bit 0: disable 1: enable This bit is only available when the A2EN bit is set to 1. If the A2EN bit is set to 0, the A2O2N bit will be cleared to 0 by hardware. Bit 5~4 A2PSEL1, A2PSEL0: OPA2 Non-inverting input selection bit 00: no connection 01: from VH1 (0.9×VLDO) 10: from VM (0.5×VDD or 0.5×VLDO) 11: from VL1 (0.1×VDD or 0.1×VLDO) To select the VH1, VM or VL1 signal as the OPA2 non-inverting input by setting the A2PSEL bit field, the A2PS and A1O2A2P bits should first be set to 0. Bit 3 A2PS: A2P pin to OPA2 Non-inverting input control bit 0: no connection 1: from A2P pin If this bit is set to 1, the A1O2A2P bit and A2PSEL field will be cleared to 0 by hardware. Bit 2 A2NS: A2N pin to OPA2 Inverting input control bit 0: no connection 1: from A2N pin If this bit is set to 1, the A1O2A2N bit will be cleared to 0 by hardware. 112 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Bit 1 A2OEN: OPA2 output enable or disable control bit 0: disable 1: enable Note: If OPA2 enable and A2OEN set to 1, the MCU will consumption more DC power (100μA ~ 200μA). Bit 0 A2EN: OPA2 enable or disable control bit 0: disable 1: enable If this bit is set to 0, the PGAEN and A2O2N bits will be cleared to 0 by hardware. OPA2C2 Register Bit Name 7 6 A1O2A2N A1O2A2P 5 4 3 2 1 0 — — PGAEN PGA2 PGA1 PGA0 R/W R/W R/W — — R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 — — 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 A1O2A2N: OPA1 output to OPA2 Inverting input control bit 0: disable 1: enable To select the OPA1 output as the OPA2 inverting input, the A2NS bit should first be set to 0 followed by the A1O2A2N bit being set to 1. Bit 6 A1O2A2P: OPA1 output to OPA2 Non-inverting input control bit 0: disable 1: enable To select the OPA1 output as the OPA2 non-inverting input, the A2PS bit should first be set to 0 followed by the A1O2A2N bit being set to 1. Bit 5~4 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 3 PGAEN: OPA2 PGA gain enable control bits 0: disable 1: enable Bit 2~0 PGA2, PGA1, PGA0: OPA2 Gain control bits 000: 1 001: 8 010: 16 011: 24 100: 32 101: 40 110: 48 111: 56 Operational Amplifier Operation The advantages of multiple switches and input path options, various reference voltage selection, up to 8 kinds of internal software gain control, offset reference voltage calibration function and power down control for low power consumption enhance the flexibility of these two OPAs to suit a wide range of application possibilities. The following block diagram illustrates the main functional blocks of the OPAs and Comparator in the devices. Rev. 1.00 113 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver A1O2N Connect AN6 (A/D) A1NS A1N A1P VH1 VM VL1 CINTO A1 A1PS CMPINT CMPES[1:0] MU X A1O2CIN R1 10K R2 PGAEN CMP1X C1 C1OUTEN C1OUT C1INTEN C2INTEN A2O2N A2NS C1N C1NSEL A1E PGAEN VH0 MUX A1PSEL[1:0] A2N Edge Select A1X A1OEN A2O2CIN C2 CINTO CMP2X 560K C2OUTEN C2OUT A1O2A2N A1O2A2P MUX A2 C2P VL0 C2PSEL A2P A2PS VH1 VM VL1 CNPSEL CNP MUX Connect AN7 (A/D) A2PSEL[1:0] A2OEN A2E A2X Operational Amplifier Functions The OPAs are connected together internally in a specific way and the output of OPAs can also be connected to the internal comparators as shown in the block diagram. Each of the OPAs has its own control register, with the name OPA1C0, OPA1C1, OPA2C0, OPA2C1 and OPA2C2 which are used to control the enable/disable function, the calibration procedure and the programmable gain function of OPA2. OPA1 Switch Control The following diagram and table illustrate the OPA1 switch control setting and the corresponding connections. Note that some switch control selections will force some switches to be controlled by hardware automatically. For example: • The S7C is closed when A1O2CIN=1 and the S7C is opened when A1O2CIN =0. • The A1PS=1 will force A1PSEL1, 0=(00), i.e. S10C, S9C, S8C will be opened. • When the A1EN=0, S6C switch are opened by hardware, then the related I/O pins can be used as the other functions. Rev. 1.00 114 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver S10C VH1 S9C VM S8C VL1 CMP1 A1O2N A1O2C1N S7C S6C CMP2 A1O2C2N A1NS A1N OPA2 S5C A1O2A2P A1E OPA1 A1PS A1P S4C A1X A1OEN A1PS=1 will force A1PSEL[1:0]=00, i.e. S10C, S9C, S8C will be opened. A1EN=0 will force the S6C opened by hardware, then the related I/O pins can be used as the other functions. OPA1 Switch Control The following table illustrates the relationship between OPA1 control register settings and the switches: OPA1 Control Bits in OPA1C0, OPA1C1 A1PS A1NS A1PSEL1 A1O2N A1PSEL0 Switch Description S4C S5C S6C Results S8C~ S10C Off OPA1 connections 1 1 00 0 On On Off 0 1 01 0 Off On Off S10C On Input= A1N, VH1 Input= A1N, A1P 0 1 10 0 Off On Off S9C On Input= A1N, VM 0 1 11 0 Off On Off S8C On Input= A1N, VL1 1 1 00 1 On On On Off Input= A1N, A1P, connect A1N, A1E 1 0 00 1 On Off On Off Input= A1P, OPA1 as unit gain buffer 0 1 01 0 Off On Off 0 1 10 0 Off On Off S10C On Input= A1N, VH1 S9C On Input= A1N, VM 0 1 11 0 Off On Off S8C On Input= A1N, VL1 Note: The A1O2N bit is only available when the OPA1 is enabled by setting the A1EN bit high. When the OPA1 is disabled by setting the A1EN bit low, the A1O2N bit will be forced low and the S6C will be switched off by hardware. The following table illustrates the OPA1 & I/O settings. A1EN A1NS A1PS Rev. 1.00 Description 0 x x PA2, PA3 and PA4 are I/Os 1 0 0 PA2 and PA3 are I/Os, PA4 is OPA1 A1E output 1 0 1 PA3 is I/O. PA2 is OPA1 A1P input, PA4 is OPA1 A1E output 1 1 0 PA2 is I/O. PA3 is OPA1 A1N input, PA4 is OPA1 A1E output 1 1 1 PA2 is OPA1 A1P input and PA3 is OPA1 A1N input, PA4 is OPA1 A1E output 115 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver OPA2 Switch Control The following diagram and table illustrate the OPA2 switch control setting and the corresponding connections. Note that some switch control selections will force some switches to be controlled by hardware automatically. For example: • The PGAEN=1 will force S6D, S7D to close and the PGAEN=0 will force S6D, S7D to open. • When the A2EN=0, these switches, S6D, S7D and S9D, are opened by hardware, then the related I/O pins can be used as the other functions. A1O2A2P OPA1 S11D S12D S13D S14D A1O2A2N S8D A2N S6D VH1 VM VL1 CMP1 A2O2CIN A2O2N S9D 560K 10K CMP2 S10D S7D A2NS S5D A2E OPA2 A2P A2PS S4D A2X Switch priority: S4D>S11D>(S12D, S13D, S14D); If A2PS=1, S11D~S14D will be opened by hardware. Switch priority: S5D>S8D; If A2NS=1, S8D will be opened by hardware. A2OEN OPA2 Switch Control Rev. 1.00 116 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver The following table illustrates the relationship between OPA2 control register settings and the switches: OPA2 Control Bits in OPA2C0, OPA2C1, OPA2C2 Switch Description Results A2PSEL1 S12D~ A2PS A2NS A1O2A2P A1O2A2N PGAEN A2O2N S4D S5D S6/7D S8D S9D S11D A2PSEL0 S14D Off OPA2 connections Normal mode, Input=A2N, A2P 1 1 00 0 0 0 0 On On Off Off Off Off 0 1 01 0 0 0 0 Off On Off Off Off Off S12D Input=A2N, VH1 On 0 1 10 0 0 0 0 Off On Off Off Off Off S13D Input=A2N, VM On 0 1 11 0 0 0 0 Off On Off Off Off Off S14D Input=A2N, VL1 On 0 1 00 1 0 0 0 Off On Off Off Off On Off Input=A2N, A1E 1 0 00 0 1 0 0 On Off Off On Off Off Off Input=A1E, A2P 1 1 00 0 0 1 0 On On On Off Off Off Off Input=A2N, A2P 1 0 00 0 0 1 0 On Off On Off Off Off Off Input=A2N, A2P 1 0 00 0 0 0 1 On Off Off Off On Off Off Input=A2P, OPA2 as buffer 0 0 01 0 0 0 1 Off Off Off Off Off Off S12D Input=VH1, On OPA2 as buffer 0 0 10 0 0 0 1 Off Off Off Off Off Off S13D Input=VM, On OPA2 as buffer 0 0 11 0 0 0 1 Off Off Off Off Off Off S14D Input=VL1, On OPA2 as buffer The following table illustrates the OPA2 & I/O settings. A2EN PGAEN A2NS A2PS Description 0 x x x PA5 and PA6 and PA7 are I/Os 1 0 0 0 PA5 and PA6 are I/Os. PA7 is OPA2 A2E output 1 0 0 1 PA6 is I/O. PA5 is OPA2 A2P input, PA7 is OPA2 A2E output 1 0 1 0 PA5 is I/O. PA6 is OPA2 A2N input, PA7 is OPA2 A2E output 1 0 1 1 PA5 is OPA2 A2P input and PA6 is OPA2 A2N input, PA7 is OPA2 A2E output 1 1 0 0 PA5 is I/O. PA6 is OPA2 A2N input, PA7 is OPA2 A2E output 1 1 0 1 PA5 is OPA2 A2P input and PA6 is OPA2 A2N input, PA7 is OPA2 A2E output 1 1 1 0 PA5 is I/O. PA6 is OPA2 A2N input and bypass R1 (10kΩ), PA7 is OPA2 A2E output 1 1 1 1 PA5 is OPA2 A2P input and PA6 is OPA2 A2N input and bypass R1 (10kΩ), PA7 is OPA2 A2E output Rev. 1.00 117 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Comparators Two analog comparators are contained within the devices. These functions offer flexibility via their register controlled features such as power-down, interrupt etc. Sharing their pins with normal I/O pins, the comparators do not waste precious I/O pins if there functions are otherwise unused. In addition, the devices provide the calibration function to adjust the comparator offset. Comparator Operation The devices contain two comparator functions which are used to compare two analog voltages and provide an output based on their difference. Full control over the two internal comparators is provided via control registers, CMP1C0, CMP1C1, CMP2C0 and CMP2C1. The comparator output is recorded via a bit in their respective control register, but can also be transferred out onto a shared I/O pin or to generate an interrupt trigger with edge control function. Additional comparator functions include the power down control. Comparator Registers The internal dual comparators are fully under the control of internal registers, CMP1C0, CMP1C1, CMP2C0 and CMP2C1. These registers control enable/disable function, input path selection, interrupt edge control and input offset voltage calibration function. CMP1C0 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name CMP1X C1OFM C1RS C1OF4 C1OF3 C1OF2 C1OF1 C1OF0 R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 CMP1X: comparator output; positive logic. This bit is read only. Bit 6 C1OFM: Comparator mode or input offset voltage cancellation mode 0: comparator mode 1: input offset voltage cancellation mode When the C1OFM=1, comparator inputs are always from I/O pins. i.e. the CNPSEL and C1NSEL will be forced to “1”. That means disconnect the input from OPAs output. Bit 5 C1RS: Comparator input offset voltage cancellation reference selection bit 0: select C1N as the reference input 1: select CNP as the reference input Note: The C1N is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Bit 4~0 C1OF4~C1OF0: Comparator input offset voltage cancellation control bits 118 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver CMP1C1 Register Bit 7 6 5 4 Name CNPSEL — — — R/W R/W — — — R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 1 — — — 0 0 1 0 Bit 7 3 2 1 0 C1INTEN C1OUTEN C1NSEL CMP1EN CNPSEL: Comparator non-inverting input control bit 0: from OPA output 1: from CNP pin Bit 6~4 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 3 C1INTEN: Comparator 1 interrupt control bit 0: disable 1: enable Bit 2 C1OUTEN: Comparator 1 output pin control bit 0: disable 1: enable Bit 1 C1NSEL: Comparator 1 inverting input control bit 0: from VH0 1: from C1N pin Note: The C1N is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Bit 0 CMP1EN: Comparator 1 enable or disable control bit 0: disable 1: enable CMP2C0 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name CMP2X C2OFM C2RS C2OF4 C2OF3 C2OF2 C2OF1 C2OF0 R/W R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 CMP2X: comparator output; positive logic. This bit is read only. Bit 6 C2OFM: Comparator mode or input offset voltage cancellation mode 0: comparator mode 1: input offset voltage cancellation mode When the C2OFM=1, comparator inputs are always from I/O pins. i.e. the CNPSEL and C1NSEL will be forced to “1”. That means disconnect the input from OPAs output. Bit 5 C2RS: Operational amplifier input offset voltage cancellation reference selection bit 0: select C2P as the reference input 1: select CNP as the reference input Note: The C2P is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Bit 4~0 C2OF4~C2OF0: Comparator input offset voltage cancellation control bits 119 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver CMP2C1 Register Bit 7 Name 6 CMPES1 CMPES0 5 4 — — 3 2 1 0 C2INTEN C2OUTEN C2PSEL CMP2EN R/W R/W R/W — — R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 — — 0 0 1 0 Bit 7~6 CMPES1, CMPES0: Interrupt edge control bits 00: disable 01: rising edge trigger 10: falling edge trigger 11: dual edge trigger Bit 5~4 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 3 C2INTEN: Comparator 2 interrupt control bit 0: disable 1: enable Bit 2 C2OUTEN: Comparator 2 output pin control bit 0: disable 1: enable Bit 1 C2PSEL: Comparator 2 non-inverting input control bit 0: from VL0 1: from C2P pin Note: The C2P is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Bit 0 CMP2EN: Comparator 2 enable or disable control bit 0: disable 1: enable Comparator Functions These two comparators can operate together with the OPAs or standalone as shown in the main functional blocks of the OPAs and Comparators. Each of the internal comparators in the devices allows for a common mode adjustment method of its input offset voltage. The calibration steps are as following: 1. Set C1OFM=1 to setup the offset cancellation mode, here S3A is closed. 2. Set C1RS to select which input pin is to be used as the reference voltage – S1A or S2A is closed. 3. Adjust C1OF0~C1OF4 until the output status changes. 4. Set C1OFM = 0 to restore the normal comparator mode. 5. Repeat the same procedure from steps 1 to 4 for comparator 2. C1OFM 0 C1RS x 1 0 1 1 "x" : don´t care S1A S2A ON OFF ON ON ON S3A OFF ON OFF ON S2A C1OUTEN C1N CNP Rev. 1.00 S3A C1OUT CMP1 S1A CMP1X 120 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver The following diagram and table illustrate the comparators switch control setting and the corresponding connections. Note that some switch control selections will force some switches to be controlled by hardware automatically. For example: • When the CMP1 in calibration mode, i.e. C1OFM =1, then the SW1, SW3 will be forced to close. The CNPSEL and C1NSEL bits will be set “1” by hardware, and these two bits will be read out as “1”. After the offset voltage calibration, the CNPSEL and C1NSEL will be back to its original value. • When the CMP2 in calibration mode, i.e. C2OFM =1, then the SW1, SW2 will be forced to close. The CNPSEL and C2PSEL bits will be set “1” by hardware, and these two bits will be read out as “1”. After the offset voltage calibration, the CNPSEL and C2PSEL will be back to its original value. • If the CNPSEL=1, the A1O2CIN and A2O2CIN will be forced to “0”, i.e. If the SW1 is closed, and that will force S7C and S10D to open. • If the CNPSEL=0 and the A1O2CIN=1, the A2O2CIN will be forced to “0”, i.e. If the S7C is closed, and that will force S10D to open. CNP C1N C2P SW1 SW2 CNPSEL Edge Select CINT0 VH0 VL0 SW3 C2PSEL CMPINT CMPES1, CMPES0 C1NSEL C1OUTEN S2A CMP1 A1O2CIN OPA1 S3A C1INTEN S10D S2B C2OUT CMP2 S1B C1OUT CINT0 C2INTEN S7C A2O2CIN OPA2 S1A CMP1X CMP2X C2OUTEN S3B Comparators Switch Control Rev. 1.00 121 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver The following table illustrates the CMP1 & I/O settings. CMP1EN C1OUTEN CNPSEL C1NSEL Description 0 x x x PC5 and PA0 and PA1 are I/Os 1 0 0 0 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C1N is from VH0 input, PA1 is I/O 1 0 0 1 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C1N is from PC5 input, PA1 is I/O 1 0 1 0 CNP is from PA0 input, C1N is from VH0 input, PA1 is I/O 1 0 1 1 CNP is from PA0 input, C1N is from PC5 input, PA1 is I/O 1 1 0 0 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C1N is from VH0 input, PA1 is comparator output 1 1 0 1 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C1N is from PC5 input, PA1 is comparator output 1 1 1 0 CNP is from PA0 input, C1N is from VH0 input, PA1 is comparator output 1 1 1 1 CNP is from PA0 input, C1N is from PC5 input, PA1 is comparator output The following table illustrates the CMP2 & I/O settings. CMP2EN C2OUTEN CNPSEL C2PSEL Description 0 x x x PC6 and PA0 and PA2 are I/Os 1 0 0 0 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C2P is from VL0 input, PA2 is I/O 1 0 0 1 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C2P is from PC6 input, PA2 is I/O 1 0 1 0 CNP is from PA0 input, C2P is from VL0 input, PA2 is I/O 1 0 1 1 CNP is from PA0 input, C2P is from PC6 input, PA2 is I/O 1 1 0 0 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C2P is from VL0 input, PA2 is comparator output 1 1 0 1 CNP is from OPA1 or OPA2 output, C2P is from PC6 input, PA2 is comparator output 1 1 1 0 CNP is from PA0 input, C2P is from VL0 input, PA2 is comparator output 1 1 1 1 CNP is from PA0 input, C2P is from PC6 input, PA2 is comparator output The following table illustrates the relationship between comparators control register settings and the switches: CMP1,CMP2 Control Bits Switch Description Results CNPSEL C2PSEL C1NSEL C1OFM C1RS SW1 SW2 SW3 S1A S2A S3A S7C S10D 1 (Forced to 1) x 1 (Forced to 1) 1 1 ON CNP x ON C1N ON OFF ON OFF OFF Input common mode=CNP 1 (Forced to 1) x 1 (Forced to 1) 1 0 ON CNP x ON OFF C1N ON ON OFF OFF Input common mode=C1N 1 0 1 0 x ON x C1N ON ON OFF OFF OFF Input = CNP, C1N 1 0 0 0 x ON x VH ON ON OFF OFF OFF Input = CNP, VH1 0 0 1 0 x OFF x C1N ON ON OFF OFF Input = A1E, C1N 0 0 1 0 x OFF x C1N ON ON OFF OFF ON ON Connections Input = A2E, C1N Comparators Switch Control Rev. 1.00 122 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Interrupts Interrupts are an important part of any microcontroller system. When an external event or an internal function such as a Timer/Event Counter or an A/D converter requires microcontroller attention, their corresponding interrupt will enforce a temporary suspension of the main program allowing the microcontroller to direct attention to their respective needs.The devices contain several external interrupt and internal interrupts functions. The external interrupts are controlled by the action of the external INT0, INT1 and PINT pins, while the internal interrupts are controlled by the Timer/Event Counter overflows, the Time Base interrupts, the SIM interrupt, the A/D converter interrupt,Comparator interrupt, EEPROM interrupt and LVD interrupt. Interrupt Register Overall interrupt control, which means interrupt enabling and request flag setting, is controlled by the INTC0, INTC1, MFIC0 and MFIC1 registers, which are located in the Data Memory. By controlling the appropriate enable bits in these registers each individual interrupt can be enabled or disabled. Also when an interrupt occurs, the corresponding request flag will be set by the microcontroller. The global enable flag if cleared to zero will disable all interrupts. Interrupt Operation A Timer/Event Counter overflow, Time Base 0/1, SIM data transfer complete, an end of A/D conversion, the external interrupt line being triggered, a comparator output, an EEPROM Write or Read cycle ends, or a LVD detection will all generate an interrupt request by setting their corresponding request flag, if their appropriate interrupt enable bit is set. When this happens, the Program Counter, which stores the address of the next instruction to be executed, will be transferred onto the stack. The Program Counter will then be loaded with a new address which will be the value of the corresponding interrupt vector. The microcontroller will then fetch its next instruction from this interrupt vector. The instruction at this vector will usually be a JMP statement which will jump to another section of program which is known as the interrupt service routine. Here is located the code to control the appropriate interrupt. The interrupt service routine must be terminated with a RETI statement, which retrieves the original Program Counter address from the stack and allows the microcontroller to continue with normal execution at the point where the interrupt occurred. The various interrupt enable bits, together with their associated request flags, are shown in the accompanying diagram with their order of priority. Once an interrupt subroutine is serviced, all the other interrupts will be blocked, as the EMI bit will be cleared automatically. This will prevent any further interrupt nesting from occurring. However, if other interrupt requests occur during this interval, although the interrupt will not be immediately serviced, the request flag will still be recorded. If an interrupt requires immediate servicing while the program is already in another interrupt service routine, the EMI bit should be set after entering the routine, to allow interrupt nesting. If the stack is full, the interrupt request will not be acknowledged, even if the related interrupt is enabled, until the Stack Pointer is decremented. If immediate service is desired, the stack must be prevented from becoming full. Rev. 1.00 123 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Interrupt Priority Interrupts, occurring in the interval between the rising edges of two consecutive T2 pulses, will be serviced on the latter of the two T2 pulses, if the corresponding interrupts are enabled. In case of simultaneous requests, the following table shows the priority that is applied. Priority Vector External interrupt 0 Interrupt Source 1 04H External interrupt 1 2 08H Timer/Event Counter 0 overflow 3 0CH Timer/Event Counter 1 overflow 4 10H SPI/I2C interrupt 5 14H Multi-function Interrupt 6 18H The A/D converter interrupt, Time Base interrupt, External Peripheral interrupt, Comparator interrupt, EEPROM interrupt, and LVD interrupt all share the same interrupt vector which is 18H. Each of these interrupts has their own individual interrupt flag but also share the same MFF interrupt flag. The MFF flag will be cleared by hardware once the Multi-function interrupt is serviced, however the individual interrupts that have triggered the Multi-function interrupt need to be cleared by the application program. INTC0 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — T0F EIF1 EIF0 ET0I EEI1 EEI0 EMI R/W — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR — 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 6 T0F: Timer/Event Counter 0 interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 5 EIF1: External interrupt 1 request flag 0: inactive 1: active Note: The INT1 is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Bit 4 EIF0: External interrupt 0 request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 3 ET0I: Timer/Event Counter 0 interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 2 EEI1: External interrupt 1 enable 0: disable 1: enable Note: The INT1 is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Bit 1 EEI0: External interrupt 0 enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 0 EMI: Master interrupt global enable 0: disable 1: enable 124 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver INTC1 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — MFF SIMF T1F — EMFI ESIM ET1I R/W — R/W R/W R/W — R/W R/W R/W POR — 0 0 0 — 0 0 0 Bit 7 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 6 MFF: Multi-function interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 5 SIMF: SIM interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Note: The SIM pins are not connected to the external pins and internally used only. Bit 4 TIF: Timer/Event counter 1 interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 3 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 2 EMFI: Multi-function interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 1 ESIM: SIM interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable Note: The SIM pins are not connected to the external pins and internally used only. Bit 0 ET1I: Timer/Event counter 1 interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable 125 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver MFIC0 Register Rev. 1.00 Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name PEF TB1F TB0F ADF EPI TB1E TB0E EADI R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 PEF: External peripheral interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Note: The PINT is not connected to the external pin. Bit 6 TB1F: Time Base 1 interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 5 TB0F: Time Base 0 interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 4 ADF: A/D converter interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 3 EPI: External peripheral interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable Note: The PINT is not connected to the external pin. Bit 2 TB1E: Time Base 1 enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 1 TB0E: Time Base 0 enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 0 EADI: A/D converter interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable 126 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver MFIC1 Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — LVDF E2F CF — ELVDI EE2I ECI R/W — R/W R/W R/W — R/W R/W R/W POR — 0 0 0 — 0 0 0 Bit 7 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 6 LVDF: LVD interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 5 E2F: EEPROM interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 4 CF: Comparator interrupt request flag 0: inactive 1: active Bit 3 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 2 ELVDI: LVD interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 1 EE2I: EEPROM interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable Bit 0 ECI: Comparator interrupt enable 0: disable 1: enable External Interrupt The external interrupts are controlled by signal transitions on the pins INT0~INT1. An external interrupt request will take place when the external interrupt request flags, EIF0~EIF1, are set, which will occur when a transition, whose type is chosen by the edge select bits, appears on the external interrupt pins. To allow the program to branch to its respective interrupt vector address, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, and respective external interrupt enable bit, EEI0~EEI1, must first be set. Additionally the correct interrupt edge type must be selected using the INTEDGE register to enable the external interrupt function and to choose the trigger edge type. As the external interrupt pins are pin-shared with I/O pins, they can only be configured as external interrupt pins if their external interrupt enable bit in the corresponding interrupt register has been set. The pin must also be setup as an input by setting the corresponding bit in the port control register. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and the correct transition type appears on the external interrupt pin, a subroutine call to the external interrupt vector, will take place. When the interrupt is serviced, the external interrupt request flags, EIF0~EIF1, will be automatically reset and the EMI bit will be automatically cleared to disable other interrupts. Note that any pull-high resistor selections on the external interrupt pins will remain valid even if the pin is used as an external interrupt input. The INTEDGE register is used to select the type of active edge that will trigger the external interrupt. A choice of either rising or falling or both edge types can be chosen to trigger an external interrupt. Note that the INTEDGE register can also be used to disable the external interrupt function. Rev. 1.00 127 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Note: The INTC1 is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. EMI auto disa�led in ISR Legend xxF Request Flag -no auto �eset in ISR xxF Request Flag-auto �eset in ISR xxE Ena�le Bit Inte��upt �a�e A/D Ti�e Base 0 Ti�e Base 1 Request Flags Ena�le Bits ADF EADI TB0F TB0E TB1F TB1E PI�T PEF EPI Co�pa�ato� CF ECI EEPROM E�F EE�I LVDF ELVDI Inte��upt �a�e Request Flags Ena�le Bits Maste� Ena�le Vector I�T0 EIF0 EEI0 EMI 0�H I�T1 EIF1 EEI1 EMI 08H Ti�e�/Event Counte�0 T0F ET0I EMI 0CH Ti�e�/Event Counte�1 T1F ET1I EMI 10H SIM SIMF ESIM EMI 1�H M.Funct . MFF EMFI EMI 18H P�io�ity High Low LVD Inte��upts contained within Multi-Function Inte��upts Interrupt Structure The external interrupt pins are connected to an internal filter to reduce the possibility of unwanted external interrupts due to adverse noise or spikes on the external interrupt input signal. As this internal filter circuit will consume a limited amount of power, a configuration option is provided to switch off the filter function, an option which may be beneficial in power sensitive applications, but in which the integrity of the input signal is high. Care must be taken when using the filter on/off configuration option as it will be applied not only to both the external interrupt pins but also to the Timer/Event Counter external input pins. Individual external interrupt or Timer/Event Counter pins cannot be selected to have a filter on/off function. Rev. 1.00 128 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver INTEDGE Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — — — — INT1S1 INT1S0 INT0S1 INT0S0 R/W — — — — R/W R/W R/W R/W POR — — — — 0 0 0 0 Bit 7~4 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 3~2 INT1S1, INT1S0: INT1 Edge select 00: disable 01: rising edge trigger 10: falling edge trigger 11: dual edge trigger Bit 1~0 INT0S1, INT0S0: INT0 Edge select 00: disable 01: rising edge trigger 10: falling edge trigger 11: dual edge trigger External Peripheral Interrupt The External Peripheral Interrupt operates in a similar way to the external interrupt and is contained within the Multi-function interrupt. For an external peripheral interrupt to occur, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, external peripheral interrupt enable bit, EPI, and Multi-function interrupt enable bit, EMFI, must first be set. An actual external peripheral interrupt will take place when the external interrupt request flag, PEF, is set, a situation that will occur when a negative transition, appears on the PINT pin. The external peripheral interrupt pin is pin-shared with the I/O pin PB5, and is configured as a peripheral interrupt pin via a configuration option. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and a negative transition type appears on the external peripheral interrupt pin, a subroutine call to the Multi-function interrupt vector at location18H, will take place. When the external peripheral interrupt is serviced, the EMI bit will be cleared to disable other interrupts, however only the MFF interrupt request flag will be reset. As the PEF flag will not be automatically reset, it has to be cleared by the application program. Note: The PINT is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Timer/Event Counter Interrupt For a Timer/Event Counter interrupt to occur, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, and the corresponding timer interrupt enable bit, ET0I or ET1I, must first be set. An actual Timer/Event Counter interrupt will take place when the Timer/Event Counter request flag, T0F or T1F, is set, a situation that will occur when the Timer/Event Counter overflows. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and a Timer/Event Counter overflow occurs, a subroutine call to the timer interrupt vector at location 0CH or 10H, will take place. When the interrupt is serviced, the timer interrupt request flag, T0F or T1F, will be automatically reset and the EMI bit will be automatically cleared to disable other interrupts. Rev. 1.00 129 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver SIM Interface Interrupt For an SIM interrupt to occur, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, and the corresponding interrupt enable bit, ESIM must be first set. An actual SIM interrupt will take place when the SIM interface request flag, SIMF, is set, a situation that will occur when a byte of data has been transmitted or received by the SIM interface When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and a byte of data has been transmitted or received by the SIM interface, a subroutine call to the SIM interrupt vector at location 14H, will take place. When the interrupt is serviced, the SIM request flag, SIMF will be automatically reset and the EMI bit will be automatically cleared to disable other interrupts. Note: The SIM pins is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Multi-function Interrupt An additional interrupt known as the Multi-function interrupt is provided. Unlike the other interrupts, this interrupt has no independent source, but rather is formed from four other existing interrupt sources, namely the A/D Converter interrupt, Time Base interrupts, the External Peripheral interrupt, Comparator interrupt, EEPROM interrupt and LVD interrupt. For a Multi-function interrupt to occur, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, and the Multi-function interrupt enable bit, EMFI, must first be set. An actual Multi-function interrupt will take place when the Multi-function interrupt request flag, MFF, is set. This will occur when either a Time Base overflow, an A/D conversion completion, an External Peripheral Interrupt, a Comparator output interrupt, an EEPROM Write or Read cycle ends interrupt, or a LVD interrupt is generated. When the interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full, and either one of the interrupts contained within the Multi-function interrupt occurs, a subroutine call to the Multi-function interrupt vector at location 018H will take place. When the interrupt is serviced, the Multi-Function request flag, MFF, will be automatically reset and the EMI bit will be automatically cleared to disable other interrupts. However, it must be noted that the request flags from the original source of the Multi-function interrupt, namely the Time-Base interrupt, A/D Converter interrupt, Comparator interrupt,EEPROM interrupt,LVD interrupt or External Peripheral interrupt will not be automatically reset and must be manually reset by the application program. A/D Interrupt The A/D Interrupt is contained within the Multi-function Interrupt. For an A/D Interrupt to be generated, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, A/D Interrupt enable bit, EADI, and Multi-function interrupt enable bit, EMFI, must first be set. An actual A/D Interrupt will take place when the A/D Interrupt request flag, ADF, is set, a situation that will occur when the A/D conversion process has finished. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and the A/D conversion process has ended, a subroutine call to the Multi-function interrupt vector at location18H, will take place. When the A/D Interrupt is serviced, the EMI bit will be cleared to disable other interrupts, however only the MFF interrupt request flag will be reset. As the ADF flag will not be automatically reset, it has to be cleared by the application program. Rev. 1.00 130 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Time Base Interrupt The function of the Time Base Interrupts is to provide regular time signal in the form of an internal interrupt. They are controlled by the overflow signals from their respective timer functions. When these happens their respective interrupt request flags, TB0F or TB1F will be set. To allow the program to branch to their respective interrupt vector addresses, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI and Time Base enable bits, TB0E or TB1E, must first be set. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and the Time Base overflows, a subroutine call to their respective vector locations will take place. When the interrupt is serviced, the respective interrupt request flag, TB0F or TB1F, will be automatically reset and the EMI bit will be cleared to disable other interrupts. The purpose of the Time Base Interrupt is to provide an interrupt signal at fixed time periods. Their clock sources originate from the internal clock source fTB. This fTB input clock passes through a divider, the division ratio of which is selected by programming the appropriate bits in the TBC register to obtain longer interrupt periods whose value ranges. The clock source that generates fTB, which in turn controls the Time Base interrupt period, can originate from several different sources, as shown in the System Operating Mode section. Time Base Interrupt TBC Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name TBON TBCK TB11 TB10 LXTLP TB02 TB01 TB00 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5~4 Bit 3 Bit 2~0 Rev. 1.00 TBON: TB0 and TB1 Control 0: disable 1: enable TBCK: Select fTB Clock 0: fTBC 1: fSYS/4 TB11~TB10: Select Time Base 1 Time-out Period 00: 4096/fTB 01: 8192/fTB 10: 16384/fTB 11: 32768/fTB LXTLP: LXT Low Power Control 0: disable 1: enable TB02~TB00: Select Time Base 0 Time-out Period 000: 256/fTB 001: 512/fTB 010: 1024/fTB 011: 2048/fTB 100: 4096/fTB 101: 8192/fTB 110: 16384/fTB 111: 32768/fTB 131 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Comparator Interrupt The Comparator Interrupt is contained within the Multi-function Interrupt. The comparator interrupt is controlled by the two internal comparators. A comparator interrupt request will take place when the comparator interrupt request flag, CF, is set, a situation that will occur when the comparator output changes state. To allow the program to branch to its respective interrupt vector address, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, and comparator interrupt enable bit, ECI, must first be set. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and the comparator input generates a comparator output transition, a subroutine call to the comparator interrupt vector, will take place. When the Comparator Interrupt is serviced, the EMI bit will be automatically cleared to disable other interrupts, however only the Multi-function interrupt request flag will be also automatically cleared. As the CF flag will not be automatically cleared, it has to be cleared by the application program. EEPROM Interrupt The EEPROM Interrupt is contained within the Multi-function Interrupt. An EEPROM Interrupt request will take place when the EEPROM Interrupt request flag, E2F, is set, which occurs when an EEPROM Write or Read cycle ends. To allow the program to branch to its respective interrupt vector address, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, EEPROM Interrupt enable bit, EE2I, and associated Multi-function interrupt enable bit, must first be set. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and an EEPROM Write or Read cycle ends, a subroutine call to the respective Multi-function Interrupt vector, will take place. When the EEPROM Interrupt is serviced, the EMI bit will be automatically cleared to disable other interrupts, however only the Multi-function interrupt request flag will be also automatically cleared. As the E2F flag will not be automatically cleared, it has to be cleared by the application program. LVD Interrupt The Low Voltage Detector Interrupt is contained within the Multi-function Interrupt. An LVD Interrupt request will take place when the LVD Interrupt request flag, LVDF, is set, which occurs when the Low Voltage Detector function detects a low power supply voltage. To allow the program to branch to its respective interrupt vector address, the global interrupt enable bit, EMI, Low Voltage Interrupt enable bit, ELVDI, and associated Multi-function interrupt enable bit, must first be set. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and a low voltage condition occurs, a subroutine call to the Multi-function Interrupt vector, will take place. When the Low Voltage Interrupt is serviced, the EMI bit will be automatically cleared to disable other interrupts, however only the Multi-function interrupt request flag will be also automatically cleared. As the LVDF flag will not be automatically cleared, it has to be cleared by the application program. Interrupt Wake-up Function Each of the interrupt functions has the capability of waking up the microcontroller when in the SLEEP or IDLE Mode. A wake-up is generated when an interrupt request flag changes from low to high and is independent of whether the interrupt is enabled or not. Therefore, even though the devices are in the SLEEP or IDLE Mode and its system oscillator stopped, situations such as external edge transitions on the external interrupt pins, a low power supply voltage or comparator input change may cause their respective interrupt flag to be set high and consequently generate an interrupt. Care must therefore be taken if spurious wake-up situations are to be avoided. If an interrupt wake-up function is to be disabled then the corresponding interrupt request flag should be set high before the devices enter the SLEEP or IDLE Mode. The interrupt enable bits have no effect on the interrupt wake-up function. Rev. 1.00 132 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Programming Considerations By disabling the interrupt enable bits, a requested interrupt can be prevented from being serviced, however, once an interrupt request flag is set, it will remain in this condition in the INTC0, INTC1,MFIC0 and MFIC1 registers until the corresponding interrupt is serviced or until the request flag is cleared by the application program. It is recommended that programs do not use the “CALL Subroutine” instruction within the interrupt subroutine. Interrupts often occur in an unpredictable manner or need to be serviced immediately in some applications. If only one stack is left and the interrupt is not well controlled, the original control sequence will be damaged once a “CALL subroutine” is executed in the interrupt subroutine. All of these interrupts have the capability of waking up the processor when in the Power Down Mode. Only the Program Counter is pushed onto the stack. If the contents of the status or other registers are altered by the interrupt service program, which may corrupt the desired control sequence, then the contents should be saved in advance. Buzzer Operating in a similar way to the Programmable Frequency Divider, the Buzzer function provides a means of producing a variable frequency output, suitable for applications such as Piezo-buzzer driving or other external circuits that require a precise frequency generator. The BZ and BZ pins form a complimentary pair, and are pin-shared with I/O pins, PA6 and PA7. A BPCTL register is used to select from one of three buzzer options. The first option is for both pins PA6 and PA7 to be used as normal I/Os, the second option is for both pins to be configured as BZ and BZ buzzer pins, the third option selects only the PA6 pin to be used as a BZ buzzer pin with the PA7 pin retaining its normal I/O pin function. Note that the BZ pin is the inverse of the BZ pin which together generate a differential output which can supply more power to connected interfaces such as buzzers. The buzzer is driven by the internal clock source, fTB, which then passes through a divider, the division ratio of which is selected by BPCTL register to provide a range of buzzer frequencies from fTB/22 to fTB/29. The clock source that generates fTB, which in turn controls the buzzer frequency, can originate from three different sources, the LXT oscillator, the LIRC oscillator or the System oscillator/4, the choice of which is determined by the fTB clock source option. Note that the buzzer frequency is controlled by BPCTL register, which select the source clock for the internal clock fTB. Buzzer Function If the BPCTL options have selected both pins PA6 and PA7 to function as a BZ and BZ complementary pair of buzzer outputs, then for correct buzzer operation it is essential that both pins must be setup as outputs by setting bits PAC6 and PAC7 of the PAC port control register to zero. The PA6 data bit in the PA data register must also be set high to enable the buzzer outputs, if set low, both pins PA6 and PA7 will remain low. In this way the single bit PA6 of the PA register can be used as an on/off control for both the BZ and BZ buzzer pin outputs. Note that the PA7 data bit in the PA register has no control over the BZ buzzer pin PA7. Rev. 1.00 133 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver BPCTL Register Bit 7 Name 6 5 PMODE PWM1EN PWM0EN 4 3 2 1 0 BC1 BC0 BZ2 BZ1 BZ0 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7~5 PWM control bits Bit 4~3 BC1~BC0: Buzzer or I/O 00: PA7 is I/O, PA6 is I/O 01: PA7 is I/O, PA6 is BZ 10: reserved 11: PA7 is BZ, PA6 is BZ Bit 2~0 BZ2~BZ0: Buzzer output frequency selection 000: fTB/22 001: fTB/23 010: fTB/24 011: fTB/25 100: fTB/26 101: fTB/27 110: fTB/28 111: fTB/29 PA6/PA7 Pin Function Control PAC Register PAC6 PAC Register PAC7 PA Data Register PA Data Register PA6 PA7 Output Function 0 0 1 × PA6=BZ; PA7=BZ 0 0 0 × PA6=“0”; PA7=“0” 0 1 1 × PA6=BZ PA7=input line 0 1 0 × PA6=“0” PA7=input line 1 0 × D PA6=input line PA7= D 1 1 × × PA6=input line PA7=input line “x” stands for don’t care; “D” stands for Data “0” or “1” If the options have selected that only the PA6 pin is to function as a BZ buzzer pin, then the PA7 pin can be used as a normal I/O pin. For the PA6 pin to function as a BZ buzzer pin, PA6 must be setup as an output by setting bit PAC6 of the PAC port control register to zero. The PA6 data bit in the PA data register must also be set high to enable the buzzer output, if set low pin PA6 will remain low. In this way the PA6 bit can be used as an on/off control for the BZ buzzer pin PA6. If the PAC6 bit of the PAC port control register is set high, then pin PA6 can still be used as an input even though the option has configured it as a BZ buzzer output. Note that no matter what BPCTL option is chosen for the buzzer, if the port control register has setup the pin to function as an input, then this will override the BPCTL option selection and force the pin to always behave as an input pin. This arrangement enables the pin to be used as both a buzzer pin and as an input pin, so regardless of the BPCTL option chosen; the actual function of the pin can be changed dynamically by the application program by programming the appropriate port control register bit. Rev. 1.00 134 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Buzzer Output Pin Control Note: The above drawing shows the situation where both pins PA6 and PA7 are selected by BPCTL option to be BZ and BZ buzzer pin outputs. The Port Control Register of both pins must have already been setup as output. The data setup on pin PA7 has no effect on the buzzer outputs. Low Voltage Detector – LVD The devices have Low Voltage Detector function, also known as LVD. This enabled the devices to monitor the power supply voltage, VDD, and provide a warning signal should it fall below a certain level. This function may be especially useful in battery applications where the supply voltage will gradually reduce as the battery ages, as it allows an early warning battery low signal to be generated. The Low Voltage Detector also has the capability of generating an interrupt signal. LVD Register The Low Voltage Detector function is controlled using a single register with the name LVDC. Three bits in this register, VLVD2~VLVD0, are used to select one of eight fixed voltages below which a low voltage condition will be detemined. A low voltage condition is indicated when the LVDO bit is set. If the LVDO bit is low, this indicates that the VDD voltage is above the preset low voltage value. The LVDEN bit is used to control the overall on/off function of the low voltage detector. Setting the bit high will enable the low voltage detector. Clearing the bit to zero will switch off the internal low voltage detector circuits. As the low voltage detector will consume a certain amount of power, it may be desirable to switch off the circuit when not in use, an important consideration in power sensitive battery powered applications. Rev. 1.00 135 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver LVDC Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name — — LVDO LVDEN — VLVD2 VLVD1 VLVD0 R/W — — R R/W — R/W R/W R/W POR — — 0 0 — 0 0 0 Bit 7~6 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 5 LVDO: LVD Output Flag 0: no Low Voltage Detect 1: low Voltage Detect Bit 4 LVDEN: Low Voltage Detector Control 0: disable 1: enable Bit 3 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 2~0 LVD2~LVD0: Select LVD Voltage 000: 2.0V 001: 2.2V 010: 2.4V 011: 2.7V 100: 3.0V 101: 3.3V 110: 3.6V 111: 4.4V LVD Operation The Low Voltage Detector function operates by comparing the power supply voltage, VDD, with a pre-specified voltage level stored in the LVDC register. This has a range of between 2.0V and 4.4V. When the power supply voltage, VDD, falls below this pre-determined value, the LVDO bit will be set high indicating a low power supply voltage condition. The Low Voltage Detector function is supplied by a reference voltage which will be automatically enabled. When the devices are powered down the low voltage detector will remain active if the LVDEN bit is high. After enabling the Low Voltage Detector, a time delay tLVDS should be allowed for the circuitry to stabilise before reading the LVDO bit. Note also that as the VDD voltage may rise and fall rather slowly, at the voltage nears that of VLVD, there may be multiple bit LVDO transitions. The Low Voltage Detector also has its own interrupt which is contained within one of the Multifunction interrupts, providing an alternative means of low voltage detection, in addition to polling the LVDO bit. The interrupt will only be generated after a delay of tLVD after the LVDO bit has been set high by a low voltage condition. When the devices are powered down the Low Voltage Detector will remain active if the LVDEN bit is high. In this case, the LVDF interrupt request flag will be set, causing an interrupt to be generated if VDD falls below the preset LVD voltage. This will cause the devices to wake-up from the SLEEP or IDLE Mode, however if the Low Voltage Detector wake up function is not required then the LVDF flag should be first set high before the devices enters the SLEEP or IDLE Mode. LVD Operation Rev. 1.00 136 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Voice Output Voice Control The voice control register controls the DAC circuit. If the DAC circuit is not enabled, any DAH/ DAL outputs will be invalid. Writing a “1” to the DACEN bit will enable the DAC circuit and channel the DAC output to its corresponding I/O pin, while writing a “0” to the DACEN bit will disable the DAC circuit. Audio Output and Volume Control – DAL, DAH, DACTRL The audio output is 12-bits wide whose highest 8-bits are written into the DAH register and whose lowest four bits are written into the highest four bits of the DAL register. Bits 0~3 of the DAL register are always read as zero. There are 8 levels of volume which are setup using the DACTRL register. The highest 3-bits of this register are used for volume control and the DACEN bit is used to control the DAC function enable or not. Once the DACEN bit is set to “1”, this will channel the DAC output to the I/O pin and disable the original I/O pin shared function. DAL Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name D3 D2 D1 D0 — — — — R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W — — — — POR 0 0 0 0 — — — — 4 3 2 1 0 Bit 7~4 D3~D0: Audio output low 4 bit Bit 3~0 unimplemented, read as “0” DAH Register Bit 7 6 5 Name D11 D10 D9 D8 D7 D6 D5 D4 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W POR 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Bit 7~0 D11~D4: Audio output high 8 bit DACTRL Register Bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 Name VOL2 VOL1 VOL0 — — — — DACEN R/W R/W R/W R/W — — — — R/W POR 0 0 0 — — — — 0 Bit 7~5 VOL2~VOL0: DAC volume control bit 000: min. volume 111: max. volume Bit 4~1 unimplemented, read as “0” Bit 0 DACEN: DAC enable control bit 0: disable 1: enable Note: When the DACEN is set to “1”, the DAC signal will be channeled to the I/O pin anddisable the original I/O pin shared function. Howerer, the D/A convereter output pin AUD is not connected to the external pin and internally used only. Rev. 1.00 137 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Power Line Data Transceiver Power Line Data Transceiver provides a way to transmit and receive data on the common power lines of an interconnected array of microcontroller based subsystems. By having one of these devices inside each subsystem, the shared power and data cabling can be reduced to a simple two line type, offering major installation cost reductions. VCC VBG=1.5V LDO 3.3V VDD CEB 5.6V Zener LVD 5.25V CN VDD – CMP R RX + 10MΩ EN1B EN1 CMP & OPA Enable VDD VDD EN1B TRX EN1 EN1B RPU TX EN1B 1.5V EN VSS + OPA – IS Current Modulator Power Line Data Transceiver Block Diagram Rev. 1.00 138 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Positive Power Supply Line Master Controller Ground Line Power Line Data Transceiver Power Line Data Transceiver Power Line Data Transceiver MCU MCU MCU Subsystem #2 Subsystem #n Subsystem #1 Power Line Data Transceiver System Block Diagram Shared Power Line All microcontroller based subsystems are connected together via the same two line power connection. The ground line is hardwired to each subsystem while the positive power line is connected to the VIN pin on the Power Line Data Transceiver device. An internal Low Dropout Voltage Regulator within the Power Line Data Transceiver device converts this input power supply voltage to a fixed voltage level which is supplied to the subsystem microcontroller and other circuit components. In this way when the power line voltage is changed due to the transmission or reception of data the subsystem circuits still continue to receive a regulated power supply. Data Transmission (From master controller to slave device) Refer to the application circuit when reading the following description. The master controller transmites the data by modulate the positibe power line (L+) voltage. Using this method should be pay attention to the noise tolerance of the devices operating voltage and the TRX pin receiving data. As the devices include a voltage regulator which is used as the power supply to the subsystem units, then the subsystem power supply voltage will not be affected as long as the regulator minimum dropout voltage is maintained. Then a voltage modulation signal will be detected in the TRX pin to make the TRX pin voltage drop lower than the threshold voltage (VT). However a reduction in the power supply will be detected by the CMP internal comparator.The output of this comparator is connected to pin RX can be connected to a microcontroller input for use as a data signal. VTRX VMARK VT VRX VVDD Power Line Data Reception Rev. 1.00 139 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Data Reception (From slave device to master controller) Refer to the application circuit when reading the following description. The Power Line Data Transceiver slave device can transmit data to the master controller by modulating the current on the power supply line. The slave devices pull the TX pin voltage to a low level to enable the internal current modulator. The modeulator will provide a constant current load by the transistor connected to the internal modulator OPA output NMOS terminal. The constant current load is supplied by the power line through the TRX pin, and can be adjusted by the RS resistor connected on the IS pin. Therefore, the current modulation signals can be generated on the TRX pin by control the TX pin voltage level. The current modulation signal can return to the master controller throuth the power supply line. VTX VVDD IIS IMC Current Modulator The device can modulate power line current by adding additional constant current source which control by TX pin. When TX pin connect to low level will enable this current modulation function. The modulation current can be calculated by the following formula: IIS = 1.5V/RS Application Considerations It is envisaged that the devices will be used together with microcontroller based subsystems which will be required to provide two I/O pins for data transmission and reception. The MCU pin connected to theTX pin must be setup as an output while the MCU pin connected to the RX pin must be setup as an input. Power impedance plays an important role in the power data transceiver applications, so it must be well defined to be used in reliable data transmit and receive operations. The external components connected to the TRX pin must be carefully selected to ensure that an enough pulse duration time is occured on the RX pin. Common decoupling protection must be taken to ensure reliable operation. Rev. 1.00 140 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Power Line Data Transceiver Application Circuits 1N4148 1N4004 1kΩ VBG=1.5V VCC LDO 3.3V 22u 1N4004 VDD 104 CEB L+ 5.6V Zener L- 1N4004 LVD 5.25V 1N4004 CN VDD – 104 R RX CMP 10MΩ + EN1B EN1 CMP & OPA Enable VDD MCU EN1B EN1 VDD 100Ω EN1B TRX RPU TX 2MΩ 1.5V EN + EN1B VSS OPA I IS RS Rev. 1.00 1.5V Rs – IS Current Modulator 100Ω 141 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Configuration Options Configuration options refer to certain options within the MCU that are programmed into the OTP Program Memory devices during the programming process. During the development process, these options are selected using the HT-IDE software development tools. As these options are programmed into the device using the hardware programming tools, once they are selected they can not be changed later by the application software. All options must be defined for proper system function, the details of which are shown in the table. No. Options Oscillator Options 1 OSC type selection: crystal or HIRC or EC (external clock) 00: HXT (Filter On) 01: HIRC (Filter Off) 10: EC (Filter Off) 2 Low speed system oscillator selection – fL: LXT, LIRC 3 HIRC frequency selection: 910kHz, 2MHz, 4MHz, 8MHz 4 fS clock selection: fSUB or fSYS/4 5 HXT mode selection: 455kHz or 1MHz~8MHz Watchdog Options 6 WDT enable or disable 7 CLR WDT instructions: 1 or 2 instructions LVR/LVD Options 8 LVR function: enable or disable 9 LVR voltage: 2.1V or 2.55V or 3.15V or 4.2V RC Filter 10 RC filter for TMR0/1 & INT0/1, enable or disable 11 SIM enable/disable 12 SPI_WCOL: enable/disable 13 SPI_CSEN: enable/disable, used to enable/disable (1/0) software CSEN function 14 I2C Debounce Time: no debounce, 1 system clock, 2 system clock SPI I2C RES 15 I/O or RES function Lock Options Rev. 1.00 16 Lock All 17 Partial Lock 142 November 14, 2017 1 1 Z1 T1 Z2 T2 R9 R6 12 12 1 2 3 4 5 82P 82P ICP C7 C8 PA0 PA2 PB6 VDD 1N4004 D5 1N4004 D4 1N4004 D7 1N4004 D6 R3 100 D1 1N4148 C13 102 R10 2M U3 NTC VDD 50~1K R5 10K C3 22uF R13 200K R11 2M LED1 R8 330 C4 103 R34 100 9 D3 D2 IRTX IRRX PA3/A1N PA2/A1P HT45FH23A PC2 PC1/AN5 PC0/AN4 PA1 . IS . CN . TRX . VIN U1 VDD 4 5 6 1 11 C43 104 10 12 . 18 + - OPA1 C1 C10 R12 - + EN1 . 17 R15 3.3 T1 8050 10P 5.1M OPA C14 PA4/A1E EN - + PB0 VBG = 1.5V PA6/A2N PA5/A2P 1.5V OR GATE LEVEL SHIFT NOT GATE 5.25V LVD CEB LDO 3.3V . 16 102 D9 4148 D8 4148 200K R19 . 15 PB5 PB6 VSS VSS EN1B VDD OPA2 C11 - + R17 10K R18 30K . 1M 33P PA7/A2E PC3/AN0/SCS PA0/CNP EN1B VDD R14 . 14 143 . Rev. 1.00 R16 560 R20 10K 13 R1 3 2 7 8 19 20 C1 104 VDD SW2 TS2 Smoke C2 47uF HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Application Circuits Note:The components used in this application circuit shluld be changed for different applications. November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Instruction Set Introduction Central to the successful operation of any microcontroller is its instruction set, which is a set of program instruction codes that directs the microcontroller to perform certain operations. In the case of Holtek microcontroller, a comprehensive and flexible set of over 60 instructions is provided to enable programmers to implement their application with the minimum of programming overheads. For easier understanding of the various instruction codes, they have been subdivided into several functional groupings. Instruction Timing Most instructions are implemented within one instruction cycle. The exceptions to this are branch, call, or table read instructions where two instruction cycles are required. One instruction cycle is equal to 4 system clock cycles, therefore in the case of an 8MHz system oscillator, most instructions would be implemented within 0.5μs and branch or call instructions would be implemented within 1μs. Although instructions which require one more cycle to implement are generally limited to the JMP, CALL, RET, RETI and table read instructions, it is important to realize that any other instructions which involve manipulation of the Program Counter Low register or PCL will also take one more cycle to implement. As instructions which change the contents of the PCL will imply a direct jump to that new address, one more cycle will be required. Examples of such instructions would be “CLR PCL” or “MOV PCL, A”. For the case of skip instructions, it must be noted that if the result of the comparison involves a skip operation then this will also take one more cycle, if no skip is involved then only one cycle is required. Moving and Transferring Data The transfer of data within the microcontroller program is one of the most frequently used operations. Making use of three kinds of MOV instructions, data can be transferred from registers to the Accumulator and vice-versa as well as being able to move specific immediate data directly into the Accumulator. One of the most important data transfer applications is to receive data from the input ports and transfer data to the output ports. Arithmetic Operations The ability to perform certain arithmetic operations and data manipulation is a necessary feature of most microcontroller applications. Within the Holtek microcontroller instruction set are a range of add and subtract instruction mnemonics to enable the necessary arithmetic to be carried out. Care must be taken to ensure correct handling of carry and borrow data when results exceed 255 for addition and less than 0 for subtraction. The increment and decrement instructions INC, INCA, DEC and DECA provide a simple means of increasing or decreasing by a value of one of the values in the destination specified. Rev. 1.00 144 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Logical and Rotate Operation The standard logical operations such as AND, OR, XOR and CPL all have their own instruction within the Holtek microcontroller instruction set. As with the case of most instructions involving data manipulation, data must pass through the Accumulator which may involve additional programming steps. In all logical data operations, the zero flag may be set if the result of the operation is zero. Another form of logical data manipulation comes from the rotate instructions such as RR, RL, RRC and RLC which provide a simple means of rotating one bit right or left. Different rotate instructions exist depending on program requirements. Rotate instructions are useful for serial port programming applications where data can be rotated from an internal register into the Carry bit from where it can be examined and the necessary serial bit set high or low. Another application which rotate data operations are used is to implement multiplication and division calculations. Branches and Control Transfer Program branching takes the form of either jumps to specified locations using the JMP instruction or to a subroutine using the CALL instruction. They differ in the sense that in the case of a subroutine call, the program must return to the instruction immediately when the subroutine has been carried out. This is done by placing a return instruction “RET” in the subroutine which will cause the program to jump back to the address right after the CALL instruction. In the case of a JMP instruction, the program simply jumps to the desired location. There is no requirement to jump back to the original jumping off point as in the case of the CALL instruction. One special and extremely useful set of branch instructions are the conditional branches. Here a decision is first made regarding the condition of a certain data memory or individual bits. Depending upon the conditions, the program will continue with the next instruction or skip over it and jump to the following instruction. These instructions are the key to decision making and branching within the program perhaps determined by the condition of certain input switches or by the condition of internal data bits. Bit Operations The ability to provide single bit operations on Data Memory is an extremely flexible feature of all Holtek microcontrollers. This feature is especially useful for output port bit programming where individual bits or port pins can be directly set high or low using either the “SET [m].i” or “CLR [m].i” instructions respectively. The feature removes the need for programmers to first read the 8-bit output port, manipulate the input data to ensure that other bits are not changed and then output the port with the correct new data. This read-modify-write process is taken care of automatically when these bit operation instructions are used. Table Read Operations Data storage is normally implemented by using registers. However, when working with large amounts of fixed data, the volume involved often makes it inconvenient to store the fixed data in the Data Memory. To overcome this problem, Holtek microcontrollers allow an area of Program Memory to be set as a table where data can be directly stored. A set of easy to use instructions provides the means by which this fixed data can be referenced and retrieved from the Program Memory. Other Operations In addition to the above functional instructions, a range of other instructions also exist such as the “HALT” instruction for Power-down operations and instructions to control the operation of the Watchdog Timer for reliable program operations under extreme electric or electromagnetic environments. For their relevant operations, refer to the functional related sections. Rev. 1.00 145 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Instruction Set Summary The following table depicts a summary of the instruction set categorised according to function and can be consulted as a basic instruction reference using the following listed conventions. Table Conventions x: Bits immediate data m: Data Memory address A: Accumulator i: 0~7 number of bits addr: Program memory address Mnemonic Description Cycles Flag Affected Add Data Memory to ACC Add ACC to Data Memory Add immediate data to ACC Add Data Memory to ACC with Carry Add ACC to Data memory with Carry Subtract immediate data from the ACC Subtract Data Memory from ACC Subtract Data Memory from ACC with result in Data Memory Subtract Data Memory from ACC with Carry Subtract Data Memory from ACC with Carry, result in Data Memory Decimal adjust ACC for Addition with result in Data Memory 1 1Note 1 1 1Note 1 1 1Note 1 1Note 1Note Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV Z, C, AC, OV C 1 1 1 1Note 1Note 1Note 1 1 1 1Note 1 Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Increment Data Memory with result in ACC Increment Data Memory Decrement Data Memory with result in ACC Decrement Data Memory 1 1Note 1 1Note Z Z Z Z Rotate Data Memory right with result in ACC Rotate Data Memory right Rotate Data Memory right through Carry with result in ACC Rotate Data Memory right through Carry Rotate Data Memory left with result in ACC Rotate Data Memory left Rotate Data Memory left through Carry with result in ACC Rotate Data Memory left through Carry 1 1Note 1 1Note 1 1Note 1 1Note None None C C None None C C Arithmetic ADD A,[m] ADDM A,[m] ADD A,x ADC A,[m] ADCM A,[m] SUB A,x SUB A,[m] SUBM A,[m] SBC A,[m] SBCM A,[m] DAA [m] Logic Operation AND A,[m] OR A,[m] XOR A,[m] ANDM A,[m] ORM A,[m] XORM A,[m] AND A,x OR A,x XOR A,x CPL [m] CPLA [m] Logical AND Data Memory to ACC Logical OR Data Memory to ACC Logical XOR Data Memory to ACC Logical AND ACC to Data Memory Logical OR ACC to Data Memory Logical XOR ACC to Data Memory Logical AND immediate Data to ACC Logical OR immediate Data to ACC Logical XOR immediate Data to ACC Complement Data Memory Complement Data Memory with result in ACC Increment & Decrement INCA [m] INC [m] DECA [m] DEC [m] Rotate RRA [m] RR [m] RRCA [m] RRC [m] RLA [m] RL [m] RLCA [m] RLC [m] Rev. 1.00 146 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Mnemonic Description Cycles Flag Affected Move Data Memory to ACC Move ACC to Data Memory Move immediate data to ACC 1 1Note 1 None None None Clear bit of Data Memory Set bit of Data Memory 1Note 1Note None None Jump unconditionally Skip if Data Memory is zero Skip if Data Memory is zero with data movement to ACC Skip if bit i of Data Memory is zero Skip if bit i of Data Memory is not zero Skip if increment Data Memory is zero Skip if decrement Data Memory is zero Skip if increment Data Memory is zero with result in ACC Skip if decrement Data Memory is zero with result in ACC Subroutine call Return from subroutine Return from subroutine and load immediate data to ACC Return from interrupt 2 1Note 1Note 1Note 1Note 1Note 1Note 1Note 1Note 2 2 2 2 None None None None None None None None None None None None None Read table (specific page) to TBLH and Data Memory Read table (current page) to TBLH and Data Memory Read table (last page) to TBLH and Data Memory 2Note 2Note 2Note None None None No operation Clear Data Memory Set Data Memory Clear Watchdog Timer Pre-clear Watchdog Timer Pre-clear Watchdog Timer Swap nibbles of Data Memory Swap nibbles of Data Memory with result in ACC Enter power down mode 1 1Note 1Note 1 1 1 1Note 1 1 None None None TO, PDF TO, PDF TO, PDF None None TO, PDF Data Move MOV A,[m] MOV [m],A MOV A,x Bit Operation CLR [m].i SET [m].i Branch Operation JMP addr SZ [m] SZA [m] SZ [m].i SNZ [m].i SIZ [m] SDZ [m] SIZA [m] SDZA [m] CALL addr RET RET A,x RETI Table Read Operation TABRD [m] TABRDC [m] TABRDL [m] Miscellaneous NOP CLR [m] SET [m] CLR WDT CLR WDT1 CLR WDT2 SWAP [m] SWAPA [m] HALT Note: 1. For skip instructions, if the result of the comparison involves a skip then two cycles are required, if no skip takes place only one cycle is required. 2. Any instruction which changes the contents of the PCL will also require 2 cycles for execution. 3. For the “CLR WDT1” and “CLR WDT2” instructions the TO and PDF flags may be affected by the execution status. The TO and PDF flags are cleared after both “CLR WDT1” and “CLR WDT2” instructions are consecutively executed. Otherwise the TO and PDF flags remain unchanged. Rev. 1.00 147 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Instruction Definition ADC A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) ADCM A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) ADD A,[m] Description Add Data Memory to ACC with Carry The contents of the specified Data Memory, Accumulator and the carry flag are added. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC + [m] + C OV, Z, AC, C Add ACC to Data Memory with Carry The contents of the specified Data Memory, Accumulator and the carry flag are added. The result is stored in the specified Data Memory. [m] ← ACC + [m] + C OV, Z, AC, C Add Data Memory to ACC The contents of the specified Data Memory and the Accumulator are added. The result is stored in the Accumulator. Operation Affected flag(s) ACC ← ACC + [m] OV, Z, AC, C ADD A,x Description Add immediate data to ACC The contents of the Accumulator and the specified immediate data are added. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC + x OV, Z, AC, C Operation Affected flag(s) ADDM A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) AND A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) AND A,x Description Operation Affected flag(s) ANDM A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Add ACC to Data Memory The contents of the specified Data Memory and the Accumulator are added. The result is stored in the specified Data Memory. [m] ← ACC + [m] OV, Z, AC, C Logical AND Data Memory to ACC Data in the Accumulator and the specified Data Memory perform a bitwise logical AND operation. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC ″AND″ [m] Z Logical AND immediate data to ACC Data in the Accumulator and the specified immediate data perform a bit wise logical AND operation. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC ″AND″ x Z Logical AND ACC to Data Memory Data in the specified Data Memory and the Accumulator perform a bitwise logical AND operation. The result is stored in the Data Memory. [m] ← ACC ″AND″ [m] Z 148 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Affected flag(s) Subroutine call Unconditionally calls a subroutine at the specified address. The Program Counter then increments by 1 to obtain the address of the next instruction which is then pushed onto the stack. The specified address is then loaded and the program continues execution from this new address. As this instruction requires an additional operation, it is a two cycle instruction. Stack ← Program Counter + 1 Program Counter ← addr None CLR [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Clear Data Memory Each bit of the specified Data Memory is cleared to 0. [m] ← 00H None CLR [m].i Description Operation Affected flag(s) Clear bit of Data Memory Bit i of the specified Data Memory is cleared to 0. [m].i ← 0 None CLR WDT Description Operation Clear Watchdog Timer The TO, PDF flags and the WDT are all cleared. WDT cleared TO ← 0 PDF ← 0 TO, PDF CALL addr Description Operation Affected flag(s) CLR WDT1 Description Operation Affected flag(s) CLR WDT2 Description Operation Affected flag(s) CPL [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Pre-clear Watchdog Timer The TO, PDF flags and the WDT are all cleared. Note that this instruction works in conjunction with CLR WDT2 and must be executed alternately with CLR WDT2 to have effect. Repetitively executing this instruction without alternately executing CLR WDT2 will have no effect. WDT cleared TO ← 0 PDF ← 0 TO, PDF Pre-clear Watchdog Timer The TO, PDF flags and the WDT are all cleared. Note that this instruction works in conjunction with CLR WDT1 and must be executed alternately with CLR WDT1 to have effect. Repetitively executing this instruction without alternately executing CLR WDT1 will have no effect. WDT cleared TO ← 0 PDF ← 0 TO, PDF Complement Data Memory Each bit of the specified Data Memory is logically complemented (1′s complement). Bits which previously contained a 1 are changed to 0 and vice versa. [m] ← [m] Z 149 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver CPLA [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Complement Data Memory with result in ACC Each bit of the specified Data Memory is logically complemented (1′s complement). Bits which previously contained a 1 are changed to 0 and vice versa. The complemented result is stored in the Accumulator and the contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC ← [m] Z Affected flag(s) Decimal-Adjust ACC for addition with result in Data Memory Convert the contents of the Accumulator value to a BCD (Binary Coded Decimal) value resulting from the previous addition of two BCD variables. If the low nibble is greater than 9 or if AC flag is set, then a value of 6 will be added to the low nibble. Otherwise the low nibble remains unchanged. If the high nibble is greater than 9 or if the C flag is set, then a value of 6 will be added to the high nibble. Essentially, the decimal conversion is performed by adding 00H, 06H, 60H or 66H depending on the Accumulator and flag conditions. Only the C flag may be affected by this instruction which indicates that if the original BCD sum is greater than 100, it allows multiple precision decimal addition. [m] ← ACC + 00H or [m] ← ACC + 06H or [m] ← ACC + 60H or [m] ← ACC + 66H C DEC [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Decrement Data Memory Data in the specified Data Memory is decremented by 1. [m] ← [m] − 1 Z DECA [m] Description Decrement Data Memory with result in ACC Data in the specified Data Memory is decremented by 1. The result is stored in the Accumulator. The contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC ← [m] − 1 Z DAA [m] Description Operation Operation Affected flag(s) Affected flag(s) Enter power down mode This instruction stops the program execution and turns off the system clock. The contents of the Data Memory and registers are retained. The WDT and prescaler are cleared. The power down flag PDF is set and the WDT time-out flag TO is cleared. TO ← 0 PDF ← 1 TO, PDF INC [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Increment Data Memory Data in the specified Data Memory is incremented by 1. [m] ← [m] + 1 Z INCA [m] Description Increment Data Memory with result in ACC Data in the specified Data Memory is incremented by 1. The result is stored in the Accumulator. The contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC ← [m] + 1 Z HALT Description Operation Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 150 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Operation Affected flag(s) Jump unconditionally The contents of the Program Counter are replaced with the specified address. Program execution then continues from this new address. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the new address is loaded, it is a two cycle instruction. Program Counter ← addr None MOV A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Move Data Memory to ACC The contents of the specified Data Memory are copied to the Accumulator. ACC ← [m] None MOV A,x Description Operation Affected flag(s) Move immediate data to ACC The immediate data specified is loaded into the Accumulator. ACC ← x None MOV [m],A Description Operation Affected flag(s) Move ACC to Data Memory The contents of the Accumulator are copied to the specified Data Memory. [m] ← ACC None NOP Description Operation Affected flag(s) No operation No operation is performed. Execution continues with the next instruction. No operation None OR A,[m] Description Logical OR Data Memory to ACC Data in the Accumulator and the specified Data Memory perform a bitwise logical OR operation. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC ″OR″ [m] Z JMP addr Description Operation Affected flag(s) OR A,x Description Operation Affected flag(s) ORM A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) RET Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Logical OR immediate data to ACC Data in the Accumulator and the specified immediate data perform a bitwise logical OR operation. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC ″OR″ x Z Logical OR ACC to Data Memory Data in the specified Data Memory and the Accumulator perform a bitwise logical OR operation. The result is stored in the Data Memory. [m] ← ACC ″OR″ [m] Z Return from subroutine The Program Counter is restored from the stack. Program execution continues at the restored address. Program Counter ← Stack None 151 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver RET A,x Description Operation Affected flag(s) RETI Description Operation Affected flag(s) RL [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) RLA [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) RLC [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) RLCA [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) RR [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Return from subroutine and load immediate data to ACC The Program Counter is restored from the stack and the Accumulator loaded with the specified immediate data. Program execution continues at the restored address. Program Counter ← Stack ACC ← x None Return from interrupt The Program Counter is restored from the stack and the interrupts are re-enabled by setting the EMI bit. EMI is the master interrupt global enable bit. If an interrupt was pending when the RETI instruction is executed, the pending Interrupt routine will be processed before returning to the main program. Program Counter ← Stack EMI ← 1 None Rotate Data Memory left The contents of the specified Data Memory are rotated left by 1 bit with bit 7 rotated into bit 0. [m].(i+1) ← [m].i; (i=0~6) [m].0 ← [m].7 None Rotate Data Memory left with result in ACC The contents of the specified Data Memory are rotated left by 1 bit with bit 7 rotated into bit 0. The rotated result is stored in the Accumulator and the contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC.(i+1) ← [m].i; (i=0~6) ACC.0 ← [m].7 None Rotate Data Memory left through Carry The contents of the specified Data Memory and the carry flag are rotated left by 1 bit. Bit 7 replaces the Carry bit and the original carry flag is rotated into bit 0. [m].(i+1) ← [m].i; (i=0~6) [m].0 ← C C ← [m].7 C Rotate Data Memory left through Carry with result in ACC Data in the specified Data Memory and the carry flag are rotated left by 1 bit. Bit 7 replaces the Carry bit and the original carry flag is rotated into the bit 0. The rotated result is stored in the Accumulator and the contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC.(i+1) ← [m].i; (i=0~6) ACC.0 ← C C ← [m].7 C Rotate Data Memory right The contents of the specified Data Memory are rotated right by 1 bit with bit 0 rotated into bit 7. [m].i ← [m].(i+1); (i=0~6) [m].7 ← [m].0 None 152 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver RRA [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) RRC [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) RRCA [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) SBC A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) SBCM A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) SDZ [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Rotate Data Memory right with result in ACC Data in the specified Data Memory and the carry flag are rotated right by 1 bit with bit 0 rotated into bit 7. The rotated result is stored in the Accumulator and the contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC.i ← [m].(i+1); (i=0~6) ACC.7 ← [m].0 None Rotate Data Memory right through Carry The contents of the specified Data Memory and the carry flag are rotated right by 1 bit. Bit 0 replaces the Carry bit and the original carry flag is rotated into bit 7. [m].i ← [m].(i+1); (i=0~6) [m].7 ← C C ← [m].0 C Rotate Data Memory right through Carry with result in ACC Data in the specified Data Memory and the carry flag are rotated right by 1 bit. Bit 0 replaces the Carry bit and the original carry flag is rotated into bit 7. The rotated result is stored in the Accumulator and the contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC.i ← [m].(i+1); (i=0~6) ACC.7 ← C C ← [m].0 C Subtract Data Memory from ACC with Carry The contents of the specified Data Memory and the complement of the carry flag are subtracted from the Accumulator. The result is stored in the Accumulator. Note that if the result of subtraction is negative, the C flag will be cleared to 0, otherwise if the result is positive or zero, the C flag will be set to 1. ACC ← ACC − [m] − C OV, Z, AC, C Subtract Data Memory from ACC with Carry and result in Data Memory The contents of the specified Data Memory and the complement of the carry flag are subtracted from the Accumulator. The result is stored in the Data Memory. Note that if the result of subtraction is negative, the C flag will be cleared to 0, otherwise if the result is positive or zero, the C flag will be set to 1. [m] ← ACC − [m] − C OV, Z, AC, C Skip if decrement Data Memory is 0 The contents of the specified Data Memory are first decremented by 1. If the result is 0 the following instruction is skipped. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is not 0 the program proceeds with the following instruction. [m] ← [m] − 1 Skip if [m]=0 None 153 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Affected flag(s) Skip if decrement Data Memory is zero with result in ACC The contents of the specified Data Memory are first decremented by 1. If the result is 0, the following instruction is skipped. The result is stored in the Accumulator but the specified Data Memory contents remain unchanged. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is not 0, the program proceeds with the following instruction. ACC ← [m] − 1 Skip if ACC=0 None SET [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Set Data Memory Each bit of the specified Data Memory is set to 1. [m] ← FFH None SET [m].i Description Operation Affected flag(s) Set bit of Data Memory Bit i of the specified Data Memory is set to 1. [m].i ← 1 None SIZ [m] Description Skip if increment Data Memory is 0 The contents of the specified Data Memory are first incremented by 1. If the result is 0, the following instruction is skipped. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is not 0 the program proceeds with the following instruction. [m] ← [m] + 1 Skip if [m]=0 None SDZA [m] Description Operation Operation Affected flag(s) SIZA [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) SNZ [m].i Description Operation Affected flag(s) SUB A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Skip if increment Data Memory is zero with result in ACC The contents of the specified Data Memory are first incremented by 1. If the result is 0, the following instruction is skipped. The result is stored in the Accumulator but the specified Data Memory contents remain unchanged. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is not 0 the program proceeds with the following instruction. ACC ← [m] + 1 Skip if ACC=0 None Skip if bit i of Data Memory is not 0 If bit i of the specified Data Memory is not 0, the following instruction is skipped. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is 0 the program proceeds with the following instruction. Skip if [m].i ≠ 0 None Subtract Data Memory from ACC The specified Data Memory is subtracted from the contents of the Accumulator. The result is stored in the Accumulator. Note that if the result of subtraction is negative, the C flag will be cleared to 0, otherwise if the result is positive or zero, the C flag will be set to 1. ACC ← ACC − [m] OV, Z, AC, C 154 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver SUBM A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Subtract Data Memory from ACC with result in Data Memory The specified Data Memory is subtracted from the contents of the Accumulator. The result is stored in the Data Memory. Note that if the result of subtraction is negative, the C flag will be cleared to 0, otherwise if the result is positive or zero, the C flag will be set to 1. [m] ← ACC − [m] OV, Z, AC, C Operation Affected flag(s) Subtract immediate data from ACC The immediate data specified by the code is subtracted from the contents of the Accumulator. The result is stored in the Accumulator. Note that if the result of subtraction is negative, the C flag will be cleared to 0, otherwise if the result is positive or zero, the C flag will be set to 1. ACC ← ACC − x OV, Z, AC, C SWAP [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) Swap nibbles of Data Memory The low-order and high-order nibbles of the specified Data Memory are interchanged. [m].3~[m].0 ↔ [m].7~[m].4 None SWAPA [m] Description Swap nibbles of Data Memory with result in ACC The low-order and high-order nibbles of the specified Data Memory are interchanged. The result is stored in the Accumulator. The contents of the Data Memory remain unchanged. ACC.3~ACC.0 ← [m].7~[m].4 ACC.7~ACC.4 ← [m].3~[m].0 None SUB A,x Description Operation Affected flag(s) SZ [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) SZA [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) SZ [m].i Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Skip if Data Memory is 0 If the contents of the specified Data Memory is 0, the following instruction is skipped. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is not 0 the program proceeds with the following instruction. Skip if [m]=0 None Skip if Data Memory is 0 with data movement to ACC The contents of the specified Data Memory are copied to the Accumulator. If the value is zero, the following instruction is skipped. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is not 0 the program proceeds with the following instruction. ACC ← [m] Skip if [m]=0 None Skip if bit i of Data Memory is 0 If bit i of the specified Data Memory is 0, the following instruction is skipped. As this requires the insertion of a dummy instruction while the next instruction is fetched, it is a two cycle instruction. If the result is not 0, the program proceeds with the following instruction. Skip if [m].i=0 None 155 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver TABRD [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) TABRDC [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) TABRDL [m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) XOR A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) XORM A,[m] Description Operation Affected flag(s) XOR A,x Description Operation Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 Read table (specific page) to TBLH and Data Memory The low byte of the program code (specific page) addressed by the table pointer pair (TBHP and TBLP) is moved to the specified Data Memory and the high byte moved to TBLH. [m] ← program code (low byte) TBLH ← program code (high byte) None Read table (current page) to TBLH and Data Memory The low byte of the program code (current page) addressed by the table pointer (TBLP) is moved to the specified Data Memory and the high byte moved to TBLH. [m] ← program code (low byte) TBLH ← program code (high byte) None Read table (last page) to TBLH and Data Memory The low byte of the program code (last page) addressed by the table pointer (TBLP) is moved to the specified Data Memory and the high byte moved to TBLH. [m] ← program code (low byte) TBLH ← program code (high byte) None Logical XOR Data Memory to ACC Data in the Accumulator and the specified Data Memory perform a bitwise logical XOR operation. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC ″XOR″ [m] Z Logical XOR ACC to Data Memory Data in the specified Data Memory and the Accumulator perform a bitwise logical XOR operation. The result is stored in the Data Memory. [m] ← ACC ″XOR″ [m] Z Logical XOR immediate data to ACC Data in the Accumulator and the specified immediate data perform a bitwise logical XOR operation. The result is stored in the Accumulator. ACC ← ACC ″XOR″ x Z 156 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Package Information Note that the package information provided here is for consultation purposes only. As this information may be updated at regular intervals users are reminded to consult the Holtek website for the latest version of the Package/Carton Information. Additional supplementary information with regard to packaging is listed below. Click on the relevant section to be transferred to the relevant website page. • Further Package Information (include Outline Dimensions, Product Tape and Reel Specifications) • Packing Meterials Information • Carton information Rev. 1.00 157 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver 20-pin SOP (300mil) Outline Dimensions Symbol Dimensions in inch Min. Nom. Max. A — 0.406 BSC — B — 0.295 BSC — 0.020 C 0.012 — C’ — 0.504 BSC — D — — 0.104 E — 0.050 BSC — F 0.004 — 0.012 G 0.016 — 0.050 H 0.008 — 0.013 α 0° — 8° Symbol Rev. 1.00 Dimensions in mm Min. Nom. Max. A — 10.30 BSC — B — 7.50 BSC — C 0.31 — 0.51 C’ — 12.80 BSC — D — — 2.65 E — 1.27 BSC — F 0.10 — 0.30 G 0.40 — 1.27 H 0.20 — 0.33 α 0° — 8° 158 November 14, 2017 HT45FH23A/HT45FH24A Smoke Detector Flash MCU with Power Line Transceiver Copyright© 2017 by HOLTEK SEMICONDUCTOR INC. The information appearing in this Data Sheet is believed to be accurate at the time of publication. However, Holtek assumes no responsibility arising from the use of the specifications described. The applications mentioned herein are used solely for the purpose of illustration and Holtek makes no warranty or representation that such applications will be suitable without further modification, nor recommends the use of its products for application that may present a risk to human life due to malfunction or otherwise. Holtek's products are not authorized for use as critical components in life support devices or systems. Holtek reserves the right to alter its products without prior notification. For the most up-to-date information, please visit our web site at http://www.holtek.com.tw. Rev. 1.00 159 November 14, 2017