DS1495/DS1497 DS1495/DS1497 RAMified Real Time Clock FEATURES PIN ASSIGNMENT • Ideal for EISA bus PCs • Functionally compatible 1 2 28 27 A2 X2 X1 STBY 3 4 26 25 VDD SQW 5 24 A4 D0 23 A5 D1 6 7 22 D2 8 21 VBAT IRQ D3 D4 9 20 RESET 10 19 D6 11 12 18 17 A0 with MC146818 in 32 KHz mode • Totally nonvolatile with over 10 years of operation in the absence of power • Self-contained subsystem includes lithium, quartz, and support circuitry A1 A3 seconds, minutes, hours, day of the week, date, month, and year with leap year compensation D5 D7 13 • Binary or BCD representations of time, calendar, and 16 RD BGND WR XRAM VSS 14 15 RTC • Counts alarm DS1495S 28-Pin SOIC (330 mil) • 12- or 24-hour clock with AM and PM in 12-hour mode • Daylight Savings Time option • Interfaced with software as 64 register/RAM locations plus 8K x 8 of static RAM – 14 bytes of clock and control registers – 50 bytes of general and control registers – Separate 8K x 8 nonvolatile SRAM • Programmable square wave output signal • Bus-compatible interrupt signals (IRQ) • Three interrupts are separately software-maskable and testable: – Time-of-day alarm once/second to once/day – Periodic rates from 122 µs to 500 ms – End-of-clock update cycle • 28-pin JEDEC footprint • Available as chip (DS1495/DS1495S) or stand alone module with embedded lithium battery and crystal (DS1497) ORDERING INFORMATION DS1495 DS1495S DS1497 RTC Chip; 28–pin DIP RTC Chip; 28–pin SOIC RTC Module; 28–pin DIP A0 1 28 A2 A1 2 27 A3 X2 3 26 VDD X1 4 25 SQW STBY 5 24 A4 D0 6 23 22 A5 VBAT D2 D3 8 21 IRQ 9 20 RESET D4 10 19 D5 D6 D7 11 18 17 RD BGND WR VSS 14 D1 7 12 13 16 XRAM 15 RTC DS1495 28-Pin DIP (600 mil) A0 1 28 A2 A1 2 27 A3 NC 3 26 NC 4 VDD SQW STBY D0 5 25 24 6 23 A5 D1 7 22 NC D2 8 21 IRQ D3 9 20 RESET D4 10 19 D5 11 NC D6 12 18 17 D7 13 16 XRAM V SS 14 15 RTC A4 RD WR DS1497 28-Pin Encapsulated Package (720 mil) Copyright 1995 by Dallas Semiconductor Corporation. All Rights Reserved. For important information regarding patents and other intellectual property rights, please refer to Dallas Semiconductor databooks. 020894 1/19 DS1495/DS1497 PIN DESCRIPTIONS VDD, VSS – Bus operational power is supplied to the part via these pins. The voltage level present on these pins should be monitored to transition between operational power and battery power. D0-D7 – Data Bus (bidirectional): Data is written into the device from the data bus if either XRAM or RTC is asserted during a write cycle at the rising edge of a WR pulse. Data is read from the device and driven onto the data bus if either XRAM or RTC is asserted during a read cycle when the RD signal is low. A0-A5 – Address Bus (input): Various internal registers of the device are selected by these lines. When RTC is asserted, A0 selects between the indirect address register and RTC data register. When the XRAM is asserted, A0-A5 addresses a 32–byte page of RAM. When A5 is high, the RAM page register is accessible. When A5 is low, A0-A4 address the 32-byte page of RAM. RD – Read Strobe (input): Data is read from the selected register and driven onto the data bus by the device when this line is low and either RTC or XRAM is asserted. WR – Write Strobe (input): Data is written into the device from the data bus on the rising edge after a low pulse on this line when the device has been selected by either the XRAM or RTC signals. STBY – Standby (input): Accesses to the device are inhibited and outputs are tri-stated to a high impedance state when this signal is asserted low. All data in RAM of the device is preserved. The real time clock continues to keep time. If a read or write cycle is in progress when the STBY signal is asserted low, the internal cycle will be terminated when either the external cycle completes or when the internal chip enable condition (VDD is 4.25 volts, typical) is negated, whichever occurs first. RTC – Real Time Clock Select (input): When this signal is asserted low, the real time clock registers are ac- 020894 2/19 cessible. Registers are selected by the A0 line. Data is driven onto the data bus when RD is low. Data is received from the bus when WR is pulsed low and then high. SQW – Square Wave (output): Frequency selectable output. Frequency is selected by setting register A bits RSO-RS3. See Table 2 for frequencies that can be selected. XRAM – Extended RAM Select (input): When this signal is asserted low, the extended RAM bytes are accessible. The XRAM page register is selected when the A5 address line is high. A 32-byte page of RAM is accessible when A5 is low. A0-A4 select the bytes within the page of RAM pointed to by the page register. Data is driven onto the data bus when RD is low. Data is received from the bus when WR is pulsed low and then high. IRQ – Interrupt Request (output): The IRQ signal is an active low, open drain output that is used as a processor interrupt request. The IRQ output follows the state of the IRQF bit (bit 7) in status register C. IRQ can be asserted by the alarm, update ended, or periodic interrupt functions depending on the configuration of register B. RESET – Reset (input): The reset signal is used to initialize certain registers to allow proper operation of the RTC module. When RESET is low, the following occurs. 1. The following register bits are cleared: a. b. c. d. e. f. g. h. Periodic interrupt (PIE) Alarm interrupt enable (AIE) Update ended interrupt (UF) Interrupt request flag (IRQF) Periodic interrupt flag (PF) Alarm interrupt flag (AF) Square wave output enable (SQWE) Update ended interrupt enable (UIE) 2. The IRQ pin is in the high impedance state. 3. The RTC is not processor accessible. DS1495/DS1497 ADDITIONAL PIN DESCRIPTION (FOR DS1495, DS1495S) X1, X2 – Connections for a standard 32.768 KHz quartz crystal, Daiwa part number DT-26S or equivalent. The internal oscillator circuitry is designed for operation with a crystal having a specified load capacitance (CL) of 6pF. The crystal is connected directly to the X1 and X2 pins. There is no need for external capacitors or resistors. Note: X1 and X2 are very high impedance nodes. It is recommended that they and the crystal be guard– ringed with ground and that high frequency signals be kept away from the crystal area. For more information on crystal selection and crystal layout considerations, please consult Application Note 58, “Crystal Considerations with Dallas Real Time Clocks”. VBAT – Battery input for any standard +3 volt lithium cell or other energy source. Battery voltage must be held between 2.5 and 3.7 volts for proper operation. The nominal write protect trip point voltage at which access to the real time clock and user RAM is denied is set by the internal circuitry at 4.25 volts typical. A maximum load of 1 µA at 25oC and 3.0V on VBAT in the absence of power should be used to size the external energy source. The battery should be connected directly to the VBAT pin. A diode must not be placed in series with the battery to the VBAT pin. Furthermore, a diode is not necessary because reverse charging current protection circuitry is provided internal to the device and has passed the requirements of Underwriters Laboratories for UL listing. BGND – Battery ground: This pin or pin 14 can be used for the battery ground return. OPERATION Power-Down/Power-Up: The real time clock will continue to operate and all of the RAM, time, and calendar and alarm memory locations will remain non-volatile regardless of the voltage level of VDD. When the voltage level applied to the VDD input is greater than 4.25 volts (typical), the module becomes accessible after 200 ms provided that the oscillator and countdown chain have been programmed to be running. This time period allows the module to stabilize after power is applied. When VDD falls below the CETHR (4.25 volts typical), the chip select inputs RTC and XRAM are forced to an inactive state regardless of the state of the pin signals. This puts the module into a write protected mode in which all inputs are ignored and all outputs are in a high impedance state. When VDD falls below 3.2 volts (typical), the module is switched over to an internal power source in the case of the DS1497, or to an external battery connected to the VBAT and BGND pins in the case of the DS1495 and DS1495S, so that power is not interrupted to timekeeping and nonvolatile RAM functions. Address Map: The registers of the device appear in two distinct address ranges. One set of registers is active when RTC is asserted low and represents the real time clock. The second set of registers is active when XRAM is asserted low and represents the extended RAM. RTC Address Map: The address map of the RTC module is shown in Figure 2. The address map consists of 50 bytes of general purpose RAM, 10 bytes of RTC/calendar information, and 4 bytes of status and control information. All 64 bytes can be accessed as read/write registers except for the following: 1. Registers C and D are Read Only (status information) 2. Bit 7 of register A is Read Only 3. Bit 7 of the “Seconds” byte (00) is Read Only The first byte of the real time clock address map is the RTC indirect address register, accessible when A0 is low. The second byte is the RTC data register, accessible when A0 is high. The function of the RTC indirect address register is to point to one of the 64 RTC registers that are indirectly accessible through the RTC data register. Extended RAM Address Map: The first 32 bytes of the extended RAM represent one of 256 pages of general purpose nonvolatile memory. These 32 bytes on a page are addressed by A0 through A4 when A5 is low. When A5 is high, the XRAM page register is accessible. The value in the XRAM page register points to one of 256 pages of nonvolatile memory available. The address of the XRAM page register is dependent only on A5 being high; thus, there are 31 aliases of this register in I/O spaces. (See Figure 3.) 020894 3/19 DS1495/DS1497 TIME, CALENDAR AND ALARM LOCATIONS The time and calendar information is obtained by reading the appropriate register bytes shown in Table 1. The time, calendar, and alarm are set or initialized by writing the appropriate register bytes. The contents of the time, calendar, and alarm registers can be either Binary or Binary-Coded Decimal (BCD) format. Table 1 shows the binary and BCD formats of the twelve time, calendar, and alarm locations. Before writing the internal time, calendar, and alarm registers, the SET bit in Register B should be written to a logic one to prevent updates from occurring while access is being attempted. Also at this time, the data format (binary or BCD), should be set via the data mode bit (DM) of Register B. All time, calendar, and alarm registers must use the same data mode. The set bit in Register B should be cleared after the data mode bit has been written to allow the real-time clock to update the time and calendar bytes. Once initialized, the real-time clock makes all updates in the selected mode. The data mode cannot be changed without reinitializing the ten data bytes. The 24/12 bit cannot be changed without reinitializing the hour locations. When the 12-hour format is selected, the high order bit of the hours byte represents PM when it is a logic one. The time, calendar, and alarm bytes are always accessible because they are double buffered. Once per second the ten bytes are advanced by one second and 020894 4/19 checked for an alarm condition. If a read of the time and calendar data occurs during an update, a problem exists where seconds, minutes, hours, etc. may not correlate. The probability of reading incorrect time and calendar data is low. Several methods of avoiding any possible incorrect time and calendar reads are covered later in this text. The three alarm bytes can be used in two ways. First, when the alarm time is written in the appropriate hours, minutes, and seconds alarm locations, the alarm interrupt is initiated at the specified time each day if the alarm enable bit is high . The second method is to insert a “don’t care” state in one or more of the three alarm bytes. The “don’t care” code is any hexadecimal value from C0 to FF. The two most significant bits of each byte set the “don’t care” condition when at logic 1. An alarm will be generated each hour when the “don’t care” bits are set in the hours byte. Similarly, an alarm is generated every minute with “don’t care” codes in the hours and minute alarm bytes. The “don’t care” codes in all three alarm bytes create an interrupt every second. USER NONVOLATILE RAM - RTC The 50 user nonvolatile RAM bytes are not dedicated to any special function within the DS1495/DS1497. They can be used by the application program as nonvolatile memory and are fully available during the update cycle. This memory is directly accessible in the RTC section. V BAT XRAM RTC A0–A5 WR RD D0–D7 STBY VDD CE PCK BUS INTERFACE POWER SWITCHING REFERENCE A0–A5 A6–A12 DATA/CONTROL VPP ON/OFF ÷8 RST ÷64 RST ÷ 64 RS0–RS3 4 3 3 10 RST ROW DECODER, 1 OF 128 EXTENDED RAM 8192 BYTES COLUMN DECODER, 1 OF 64 EXTENDED RAM PAGE REGISTER ROW DECODER, 1 OF 8 50 BYTES USER RAM COLUMN DECODER 1 OF 8 CLOCK CALENDAR AND ALARM REGISTERS REGISTERS A,B,C,D PERIODIC INTR/SQ WAVE SELECTOR INDEX REGISTER OSC KHz DECODER 32.768 ÷2 CLOCK CALENDAR UPDATE SQ WAVE OUT IRQ RST SQW DS1495/DS1497 DS149X BLOCK DIAGRAM Figure 1 020894 5/19 DS1495/DS1497 REAL TIME CLOCK RAM MAP Figure 2 RTC RTC +1 INDIRECT ADDRESS REGISTER RTC DATA REGISTER 14– BYTES REAL TIME CLOCK INDIRECT ADDRESS 00 00 14–BYTES RTC 00 SECONDS 01 SECONDS ALARM 02 MINUTES 03 MINUTES ALARM 04 HOURS 05 HOURS ALARM 06 DAY OF WEEK 07 DAY OF MONTH 08 MONTH 09 YEAR 0A REGISTER A 0B REGISTER B 0C REGISTER C 0D REGISTER D 0D 13 14 0E 50–BYTES USER RAM 3F 63 EXTENDED RAM ADDRESS MAP Figure 3 XRAM THRU 256 PAGES OF 32–BYTES EXTENDED RAM 01 PAGE 00 XRAM + 1F XRAM + 20 XRAM PAGE REGISTER XRAM + 21 THRU XRAM + 3F 020894 6/19 PAGE FF 02 ALIASES OF PAGE REGISTER DS1495/DS1497 TIME, CALENDAR AND ALARM DATA MODES Table 1 ADDRESS LOCATION FUNCTION DECIMAL RANGE RANGE BINARY DATA MODE BCD DATA MODE 0 Seconds 0-59 00-3B 00-59 1 Seconds Alarm 0-59 00-3B 00-59 2 Minutes 0-59 00-3B 00-59 3 Minutes Alarm 0-59 00-3B 00-59 4 Hours-12-hr Mode 1-12 01-0C AM, 81-8C PM 01-12AM,81-92PM Hours-24-hr Mode 0-23 00-17 00-23 Hours Alarm-12-hr 1-12 01-0C AM, 81-8C PM 01-12AM,81-92PM Hours Alarm-24-hr 0-23 00-17 00-23 6 Day of the Week Sunday = 1 1-7 01-07 01-07 7 Date of the Month 1-31 01-1F 01-31 8 Month 1-12 01-0C 01-12 9 Year 0-99 00-63 00-99 5 INTERRUPTS The RTC plus RAM includes three separate, fully automatic sources of interrupt for a processor. The alarm interrupt can be programmed to occur at rates from once per second to once per day. The periodic interrupt can be selected for rates from 500 ms to 122 µs. The update-ended interrupt can be used to indicate to the program that an update cycle is complete. Each of these independent interrupt conditions is described in greater detail in other sections of this text. The application program can select which interrupts, if any, are going to be used. Three bits in Register B enable the interrupts. Writing a logic 1 to an interrupt-enable bit permits that interrupt to be initiated when the event occurs. A logic 0 in an interrupt-enable bit prohibits the IRQ pin from being asserted from that interrupt condition. If an interrupt flag is already set when an interrupt is enabled, IRQ is immediately set at an active level, although the interrupt initiating the event may have occurred much earlier. As a result, there are cases where the program should clear such earlier initiated interrupts before first enabling new interrupts. When an interrupt event occurs, the relating flag bit is set to logic 1 in Register C. These flag bits are set independent of the state of the corresponding enable bit in Register B. The flag bit can be used in a polling mode without enabling the corresponding enable bits. When a flag is set, an indication is given to software that an interrupt event has occurred since the flag bit was last read. However, care should be taken when using the flag bits as they are cleared each time Register C is read. Double latching is included with Register C so that bits which are set remain stable throughout the read cycle. All bits which are set (high) are cleared when read and new interrupts which are pending during the read cycle are held until after the cycle is completed. One, two, or three bits can be set when reading Register C. Each utilized flag bit should be examined when read to ensure that no interrupts are lost. The alternative flag bit usage method is with fully enabled interrupts. When an interrupt flag bit is set and the corresponding interrupt enable bit is also set, the IRQ pin is asserted low. IRQ is asserted as long as at least one of the three interrupt sources has its flag and enable bits both set. The IRQF bit in Register C is a one whenever the IRQ pin is being driven low. Determination that the RTC initiated an interrupt is accomplished by reading Register C. A logic one in bit 7 (IRQF bit) indicates that one or more interrupts have been initiated by the DS1495/DS1497. The act of reading Register C clears all active flag bits and the IRQF bit. 020894 7/19 DS1495/DS1497 OSCILLATOR CONTROL BITS When the DS1495/DS1497 is shipped from the factory, the internal oscillator is turned off. This feature prevents the lithium battery from being used until it is installed in a system. A pattern of 010 in bits 4 through 6 of Register A will turn the oscillator on and enable the countdown chain. A pattern of 11X will turn the oscillator on, but holds the countdown chain of the oscillator in reset. All other combinations of bits 4 through 6 keep the oscillator off. SQUARE WAVE OUTPUT SELECTION Thirteen of the 15 divider taps are made available to a 1-of-15 selector, as shown in the block diagram of Figure 1. The first purpose of selecting a divider tap is to generate a square wave output signal on the SQW pin. The RS0-RS3 bits in Register A establish the square wave output frequency. These frequencies are listed in Table 2. The SQW frequency selection shares its 1-of-15 selector with the periodic interrupt generator. Once the frequency is selected, the output of the SQW pin can be turned on and off under program control with the square wave enable bit (SQWE). PERIODIC INTERRUPT SELECTION The periodic interrupt will cause the IRQ pin to go to an active state from once every 500 ms to once every 122 µs. This function is separate from the alarm interrupt which can be output from once per second to once per day. The periodic interrupt rate is selected using the same Register A bits which select the square wave frequency (see Table 1). Changing the Register A bits affects both the square wave frequency and the periodic interrupt output. However, each function has a separate enable bit in Register B. The SQWE bit controls the square wave output. Similarly, the periodic interrupt is enabled by the PIE bit in Register B. The periodic interrupt can be used with software counters to measure inputs, create output intervals, or await the next needed software function. PERIODIC INTERRUPT RATE AND SQUARE WAVE OUTPUT FREQUENCY Table 2 SELECT BITS REGISTER A tPI PERIODIC INTERRUPT RATE SQW OUTPUT FREQUENCY RS3 RS2 RS1 RS0 0 0 0 0 None None 0 0 0 1 3.90625 ms 256 Hz 0 0 1 0 7.8125 ms 128 Hz 0 0 1 1 122.070 µs 8.192 KHz 0 1 0 0 244.141 µs 4.096 KHz 0 1 0 1 488.281 µs 2.048 KHz 0 1 1 0 976.5625 µs 1.024 KHz 0 1 1 1 1.953125 ms 512 Hz 1 0 0 0 3.90625 ms 256 Hz 1 0 0 1 7.8125 ms 128 Hz 1 0 1 0 15.625 ms 64 Hz 1 0 1 1 31.25 ms 32 Hz 1 1 0 0 62.5 ms 16 Hz 1 1 0 1 125 ms 8 Hz 1 1 1 0 250 ms 4 Hz 1 1 1 1 500 ms 2 Hz 020894 8/19 DS1495/DS1497 UPDATE CYCLE The DS1495/DS1497 executes an update cycle once per second regardless of the SET bit in Register B. When the SET bit in Register B is set to one, the user copy of the double buffered time, calendar, and alarm bytes is frozen and will not update as the time increments. However, the time countdown chain continues to update the internal copy of the buffer. This feature allows time to maintain accuracy independent of reading or writing the time, calendar, and alarm buffers and also guarantees that time and calendar information is consistent. The update cycle also compares each alarm byte with the corresponding time byte and issues an alarm if a match or if a “don’t care” code is present in all three positions. There are three methods that can handle access of the real-time clock that avoid any possibility of accessing inconsistent time and calendar data. The first method uses the update-ended interrupt. If enabled, an interrupt occurs after every update cycle that indicates that over 999 ms are available to read valid time and date information. If this interrupt is used, the IRQF bit in Regis- ter C should be cleared before leaving the interrupt routine. A second method uses the update-in-progress bit (UIP) in Register A to determine if the update cycle is in progress. The UIP bit will pulse once per second. After the UIP bit goes high, the update transfer occurs 244 µs later. If a low is read on the UIP bit, the user has at least 244 µs before the time/calendar data will be changed. Therefore, the user should avoid interrupt service routines that would cause the time needed to read valid time/calendar data to exceed 244 µs. The third method uses a periodic interrupt to determine if an update cycle is in progress. The UIP bit in Register A is set high between the setting of the PF bit in Register C (see Figure 3). Periodic interrupts that occur at a rate of greater than tBUC allow valid time and date information to be reached at each occurrence of the periodic interrupt. The reads should be complete within (tPI/2+tBUC) to ensure that data is not read during the update cycle. UPDATE-ENDED AND PERIODIC INTERRUPT RELATIONSHIP Figure 4 UIP BIT IN REGISTER A t BUC UF BIT IN REGISTER C t PI/2 t PI/2 PF BIT IN REGISTER C t PI tPI = Periodic interrupt time interval per Table 1. tBUC = Delay time before update cycle = 244 µs. 020894 9/19 DS1495/DS1497 REGISTERS The DS1495/DS1497 has four control registers which are accessible at all times, even during the update cycle. REGISTER A MSB LSB BIT 7 BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 UIP DV2 DV1 DV0 RS3 RS2 RS1 RS0 UIP - The Update In Progress (UIP) bit is a status flag that can be monitored. When the UIP bit is a one, the update transfer will soon occur. When UIP is a zero, the update transfer will not occur for at least 244 µs. The time, calendar, and alarm information in RAM is fully available for access when the UIP bit is zero. The UIP bit is read only. Writing the SET bit in Register B to a one inhibits any update transfer and clears the UIP status bit. DV2, DV1, DV0 - These three bits are used to turn the oscillator on or off and to reset the countdown chain. A pattern of 010 is the only combination of bits that will turn the oscillator on and allow the RTC to keep time. A pattern of 11X will enable the oscillator but holds the countdown chain in reset. The next update will occur at 500 ms after a pattern of 010 is written to DV2, DV1, and DV0. RS3, RS2, RS1, RS0 - These four rate-selection bits select one of the 13 taps on the 15-stage divider or disable the divider output. The tap selected can be used to generate an output square wave (SQW pin) and/or a periodic interrupt. The user can do one of the following 1. Enable the interrupt with the PIE bit; 2. Enable the SQW output pin with the SQWE bit; 3. Enable both at the same time and the same rate; or 4. Enable neither. Table 2 lists the periodic interrupt rates and the square wave frequencies that can be chosen with the RS bits. REGISTER B MSB LSB BIT 7 BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 SET PIE AIE UIE SQWE DM 24/12 DSE SET - When the SET bit is a zero, the update transfer functions normally by advancing the counts once per second. When the SET bit is written to a one, any update 020894 10/19 transfer is inhibited and the program can initialize the time and calendar bytes without an update occurring in the midst of initializing. Read cycles can be executed in a similar manner. SET is a read/write bit that is not modified by internal functions of the DS1495/DS1497. PIE - The Periodic Interrupt Enable bit is a read/write bit which allows the Periodic Interrupt Flag (PF) bit in Register C to drive the IRQ pin low. When the PIE bit is set to one, periodic interrupts are generated by driving the IRQ pin low at a rate specified by the RS3-RS0 bits of Register A. A zero in the PIE bit blocks the IRQ output from being driven by a periodic interrupt, but the Periodic Flag (PF) bit is still set at the periodic rate. PIE is not modified by any internal DS1495/DS1497 functions but is cleared by the hardware RESET signal. AIE - The Alarm Interrupt Enable (AIE) bit is a read/write bit which, when set to a one, permits the Alarm Flag (AF) bit in register C to assert IRQ. An alarm interrupt occurs for each second that the three time bytes equal the three alarm bytes including a don’t care alarm code of binary 11XXXXXX. When the AIE bit is set to zero, the AF bit does not initiate the IRQ signal. The internal functions of the DS1495/DS1497 do not affect the AIE bit but is cleared by RESET. UIE - The Update Ended Interrupt Enable (UIE) bit is a read/write bit that enables the Update Ended Flag (UF) bit in Register C to assert IRQ. The SET bit going high or the RESET pin going low clears the UIE bit. SQWE - When the Square Wave Enable (SQWE) bit is set to a one, a square wave signal at the frequency set by the rate-selection bits RS3 through RS0 is driven out on a SQW pin. When the SQWE bit is set to zero, the SQW pin is held low. SQWE is a read/write bit and is cleared by RESET. DM - The Data Mode (DM) bit indicates whether time and calendar information is in binary or BCD format. The DM bit is set by the program to the appropriate format and can be read as required. This bit is not modified by internal functions. A one in DM signifies binary data while a zero in DM specifies Binary Coded Decimal (BCD) data. 24/12 - The 24/12 control bit establishes the format of the hours byte. A one indicates the 24-hour mode and a zero indicates the 12-hour mode. This bit is read/write. DS1495/DS1497 DSE - The Daylight Savings Enable (DSE) bit is a read/ write bit which enables two special updates when DSE is set to one. On the first Sunday in April the time increments from 1:59:59 AM to 3:00:00 AM. On the last Sunday in October when the time first reaches 1:59:59 AM it changes to 1:00:00 AM. These special updates do not occur when the DSE bit is a zero. This bit is not affected by internal functions. REGISTER C MSB LSB BIT 7 BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 IRQF PF AF UF 0 0 0 0 IRQF – The Interrupt Request Flag (IRQF) bit is set to a one when one or more of the following are true: PF = PIE = 1 AF = AIE = 1 UF = UIE = 1 i.e., IRQF = (PF • PIE) + (AF • AIE) + (UF AF – A one in the Alarm Interrupt Flag (AF) bit indicates that the current time has matched the alarm time. If the AIE bit is also a one, the IRQ pin will go low and a one will appear in the IRQF bit. A read of Register C or a RESET will clear AF. UF – The Update Ended Interrupt Flag (UF) bit is set after each update cycle. When the UIE bit is set to one, the one in UF causes the IRQF bit to be a one which will assert the IRQ pin. UF is cleared by reading Register C or by RESET. BIT 0 THROUGH BIT 3 – These are reserved bits of the status Register C. These bits always read zero and cannot be written. REGISTER D MSB • UIE) Any time the IRQF bit is a one, the IRQ pin is driven low. All flag bits are cleared after Register C is read by the program or when the RESET pin is low. PF – The Periodic Interrupt Flag (PF) is a read-only bit which is set to a one when an edge is detected on the selected tap of the divider chain. The RS3 through RS0 bits establish the periodic rate. PF is set to a one independent of the state of the PIE bit. When both PF and PIE are ones, the IRQ signal is active and will set the IRQF bit. The PF bit is cleared by a software read of Register C or by RESET. LSB BIT 7 BIT 6 BIT 5 BIT 4 BIT 3 BIT 2 BIT 1 BIT 0 VRT 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 VRT – The Valid RAM and Time (VRT) bit is set to the one state by Dallas Semiconductor Corporation prior to shipment. This bit is not writable and should always be a one when read. If a zero is ever present, an exhausted internal lithium energy source is indicated and both the contents of the RTC data and RAM data are questionable. BIT 6 THROUGH BIT 0 – The remaining bits of Register D are reserved and not usable. They cannot be written and, when read, they will always read zero. 020894 11/19 DS1495/DS1497 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS* VDD Pin Potential to Ground Pin Input Voltage Power Dissipation Storage Temperature -0.3V to +7.0V VSS – 0.3 to VDD + 0.3V 500 mW DS1497: –40°C to +70°C DS1495: –55°C to +125°C 0°C to 70°C 260°C for 10 seconds Ambient Temperature Soldering Temperature * This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operation sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods of time may affect reliability. (0°C to 70°C) RECOMMENDED DC OPERATING CONDITIONS CHARACTERISTIC TEST CONDITION Supply Voltage SYM MIN MAX UNITS VCC 4.5 5.5 V Input High Voltage Recognized as a High Signal Over Recommended VDD and tA Range VIH 2.2 VDD+ 0.3 V V Input Low Voltage Recognized as a Low Signal Over Recommended VDD and tA Range VIL -0.3 0.8 V VBAT 2.5 3.7 V Battery Voltage DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS CHARACTERISTIC (VDD = 5.0V + 10%, VSS = 0V, tA = 0° C to 70°C) TEST CONDITION SYM MIN II MAX UNIT +1 µA Input Leakage VIL=0V, VIH=VDD For any Single Pin: D0-7, RD, WR, A0-5, XRAM, RTC, RESET Output High Voltage VDD=5.0V ILOAD =1 mA VOH Output Low Voltage VDD = 5.0V ILOAD = 2 mA VOL 0.4 V Power Supply Current Outputs Unloaded IDD 50 mA STBY pin Input Current STBY=VDD ISTBY +500 µA STBY pin Input Current STBY=VSS ISTBY –1 µA TEST CONDITION Reset Pulse Width Oscillator Startup V SYM MIN tRWL 5 MAX UNIT µs tRC 1 s IRQ Release from RD High tIRDS 2 µs IRQ Release from RESET Low tIRR 2 µs 020894 12/19 From Software Enable Via DV Bits 2.4 NOTES (0°C to 70°C; VDD = 4.5V to 5.5V) AC SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS CHARACTERISTIC NOTES NOTES DS1495/DS1497 IRQ RELEASE DELAY RD VHIGH tRWL RESET V HIGH IRQ tIRR tIRDS OSCILLATOR START-UP tRC SQW Pin WR VHIGH DV0–2 NOTE: Timing assumes RS3-0 Bits = 0011, minimum tPI. 020894 13/19 DS1495/DS1497 (0°C to 70°C; VDD = 4.5V to 5.5V) BUS TIMING PARAMETER SYM MIN Cycle Time tCYC 395 PWRWL 200 Pulse Width, RD/WR Low Signal Rise and Fall Time, RTC, XRAM, RD, WR TYP MAX UNIT DC ns ns tR, tF 30 ns Address Hold Time tAH 20 ns Address Setup Time Before RD tARS 50 ns Address Setup Time Before WR tAWS 0 ns RTC/XRAM Select Setup Time Before RD tCRS 50 ns RTC/XRAM Select Setup Time Before WR tCWS 0 ns RTC/XRAM Select Hold Time After RD or WR tCH 20 ns Read Data Hold Time tDHR 10 Write Data Hold Time tDHW 0 Output Data Delay Time from RD tDDR 20 Write Data Setup Time tDSW 200 100 ns 200 +5 V 1.1KΩ D.U.T. 50 pF 020894 14/19 ns ns OUTPUT LOAD 680Ω ns NOTES DS1495/DS1497 BUS READ/WRITE TIMING t CYC VALID A0-A5 t t F R RTC XRAM t CWS t t t F WR t CH R PWRWL AWS t t DSW DATA BUS WRITE DATA D0–D7 AH t DHW VALID DATA BUS READ DATA D0–D7 VALID t CRS t DDR RD t t CH PWRWL ARS t DHR t AH POWER-DOWN/ POWER-UP TIMING PARAMETER (tA = 25°C) SYMBOL CE High to Power Fail tPF Recovery at Power Up tREC MIN TYP MAX UNITS 0 ns 150 NOTES ms VCC Slew Rate Power Down tF 4.0 <VCC < 4.5V 300 µs VCC Slew Rate Power Down tFB 3.0 <VCC< 4.0V 10 µs VCC Slew Rate Power Up tR 4.5V>VCC>4.0V 0 µs Expected Data Retention tDR 10 years NOTE: CE is chip enabled for access, an internal signal which is defined by (RD + WR) (XRAM + RTC). CAPACITANCE PARAMETER Input Capacitance Output Capacitance (tA = 25°C) SYMBOL MIN TYP MAX UNITS CIN 12 pF COUT 12 pF NOTES 020894 15/19 DS1495/DS1497 GENERAL INFORMATION PARAMETER SYM MIN Expected Data Retention @ 25°C (DS1497 only) tDR 10 Years Clock Accuracy for tDR @ 25°C (DS1497 only) CQ ±1 Min/Mo Clock Accuracy Temperature Coefficient (DS1497) K Clock Temperature Coefficient Turnover Temperature (DS1497 only) tO Chip Enable Threshold (DS1497 only) CETHR TYP MAX 20 UNIT .050 ppm/°C2 30 0°C 4.5 V POWER–UP CONDITION CE VIH tREC 4.5V 4.25V 4.0V VCC tR POWER FAIL NOTE: CE is an internal signal generated by the power switching reference in the DS149X products. POWER–DOWN CONDITION CE ÉÉÉÉÉ ÉÉÉÉÉ ÉÉÉÉÉ VIH tPF tF VCC 4.5V 4.25V 4.0V VBAT tFB POWER FAIL 020894 16/19 tDR NOTES DS1495/DS1497 DS1495 28–PIN DIP PKG MIN MAX A IN. MM 1.445 36.70 1.470 37.34 B IN. MM 0.530 13.46 0.550 13.97 C IN. MM 0.140 3.56 0.160 4.06 D IN. MM 0.600 15.24 0.625 15.88 E IN. MM 0.015 0.38 0.040 1.02 F IN. MM 0.120 3.05 0.145 3.68 G IN. MM 0.090 2.29 0.110 2.79 C H IN. MM 0.625 15.88 0.675 17.15 F J IN. MM 0.008 0.20 0.012 0.30 K IN. MM 0.015 0.38 0.022 0.56 B D 1 A K G E 28–PIN DIM J H 020894 17/19 DS1495/DS1497 DS1495S 28–PIN SOIC K G PKG 28-PIN DIM MIN MAX A IN. MM 0.706 17.93 0.728 18.49 B IN. MM 0.338 8.58 0.350 8.89 C IN. MM 0.086 2.18 0.110 2.79 D IN. MM 0.020 0.58 0.050 1.27 E IN. MM 0.002 0.05 0.014 0.36 F IN. MM 0.090 2.29 0.124 3.15 G IN. MM 0.050 1.27 H IN. MM 0.460 11.68 0.480 12.19 J IN. MM 0.006 0.15 0.013 0.33 K IN. MM 0.014 0.36 0.020 0.51 BSC C A E B F 0–8 deg. typ. J H D 020894 18/19 DS1495/DS1497 DS1497 28–PIN 720 MIL FLUSH ENCAPSULATED 15 28 PKG 1 14 A C E F D K G 13 EQUAL SPACES AT .100 ± .010 TNA NOTE: 28-PIN DIM MIN MAX A IN. MM 1.520 38.61 1.540 39.12 B IN. MM 0.695 17.65 0.720 18.29 C IN. MM 0.350 8.89 0.375 9.52 D IN. MM 0.100 2.54 0.130 3.30 E IN. MM 0.015 0.38 0.030 0.76 F IN. MM 0.110 2.79 0.140 3.56 G IN. MM 0.090 2.29 0.110 2.79 H IN. MM 0.590 14.99 0.630 16.00 J IN. MM 0.008 0.20 0.012 0.30 K IN. MM 0.015 0.38 0.021 0.53 PINS 3, 4, 18 AND 22 ARE MISSING BY DESIGN. J H B 020894 19/19