DSP56F826/D Rev. # 0, 3/2001 Semiconductor Products Sector DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data DSP56F826 16-bit Digital Signal Processor • Up to 64K × 16-bit words each of external memory expansion for Program and Data memory Hardware DO and REP loops • One Serial Port Interface (SPI) MCU-friendly instruction set supports both DSP and controller functions: MAC, bit manipulation unit, 14 addressing modes • One additional SPI or two optional Serial Communication Interfaces (SCI) • One Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) • Up to 40 MIPS at 80MHz core frequency • DSP and MCU functionality in a unified, C-efficient architecture • • • 31.5K × 16-bit words Program Flash • One General Purpose Quad Timer • 512 × 16-bit words Program RAM • JTAG/OnCE™ for debugging • 2K × 16-bit words Data Flash • 100-pin LQFP Package • 4K × 16-bit words Data RAM • 16 dedicated and 30 shared GPIO • 2K × 16-bit words BootFLASH • One Time-of-Day module EXTBOOT RESET IRQB IRQA VDD 6 3 IO VDD VSS 3 4 IO VSS Low Voltage Supervisor JTAG/ OnCE Port VDDA VSSA 4 Analog Reg TOD Timer Program Controller and Hardware Looping Unit Interrupt Controller 4 Quad Timer or GPIO 6 SSI or GPIO 4 SCI0 & SCI1 or SPI0 4 SPI1 or GPIO Dedicated GPIO Program Memory 32252 x 16 Flash 512 x 16 SRAM PDB Boot Flash 2048 x 16 Flash XDB2 ApplicationSpecific Memory & Peripherals Data ALU 16 x 16 + 36 → 36-Bit MAC Three 16-bit Input Registers Two 36-bit Accumulators CLKO PLL 16-Bit DSP56800 Core XTAL Clock Gen . EXTAL CGDB XAB1 XAB2 COP RESET MODULE CONTROLS ADDRESS BUS [8:0] INTERRUPT CONTROLS 16 IPBB CONTROLS 16 IPBus Bridge (IPBB) DATA BUS [15:0] 16 Figure 1. DSP56F826 Block Diagram © Motorola, Inc., 2001. All rights reserved. Bit Manipulation Unit PAB Data Memory 2048 x 16 Flash 4096 x 16 SRAM COP/ Watchdog Address Generation Unit External Bus Interface Unit External Address Bus Switch 16 External Data Bus Switch 16 Bus Control A[00:15] or GPIO D[00:15] PS Select DS Select WR Enable RD Enable Part 1 Overview 1.1 DSP56F826 Features 1.1.1 Digital Signal Processing Core • Efficient 16-bit DSP56800 Family DSP engine with dual Harvard architecture • As many as 40 Million Instructions Per Second (MIPS) at 80MHz core frequency • Single-cycle 16 × 16-bit parallel Multiplier-Accumulator (MAC) • Two 36-bit accumulators, including extension bits • 16-bit bidirectional barrel shifter • Parallel instruction set with unique DSP addressing modes • Hardware DO and REP loops • Three internal address buses and one external address bus • Four internal data buses and one external data bus • Instruction set supports both DSP and controller functions • Controller style addressing modes and instructions for compact code • Efficient C Compiler and local variable support • Software subroutine and interrupt stack with depth limited only by memory • JTAG/OnCE Debug Programming Interface 1.1.2 Memory • Harvard architecture permits as many as three simultaneous accesses to program and data memory • On-chip memory including a low cost, high volume flash solution — 31.5K × 16-bit words of Program Flash — 512 × 16-bit words of Program RAM — 2K × 16-bit words of Data Flash — 4K × 16-bit words of Data RAM — 2K × 16-bit words of BootFLASH • Off-chip memory expansion capabilities programmable for 0, 4, 8, or 12 wait states — As much as 64 K × 16-bit data memory — As much as 64 K × 16-bit program memory 1.1.3 2 Peripheral Circuits for DSP56F826 • One General Purpose Quad Timer totalling 7pins • One Serial Peripheral Interface with 4 pins (or four additional GPIO lines) • One Serial Peripheral Interface, or multiplexed with two Serial Communications Interfaces totalling 4 pins • Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) with configurable six-pin port (or six additional GPIO lines) DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data DSP56F826 Description • Sixteen (16) dedicated general purpose I/O (GPIO) pins • Thirty (30) shared general purpose I/O (GPIO) pins • Computer-Operating Properly (COP) Watchdog timer • Two external interrupt pins • External reset pin for hardware reset • JTAG/On-Chip Emulation (OnCE™) for unobtrusive, processor speed-independent debugging • Software-programmable, Phase Lock Loop-based frequency synthesizer for the DSP core clock • Fabricated in high-density EMOS with 5V tolerant, TTL-compatible digital inputs • One Time of Day module Energy Information • Dual power supply, 3.3V and 2.5V • Wait and Multiple Stop modes available 1.2 DSP56F826 Description The DSP56F826 is a member of the DSP56800 core-based family of Digital Signal Processors (DSPs). It combines, on a single chip, the processing power of a DSP and the functionality of a microcontroller with a flexible set of peripherals to create an extremely cost-effective solution for general purpose applications. Because of its low cost, configuration flexibility, and compact program code, the DSP56F826 is wellsuited for many applications. The DSP56F826 includes many peripherals that are especially useful for applications such as: noise suppression, ID tag readers, sonic/subsonic detectors, security access devices, remote metering, sonic alarms, POS terminals, feature phones. The DSP56800 core is based on a Harvard-style architecture consisting of three execution units operating in parallel, allowing as many as six operations per instruction cycle. The microprocessor-style programming model and optimized instruction set allow straightforward generation of efficient, compact code for both DSP and MCU applications. The instruction set is also highly efficient for C/C++ Compilers to enable rapid development of optimized control applications. The DSP56F826 supports program execution from either internal or external memories. Two data operands can be accessed from the on-chip Data RAM per instruction cycle. The DSP56F826 also provides two external dedicated interrupt lines, and up to 46 General Purpose Input/Output (GPIO) lines, depending on peripheral configuration. The DSP56F826 DSP controller includes 31.5K words (16-bit) of Program Flash and 2K words of Data Flash (each programmable through the JTAG port) with 512 words of Program RAM, and 4K words of Data RAM. It also supports program execution from external memory. The DSP56F826 incorporates a total of 2K words of BootFLASH for easy customer-inclusion of fieldprogrammable software routines that can be used to program the main Program and Data Flash memory areas. Both Program and Data Flash memories can be independently bulk-erased or erased in page sizes of 256 words. The BootFLASH memory can also be either bulk- or page-erased. This DSP controller also provides a full set of standard programmable peripherals including one Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI), one Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI), the option to select a second SPI or two Serial Communications Interfaces (SCIs), and one Quad Timer. The SSI, SPI, and quad timer can be used as General Purpose Input/Outputs (GPIOs) if a timer function is not required. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 3 1.3 Best in Class Development Environment The SDK (Software Development Kit) provides fully debugged peripheral drivers, libraries and interfaces that allow programmers to create their unique C application code independent of component architecture. The CodeWarrior Integrated Development Environment is a sophisticated tool for code navigation, compiling, and debugging. A complete set of evaluation modules (EVMs) and development system cards will support concurrent engineering. Together, the SDK, CodeWarrior, and EVMs create a complete, scalable tools solution for easy, fast, and efficient development. 1.4 Product Documentation The four documents listed in Table 1 are required for a complete description and proper design with the DSP56F826. Documentation is available from local Motorola distributors, Motorola semiconductor sales offices, Motorola Literature Distribution Centers, or online at www.motorola.com/semiconductors/. Table 1. DSP56F826 Chip Documentation Topic Description Order Number DSP56800 Family Manual Detailed description of the DSP56800 family architecture, and 16-bit DSP core processor and the instruction set DSP56800FM/D DSP56824/F826/F827 User’s Manual Detailed description of memory, peripherals, and interfaces of the DSP56824, DSP56F826, DSP56F827 TBD DSP56F826 Technical Data Sheet Electrical and timing specifications, pin descriptions, and package descriptions (this document) DSP56F826/D DSP56F826 Product Brief Summary description and block diagram of the DSP56F826 core, memory, peripherals and interfaces DSP56F826PB/D 1.5 Data Sheet Conventions This data sheet uses the following conventions: OVERBAR This is used to indicate a signal that is active when pulled low. For example, the RESET pin is active when low. “asserted” A high true (active high) signal is high or a low true (active low) signal is low. “deasserted” A high true (active high) signal is low or a low true (active low) signal is high. Examples: 1. 4 Signal/Symbol Logic State Signal State Voltage1 PIN True Asserted VIL/VOL PIN False Deasserted VIH/VOH PIN True Asserted VIH/VOH PIN False Deasserted VIL/VOL Values for VIL, VOL, VIH, and VOH are defined by individual product specifications. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Introduction Part 2 Signal/Connection Descriptions 2.1 Introduction The input and output signals of the DSP56F826 are organized into functional groups, as shown in Table 2 and as illustrated in Figure 2. In Table 3 describes the signal or signals present on a pin. Table 2. Functional Group Pin Allocations Functional Group Power (VDD , VDDIO or VDDA) (3,4,1) Ground (VSS , VSSIO or VSSA ) (3,4,1) PLL and Clock 3 Address Bus1 16 Data Bus 16 Bus Control 4 Interrupt and Program Control 5 Dedicated General Purpose Input/Output 16 Synchronous Serial Interface (SSI) Port 6 Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Port1 4 Serial Communications Interface (SCI) Ports 4 Quad Timer Module Ports 4 JTAG/On-Chip Emulation (OnCE) 6 1. Number of Pins Alternately, GPIO pins DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 5 DSP56F826 VDD VSS VDDIO VSSIO 3 3 2.5V Power Port Ground Port 4 4 3.3V Power Port Ground Port Analog Power Port (3.3V) Ground Port VDDA VSSA EXTAL(CLOCKIN) Dedicated GPIO SRCK (GPIOC2) STD (GPIOC3) STFS (GPIOC4) STCK (GPIOC5) 16 GPIOA0–A7) D0–D15 GPIOD0–7 SRFS (GPIOC1) SSI Port or GPIO CLKO A0-A15(GPIO/E0–E7, GPIOB0–7 SRD (GPIOC0) PLL and Clock XTAL 8 8 16 External Address Bus or GPIO External Data Bus SCLK (GPIOF4) SPI1 Port or GPIO MOSI (GPIOF5) MISO (GPIOF6) SS (GPIOF7) PS DS External Bus Control RD WR TA0 (GPIOF0) TA1 (GPIOF1) Quad Timer A SCI0 Port or SPI0 Port TXD0 (SCLK0) SCI1 Port or SPI0 Port TXD1 (MISO0) RXD0 (MOSI0) RXD1 (SS0) TA2 (GPIOF2) TA3 (GPIOF3) Interrupt/ Program Control TCK IRQA IRQB RESET EXTBOOT TMS TDI TDO JTAG/OnCE Port TRST DE Figure 2. DSP56F826 Signals Identified by Functional Group1 1. Alternate pin functionality is shown in parenthesis. 6 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Introduction Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. A0 24 Output A1 23 Output A2 22 Output A3 21 Output A4 18 Output A5 17 Output A6 16 Output A7 15 Output GPIOE0– GPIOE7 Type Description Address Bus—A0–A7 specify the address for external program or data memory accesses. Input/Output Port E GPIO—These eight General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pins can be individually programmed as input or output pins. After reset, the default state is Address Bus. A8 14 Output A9 13 Output A10 12 Output A11 11 Output A12 10 Output A13 9 Output A14 8 Output A15 7 Output GPIOA0– GPIOA7 Address Bus—A8–A15 specify the address for external program or data memory accesses. Input/Output Port A GPIO—These eight General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pins can be individually programmed as input or output pins. After reset, the default state is Address Bus. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 7 Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 8 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. CLKO 65 Output Clock Output—This pin outputs a buffered clock signal. By programming the CLKO Select Register (SLKOSR), the user can select between outputting a version of the signal applied to XTAL and a version of the DSP master clock at the output of the PLL. The clock frequency on this pin can be disabled by programming the CLKO Select Register (CLKOSR). D0 34 Input/Output Data Bus— D0–D15 specify the data for external program or data memory accesses. D0–D15 are tri-stated when the external bus is inactive. D1 35 D2 36 D3 37 D4 38 D5 39 D6 40 D7 41 D8 42 D9 43 D10 44 D11 46 D12 47 D13 48 D14 49 D15 50 DE 98 Output Debug Event—DE provides a low pulse on recognized debug events. DS 28 Output Data Memory Select—DS is asserted low for external data memory access. Type Description DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Introduction Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. EXTAL 61 CLOCKIN Type Description Input External Crystal Oscillator Input—This input can be connected to an 4MHz external crystal. If a 4MHz or less external clock source is used, EXTAL can be used as the input and XTAL must not be connected. For more information, please refer to Section 3.5.2. Input External Clock Input—This input can be connected to an external 8MHz clock. For more information, please refer to Section 3.5. The input clock can be selected to provide the clock directly to the DSP core. This input clock can also be selected as input clock for the on-chip PLL. EXTBOOT 25 Input External Boot—This input is tied to VDD to force device to boot from offchip memory. Otherwise, it is tied to ground. GPIOB0 66 Input or Output Port B GPIO—These eight dedicated General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pins can be individually programmed as input or output pins. GPIOB1 67 GPIOB2 68 GPIOB3 69 GPIOB4 70 GPIOB5 71 GPIOB6 72 GPIOB7 73 GPIOD0 74 GPIOD1 75 GPIOD2 76 GPIOD3 77 GPIOD4 78 GPIOD5 79 GPIOD6 82 GPIOD7 83 After reset, the default state is GPIO input. Input or Output Port D GPIO—These eight dedicated GPIO pins can be individually programmed as an input or output pins. After reset, the default state is GPIO input. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 9 Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. IRQA 32 Type Input Description External Interrupt Request A—The IRQA input is a synchronized external interrupt request that indicates that an external device is requesting service. It can be programmed to be level-sensitive or negative-edge- triggered. If level-sensitive triggering is selected, an external pull up resistor is required for wired-OR operation. If the processor is in the Stop state and IRQA is asserted, the processor will exit the Stop state. IRQB 33 Input External Interrupt Request B—The IRQB input is an external interrupt request that indicates that an external device is requesting service. It can be programmed to be level-sensitive or negative-edge-triggered. If levelsensitive triggering is selected, an external pull up resistor is required for wired-OR operation. MISO 86 Input/Output SPI Master In/Slave Out (MISO)—This serial data pin is an input to a master device and an output from a slave device. The MISO line of a slave device is placed in the high-impedance state if the slave device is not selected. Input/Output Port F GPIO—This General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin can be individually programmed as input or output. GPIOF6 After reset, the default state is MISO. MOSI 85 GPIOF5 10 Input/Output SPI Master Out/Slave In (MOSI)—This serial data pin is an output from a master device and an input to a slave device. The master device places data on the MOSI line a half-cycle before the clock edge that the slave device uses to latch the data. Input/Output Port F GPIO—This General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin can be individually programmed as input or output. PS 29 Output Program Memory Select—PS is asserted low for external program memory access. RD 26 Output Read Enable—RD is asserted during external memory read cycles. When RD is asserted low, pins D0–D15 become inputs and an external device is enabled onto the DSP data bus. When RD is deasserted high, the external data is latched inside the DSP. When RD is asserted, it qualifies the A0–A15, PS, and DS pins. RD can be connected directly to the OE pin of a Static RAM or ROM. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Introduction Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. RESET 45 Type Input Description Reset—This input is a direct hardware reset on the processor. When RESET is asserted low, the DSP is initialized and placed in the Reset state. A Schmitt trigger input is used for noise immunity. When the RESET pin is deasserted, the initial chip operating mode is latched from the external boot pin. The internal reset signal will be deasserted synchronous with the internal clocks, after a fixed number of internal clocks. To ensure complete hardware reset, RESET and TRST should be asserted together. The only exception occurs in a debugging environment when a hardware DSP reset is required and it is necessary not to reset the OnCE/ JTAG module. In this case, assert RESET, but do not assert TRST. RXD0 96 MOSI0 Input Receive Data (RXD0)— receive data input Input/ Output SPI Master Out/Slave In—This serial data pin is an output from a master device, and an input to a slave device. The master device places data on the MOSI line one half-cycle before the clock edge the slave device uses to latch the data. After reset, the default state is SCI input. RXD1 92 SS0 Input Receive Data (RXD1)— receive data input Input SPI Slave Select—In maste mode, this pin is used to arbitrate multiple masters. In slave mode, this pin is used to select the slave. After reset, the default state is SCI input. SCLK 84 GPIOF4 Input/Output SPI Serial Clock—In master mode, this pin serves as an output, clocking slaved listeners. In slave mode, this pin serves as the data clock input. Input/Output Port F GPIO—This General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin can be individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is SCLK. SRCK GPIOC2 53 Input/Output SSI Serial Receive Clock (STCK)—This bidirectional pin provides the serial bit rate clock for the Receive section of the SSI. The clock signal can be continuous or gated and can be used by both the transmitter and receiver in synchronous mode. Input/Output Port C GPIO—This is a General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin with the capability of being individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is GPIO input. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 11 Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. SRD 51 GPIOC0 Type Description Input/Output SSI Receive Data (SRD)—This input pin receives serial data and transfers the data to the SSI Receive Shift Receiver. Input/Output Port C GPIO—This is a General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin with the capability of being individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is GPIO input. SRFS 52 GPIOC1 Input/ Output SSI Serial Receive Frame Sync (SRFS)—This bidirectional pin is used by the receive section of the SSI as frame sync I/O or flag I/O. The STFS can be used only by the receiver. It is used to synchronize data transfer and can be an input or an output. Input/Output Port C GPIO—This is a General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin with the capability of being individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is GPIO input. SS 87 GPIOF7 Input SPI Slave Select—In master mode, this pin is used to arbitrate multiple masters. In slave mode, this pin is used to select the slave. Input/Output Port F GPIO—This General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin can be individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is SS. STCK 56 GPIOC5 Input/ Output SSI Serial Transmit Clock (STCK)—This bidirectional pin provides the serial bit rate clock for the transmit section of the SSI. The clock signal can be continuous or gated. It can be used by both the transmitter and receiver in synchronous mode. Input/Output Port C GPIO—This is a General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin with the capability of being individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is GPIO input. STD GPIOC3 54 Output SSI Transmit Data (STD)—This output pin transmits serial data from the SSI Transmitter Shift Register. Input/Output Port C GPIO—This is a General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin with the capability of being individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is GPIO input. 12 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Introduction Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. STFS 55 GPIOC4 Type Description Input SSI Serial Transmit Frame Sync (STFS)—This bidirectional pin is used by the Transmit section of the SSI as frame sync I/O or flag I/O. The STFS can be used by both the transmitter and receiver in synchronous mode. It is used to synchronize data transfer and can be an input or output pin. Input/Output Port C GPIO—This is a General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pin with the capability of being individually programmed as input or output. After reset, the default state is GPIO input. TA0-3 91 Input/Output TA0–3—Timer F Channels 0, 1, 2, and 3 Input/Output 89 Port F GPIO—These four General Purpose I/O (GPIO) pins can be individually programmed as input or output. 88 After reset, the default state is Quad Timer. TCS 99 TCS—This pin is reserved for factory use. It must be tied to VSS for normal use. In block diagrams, this pin is considered an additional VSS. TCK 100 Input Test Clock Input—This input pin provides a gated clock to synchronize the test logic and shift serial data to the JTAG/OnCE port. The pin is connected internally to a pull-down resistor. TDI 2 Input Test Data Input—This input pin provides a serial input data stream to the JTAG/OnCE port. It is sampled on the rising edge of TCK and has an onchip pull-up resistor. TDO 3 Output Test Data Output—This tri-statable output pin provides a serial output data stream from the JTAG/OnCE port. It is driven in the Shift-IR and Shift-DR controller states, and changes on the falling edge of TCK. TMS 1 Input Test Mode Select Input—This input pin is used to sequence the JTAG TAP controller’s state machine. It is sampled on the rising edge of TCK and has an on-chip pull-up resistor. TRST 4 Input Test Reset—As an input, a low signal on this pin provides a reset signal to the JTAG TAP controller. To ensure complete hardware reset, TRST should be asserted whenever RESET is asserted. The only exception occurs in a debugging environment when a hardware DSP reset is required and it is necessary not to reset the JTAG/OnCE module. In this case, assert RESET, but do not assert TRST. 90 GPIOF0GPIOF3 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 13 Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. TXD0 97 SCLK0 Type Description Output Transmit Data (TXD0)—transmit data output Input/Output SPI Serial Clock—In master mode, this pin serves as an output, clocking slaved listeners. In slave mode, this pin serves as the data clock input. After reset, the default state is SCI output. TXD1 93 MISO0 Output Transmit Data (TXD1)—transmit data output Input/Output SPI Master In/Slave Out—This serial data pin is an input to a master device and an output from a slave device. The MISO line of a slave device is placed in the high-impedance state if hte slave device is not selected. After reset, the default state is SCI output. 14 VDD 20 VDD Power—These pins provide power to the internal structures of the chip, and are generally connected to a 2.5V supply. VDD 64 VDD VDD 94 VDD VDDA 59 VDDA Analog Power—This pin supplies an analog power source (generally 2.5V). VDDIO 5 VDDIO Power—These pins provide power to the I/O structures of the chip, and are generally connected to a 3.3V supply. VDDIO 30 VDDIO VDDIO 57 VDDIO VDDIO 80 VDDIO VSS 19 VSS VSS 63 VSS VSS 95 VSS VSSA 60 VSSA Analog Ground—This pin supplies an analog ground. VSSIO 6 VSSIO GND In/Out—These pins provide grounding for the I/O ring on the chip. All should be attached to VSS. VSSIO 31 VSSIO VSSIO 58 VSSIO VSSIO 81 VSSIO GND—These pins provide grounding for the internal structures of the chip. All should be attached to VSS. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Introduction Table 3. DSP56F826 Signal and Package Information for the 100 Pin LQFP All inputs have a weak internal pull-up circuit associated with them. These pull-up circuits are always enabled. Exceptions: 1. When a pn is owned by GPIO, then the pull-up may be disabled under software control. 2. TCK has a weak pull-down circuit always active. Signal Name Pin No. WR 27 Output Write Enable—WR is asserted during external memory write cycles. When WR is asserted low, pins D0–D15 become outputs and the DSP puts data on the bus. When WR is deasserted high, the external data is latched inside the external device. When WR is asserted, it qualifies the A0–A15, PS, and DS pins. WR can be connected directly to the WE pin of a Static RAM. XTAL 62 Output Crystal Oscillator Output—This output connects the internal crystal oscillator output to an external crystal. If an external clock source over 4MHz is used, XTAL must be used as the input and EXTAL connected to VSS. For more information, please refer to Section 3.5.2. Type Description DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 15 Part 3 Specifications 3.1 General Characteristics The DSP56F826 is fabricated in high-density CMOS with 5-volt tolerant TTL-compatible digital inputs. The term 5-volt tolerant refers to the capability of an I/O pin, built on a 3.3V compatible process technology, to withstand a voltage up to 5.5V without damaging the device. Many systems have a mixture of devices designed for 3.3V and 5V power supplies. In such systems, a bus may carry both 3.3V and 5V- compatible I/O voltage levels. A standard 3.3V I/O is designed to receive a maximum voltage of 3.3V ± 10% during normal operation without causing damage. This 5V tolerant capability, therefore, offers the power savings of 3.3V I/O levels while being able to receive 5V levels without being damaged. Absolute maximum ratings given in Table 4 are stress ratings only, and functional operation at the maximum is not guaranteed. Stress beyond these ratings may affect device reliability or cause permanent damage to the device. The DSP56F826 DC/AC electrical specifications are preliminary and are from design simulations. These specifications may not be fully tested or guaranteed at this early stage of the product life cycle. Finalized specifications will be published after complete characterization and device qualifications have been completed. CAUTION This device contains protective circuitry to guard against damage due to high static voltage or electrical fields. However, normal precautions are advised to avoid application of any voltages higher than maximum rated voltages to this high-impedance circuit. Reliability of operation is enhanced if unused inputs are tied to an appropriate logic voltage level (e.g., either or VDD or VSS). Table 4. Absolute Maximum Ratings (VSS = 0 V) Characteristic Symbol Min Max Unit VDD VSS – 0.3 3.0 V VDDIO VSS – 0.3 4.0 V VIN VSS – 0.3 VDDIO + 0.3 V Current drain per pin excluding VDD, VSS I — 10 mA Junction temperature TJ — 150 °C TSTG –55 150 °C Supply voltage, core Supply voltage, IO and analog All other input voltages Storage temperature range 16 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data DC Electrical Characteristics Table 5. Recommended Operating Conditions Characteristic Symbol Min Max Unit VDD 2.25 2.75 V Supply Voltage, IO and analog VDDIO,VDDA 3.0 3.6 V Ambient operating temperature TA –40 85 °C Flash program/erase temperature TF 0 85 °C Supply voltage, core Table 6. Thermal Characteristics1 100-pin LQFP Characteristic Symbol Value Unit Thermal resistance junction-to-ambient (estimated) θJA 39.7 °C/W I/O pin power dissipation PI/O User Determined W Power dissipation PD PD = (IDD x VDD) + PI/O W PDMAX (TJ – TA) / θJA °C Maximum allowed PD 1. See Section 5.1 for more detail. 3.2 DC Electrical Characteristics Table 7. DC Electrical Characteristics Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Input high voltage (XTAL/EXTAL) VIHC 2.25 2.5 2.75 V Input low voltage (XTAL/EXTAL) VILC -0.3 — 0.5 V Input high voltage VIH 2.0 — 5.5 V Input low voltage VIL -0.3 — 0.8 V Input current low (pullups disabled) IIL -1 — 1 µA Input current high (pullups disabled) IIH -1 — 1 µA IOZL -10 — 10 µA Output tri-state current low DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 17 Table 7. DC Electrical Characteristics (Continued) Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Output tri-state current high IOZH -10 — 10 µA Output High Voltage with IOH load VOH VDD – 0.7 — — V Output Low Voltage with IOL load VOL — — 0.4 V Output High Current IOH -300 — — µA Output Low Current IOL — — 2 mA Input capacitance CIN — 8 — pF Output capacitance COUT — 12 — pF VDD supply current IDD — — — 50 20 2 TBD TBD TBD mA mA mA VEI — 2.7 TBD V Low Voltage Interrupt Recovery Hysteresis VEIH — 50 — mV Power on Reset4 POR — 1.5 2.0 V 1 Run Wait2 Stop Low Voltage Interrupt3 1. Run (operating) IDD measured using external square external square clock source (fosc = 4MHz) into XTAL. All inputs 0.2V from rail; no DC loads; outputs unloaded. All ports configured as inputs; measured with all modules enabled. PLL set to 80MHz out. 2. Wait IDD measured using external square wave clock source (fosc = 8MHz); all inpuyts 0.2V from rail; no DC loads; less than 50 pF on all outputs. CL= 20 pF on OSC2; all ports configured as inputs; OSC2 capacitance linearly affects wait IDD; measured with PLL and LVI enabled 3. When VDD drops below VEI max value, an interrupt is generated. 4. Power–on reset occurs whenever the internally regulated 2.5V digital supply drops below 1.5V typical. While power is ramping up, this signal remains active for as long as the internal 2.5V is below 1.5V typical no matter how long the ramp up rate is. The internally regulated voltage is typically 100 mV less than VDD during ramp up until 2.5V is reached, at which time it self regulates. 18 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data AC Electrical Characteristics 3.3 AC Electrical Characteristics Timing waveforms in Section 3.3 are tested with a VIL maximum of 0.8V and a VIH minimum of 2.0V for all pins except XTAL, which is tested using the input levels in Section 3.2. In Figure 3 the levels of VIH and VIL for an input signal are shown. Pulse Width Low VIH Input Signal High 90% 50% 10% Midpoint1 VIL Fall Time Rise Time Note: The midpoint is VIL + (VIH – VIL)/2. Figure 3. Input Signal Measurement References Figure 4 shows the definitions of the following signal states: • Active state, when a bus or signal is driven, and enters a low impedance state. • Tri-stated, when a bus or signal is placed in a high impedance state. • Data Valid state, when a signal level has reached V OL or VOH. • Data Invalid state, when a signal level is in transition between VOL and VOH. Data2 Valid Data1 Valid Data1 Data3 Valid Data2 Data3 Data Tri-stated Data Invalid State Data Active Data Active Figure 4. Signal States DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 19 3.4 Flash Memory Characteristics Table 8. Flash Memory Truth Table Mode XE1 YE2 SE3 OE4 PROG5 ERASE6 MAS17 NVSTR8 Standby L L L L L L L L Read H H H H L L L L Word Program H H L L H L L H Page Erase H L L L L H L H Mass Erase H L L L L H H H 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. X address enable, all rows are disabled when XE = 0 Y address enable, YMUX is disabled when YE = 0 Sense amplifier enable Output enable, tri-state flash data out bus when OE = 0 Defines program cycle Defines erase cycle Defines mass erase cycle, erase whole block Defines non-volatile store cycle Table 9. IFREN Truth Table 20 Mode IFREN = 1 IFREN = 0 Read Read information block Read main memory block Word program Program information block Program main memory block Page erase Erase information block Erase main memory block Mass erase Erase both block Erase main memory block DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Flash Memory Characteristics Table 10. Timing Symbols Characteristic Symbol See Figure(s) X address access time Txa - Y address access time Tya - OE access time Toa - PROG/ERASE to NVSTR set up time Tnvs* Figure 5, Figure 6, Figure 7 NVSTR hold time Tnvh* Figure 5, Figure 6 NVSTR hold time(mass erase) Tnvh1* Figure 7 NVSTR to program set up time Tpgs* Figure 5 Program hold time Tpgh Figure 5 Address/data set up time Tads Figure 5 Address/data hold time Tadh Figure 5 Recovery time Trcv* Figure 5, Figure 6, Figure 7 Cumulative program HV period Thv Figure 5 Program time Tprog* Figure 5 Erase time Terase* Figure 6 Mass erase time Tme* Figure 7 * The Flash interface unit provides registers for the control of these parameters. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 21 Table 11. Flash Timing Parameters Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Program time1 Tprog 20 — — us Erase time2 Terase 20 — — ms Mass erase time3 Tme 100 — — ms Endurance4 ECYC 10,000 — — cycles Data Retention DRET 10 — — years The following parameters should only be used in the Manual Word Programming mode. PROG/ERASE to NVSTR set up time Tnvs — 5 — us NVSTR hold time Tnvh — 5 — us NVSTR hold time(mass erase) Tnvh1 — 100 — us NVSTR to program set up time Tpgs — 10 — us Recovery time Trcv — 1 — us Cumulative program HV period5 Thv — 3 — ms 1. Program specification guaranteed from TA = 0° C to 85° C. 2. Erase specification guaranteed from TA = 0° C to 85° C. 3. Mass erase specification guaranteed from TA = 0° C to 85° C. 4. One cycle is equal to an erase, program, and read. 5. Thv is the cumulative high voltage programming time to the same row before next erase. The same address cannot be programmed twice before next erase. 22 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Flash Memory Characteristics IFREN XADR XE Tadh YADR YE DIN Tads PROG Tnvs Tprog Tpgh NVSTR Tpgs Tnvh Trcv Thv Figure 5. Flash Program Cycle IFREN XADR XE YE=SE=OE=MAS1=0 ERASE Tnvs NVSTR Tnvh Terase Trcv Figure 6. Flash Erase Cycle DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 23 IFREN XADR XE MAS1 YE=SE=OE=0 ERASE Tnvs NVSTR Tnvh1 Tme Trcv Figure 7. Flash Mass Erase Cycle 3.5 External Clock Operation The DSP56F826 system clock can be derived from a crystal or an external system clock signal. To generate a reference frequency using the internal oscillator, a reference crystal must be connected between the EXTAL and XTAL pins. 3.5.1 Crystal Oscillator The internal oscillator is also designed to interface with a parallel-resonant crystal resonator in the frequency range specified for the external crystal in Table 13. In Figure 8 a typical crystal oscillator circuit is shown. Follow the crystal supplier’s recommendations when selecting a crystal, because crystal parameters determine the component values required to provide maximum stability and reliable start-up. The crystal and associated components should be mounted as close as possible to the EXTAL and XTAL pins to minimize output distortion and start-up stabilization time. 24 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data External Clock Operation Crystal Frequency = 4MHz EXTAL XTAL Rz Sample External Crystal Parameters: Rz = 20 MW Figure 8. External Crystal Oscillator Circuit 3.5.2 External Clock Source The recommended method of connecting an external clock is given in Figure 9. The external clock source is connected to XTAL and the EXTAL pin is grounded. DSP56F826 XTAL EXTAL External Clock VSS Figure 9. Connecting an External Clock Signal using XTAL It is possible to instead drive EXTAL with an external clock, though this is not the recommended method. If you elect to drive EXTAL with an external clock source the following conditions must be met: 1. XTAL must be completely un-loaded, 2. the maximum frequency of the applied clock must be less than 6MHz. Figure 10 illustrates how to connect an external clock circuit with a external clock source using EXTAL as the input. DSP56F826 XTAL EXTAL External No Connection Clock ( < 6MHz) Figure 10. Connecting an External Clock Signal using EXTAL DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 25 Table 12. External Clock Operation Timing Requirements Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Frequency of operation (external clock driver)1 fosc 0 — 80 MHz Clock Pulse Width2, 5 tPW 6.25 — — ns External clock input rise time3, 5 trise — — 3 ns External clock input fall time4, 5 tfall — — 3 ns 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. See Figure 9 for details on using the recommended connection of an external clock driver. The high or low pulse width must be no smaller than 6.25 ns or the chip will not function. External clock input rise time is measured from 10% to 90%. External clock input fall time is measured from 90% to 10%. Parameters shown are guaranteed by design. VIH External Clock 90% 50% 10% tPW 90% 50% 10% tPW tfall VIL trise Note: The midpoint is VIL + (VIH – VIL)/2. Figure 11. External Clock Timing Table 13. PLL Timing Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Typ Max Unit External reference crystal frequency for the PLL1 fosc 2 4 6 MHz PLL output frequency fop 40 — 80 MHz PLL stabilization time 2 tplls — 1 10 ms 1. An externally supplied reference clock should be as free as possible from any phase jitter for the PLL to work correctly. The PLL is optimized for 8MHz input crystal. 2. This is the minimum time required after the PLL setup is changed to ensure reliable operation 26 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data External Bus Asynchronous Timing 3.6 External Bus Asynchronous Timing Table 14. External Bus Asynchronous Timing1, 2 Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Max Unit Address Valid to WR Asserted tAWR 6.5 — ns WR Width Asserted Wait states = 0 Wait states > 0 tWR 7.5 (T*WS) + 7.5 — — ns ns WR Asserted to D0–D15 Out Valid tWRD — T + 4.2 ns Data Out Hold Time from WR Deasserted tDOH 4.8 — ns Data Out Set Up Time to WR Deasserted Wait states = 0 Wait states > 0 tDOS 6.4 (T*WS) + 6.4 — — ns ns RD Deasserted to Address Not Valid tRDA 0 — ns Address Valid to RD Deasserted Wait states = 0 Wait states > 0 tARDD Input Data Hold to RD Deasserted tDRD RD Assertion Width Wait states = 0 Wait states > 0 tRD Address Valid to Input Data Valid Wait states = 0 Wait states > 0 tAD — 18.7 (T*WS) + 18.7 Address Valid to RD Asserted tARDA RD Asserted to Input Data Valid Wait states = 0 Wait states > 0 tRDD ns ns 0 — ns 19 (T*WS) + 19 — — ns ns — — 1 (T*WS) + 1 ns ns -4.4 — ns — — 2.4 (T*WS) + 2.4 ns ns WR Deasserted to RD Asserted tWRRD 6.8 — ns RD Deasserted to RD Asserted tRDRD 0 — ns WR Deasserted to WR Asserted tWRWR 14.1 — ns RD Deasserted to WR Asserted tRDWR 12.8 — ns DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 27 1. Timing is both wait state and frequency dependent. In the formulas listed, WS = the number of wait states and T = Clock Period. For 80MHz operation, T = 12.5ns. 2. Parameters listed are guaranteed by design. To calculate the required access time for an external memory for any frequency < 80Mhz, use this formula: Top = Clock period @ desired operating frequency WS = Number of wait states Memory Access Time = (Top*WS) + (Top- 11.5) A0–A15, PS, DS (See Note) tARDD tRDA tARDA RD tRDRD tRD tAWR tWRWR tWR tWRRD tRDWR WR tRDD tAD tWRD tDRD tDOS D0–D15 tDOH Data Out Data In Note: During read-modify-write instructions and internal instructions, the address lines do not change state. Figure 12. External Bus Asynchronous Timing 28 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Reset, Stop, Wait, Mode Select, and Interrupt Timing 3.7 Reset, Stop, Wait, Mode Select, and Interrupt Timing Table 15. Reset, Stop, Wait, Mode Select, and Interrupt Timing1, 5 Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Typical Min Typical Max Unit See Figure RESET Assertion to Address, Data and Control Signals High Impedance tRAZ — 21 ns Figure 13 Minimum RESET Assertion Duration2 OMR Bit 6 = 0 OMR Bit 6 = 1 tRA 275,000T 128T — — ns ns RESET De-assertion to First External Address Output tRDA 33T 34T ns Figure 13 Edge-sensitive Interrupt Request Width tIRW 1.5T — ns Figure 14 IRQA, IRQB Assertion to External Data Memory Access Out Valid, caused by first instruction execution in the interrupt service routine tIDM — 15T ns Figure 15 IRQA, IRQB Assertion to General Purpose Output Valid, caused by first instruction execution in the interrupt service routine tIG — 16T ns Figure 15 IRQA Low to First Valid Interrupt Vector Address Out recovery from Wait State3 tIRI — 13T ns Figure 16 IRQA Width Assertion to Recover from Stop State4 tIW — 2T ns Figure 17 Delay from IRQA Assertion to Fetch of first instruction (exiting Stop) OMR Bit 6 = 0 OMR Bit 6 = 1 tIF Duration for Level Sensitive IRQA Assertion to Cause the Fetch of First IRQA Interrupt Instruction (exiting Stop) OMR Bit 6 = 0 OMR Bit 6 = 1 tIRQ Delay from Level Sensitive IRQA Assertion to First Interrupt Vector Address Out Valid (exiting Stop) OMR Bit 6 = 0 OMR Bit 6 = 1 Figure 13 Figure 17 — — 275,000T 12T ns ns Figure 18 — — 275,000T 12T ns ns Figure 18 tII — — 275,000T 12T ns ns 1. In the formulas, T = clock cycle. For an operating frequency of 80MHz, T = 12.5 ns. 2. Circuit stabilization delay is required during reset when using an external clock or crystal oscillator in two cases: • After power-on reset • When recovering from Stop state 3. The minimum is specified for the duration of an edge-sensitive IRQA interrupt required to recover from the Stop state. This is not the minimum required so that the IRQA interrupt is accepted. 4. The interrupt instruction fetch is visible on the pins only in Mode 3. 5. Parameters listed are guaranteed by design. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 29 RESET tRA tRAZ tRDA A0–A15, D0–D15 First Fetch PS, DS, RD, WR First Fetch Figure 13. Asynchronous Reset Timing IRQA, IRQB tIRW Figure 14. External Interrupt Timing (Negative-Edge-Sensitive) A0–A15, PS, DS, RD, WR First Interrupt Instruction Execution tIDM IRQA, IRQB a) First Interrupt Instruction Execution General Purpose I/O Pin tIG IRQA, IRQB b) General Purpose I/O Figure 15. External Level-Sensitive Interrupt Timing 30 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Reset, Stop, Wait, Mode Select, and Interrupt Timing IRQA, IRQB tIRI A0–A15, PS, DS, RD, WR First Interrupt Vector Instruction Fetch Figure 16. Interrupt from Wait State Timing tIW IRQA tIF A0–A15, PS, DS, RD, WR First Instruction Fetch Not IRQA Interrupt Vector Figure 17. Recovery from Stop State Using Asynchronous Interrupt Timing tIRQ IRQA tII A0–A15 PS, DS, RD, WR First IRQA Interrupt Instruction Fetch Figure 18. Recovery from Stop State Using IRQA Interrupt Service DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 31 3.8 Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Timing Table 16. SPI Timing1 Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Cycle time Master Slave Min Max Unit 50 50 — — ns ns — 25 — — ns ns — 100 — — ns ns 17.6 25 — — 24.1 25 — — ns ns 20 0 — — ns ns 0 2 — — ns ns 4.8 15 ns 3.7 15.2 ns — — 4.5 20.4 ns ns 0 0 — — ns ns — — 11.5 10.0 ns ns — — 9.7 9.0 ns ns tC Enable lead time Master Slave tELD Enable lag time Master Slave tELG Clock (SCLK) high time Master Slave tCH Clock (SCLK) low time Master Slave tCL Data setup time required for inputs Master Slave tDS Data hold time required for inputs Master Slave tDH Access time (time to data active from high-impedance state) Slave tA Disable time (hold time to high-impedance state) Slave tD Data Valid for outputs Master Slave (after enable edge) tDV Data invalid Master Slave tDI Rise time Master Slave tR Fall time Master Slave tF See Figure Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figure 22 Figure 22 ns ns Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figure 22 Figure 22 Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 Figures 19, 20, 21, 22 1.Parameters listed are guaranteed by design. 32 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Timing SS SS is held High on master (Input) tC tR tF tCL SCLK (CPOL = 0) (Output) tCH tF tR tCL SCLK (CPOL = 1) (Output) tDH tCH tDS MISO (Input) MSB in Bits 14–1 LSB in tDI MOSI (Output) tDV Master MSB out Bits 14–1 tDI(ref) Master LSB out tR tF Figure 19. SPI Master Timing (CPHA = 0) SS SS is held High on master (Input) tC tF tR tCL SCLK (CPOL = 0) (Output) tCH tF tCL SCLK (CPOL = 1) (Output) tCH tDS tDH tR MISO (Input) MSB in tDI tDV(ref) MOSI (Output) Master MSB out Bits 14–1 LSB in tDV Bits 14– 1 tF Master LSB out tR Figure 20. SPI Master Timing (CPHA = 1) DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 33 SS (Input) tC tF tCL SCLK (CPOL = 0) (Input) tELG tR tCH tELD tCL SCLK (CPOL = 1) (Input) tCH tA MISO (Output) Slave MSB out tF tR tD Bits 14–1 tDS Slave LSB out tDV MOSI (Input) MSB in tDI tDI tDH Bits 14–1 LSB in Figure 21. SPI Slave Timing (CPHA = 0) SS (Input) tC tF tR tCL SCLK (CPOL = 0) (Input) tCH tELD SCLK (CPOL = 1) (Input) tDV tELG tCL tCH tR MISO (Output) Slave MSB out Bits 14–1 tDV tDS tDH MOSI (Input) tD tF tA MSB in Bits 14–1 Slave LSB out tDI LSB in Figure 22. SPI Slave Timing (CPHA = 1) 34 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Quad Timer Timing 3.9 Quad Timer Timing Table 17. Timer Timing1, 2 Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Max Unit PIN 4T+6 — ns Timer input high/low period PINHL 2T+3 — ns Timer output period POUT 2T-3 — ns POUTHL 1T-3 — ns Timer input period Timer output high/low period 1. 2. In the formulas listed, T = clock cycle. For 80MHz operation, T = 12.5 ns. Parameters listed are guaranteed by design. Timer Inputs PIN PINHL PINHL Timer Outputs POUT POUTHL POUTHL Figure 23. Quad Timer Timing 3.10 Serial Communication Interface (SCI) Timing Table 18. SCI Timing4 Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80 MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Max Unit BR — (fMAX*2.5)/(80) Mbps RXD2 Pulse Width RXDPW 0.965/BR 1.04/BR ns TXD3 Pulse Width TXDPW 0.965/BR 1.04/BR ns Baud Rate1 1. 2. 3. 4. fMAX is the frequency of operation of the system clock in MHz. The RXD pin in SCI0 is named RXD0 and the RXD pin in SCI1 is named RXD1. The TXD pin in SCI0 is named TXD0 and the TXD pin in SCI1 is named TXD1. Parameters listed are guaranteed by design. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 35 RXD SCI receive data pin (Input) RXDPW Figure 24. RXD Pulse Width TXD SCI receive data pin (Input) TXDPW Figure 25. TXD Pulse Width 3.11 JTAG Timing Table 19. JTAG Timing1, 3 Operating Conditions: VSSIO=VSS = VSSA = 0 V, VDDIO=3.0 to 3.6V, VDD = VDDA = 2.25–2.75 V, TA = –40° to +85°C, CL ≤ 50 pF, fop = 80MHz Characteristic Symbol Min Max Unit TCK frequency of operation2 fOP DC 10 MHz TCK cycle time tCY 100 — ns TCK clock pulse width tPW 50 — ns TMS, TDI data setup time tDS 0.4 — ns TMS, TDI data hold time tDH 1.2 — ns TCK low to TDO data valid tDV — 26.6 ns TCK low to TDO tri-state tTS — 23.5 ns tTRST 50 — ns tDE 4T — ns TRST assertion time DE assertion time 1. Timing is both wait state and frequency dependent. For the values listed, T = clock cycle. For 80MHz operation, T = 12.5 ns. 2. TCK frequency of operation must be less than 1/8 the processor rate. 3. Parameters listed are guaranteed by design. 36 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data JTAG Timing tCY tPW tPW VM VM VIH TCK (Input) VIL VM = VIL + (VIH – VIL)/2 Figure 26. Test Clock Input Timing Diagram TCK (Input) tDS TDI TMS (Input) tDH Input Data Valid tDV TDO (Output) Output Data Valid tTS TDO (Output) tDV TDO (Output) Output Data Valid Figure 27. Test Access Port Timing Diagram TRST (Input) tTRST Figure 28. TRST Timing Diagram DE tDE Figure 29. OnCE—Debug Event DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 37 Part 4 Packaging 4.1 Package and Pin-Out Information DSP56F826 TCK TCS DE TXD0 RXD0 VSS VDD TXD1 RXD1 TA0 TA1 TA2 TA3 SS MISO MOSI SCLK MPIOD7 MPIOD6 VSSIO VDDIO GPIOD5 GPIOD4 GPIOD3 GPIOD2 This section contains package and pin-out information for the 100-pin LQFP configuration of the DSP56F826. GPIOD1 GPIOD0 GPIOB7 GPIOB6 GPIOB5 GPIOB4 GPIOB3 GPIOB2 GPIOB1 GPIOB0 CLKO VDD VSS XTAL EXTAL VSSA VDDA VSSIO VDDIO STCK STFS STD SRCK SRFS SRD PIN 76 ORIENTATION MARK PIN 1 Motorola DSP56F826 PIN 51 PIN 26 RD WR DS PS VDDIO VSSIO IREQA IREQB D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 D8 D9 D10 RESET D11 D12 D13 D14 D15 TMS TDI TDO TRST VDDIO VSSIO A15 A14 A13 A12 A11 A10 A9 A8 A7 A6 A5 A4 VSS VDD A3 A2 A1 A0 EXTBOOT Figure 30. Top View, DSP56F826 100-pin LQFP Package 38 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Package and Pin-Out Information DSP56F826 Table 20. DSP56F826 Pin Identification by Pin Number Pin No. Signal Name Pin No. Signal Name Pin No. Signal Name Pin No. Signal Name 1 TMS 26 RD 51 SRD 76 GPIOD2 2 TDI 27 WR 52 SRFS 77 GPIOD3 3 TDO 28 DS 53 SRCK 78 GPIOD4 4 TRST 29 PS 54 STD 79 GPIOD5 5 VDDIO 30 VDDIO 55 STFS 80 VDDIO 6 VSSIO 31 VSSIO 56 STCK 81 VSSIO 7 A15 32 IRQA 57 VDDIO 82 GPIOD6 8 A14 33 IRQB 58 VSSIO 83 GPIOD7 9 A13 34 D0 59 VDDA 84 SCLK 10 A12 35 D1 60 VSSA 85 MOSI 11 A11 36 D2 61 EXTAL 86 MISO 12 A10 37 D3 62 XTAL 87 SS 13 A9 38 D4 63 VSS 88 TA3 14 A8 39 D5 64 VDD 89 TA2 15 A7 40 D6 65 CLKO 90 TA1 16 A6 41 D7 66 GPIOB0 91 TA0 17 A5 42 D8 67 GPIOB1 92 RXD1 18 A4 43 D9 68 GPIOB2 93 TXD1 19 VSS 44 D10 69 GPIOB3 94 VDD 20 VDD 45 RESET 70 GPIOB4 95 VSS 21 A3 46 D11 71 GPIOB5 96 RXD0 22 A2 47 D12 72 GPIOB6 97 TXD0 23 A1 48 D13 73 GPIOB7 98 DE 24 A0 49 D14 74 GPIOD0 99 TCS 25 EXTBOOT 50 D15 75 GPIOD1 100 TCK DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 39 S 0.15(0.006) AC T-U S Z S S -T- 0.15(0.006) 0.15(0.006) S AC Z B -Z- S V AC Z S S T-U T-U S S NOTES: 1. DIMENSIONING AND TOLERANCING PER ANSI Y14.5M, 1982. 2. CONTROLLING DIMENSION: MILLIMETER. 3. DATUM PLANE -AB- IS LOCATED AT BOTTOM OF LEAD AND IS COINCIDENT WITH THE LEAD WHERE THE LEAD EXITS THE PLASTIC BODY AT THE BOTTOM OF THE PARTING LINE. 4. DATUMS -T-, -U-, AND -Z- TO BE DETERMINED AT DATUM PLANE -AB-. 5. DIMENSIONS S AND V TO BE DETERMINED AT SEATING PLANE -AC-. 6. DIMENSIONS A AND B DO NOT INCLUDE MOLD PROTRUSION. ALLOWABLE PROTRUSION IS 0.250 (0.010) PER SIDE. DIMENSIONS A AND B DO INCLUDE MOLD MISMATCH AND ARE DETERMINED AT DATUM PLANE -AB-. 7. DIMENSION D DOES NOT INCLUDE DAMBAR PROTRUSION. DAMBAR PROTRUSION SHALL NOT CAUSE THE D DIMENSION TO EXCEED 0.350 (0.014). DAMBAR CAN NOT BE LOCATED ON THE LOWER RADIUS OR THE FOOT. MINIMUM SPACE BETWEEN PROTRUSION AND AN ADJACENT LEAD IS 0.070 (0.003). 8. MINIMUM SOLDER PLATE THICKNESS SHALL BE 0.0076 (0.003). 9. EXACT SHAPE OF EACH CORNER MAY VARY FROM DEPICTION. -UA 9 0.15(0.006) S AB T-U S AE Z MILLIMETERS DIM MIN MAX A 13.950 14.050 B 13.950 14.050 C 1.400 1.600 D 0.170 0.270 E 1.350 1.450 F 0.170 0.230 G 0.500 BSC H 0.050 0.150 J 0.090 0.200 K 0.500 0.700 M 12° REF N 0.090 0.160 Q 1° 5° R 0.150 0.250 S 15.950 16.050 V 15.950 16.050 W 0.200 REF X 1.000 REF S AD -AB-AC96X G SEATING PLANE (24X PER SIDE) AE 0.100(0.004) AC M° C R 0.25 (0.010) E GAUGE PLANE D F J N H INCHES MIN MAX 0.549 0.553 0.549 0.553 0.055 0.063 0.007 0.011 0.053 0.057 0.007 0.009 0.020 BSC 0.002 0.006 0.004 0.008 0.020 0.028 12° REF 0.004 0.006 1° 5° 0.006 0.010 0.628 0.632 0.628 0.632 0.008 REF 0.039 REF Q° W K X 0.20(0.008) M AC T-U S Z S SECTION AE-AE DETAIL AD CASE 842F-01 Figure 31. 100-pin LQPF Mechanical Information 40 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data Thermal Design Considerations Part 5 Design Considerations 5.1 Thermal Design Considerations An estimation of the chip junction temperature, TJ, in °C can be obtained from the equation: Equation 1: TJ = T A + ( P D × R θJA ) Where: TA = ambient temperature °C RθJA = package junction-to-ambient thermal resistance °C/W PD = power dissipation in package Historically, thermal resistance has been expressed as the sum of a junction-to-case thermal resistance and a case-to-ambient thermal resistance: Equation 2: RθJA = RθJC + R θCA Where: RθJA = package junction-to-ambient thermal resistance °C/W RθJC = package junction-to-case thermal resistance °C/W RθCA = package case-to-ambient thermal resistance °C/W RθJC is device-related and cannot be influenced by the user. The user controls the thermal environment to change the case-to-ambient thermal resistance, RθCA. For example, the user can change the air flow around the device, add a heat sink, change the mounting arrangement on the Printed Circuit Board (PCB), or otherwise change the thermal dissipation capability of the area surrounding the device on the PCB. This model is most useful for ceramic packages with heat sinks; some 90% of the heat flow is dissipated through the case to the heat sink and out to the ambient environment. For ceramic packages, in situations where the heat flow is split between a path to the case and an alternate path through the PCB, analysis of the device thermal performance may need the additional modeling capability of a system level thermal simulation tool. The thermal performance of plastic packages is more dependent on the temperature of the PCB to which the package is mounted. Again, if the estimations obtained from RθJA do not satisfactorily answer whether the thermal performance is adequate, a system level model may be appropriate. Definitions: A complicating factor is the existence of three common definitions for determining the junction-to-case thermal resistance in plastic packages: • Measure the thermal resistance from the junction to the outside surface of the package (case) closest to the chip mounting area when that surface has a proper heat sink. This is done to minimize temperature variation across the surface. • Measure the thermal resistance from the junction to where the leads are attached to the case. This definition is approximately equal to a junction to board thermal resistance. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 41 Electrical Design Considerations • Use the value obtained by the equation (TJ – TT)/PD where TT is the temperature of the package case determined by a thermocouple. The junction-to-case thermal resistances quoted in this data sheet are determined using the first definition on page 41. From a practical standpoint, that value is also suitable for determining the junction temperature from a case thermocouple reading in forced convection environments. In natural convection, using the junction-to-case thermal resistance to estimate junction temperature from a thermocouple reading on the case of the package will estimate a junction temperature slightly hotter than actual. Hence, the new thermal metric, Thermal Characterization Parameter, or ΨJT, has been defined to be (TJ – TT)/PD. This value gives a better estimate of the junction temperature in natural convection when using the surface temperature of the package. Remember that surface temperature readings of packages are subject to significant errors caused by inadequate attachment of the sensor to the surface and to errors caused by heat loss to the sensor. The recommended technique is to attach a 40-gauge thermocouple wire and bead to the top center of the package with thermally conductive epoxy. 5.2 Electrical Design Considerations CAUTION This device contains protective circuitry to guard against damage due to high static voltage or electrical fields. However, normal precautions are advised to avoid application of any voltages higher than maximum rated voltages to this high-impedance circuit. Reliability of operation is enhanced if unused inputs are tied to an appropriate logic voltage level (e.g., either VSS or VDD). Use the following list of considerations to assure correct DSP operation: • Provide a low-impedance path from the board power supply to each VDD pin on the DSP, and from the board ground to each VSS (GND) pin. • The minimum bypass requirement is to place six 0.01–0.1 µF capacitors positioned as close as possible to the package supply pins. The recommended bypass configuration is to place one bypass capacitor on each of the eight VDD/VSS pairs, including VDDA/VSSA. • Ensure that capacitor leads and associated printed circuit traces that connect to the chip VDD and VSS (GND) pins are less than 0.5 inch per capacitor lead. • Use at least a four-layer Printed Circuit Board (PCB) with two inner layers for VDD and VSS. • Bypass the VDD and VSS layers of the PCB with approximately 100 µF, preferably with a highgrade capacitor such as a tantalum capacitor. • Because the DSP output signals have fast rise and fall times, PCB trace lengths should be minimal. DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data 42 • Consider all device loads as well as parasitic capacitance due to PCB traces when calculating capacitance. This is especially critical in systems with higher capacitive loads that could create higher transient currents in the VDD and VSS circuits. • All inputs must be terminated (i.e., not allowed to float) using CMOS levels. • Take special care to minimize noise levels on the VREF, V DDA and VSSA pins. • When using Wired-OR mode on the SPI or the IRQx pins, the user must provide an external pullup device. • Designs that utilize the TRST pin for JTAG port or OnCE module functionality (such as development or debugging systems) should allow a means to assert TRST whenever RESET is asserted, as well as a means to assert TRST independently of RESET. Designs that do not require debugging functionality, such as consumer products, should tie these pins together. • Because the Flash memory is programmed through the JTAG/OnCE port, designers should provide an interface to this port to allow in-circuit Flash programming. Part 6 Ordering Information Table 21 lists the pertinent information needed to place an order. Consult a Motorola Semiconductor sales office or authorized distributor to determine availability and to order parts. Table 21. DSP56F803 Ordering Information Part DSP56F826 43 Supply Voltage 3.0–3.6 V 2.25-2.75 V Package Type Plastic Quad Flat Pack (LQFP) Pin Count Frequency (MHz) Order Number 100 80 DSP56F803BU80 DSP56F826 Preliminary Technical Data OnCE™ are trademarks of Motorola, Inc. This document contains information on a new product. Specifications and information herein are subject to change without notice. Motorola reserves the right to make changes without further notice to any products herein. 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