ETC BT8960EPF

Bt8960
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
The Bt8960 is a full-duplex 2B1Q transceiver based on Rockwell’s HDSL technology. It supports Nx64 kbps transmission of more than 18,000 feet over 26 AWG
copper telephone wire without repeaters. Small size and low power dissipation
make the Bt8960 ideal for line-powered voice pairgain systems capable of providing four or six clear 64 kbps channels.
The Bt8960 is a highly integrated device that includes all of the active circuitry
needed for a complete 2B1Q transceiver. In the receive portion of the Bt8960, a
variable gain amplifier optimizes the signal level according to the dynamic range
of the analog-to-digital converter. Once the signal is digitized, sophisticated adaptive echo cancellation, equalization, and detection DSP algorithms reproduce the
originally transmitted far-end signal.
In the transmitter, the transmit source and scrambler operation is programmable via the microcomputer interface. A highly linear digital-to-analog converter
with programmable gain, sets the transmission power for optimal performance. A
pulse-shaping filter and a low distortion line driver generate the signal characteristics needed to drive a large range of subscriber lines at low-bit error rates.
Startup and performance monitoring operations are controlled via the microprocessor interface. C-language source code supporting these operations is supplied under a no-fee license agreement from Rockwell. The Bt8960 includes a
glueless interface to both Intel and Motorola microprocessors.
Distinguishing Features
•
•
•
•
•
•
Functional Block Diagram
•
•
Analog
Receive
MPU
Bus
Analog
Transmit
Variable
Gain
Amplifier
Analogto-Digital
Converter
Digital
Signal
Processor
Framer/
Channel
Unit
Interface
Microcomputer
Interface
Line
Driver
Recovered
Data and
Clock
PulseShaping
Filter
Programmable
Gain
DAC
•
•
•
Single-chip 2B1Q transceiver solution
All 2B1Q transceiver functions integrated into a single monolithic device
– Receiver gain control and A/D
converter
– DSP functions including echo
cancellation, equalization, timing
recovery, and symbol detection
– Programmable gain transmit DAC,
pulse-shaping filter and line driver
Supports operation from 160 to 416
kbps
Capable of transceiving over the ANSI
T1.601 and ETSI ETR 080 ISDN
test loops
Flexible Monitoring and Control
– Glueless interface to Intel 8051 and
Motorola 68302 processors
– Access to embedded filters, performance meters and timers
Backwards compatible with Bt8952
software API commands
JTAG/IEEE Std 1149.1-1990
compliant
Single +5 V power supply
operation
600 mW power consumption at 288
kbps (typical)
100-pin PQFP package
–40˚C to +85˚C operation
Applications
Transmit
Data
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Voice/data pairgain systems
Internet connectivity
ISDN basic-rate interface
concentrators
ISDN H0 transport
Extended range fractional T1/E1
Cellular/microcellular base stations
Personal Communications Systems
(PCS) radio ports and cell switches
Ordering Information
Order Number
Package
Ambient Temperature
Bt8960EPF
100-Pin Plastic Quad Flat Pack (PQFP)
–40˚C to +85˚C
Copyright © 1997 Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
Print date: December 1997
Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. reserves the right to make changes to its products or specifications to improve performance,
reliability, or manufacturability. Information furnished is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is
assumed for its use; nor for any infringement of patents or other rights of third parties which may result from its use. No license is
granted by its implication or otherwise under any patent or intellectual property rights of Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc.
Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. products are not designed or intended for use in life support appliances, devices, or systems
where malfunction of a Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. product can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury or
death. Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. customers using or selling Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. products for use
in such applications do so at their own risk and agree to fully indemnify Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. for any damages
resulting from such improper use or sale.
Bt is a registered trademark of Rockwell Semiconductor Systems, Inc. SLC® is a registered trademark of AT&T Technologies, Inc.
Product names or services listed in this publication are for identification purposes only, and may be trademarks or registered
trademarks of their respective companies. All other marks mentioned herein are the property of their respective holders.
Specifications are subject to change without notice.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Table of Contents
List of Figures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii
List of Tables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix
1.0 System Overview . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1.1 Functional Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
1.1.1 Transmit Section . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.1.2 Receive Section. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.1.3 Timing Recovery and Clock Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.1.4 Microcomputer Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
1.1.5 Test and Diagnostic Interface (JTAG) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3
3
3
4
4
1.2 Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
1.2.1 Voice/Data Pairgain. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
1.2.2 Internet Connectivity Transport . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
1.2.3 ISDN Basic Rate Interface Concentrator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7
1.3 Pin Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
2.0 Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
2.1 Transmit Section . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
2.1.1 Symbol Source Selector/Scrambler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.1.2 Variable Gain Digital-to-Analog Converter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.1.3 Pulse-Shaping Filter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.1.4 Line Driver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
16
18
18
18
2.2 Receive Section. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
2.2.1 Variable Gain Amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.2 Analog-to-Digital Converter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3 Digital Signal Processor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3.1 Digital Front-End . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3.2 Offset Adjustment . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3.3 DC Level Meter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3.4 Signal Level Meter . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3.5 Overflow Detection and Monitoring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3.6 Far-End Level Meter. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.3.7 Far-End Level Alarm . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
N8960DSB
19
20
20
21
22
22
22
22
22
22
iii
Bt8960
Table of Contents
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2.4 Echo Canceler . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.4.1 Linear Echo Canceler (LEC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.4.2 Nonlinear Echo Canceler (NEC) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.5 Equalizer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.5.1 Digital Automatic Gain Control . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.5.2 Feed Forward Equalizer (FFE) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.5.3 Error Predictor (EP). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.5.4 Decision Feedback Equalizer (DFE) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.5.5 Microcoding . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.6 Detector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.6.1 Slicer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.6.2 Peak Detector (PKD) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.6.3 Error Signals . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.6.4 Scrambler Module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.6.5 Sync Detector . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.2.6.6 Detector Meters. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
23
23
23
23
23
24
24
24
24
24
24
25
25
25
26
26
2.3 Timing Recovery and Clock Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
2.3.0.7 Timing Recovery Circuit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
2.3.0.8 Crystal Amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
2.4 Channel Unit Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
2.5 Microcomputer Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
2.5.1 Source Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.2 Microcomputer Read/Write. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.2.1 RAM Access Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.2.2 Multiplexed Address/Data Bus. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.2.3 Separated Address/Data Bus . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.3 Interrupt Request . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.4 Reset. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.5 Registers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
2.5.6 Timers. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
32
32
33
33
33
33
34
34
34
2.6 Test and Diagnostic Interface (JTAG) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
3.0 Registers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
3.1 Conventions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 37
3.2 Register Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
3.2.1 0x00—Global Modes and Status Register (global_modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.2 0x01—Serial Monitor Source Select Register (serial_monitor_source) . . . . . . . . .
3.2.3 0x02—Interrupt Mask Register Low (mask_low_reg) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.4 0x03—Interrupt Mask Register High (mask_high_reg) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.5 0x04—Timer Source Register (timer_source) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.6 0x05—IRQ Source Register (irq_source) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.7 0x06—Channel Unit Interface Modes Register (cu_interface_modes) . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.8 0x07—Receive Phase Select Register (receive_phase_select) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.9 0x08—Linear Echo Canceller Modes Register (linear_ec_modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . .
iv
N8960DSB
44
44
45
46
46
47
47
48
48
Bt8960
Table of Contents
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.10 0x09—Nonlinear Echo Canceller Modes Register (nonlinear_ec_modes) . . . . . .
3.2.11 0x0A—Decision Feedback Equalizer Modes Register (dfe_modes) . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.12 0x0B—Transmitter Modes Register (transmitter_modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.13 0x0C—Timer Restart Register (timer_restart) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.14 0x0D—Timer Enable Register (timer_enable). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.15 0x0E—Timer Continuous Mode Register (timer_continuous) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.16 0x0F—Test Register (reserved2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.17 0x10, 0x11—Startup Timer 1 Interval Register (sut1_low, sut1_high). . . . . . . . .
3.2.18 0x12, 0x13—Startup Timer 2 Interval Register (sut2_low, sut2_high). . . . . . . . .
3.2.19 0x14, 0x15—Startup Timer 3 Interval Register (sut3_low, sut3_high). . . . . . . . .
3.2.20 0x16, 0x17—Startup Timer 4 Interval Register (sut4_low, sut4_high). . . . . . . . .
3.2.21 0x18, 0x19—Meter Timer Interval Register (meter_low, meter_high) . . . . . . . . .
3.2.22 0x20—Test Register (reserved9) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.23 0x1A, 0x1B—SNR Alarm Timer Interval Register
(snr_timer_low, snr_timer_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.24 0x1C, 0x1D—General Purpose Timer 3 Interval Register (t3_low, t3_high) . . . . .
3.2.25 0x1E, 0x1F—General Purpose Timer 4 Interval Register (t4_low, t4_high) . . . . .
3.2.26 0x21—ADC Control Register (adc_control) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.27 0x22—PLL Modes Register (pll_modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.28 0x23—Test Register (reserved10) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.29 0x24, 0x25—Timing Recovery PLL Phase Offset Register (pll_phase_offset_low,
pll_phase_offset_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.30 0x26, 0x27—Receiver DC Offset Register (dc_offset_low, dc_offset_high) . . . . .
3.2.31 0x28—Transmitter Calibration Register (tx_calibrate) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.32 0x29—Transmitter Gain Register (tx_gain) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.33 0x2A, 0x2B—Noise-Level Histogram Threshold Register
(noise_histogram_th_low, noise_histogram_th_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.34 0x2C, 0x2D—Error Predictor Pause Threshold Register
(ep_pause_th_low, ep_pause_th_high). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.35 0x2E—Scrambler Synchronization Threshold Register (scr_sync_th) . . . . . . . . .
3.2.36 0x30, 0x31—Far-End High Alarm Threshold Register
(far_end_high_alarm_th_low, far_end_high_alarm_th_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.37 0x32, 0x33—Far-End Low Alarm Threshold Register
(far_end_low_alarm_th_low, far_end_low_alarm_th_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.38 0x34, 0x35—SNR Alarm Threshold Register (snr_alarm_th_low,
snr_alarm_th_high). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.39 0x36, 0x37—Cursor Level Register (cursor_level_low, cursor_level_high) . . . . .
3.2.40 0x38, 0x39—DAGC Target Register (dagc_target_low, dagc_target_high). . . . . .
3.2.41 0x3A—Symbol Detector Modes Register (detector_modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.42 0x3B—Peak Detector Delay Register (peak_detector_delay) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.43 0x3C—Digital AGC Modes Register (dagc_modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.44 0x3D—Feed Forward Equalizer Modes Register (ffe_modes). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.45 0x3E—Error Predictor Modes Register (ep_modes) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.46 0x40, 0x41—Phase Detector Meter Register (pdm_low, pdm_high) . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.47 0x42—Overflow Meter Register (overflow_meter) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.48 0x44, 0x45—DC Level Meter Register (dc_meter_low, dc_meter_high) . . . . . . .
N8960DSB
49
50
50
52
52
53
53
53
53
53
53
53
54
54
54
54
55
56
57
57
57
57
58
59
59
59
59
59
60
60
60
61
62
62
63
63
64
64
64
v
Bt8960
Table of Contents
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.49 0x46, 0x47—Signal Level Meter Register (slm_low, slm_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.50 0x48, 0x49—Far-End Level Meter Register (felm_low, felm_high). . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.51 0x4A, 0x4B—Noise Level Histogram Meter Register
(noise_histogram_low, noise_histogram_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.52 0x4C, 0x4D—Bit Error Rate Meter Register
(ber_meter_low, ber_meter_high). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.53 0x4E—Symbol Histogram Meter Register (symbol_histogram). . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.54 0x50, 0x51—Noise Level Meter Register (nlm_low, nlm_high) . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.55 0x5E, 0x5F— PLL Frequency Register
(pll_frequency_low, pll_frequency_high). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.56 0x70—LEC Read Tap Select Register (linear_ec_tap_select_read). . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.57 0x71—LEC Write Tap Select Register (linear_ec_tap_select_write) . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.58 0x72—NEC Read Tap Select Register (nonlinear_ec_tap_select_read) . . . . . . . .
3.2.59 0x73—NEC Write Tap Select Register (nonlinear_ec_tap_select_write). . . . . . . .
3.2.60 0x74—DFE Read Tap Select Register (dfe_tap_select_read) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.61 0x75—DFE Write Tap Select Register (dfe_tap_select_write). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.62 0x76—Scratch Pad Read Tap Select (sp_tap_select_read) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.63 0x77—Scratch Pad Write Tap Select (sp_tap_select_write) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.64 0x78—Equalizer Read Select Register (eq_add_read) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.65 0x79—Equalizer Write Select Register (eq_add_write) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.66 0x7A—Equalizer Microcode Read Select Register
(eq_microcode_add_read) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.67 0x7B—Equalizer Microcode Write Select Register
(eq_microcode_add_write) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3.2.68 0x7C–0x7F—Access Data Register (access_data_byte3:0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
65
65
65
66
66
66
67
67
67
67
68
68
68
68
69
69
70
70
70
70
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
4.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
4.2 Recommended Operating Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
4.3 Electrical Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
4.4 Clock Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
4.5 Channel Unit Interface Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4.6.1 Test and Diagnostic Interface Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4.6.2 Analog Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
4.6.3 Test Conditions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
79
84
86
89
4.7 Timing Measurements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
4.8 Mechanical Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
vi
N8960DSB
Bt8960
List of Figures
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
List of Figures
Figure 1-1.
Figure 1-2.
Figure 1-3.
Figure 1-4.
Figure 2-1.
Figure 2-2.
Figure 2-3.
Figure 2-4.
Figure 2-5.
Figure 2-6.
Figure 2-7.
Figure 2-8.
Figure 4-1.
Figure 4-2.
Figure 4-3.
Figure 4-4.
Figure 4-5.
Figure 4-6.
Figure 4-7.
Figure 4-8.
Figure 4-9.
Figure 4-10.
Figure 4-11.
Figure 4-12.
Figure 4-13.
Figure 4-14.
Figure 4-15.
Figure 4-16.
Figure 4-17.
Figure 4-18.
Figure 4-19.
Figure 4-20.
2B1Q Terminal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
Bt8960 Detailed Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
PCM6 Voice Pairgain Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Pin Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8
Transmit Section Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15
First-Order Echo Cancellation Using the Variable Gain Amplifier . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19
Receiver Digital Signal Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20
Digital Front-End Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21
Timing Recovery and Clock Interface Block Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 28
Serial Sign-Bit First Mode. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Parallel Master Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 30
Parallel Slave Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
MCLK Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Clock Control Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Channel Unit Interface Timing, Parallel Master Mode. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Channel Unit Interface Timing, Parallel Slave Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Channel Unit Interface Timing, Serial Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
MCI Write Timing, Intel Mode (MOTEL = 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
MCI Write Timing, Motorola Mode (MOTEL = 1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 81
MCI Read Timing, Intel Mode (MOTEL = 0) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
MCI Read Timing, Motorola Mode (MOTEL = 1) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
Internal Write Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83
JTAG Interface Timing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
SMON Timing. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
Transmitted Pulse Template. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
Transmitter Test Circuit . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 89
Standard Output Load (Totem Pole and Three-State Outputs) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Open-Drain Output Load (IRQ). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
Input Waveforms for Timing Tests. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
Output Waveforms for Timing Tests . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 91
Output Waveforms for Three-state Enable and Disable Tests. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92
100-Pin Plastic Quad Flat Pack. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93
N8960DSB
vii
Bt8960
List of Figures
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
viii
N8960DSB
Bt8960
List of Tables
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
List of Tables
Table 1-1.
Table 1-2.
Table 2-1.
Table 2-2.
Table 2-3.
Table 2-4.
Table 2-5.
Table 2-6.
Table 2-7.
Table 2-8.
Table 3-1.
Table 4-1.
Table 4-2.
Table 4-3.
Table 4-4.
Table 4-5.
Table 4-6.
Table 4-7.
Table 4-8.
Table 4-9.
Table 4-10.
Table 4-11.
Table 4-12.
Table 4-13.
Table 4-14.
Table 4-15.
Table 4-16.
Table 4-17.
Table 4-18.
Table 4-19.
Table 4-20.
Pin Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9
Hardware Signal Definitions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 10
Symbol Source Selector/Scrambler Modes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16
Four-Level Bit-to-Symbol Conversions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Two-Level Bit-to-Symbol Conversions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17
Two-Level Symbol-to-Bit Conversion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Four-Level Symbol-to-Bit Conversion. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25
Crystal Oscillator Circuit Component Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 29
Timers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 35
Device Identification JTAG Register . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36
Register Table. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 38
Absolute Maximum Ratings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
Recommended Operating Conditions. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
Electrical Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 73
External Clock Timing Requirements (MCLK). . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
HCLK Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
Symbol Clock (QCLK) Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 75
Channel Unit Interface Timing Requirements, Parallel Master Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Channel Unit Interface Switching Characteristics, Parallel Master Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76
Channel Unit Interface Timing Requirements, Parallel Slave Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Channel Unit Interface Switching Characteristics, Parallel Slave Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 77
Channel Unit Interface Timing Requirements, Serial Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Channel Unit Interface Switching Characteristics, Serial Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 78
Microcomputer Interface Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79
Microcomputer Interface Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 80
Test and Diagnostic Interface Timing Requirements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Test and Diagnostic Interface Switching Characteristics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 84
Receiver Analog Requirements and Specifications. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
Transmitter Analog Requirements and Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87
Transmitted Pulse Template . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88
Transmitter Test Circuit Component Values . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
N8960DSB
ix
Bt8960
List of Tables
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
x
N8960DSB
1.0 System Overview
1.1 Functional Summary
The Bt8960 2B1Q transceiver is an integral component of Rockwell's telecommunications product line. The major building blocks of a 2B1Q terminal are
shown in Figure 1-1.
Figure 1-1. 2B1Q Terminal
Receive
Data
Transmit
Data
Framer/
Channel
Unit
Bt8960
Transceiver
N8960DSB
Transformer
and Hybrid
Twisted
Pair
1
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.1 Functional Summary
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
The Bt8960 comprises five major functions: a transmit section, a receive section, a timing recovery and clock interface, a microcomputer interface, and a test
and diagnostic interface. Figure 1-2 details the connections within and between
each of these functional blocks.
Figure 1-2. Bt8960 Detailed Block Diagram
Receive Section
RXP
RXN
Digital
Front
End
ADC
VGA
Echo
Canceler
Equalizer
Detector
Receive
Channel
Unit
Interface
RXBP
RXBN
AD[7:0]
ADDR[7:0]
Timing
Recovery/
PLL
Crystal
Amplifier
Control
and
Status
Registers
MUXED
MicroComputer
Interface
Voltage
Reference
Generator
READY
IRQ
TXN
TXLDIN
TXLDIP
2
PulseShaping
Filter
QCLK
XTALI/MCLK
XTALO
XOUT
RBIAS
VCOMO
VCOMI
VCCAP
Diagnostics
SMON
JTAG
TMS
TDI
TCK
TDO
Transmit Section
Line
Driver
HCLK
VRXP,VRXN
VTXP,VTXN
Timers
TXP
RQ[0]/BCLK
RBCLK
Microcomputer
Interface and
System Control
MOTEL
WR/R/W
RD/DS
CS
ALE
RST
RQ[1]/RDAT
TBCLK
VariableGain
DAC
TXPSN
TXPSP
N8960DSB
Symbol
Source/
Scrambler
Transmit
Channel
Unit
Interface
TQ[1]/TDAT
TQ[0]
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.1 Functional Summary
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
1.1.1 Transmit Section
The source of transmitted symbols is programmable through the microcomputer
interface. The primary choices include external 2B1Q-encoded data presented to
the TQ[1,0]/TDAT pins of the channel unit interface, internally looped-back
receive symbols from the detector, or a constant “all ones” source. The symbols
are then optionally scrambled. Isolated pulses can also be generated to support
the testing of pulse templates.
The digital symbols are transformed to an analog signal via the DAC, which is
highly linear in order to maximize the echo cancellation and detection properties
of the signal. In addition, the transmit power level of the DAC may be adjusted
via the Transmitter Gain Register [tx_gain; 0x29] to optimize performance. The
Transmitter Calibration Register [tx_calibrate; 0x28] contains the nominal setting
for the transmitter gain which is calibrated and hard-coded at the factory. The
pulse-shaping filter then conditions the signal to prevent crosstalk to adjacent subscriber lines. Finally, the differential line driver provides the current driving capabilities and low-distortion characteristics needed to drive a large range of
subscriber lines at low-bit error rates.
1.1.2 Receive Section
The differential Variable Gain Amplifier (VGA) receives the data from the subscriber line. Balancing inputs (RXBP, RXBN) are provided to accommodate firstorder transmit echo cancellation via an external hybrid. The gain is programmable so that the dynamic range of the Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) can be
maximized according to the attenuation of the subscriber line.
Digitized receive data is passed to the Digital Signal Processor (DSP) portion
of the Bt8960. After DC offset cancellation, a replica of the transmit signal is subtracted from the total receive signal by a digital echo canceler. The resultant farend signal is then conditioned by an equalization stage consisting of Automatic
Gain Control (AGC), a feed-forward equalizer, a decision-feedback equalizer,
and an error predictor. A mode-dependent detector is then used to recover the
2B1Q-encoded data from the equalized signal. The channel unit interface then
provides an optional descrambling function followed by parallel or serial output
of the sign and magnitude bits on pins RQ[1,0]/RDAT. A number of meters are
implemented within the receiver to provide average level indications at various
points in the receive signal path. The receive section also performs remote unit
clock recovery through an on-chip Phase Lock Loop (PLL) circuit.
1.1.3 Timing Recovery and Clock Interface
The clock interface includes a crystal amplifier module to reduce the external
components needed for clock generation. The crystal frequency must be 64 times
the desired symbol rate. When configured as a remote unit, the PLL module
recovers the incoming data clock and outputs it on the QCLK pin (and also the
BCLK pin for serial mode operation). The HCLK output, which is synchronized
to the QCLK signal, can be configured to cycle at 16, 32, or 64 times the symbol
rate.
N8960DSB
3
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.1 Functional Summary
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
1.1.4 Microcomputer Interface
The Microcomputer Interface (MCI) provides access to a 256-byte address space
within the transceiver. A combination of direct and indirect addressing methods
are used to access all internal locations. The MCI is designed to interface with
both Intel- and Motorola-style processors with no additional glue logic. A
MOTEL control pin is provided to configure the bus interface control/handshake
lines to conform to common Motorola/Intel conventions. A MUXED control pin
is provided to configure the bus interface address and data lines for multiplexed or
independent data/address bus operation. Little-endian data formatting (least significant byte of a multibyte word stored at the lowest byte-address location) is
used in all cases, regardless of MOTEL pin selection. A READY control pin is
provided to support wait-state insertion. An Interrupt Request (IRQ) output pin
supports low-latency responses to time-critical events within the transceiver.
Eight 16-bit timers and ten measurement meters are integrated into the transceiver. The timers support various metering functions within the receiver section,
and off-load the external microcomputer from complex timing operations associated with startup procedures. Control and monitoring access to the timers and
meters is provided through the microcomputer interface.
1.1.5 Test and Diagnostic Interface (JTAG)
The test and diagnostic interface comprises a test access port and a Serial Monitor
Output (SMON). The test access port conforms to IEEE Std 1149.1-1990, (IEEE
Standard Test Access Port and Boundary Scan Architecture). Also referred to as
Joint Test Action Group (JTAG), this interface provides direct serial access to
each of the transceiver’s I/O pins. This capability can be used during an in-circuit
board test to increase the testability and reduce the cost of the in-circuit test process.
The serial monitor output can be viewed as a real-time virtual probe for looking at the transceiver’s internal signals. The programmable signal source is shifted
out serially at 16 times the symbol rate. The majority of the receive signal path is
accessible through this output.
4
N8960DSB
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.2 Applications
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
1.2 Applications
1.2.1 Voice/Data Pairgain
A well-established market exists for voice pairgain systems. These systems transport several simultaneous phone conversations over a single twisted pair. They are
used by telecommunications service providers to maximize the utilization of the
existing copper plant, and allow it to provision many more telephone circuits than
possible with ordinary 4 kHz analog transport.
The external interfaces of voice pairgain systems, at both the central office and
remote ends, are analog POTS lines. Various carrier techniques exist to facilitate
the single-pair transmission such as: the Frequency Domain Multiplexed (FDM)
systems and Time Domain Multiplexed (TDM) systems. In FDM systems, each
voice channel is modulated by a successively higher carrier, therefore the composite transmission consists of several frequency bands. In TDM systems, the
voice data is digitized and sampled in a channel-multiplexed fashion. Although
FDM systems are currently fielded, recent trends are clearly toward TDM systems
due to the inherent advantages associated with digital transmission.
Traditional 1 + 3, also called PCM4 voice pairgain systems, use a combination of 2:1 ADPCM compression and basic rate ISDN U-interface devices to
transport four voice conversations on one twisted pair. The disadvantage of this
scheme is that clear 64 kbps channel capacity is lost due to the ADPCM voice
compression algorithm. This may prevent high-speed facsimile transmissions
from being transported reliably. Regarding the Bt8960, an alternate way exists to
implement this type of voice pairgain equipment. A Bt8960-based system can
transport four or six clear 64 kbps channels on a single pair. Clear 64 kbps transport assures the transmission of any baud-rate facsimile or can be used to provision special data services such as switched 56, clear 64, and frame relay.
Figure 1-3 shows the architecture of a PCM6 voice pairgain system. As illustrated, six analog Subscriber Line Interface Cards (SLIC) are connected to a concentrating framer. The function of this framer is to time-multiplex the PCM data
from the SLICs, create a transport frame, and handle signaling information. The
output of the framer is then passed on to the Bt8960 for conversion into the 2B1Q
code suitable for long-reach transport over the loop plant.
N8960DSB
5
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.2 Applications
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 1-3. PCM6 Voice Pairgain Block Diagram
SLIC
SLIC
SLIC
PCM
Framer
Bt8960
Local
Loop
SLIC
SLIC
SLIC
1.2.2 Internet Connectivity Transport
The growth of the Internet has created a tremendous demand for additional bandwidth in the local loop. When existing loop facilities are used to provide connectivity to Internet servers, they are limited to the 128 kbps offered by Basic Rate
ISDN (BRI) service. Although those same loops could be provisioned through
HDSL (for E1 or T1 transport rates), the tariff structure for these services puts
their bandwidth beyond the practical reach of most consumers. It is unlikely that
the E1/T1 tariff structure will change soon since it still represents significant
value for business customers using E1/T1 leased lines for corporate data and
voice exchange.
The 128 kbps rate offered by BRI is sufficient for the text and graphic content
of most of today's home pages. However, when motion, video, or interactivity are
added, the data rate required is increased to well over 300 kbps.
The advent of the Bt8960 creates an intermediate solution between BRI and
E1/T1 which opens a host of low-cost, higher bandwidth possibilities. With the
Bt8960, local loops could be provisioned for data rates up to 384 kbps with lowcost hardware. In addition, the full ISDN 18,000 ft. carrier service area could be
served with a higher data rate. Enabling hardware could, for example, take the
form of LAN extender equipment, and terminals for such equipment could have
standard Ethernet connections to routers, personal computers, or workstations.
The terminals could also use the Bt8960 2B1Q transport mechanism for the local
loop link to the central office or Internet server location.
By placing a SLIC in the terminal and reserving a 64 kbps channel for voice
transport, simultaneous data and voice service could be offered over a single
twisted pair. The extraordinary low power of the Bt8960 allows for customer site
equipment to be remotely powered, thereby guaranteeing lifeline POTS service in
the event of power loss at the customer site.
6
N8960DSB
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.2 Applications
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
1.2.3 ISDN Basic Rate Interface Concentrator
Since many telecommunications service providers are positioning BRI service as
residential Internet or telecommuter connectivity, the lack of installed copper
pairs into the residence could be a serious limitation to the proliferation of the service. The Bt8960 solves this problem because it is capable of 416 kbps data rates.
Thus, it enables the transport of two full BRI U-interface channels (4B + 2D) on a
single twisted pair.
Alternatively, a BRI service and two POTS lines can be provisioned over a
single twisted pair. Another possible combination is six B-channels with a consolidated D-channel for the provisioning of three ISDN lines on a single twisted pair.
Users of this equipment can include a small office with two computers, each
needing BRI service, or a residence requiring a BRI line and two POTS lines. The
primary advantage of (1 or 2 BRIs + 1 or 2 POTS) is there is no need for expensive digital phones and when a POTS function is used, the full BRI bandwidth for
data traffic is retained.
N8960DSB
7
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.3 Pin Descriptions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
1.3 Pin Descriptions
The Bt8960 is packaged in a 100-Pin Plastic Quad Flat Pack (PQFP). The pin
assignments are shown in Figure 1-4. A listing of pin labels, numbers, and I/O
assignments is given in Table 1-1. Signal definitions are provided in Table 1-2.
The coding used in the I/O column is: O = digital output, OA = analog output, OD
= open-drain output, I = digital input, IA = analog input, and I/O = bidirectional.
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
Bt8960
DGND
DGND
VDD2
RST
HCLK
XOUT
DGND
VDD1
XTALO
XTALI/MCLK
VDD2
DGND
DTEST1
DTEST2
DTEST3
VDD1
DGND
DTEST4
AGND
AGND
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
VDD1
CS
RD/DS
WR/R/W
ALE
IRQ
READY
AD[0]
AD[1]
AD[2]
AD[3]
AD[4]
AD[5]
AD[6]
DGND
DGND
VDD2
AD[7]
MOTEL
MUXED
ADDR[7]
ADDR[6]
ADDR[5]
ADDR[4]
ADDR[3]
ADDR[2]
ADDR[1]
ADDR[0]
SMON
VDD1
100
99
98
97
96
95
94
93
92
91
90
89
88
87
86
85
84
83
82
81
DGND
DGND
VDD2
TCK
TMS
TDI
TDO
DTEST6
DTEST5
TBCLK
RBCLK
RQ[0]/BCLK
RQ[1]/RDAT
QCLK
TQ[0]
TQ[1]/TDAT
DGND
VDD1
AGND
VAA
Figure 1-4. Pin Diagram
8
N8960DSB
80
79
78
77
76
75
74
73
72
71
70
69
68
67
66
65
64
63
62
61
60
59
58
57
56
55
54
53
52
51
RXBN
RXBP
RXN
RXP
AGND
AGND
TXN
AGND
VAA
TXP
TXLDIN
TXLDIP
TXPSN
TXPSP
ATEST2
ATEST1
VAA
VAA
AGND
VTXN
VTXP
VCCAP
VCOMO
VCOMI
RBIAS
VAA
VAA
AGND
VRXN
VRXP
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.3 Pin Descriptions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 1-1. Pin Descriptions
Pin
Pin Label
I/O
Pin
Pin Label
I/O
Pin
Pin Label
I/O
Pin
Pin Label
I/O
1
VDD1
–
26
ADDR[2]
I
51
VRXP
OA
76
AGND
–
2
CS
I
27
ADDR[1]
I
52
VRXN
OA
77
RXP
IA
3
RD/DS
I
28
ADDR[0]
I
53
AGND
–
78
RXN
IA
4
WR/R/W
I
29
SMON
O
54
VAA
–
79
RXBP
IA
5
ALE
I
30
VDD1
–
55
VAA
–
80
RXBN
IA
6
IRQ
OD
31
DGND
–
56
RBIAS
OA
81
VAA
–
7
READY
OD
32
DGND
–
57
VCOMI
OA
82
AGND
–
8
AD[0]
I/O
33
VDD2
–
58
VCOMO
OA
83
VDD1
–
9
AD[1]
I/O
34
RST
I
59
VCCAP
OA
84
DGND
–
10
AD[2]
I/O
35
HCLK
O
60
VTXP
OA
85
TQ[1]/TDAT
I
11
AD[3]
I/O
36
XOUT
O
61
VTXN
OA
86
TQ[0]
I
12
AD[4]
I/O
37
DGND
–
62
AGND
–
87
QCLK
O
13
AD[5]
I/O
38
VDD1
–
63
VAA
–
88
RQ[1]/RDAT
O
14
AD[6]
I/O
39
XTALO
O
64
VAA
–
89
RQ[0]/BCLK
O
15
DGND
–
40
XTALI/MCLK
I
65
ATEST1
IA
90
RBCLK
I
16
DGND
–
41
VDD2
–
66
ATEST2
IA
91
TBCLK
I
17
VDD2
–
42
DGND
–
67
TXPSP
OA
92
DTEST5
I
18
AD[7]
I/O
43
DTEST1
I
68
TXPSN
OA
93
DTEST6
I
19
MOTEL
I
44
DTEST2
I
69
TXLDIP
IA
94
TDO
O
20
MUXED
I
45
DTEST3
I
70
TXLDIN
IA
95
TDI
I
21
ADDR[7]
I
46
VDD1
–
71
TXP
OA
96
TMS
I
22
ADDR[6]
I
47
DGND
–
72
VAA
–
97
TCK
I
23
ADDR[5]
I
48
DTEST4
I
73
AGND
–
98
VDD2
–
24
ADDR[4]
I
49
AGND
–
74
TXN
OA
99
DGND
–
25
ADDR[3]
I
50
AGND
–
75
AGND
–
100
DGND
–
N8960DSB
9
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.3 Pin Descriptions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 1-2. Hardware Signal Definitions (1 of 4)
Pin Label
Signal Name
I/O
Definition
Microcomputer Interface (MCI)
MOTEL
Motorola/Intel
I
Selects between Motorola and Intel handshake conventions for the RD/DS and
WR/R/W signals.
MOTEL = 1 for Motorola protocol: DS, R/W
MOTEL = 0 for Intel protocol: RD, WR
ALE
Address Latch
Enable
I
Falling-edge-sensitive input. The value of AD[7:0] when MUXED = 1, or
ADDR[7:0] when MUXED = 0, is internally latched on the falling edge of ALE.
CS
Chip Select
I
Active-low input used to enable read/write operations on the Microcomputer
Interface (MCI).
RD/DS
Read/Data Strobe
I
Bimodal input for controlling read/write access on the MCI.
When MOTEL = 1 and CS = 0, RD/DS behaves as an active-low data strobe
DS. Internal data is output on AD[7:0] when DS = 0 and R/W = 1. External data is
internally latched from AD[7:0] on the rising edge of DS when R/W = 0.
When MOTEL = 0 and CS = 0, RD/DS behaves as an active-low read strobe
RD. Internal data is output on AD[7:0] when RD = 0. Write operations are not
controlled by RD in this mode.
WR / R/W
Write/
Read/Write
I
Bimodal input for controlling read/write access on the MCI.
When MOTEL = 1 and CS = 0, WR/R/W behaves as a read/write select line
R/W. Internal data is output on AD[7:0] when DS = 0 and R/W = 1. External data
is internally latched from AD[7:0] on the rising edge of DS when R/W = 0.
When MOTEL = 0 and CS = 0, WR/R/W behaves as an active-low write strobe
WR. External data is internally latched from AD[7:0] on the rising edge of WR.
Read operations are not controlled by WR in this mode.
AD[7:0]
AddressData[7:0]
ADDR[7:0]
Address Bus[7:0]
(Not Multiplexed)
I
Provides a glueless interface to microcomputers with separate address and data
buses. ADDR[7] = MSB, ADDR[0] = LSB. Usage is controlled using the MUXED
signal.
MUXED
Addressing
Mode Select
I
Controls the MCI addressing mode.
When MUXED = 1, the MCI uses AD[7:0] as a multiplexed signal for address
and data (typical of Intel processors).
When MUXED = 0, the MCI uses ADDR[7:0] as the address input and
AD[7:0] for data only (typical of Motorola processors).
READY
Ready
OD
Active-low, open-drain output that indicates that the MCI is ready to transfer
data. Can be used to signal the microcomputer to insert wait states.
IRQ
Interrupt Request
OD
Active-low, open-drain output that indicates requests for interrupt. Asserted
whenever at least one unmasked interrupt flag is set. Remains inactive whenever
no unmasked interrupt flags are present.
RST
Reset
I
Asynchronous, active-low, level-sensitive input that places the transceiver in an
inactive state by setting the power-down mode bit of the Global Modes and Status Register [global_modes; 0x00], and zeroing the clk_freq[1,0] bits of the PLL
Modes Register [pll_modes; 0x22], and the hclk_freq[1,0] bits of the Serial
Monitor Source Select Register [serial_monitor_source; 0x01]. All RAM contents are lost. Does not affect the state of the test access port which is reset
automatically at power-up only.
10
I/O
8-bit bidirectional multiplexed address-data bus. AD[7] = MSB, AD[0] = LSB.
Usage is controlled using the MUXED signal as defined below.
N8960DSB
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.3 Pin Descriptions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 1-2. Hardware Signal Definitions (2 of 4)
Pin Label
Signal Name
I/O
Definition
Channel Unit Interface
RQ[1]/
RDAT
Receive Quat 1/
Receive Data
O
RQ[0]/ BCLK
Receive Quat 0/
Bit Clock
O
RQ[1]/RDAT and RQ[0]/BCLK are bimodal outputs that represent the sign and
magnitude bits of the received quaternary output symbol in parallel channel unit
modes (RQ[1], RQ[0]), and the serial-data and bit-clock outputs in serial channel unit modes (RDAT, BCLK). Behavior of these outputs is configurable through
the Channel Unit Interface Modes Register [CU_interface_modes; 0x06] for parallel master, parallel slave, serial magnitude-bit-first and serial sign-bit-first
operations.
For parallel mode operation:
RQ[1] = Sign bit output
RQ[0] = Magnitude bit output
Both outputs are updated at the symbol rate on the rising edge of QCLK
(master mode) or the rising/falling edge (programmable) of RBCLK (slave
mode).
For serial mode operation:
RDAT = Serial quaternary data output
BCLK = Bit-rate (two times symbol rate) clock output
RDAT is updated at the bit rate on the rising edge of BCLK
TQ[1]/ TDAT
Transmit Quat 1/
Transmit Data
I
Transmit Quat 0
I
TQ[0]
TQ[1]/TDAT and TQ[0] are bimodal inputs that represent the sign and magnitude
bits of the quaternary input symbol to be transmitted in parallel channel unit
modes (TQ[1], TQ[0]), and the serial data input in serial channel unit modes
(TDAT). Interpretation of these inputs is configurable through the Channel Unit
Interface Modes Register [CU_Interface_modes; 0x06] for parallel master, parallel slave, serial magnitude-bit-first and serial sign-bit-first operations.
For parallel mode operation:
TQ[1] = Sign bit input
TQ[0] = Magnitude bit input
Both inputs are sampled at the symbol rate on the falling edge of QCLK (master mode) or the rising/falling edge (programmable) of TBCLK (slave mode).
For serial mode operation:
TDAT = Serial quaternary data input
TQ0 = Don’t care (tie or pull up to supply rail)
TDAT is sampled at the bit rate (two times the symbol rate) on the falling
edge of BCLK.
QCLK
Quaternary Clock
O
Runs at the symbol rate. It defines the data on the TQ and RQ interfaces. QCLK
is also used to frame transmit/receive quats in serial mode.
TBCLK
Transmit BaudRate Clock
I
Functions as the transmit baud-rate clock input. It must be frequency locked to
QCLK. This input is used only when the channel unit interface is in parallel slave
mode. If it is unused, it should be tied to VDD2 or DGND.
RBCLK
Receive BaudRate Clock
I
Functions as the receive baud-rate clock input. It must be frequency locked to
QCLK. This input is used only when the channel unit interface is in parallel slave
mode. If it is unused, it should be tied to VDD2 or DGND.
N8960DSB
11
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.3 Pin Descriptions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 1-2. Hardware Signal Definitions (3 of 4)
Pin Label
Signal Name
I/O
Definition
Analog Transmit Interface
TXP, TXN
Transmit Positive,
Negative
OA
Differential Transmit Line Driver Outputs. These signals are used to drive the
subscriber line after passing through the hybrid and line transformer.
TXLDIP,
TXLDIN
Transmit Line
Driver In Positive,
Negative
IA
Differential Transmit Line Driver Inputs. These inputs should be connected to the
TXPSP, TXPSN outputs after passing through an external RC filter.
TXPSP,
TXPSN
Transmit PulseShaping Filter
Positive, Negative
OA
Differential Transmit Pulse-shaping Filter Outputs. These outputs should be connected to an external RC filter, which is then connected to the TXLDIP and TXLDIN inputs.
Analog Receive Interface
RXP, RXN
Receive Positive,
Negative
IA
Differential Receiver Inputs. RXP and RXN receive the signal from the subscriber
line.
RXBP, RXBN
Receive Balance
Positive, Negative
IA
Differential Receiver Balance Inputs. RXBP and RXBN are used to subtract the
echo of the signal being transmitted on the subscriber line. They should be connected to the TXP, TXN output pins through the hybrid circuit. This signal is subtracted from the signal being received by the RXP and RXN inputs in the Variable
Gain Amplifier (VGA).
Voltage Reference Generator Interface
RBIAS
Resistor Bias
OA
Connection point for external bias resistor.
VCOMO
Common Mode
Voltage Outputs
OA
Common mode voltage for the analog circuitry. This pin should be connected to
an external filtering capacitor.
VCOMI
Common Mode
Voltage Inputs
OA
Common mode voltage for the analog circuitry. This pin should be connected to
an external filtering capacitor.
VCCAP
Voltage Compensation Capacitor
OA
Analog Voltage Compensation Capacitor. This pin should be connected to an
external filtering capacitor.
VRXP, VRXN
Receiver Voltage
Reference Positive, Negative
OA
Analog Receive Circuitry Reference Voltages. These pins should be connected to
external filtering capacitors.
VTXP, VTXN
Transmit Voltage
Reference Positive, Negative
OA
Analog Transmit Circuitry Reference Voltages. These pins should be connected
to external filtering capacitors.
Clock Interface
XTALI/
MCLK
Crystal In/Master
Clock
I
A bimodal input that can be used as the crystal input or as the master clock
input. If an external clock is connected to this input, XTALO should be left floating. The frequency of the crystal or clock should be 64 times the symbol rate (32
times the data rate).
XTALO
Crystal Output
O
Connection point for the crystal.
HCLK
High Speed
Clock Out
O
HCLK can be configured to run at 16, 32, or 64 times the symbol rate. Upon
reset, it is set to 64 times the symbol rate. This clock will be phase locked to the
incoming data when the Bt8960 is configured as the remote unit.
XOUT
Crystal Clock Out
O
Buffered-crystal oscillator output.
12
N8960DSB
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.3 Pin Descriptions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 1-2. Hardware Signal Definitions (4 of 4)
Pin Label
Signal Name
I/O
Definition
Test and Diagnostic Interface
TDI
JTAG Test Data
Input
I
JTAG test data input per IEEE Std 1149.1-1990. Used for loading all serial
instructions and data into internal test logic. Sampled on the rising edge of TCK.
TDI can be left unconnected if it is not being used because it is pulled-up internally.
TMS
JTAG Test Mode
Select
I
JTAG test mode select input per IEEE Std 1149.1-1990. Internally pulled-up
input signal used to control the test-logic state machine. Sampled on the rising
edge of TCK. TMS can be left unconnected if it is not being used because it is
pulled-up internally.
TDO
JTAG Test Data
Output
O
JTAG test data output per IEEE Std 1149.1-1990. Three-state output used for
reading all serial configuration and test data from internal test logic. Updated on
the falling edge of TCK.
TCK
JTAG Test Clock
Input
I
JTAG test clock input per IEEE Std 1149.1-1990. Used for all test interface and
internal test logic operations. If unused, TCK should be pulled low.
SMON
Serial Monitor
O
Serial data output used for real-time monitoring of internal signal-path registers.
The source register is selected through the Serial Monitor Source Select Register [serial_monitor_source; 0x01]. 16-bit words are shifted out, LSB first, at 16
times the symbol rate. The rising edge of QCLK defines the start Least Significant Bit (LSB) of each word. The output is updated on the rising edge of an internal clock running at 16 times QCLK.
DTEST[1:4]
Digital Tests 1–4
I
Active-high test inputs used by Rockwell to enable internal test modes. These
inputs should be tied to digital ground (DGND).
DTEST[5, 6]
Digital Test 5, 6
I
Active-low test inputs used by Rockwell to enable internal test modes. These
inputs should be tied to the I/O buffer power supply (VDD2).
ATEST[1,2]
Analog Test 1, 2
IA
Analog test inputs used by Rockwell for internal test modes. These inputs
should be left floating (No Connect, NC).
Power and Ground
VDD1
Core Logic Power
Supply
–
Dedicated supply pins powering the digital core logic functions.
VDD2
I/O Buffer Power
Supply
–
Dedicated supply pins powering the digital I/O buffers.
DGND
Digital Ground
–
Dedicated ground pins for the digital circuitry. Must be held at same potential as
AGND.
VAA
Analog Power
Supply
–
Dedicated supply pins powering the analog circuitry.
AGND
Analog Ground
–
Dedicated ground pins for the analog circuitry. Must be held at the same potential as DGND.
N8960DSB
13
Bt8960
1.0 System Overview
1.3 Pin Descriptions
14
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
N8960DSB
2.0 Functional Description
2.1 Transmit Section
The transmit section is illustrated in Figure 2-1. It comprises four major functions: a symbol source selector/scrambler, a variable gain digital-to-analog converter (DAC), a pulse-shaping filter, and a line driver.
Figure 2-1. Transmit Section Block Diagram
TQ[1,0]
Transmit
Channel Unit
Interface
Isolated Pulses
Detector Loopback
Ones (1s)
Symbol
Source/
Scrambler
Variable-Gain
DAC
PulseShaping
Filter
Line
Driver
TXP
TXN
Control
Registers
External
RC Filter
N8960DSB
15
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.1 Transmit Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.1.1 Symbol Source Selector/Scrambler
The input source selector/scrambler can be configured through the Transmitter
Modes Register [transmitter_modes; 0x0B] data_source [2:0] bits to select the
source of the data to be transmitted and determine whether or not the data is
scrambled. The symbol source selector/scrambler modes are specified in Table 21.
Table 2-1. Symbol Source Selector/Scrambler Modes
16
data_source[2:0]
Symbol Source Selector/Scrambler Mode
000
Isolated pulse. Level selected by isolated_pulse[1,0]. The meter timer must be enabled and in the continuous mode. The pulse repetition interval is determined by the meter-timer-countdown interval.
001
Four-level scrambled detector loopback. Sign and magnitude bits from the receiver detector are scrambled and looped back to the transmitter. Feedback polynomial determined by the htur_lfsr control bit.
010
Four-level unscrambled data. Transmits the four-level (2B1Q) sign and magnitude bits from the transmit
channel unit.
011
Four-level scrambled ones. Transmits a scrambled, constant high-logic level as a four-level (2B1Q) signal. Feedback polynomial determined by the htur_lfsr control bit.
100
Reserved.
101
Four-level scrambled data. Scrambles and transmits the four-level (2B1Q) sign and magnitude bits from
the channel unit transmit interface. Feedback polynomial determined by the htur_lfsr control bit.
110
Two-level unscrambled data. Constantly forces the magnitude bit from the transmit channel unit interface to a logic zero, and transmits the resulting two-level signal (as determined by the sign bit) without
scrambling. Valid output levels limited to +3, –3.
111
Two-level scrambled ones. Transmits a scrambled, constant high-logic level, as a two-level signal. Feedback polynomial determined by the htur_lfsr control bit. Scrambler is run at the symbol rate (half-bit
rate) to produce the sign bit of the transmitted signal while the magnitude bit is sourced with a constant
logic zero. Valid output levels limited to +3, –3.
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.1 Transmit Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
The bit stream is converted into symbols for the four-level cases as shown in
Table 2-2.
Table 2-2. Four-Level Bit-to-Symbol Conversions
First Input Bit
(sign)
Second Input Bit
(magnitude)
Output Symbol
0
0
–3
0
1
–1
1
1
+1
1
0
+3
In two-level mode, the magnitude bit is forced to a zero. This forces the symbols to be +3 and –3, as shown in Table 2-3.
Table 2-3. Two-Level Bit-to-Symbol Conversions
First Input Bit
(sign)
Second Input Bit
(magnitude)
Output Symbol
0
don’t care
–3
1
don’t care
+3
The scrambler is essentially a 23-bit-long Linear Feedback Shift Register
(LFSR). The feedback points are programmable for central office and remote terminal applications using the htur_lfsr bit of the Transmitter Modes Register. The
LFSR polynomials for local (HTU-C/LTU) and remote (HTU-R/NTU) unit operations are:
local ⇒ x –23 ⊕ x –5 ⊕ 1
remote ⇒ x –23 ⊕ x –18 ⊕ 1
The scrambler operates differently depending on whether a two-level or fourlevel mode is specified. In 2-level scrambled-ones mode, the LFSR is clocked
once-per-symbol; in 4-level mode, the LFSR is clocked twice-per-symbol.
The Transmitter Modes Register can also be used to zero the output of the
transmitter using the transmitter_off control bit.
The Bt8960 can generate isolated pulses to support the testing of pulse templates. When in the isolated pulse mode, the output consists of a single pulse surrounded by zeros.
NOTE:
Zero is not a valid 2B1Q level and only occurs in this special mode or
when the transmitter is off. The repetition rate of the pulses is controlled
by the meter timer. Any of the four 2B1Q levels may be chosen via the
Transmitter Modes Register’s isolated_pulse[1,0] control bits.
N8960DSB
17
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.1 Transmit Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.1.2 Variable Gain Digital-to-Analog Converter
A four-level Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC) is integrated into the Bt8960 to
accurately convert the output of the symbol source to analog form. The normalized values of these four analog levels are: +3, +1, –1 and –3. Each represents a
symbol or quat.
To provide precise adjustment of the transmitted power, the level of the DAC
may be adjusted. The Transmitter Gain Register [tx_gain; 0x29] sets the level.
During the manufacturing of the Bt8960, one source of variation in the transmitter levels is process variations. The Transmitter Calibration Register
[tx_calibrate; 0x28] contains a read-only value which nulls this variation. The
value of this register is determined for each Bt8960 device during production testing. Upon initialization, the Transmitter Gain Register should be loaded based on
the Transmitter Calibration Register.
If there are other sources of transmit power variation (e.g., a nonstandard
hybrid or attenuative lightening protection), the transmitter gain must be adjusted
to include these affects.
2.1.3 Pulse-Shaping Filter
The pulse-shaping filter filters the quats output from the variable-gain DAC. This
filter, when combined with other filtering in the signal path, produces a transmitted signal on the line that meets the power spectral density, transmitted power,
and pulse-shaping requirements, as specified in the Electrical Specifications section of this datasheet.
2.1.4 Line Driver
The line driver buffers the output of the pulse-shaping filter to drive diverse loads.
The output of the line driver is differential.
18
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2 Receive Section
Like the transmit section, the receive section consists of both analog and digital
circuitry. The VGA provides the interface to the analog signals received from the
line and the hybrid. The Analog-to-Digital Converter (ADC) then digitizes the
analog signal so it can be further processed in the digital signal Processing (DSP)
section of the receiver. The receiver DSP section includes: front-end processing,
echo cancellation, equalization, and symbol detection.
2.2.1 Variable Gain Amplifier
The Variable Gain Amplifier (VGA) has two purposes. The first is to provide a
dual-differential analog input so the pseudo-transmit signal created by the hybrid
can be subtracted from the signal from the line transformer. This subtraction provides first-order echo cancellation, which results in a first-order approximation of
the signal received from the line. Figure 2-1 illustrates the recommended suggested echo-cancellation circuit interconnections. All off-chip circuitry, including
the hybrid and anti-alias filters, consists entirely of passive components. Further
echo cancellation occurs in the receiver DSP.
Figure 2-2. First-Order Echo Cancellation Using the Variable Gain Amplifier
RXP
Line +
Transformer
–
Anti-Alias
Filter
Line
(Twisted Pair)
RXN
+
–
TXP
+ Line
– Driver
TXN
Line
Impedance
Matching
Resistors
RXBP
+
–
Hybrid
Anti-alias
Filter
Off-Chip Circuitry
RXBN
+
To
ADC
+
–
Gain[2:0]
–
On-Chip Circuitry
The second purpose of the VGA is to provide programmable gain of the
received signal prior to passing it to the ADC. This reduces the resolution
required for the ADC. There are six gain settings ranging from 0 dB to 15 dB. The
gain is controlled via the gain[2:0] control bits in the ADC Control Register
[adc_control; 0x21]. See the Registers section of this datasheet for a more
detailed description of the gain[2:0] control bits.
N8960DSB
19
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2.2 Analog-to-Digital Converter
The ADC provides 16 bits of resolution. The analog input from the variable gain
amplifier is converted into digital data and output at the symbol rate.
2.2.3 Digital Signal Processor
The Digital Signal Processor (DSP) includes five Least Mean Squared (LMS) filters: an Echo Canceller (EC), a Digital Automatic Gain Controller (DAGC), a
Feed Forward Equalizer (FFE), an Error Predictor (EP), and a Decision Feedback
Equalizer (DFE). These filters are used to equalize the received signal so that the
symbols transmitted from the far-end can be reliably recovered. The DSP uses
symbol rate sampling for all processing functions. Their interconnections and
relationships to the digital front-end and the detector are illustrated in Figure 2-3.
Figure 2-3. Receiver Digital Signal Processing
Detector
–
PKD
Digital
Front-End
–
DAGC
–
FFE
–
Channel
Unit
Interface
Slicer
–
–
NEC
EP
LEC
Transmit
Symbol
DFE
Echo Canceller
20
Equalizer
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2.3.1 Digital
Front-End
Prior to the main signal processing, the input signal must be adjusted for any DC
offset. The front-end module also monitors the input signal level, which includes
measuring DC and AC input signal levels, detecting and counting overflows, and
detecting alarms based on the far-end signal level. Figure 2-4 summarizes the features of the digital front-end module.
Figure 2-4. Digital Front-End Block Diagram
Echo-Free
Signal
from NEC
High Threshold
from MCI
Absolute
Value
Accumulator
Low Threshold
from MCI
Comparator
high_felm
Interrupt
Comparator
low_felm
Interrupt
Far-End
Alarms
Result
Register
Far-End
Level Meter
r, To EC
+
ADC Data
–
Accumulator
Absolute
Value
Result
Register
Accumulator
DC Offset
from MCI
Result
Register
DC Level
Meter
Signal Level
Meter
Overflow
Overflow
Detector
Counter
Result
Register
Overflow Monitor
N8960DSB
21
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2.3.2 Offset
Adjustment
A nonzero DC level on the input can be corrected by a DC offset value
[dc_offset_low, dc_offset_high; 0x26, 0x27] which is subtracted from the input.
The DC offset is a 16-bit number and is programmed via the microcomputer
interface.
2.2.3.3 DC Level Meter
The DC level meter provides the monitoring needed for adaptive offset compensation. The offset-adjusted input signal is accumulated over the meter timer interval [meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. The 16 MSBs are placed into the DC
Level Meter Registers [dc_meter_low, dc_meter_high; 0x44, 0x45].
2.2.3.4 Signal Level
Meter
The signal level meter provides the monitoring needed for adjusting the analog
gain circuit located prior to the ADC. This value is accumulated over the meter
timer interval [meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. The 16 MSBs are placed in
the Signal Level Meter Registers [slm_low, slm_high; 1; 0x46, 0x47].
2.2.3.5 Overflow
Detection
and Monitoring
The overflow sensor detects ADC overflows. The overflow monitor counts the
number of overflows, as indicated by the overflow sensor during the meter timer
interval [meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. The counter is limited to 8 bits. In
the case of 256 or more overflows during the measurement interval, the counter
will hold at 255. The counter is loaded into the Overflow Meter Register
[overflow_meter; 0x42] at the end of each measurement interval.
2.2.3.6 Far-End Level
Meter
The far-end level meter monitors the output of the echo canceler. Since the echo
canceler output had the echo of the transmitted signal subtracted from it, it is
called the far-end signal. This value is accumulated over the meter timer interval
[meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. The 16 MSBs are placed into the Far-End
Level Meter Register [felm_low, felm_high; 0x48, 0x49].
2.2.3.7 Far-End Level
Alarm
The result of the far-end level meter is compared to two thresholds. When
exceeded, an interrupt is sent to the microcomputer interface, if enabled. The
threshold is determined by the value in the Far-End High Alarm Threshold Registers [far_end_high_alarm_th_low, far_end_high_alarm_th_high; 0x30, 0x31] and
the Far-End Low Alarm Threshold Registers [far_end_low_alarm_th_low,
far_end_low_alarm_th_high; 0x32, 0x33].
The interrupts high_felm and low_felm, are bits 2 and 1, respectively of the
IRQ Source Register [irq_source; 0x05]. The interrupts high_felm and low_felm,
can be masked by writing a one to bits 2 and 1, respectively of the Interrupt Mask
Register High [mask_high_reg; 0x03].
22
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2.4 Echo Canceler
The EC removes images of the transmitted symbols from the received signal and
consists of two blocks: a linear and nonlinear echo canceler. The organization of
the blocks is displayed in Figure 2-3.
2.2.4.1 Linear Echo
Canceler (LEC)
The Linear Echo Canceler (LEC) is a conventional LMS Finite Impulse Response
(FIR) filter, which removes linear images of the transmitted symbols from the
received signal. It consists of a 60-tap FIR filter with 32-bit linear adapted coefficients.
When enabled, the last data tap of the echo canceler is treated specially. This
serves to cancel any DC offset that may be present.
A freeze coefficient mode may be specified via the microcomputer interface.
This mode disables the coefficient updates only. A special mode exists to zero all
of the coefficients; it is also enabled through the microcomputer interface.
An additional mode exists to zero the output of the FIR with no effect on the
coefficients. It is also enabled through the microcomputer interface. Individual
EC coefficients can be read and written through the microcomputer interface.
Adaptation should be frozen prior to reading or writing coefficients.
2.2.4.2 Nonlinear Echo
Canceler (NEC)
The Nonlinear Echo Canceler (NEC) reduces the residual echo power in the echo
canceler output caused by nonlinear effects in the transmitter DAC, receiver
ADC, analog hybrid circuitry, or line cables.
The delay of the transmit-symbol input to the NEC can be specified via the
microcomputer interface: Nonlinear Echo Canceler Mode Register
[nonlinear_ec_modes; 0x09]. This allows the NEC to operate on the peak of the
echo regardless of differing delays in the echo path.
A freeze coefficient mode may be specified via the microcomputer interface.
This mode disables the coefficient updates only. A special mode exists to zero all
of the coefficients; it is also enabled through the microcomputer interface.
An additional mode exists to zero the output of the look-up table with no
effect on the coefficients. It is also enabled through the microcomputer interface.
The 64, 14-bit, individual NEC coefficients can be read and written through the
microcomputer interface. Adaptation should be frozen prior to reading or writing
coefficients.
2.2.5 Equalizer
Four LMS filters are used in the equalizer to process the echo canceler output so
that received symbols can be reliably recovered. The filters are a digital automatic
gain controller, a feed forward equalizer, an error predictor, and a decision feedback equalizer. Their interconnections are shown in Figure 2-3.
2.2.5.1 Digital
Automatic Gain Control
The DAGC scales the echo-free signal to the optimum magnitude for subsequent
processing. Its structure is that of an LMS filter, but it is a degenerate case since
there is only one tap.
A freeze coefficient mode may be specified via the microcomputer interface.
This mode disables the coefficient update only.
The DAGC gain coefficient can be read or written through the microcomputer
interface. Adaptation should be frozen prior to reading or writing the coefficient.
N8960DSB
23
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2.5.2 Feed Forward
Equalizer (FFE)
The Feed Forward Equalizer (FFE) removes precursors from the received signal.
The FFE may be operated in a special adapt last mode. In this mode, which is
useful during startup, only the last coefficient is updated. The last coefficient is
the one which is multiplied with the oldest data sample, (sample #7).
A freeze coefficient mode may be specified via the microcomputer interface.
This mode disables the coefficient updates only. A special mode exists to zero all
of the coefficients. It is also enabled through the microcomputer interface. Individual FFE coefficients can be read and written through the microcomputer interface. Adaptation should be frozen prior to reading or writing coefficients.
2.2.5.3 Error
Predictor (EP)
The Error Predictor (EP) improves the performance of the equalizer by prognosticating errors before they occur. A freeze coefficient mode may be specified via
the microcomputer interface. This mode disables the coefficient updates only. A
special mode exists to zero all of the coefficients; it is also enabled through the
microcomputer interface. Individual EP coefficients can be read and written
through the microcomputer interface. Adaptation should be frozen prior to reading or writing coefficients.
2.2.5.4 Decision
Feedback Equalizer
(DFE)
The Decision Feedback Equalizer (DFE) removes postcursors from the received
signal. A freeze coefficient mode may be specified via the microcomputer interface. This mode disables the coefficient updates only. A zero coefficients mode
exists to zero all of the coefficients; it is also enabled through the microcomputer
interface. A zero filter output mode exists to zero the output of the FIR with no
effect on the coefficients. It is also enabled through the microcomputer interface.
Individual DFE coefficients can be read and written through the microcomputer
interface. Adaptation should be frozen prior to reading or writing coefficients.
2.2.5.5 Microcoding
The DAGC, FFE, and EP filters are implemented using an internal microprogrammable Digital Signal Processor (DSP) optimized for LMS filters. Internal
DSP micro-instructions are stored in an on-chip RAM. This microcode RAM is
loaded after powerup through the microcomputer interface when the transceiver is
initialized.
2.2.6 Detector
The detector converts the equalized received signal into a 2B1Q symbol and produces two error signals used in adapting the receiver equalizers. The signal detection uses two sub-blocks, a slicer, and a peak detector. Additionally, the detector
contains a scrambler and Bit Error Rate (BER) meter for use during the startup
sequence.
2.2.6.1 Slicer
24
The slicer thresholds the equalized signal to produce a 2B1Q symbol. The input
to the slicer is the FFE output minus the DFE and EP outputs.
The slicer can operate in two modes: two-level and four-level. In the two-level
mode, used during the part of startup when the only transmitted symbols are +3 or
–3, the slicer threshold is set at zero.
When in four-level mode, the cursor level is specified via the microcomputer
interface. It is a 16-bit, 2’s complement number, but must be positive and less
than 0x2AAA for proper operation.
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.2.6.2 Peak Detector
(PKD)
The PKD is only used during the two-level transmission part of startup. It operates on the echo-free signal. A signal is detected to be a +3, if it is higher than
both of its neighbors, or a –3, if it is lower than both of its neighbors. If neither of
the peaked conditions exists, the output of the slicer is used.
2.2.6.3 Error Signals
The detector computes two error signals for use in the equalizer: a 16-bit slicer
and a 16-bit equalizer.
2.2.6.4 Scrambler
Module
The scrambler may operate as either a scrambler or as a descrambler. The scrambler block is used during the scrambled-ones part of the startup sequence. This
provides an error-free signal for equalizer adaptation. This scrambler is essentially a 23-bit-long LFSR with feedback. The feedback point depends on whether
the transceiver is being used in a central-office or remote-terminal application.
When operating as a descrambler, the input source is the detector output. The
symbol is converted to a bit stream, as shown in Table 2-4 for the two-level case.
Table 2-4. Two-Level Symbol-to-Bit Conversion
Input Symbol
Output Bit
–3
0
+3
1
The symbol is converted to a bit stream, as shown in Table 2-5 for the fourlevel case.
Table 2-5. Four-Level Symbol-to-Bit Conversion
Input Symbol
First Output Bit
(sign)
Second Output Bit
(magnitude)
–3
0
0
–1
0
1
+1
1
1
+3
1
0
N8960DSB
25
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
The LFSR operates in the same way in both cases, except in the two-level case
it is clocked once-per-symbol and in the four-level case it is clocked twice-persymbol.
When operating as a scrambler, the LFSR must first be locked to the far-end
source. Once locked, it is then able to replicate the far-end input sequence, when
its input is held at all ones. The locking sequence is controlled internally, initiated
through the microcomputer interface by setting the lfsr_lock bit of the
detector_modes register. The locking sequence consists of the following four
steps:
1. Operate the LFSR as a descrambler for 23 bits.
2. Operate the LFSR as a scrambler for 127 bits. The sync detector is active
during this period.
3. Go to Step 1 if synchronization was not achieved, otherwise continue to
Step 4.
4. Send an interrupt to the microcomputer, if unmasked, indicating successful
locking and continue operating as a scrambler.
The sequence continues until the lfsr_lock control bit is cleared by the microcomputer.
2.2.6.5 Sync Detector
The sync detector compares the output of the scrambler with the output of the
symbol detector. The number of equivalent bits is accumulated for 128 comparisons. The result is then compared to a Scrambler Synchronization Threshold Register [scr_sync_th; 0x2E], lock is declared, and the sync bit of the irq_source
register is set if the count is greater than the threshold. For a count less than or
equal to the threshold, no lock condition is declared and the sync bit is unaffected.
2.2.6.6 Detector Meters
The detector consists of five meters: a BER meter, a symbol histogrammer, a
noise-level meter, a noise-level histogram meter, and an SNR alarm meter.
The BER meter provides an estimate of the bit error rate when the received
symbols are known to be scrambled ones. When the LFSR is operating as a
descrambler the meter counts the number of ones on the descrambler output.
When the LFSR is operating as a scrambler, the BER meter counts the number of
equal scrambler, and symbol detector outputs. The counter operates over the
meter timer interval [meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. The counter is saturated to 16 bits. At the end of the measurement interval the counter is loaded into
the Bit Error Rate Meter Registers [ber_meter_low, ber_meter_high; 0x4C,
0x40].
The symbol histogrammer computes a coarse histogram of the received symbols. It operates by counting the number of ones received during meter timer
interval [meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. That is, at the start of the measurement interval a counter is cleared. For each detector output which is +1 or –1, the
counter is incremented. If the detector output is +3 or –3, the count is held at its
previous value. The count is saturated to 16 bits. At the end of the measurement
interval, the 8 MSBs of the counter are loaded into the Symbol Histogram Meter
Register [symbol_histogram; 0x4E].
The noise level meter estimates the noise at the input to the slicer. It operates
by accumulating the absolute value of the slicer error over meter timer interval
[meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. At the end of the measurement interval, the
16 MSBs of the 32-bit accumulator are loaded into the Noise Level Histogram
Meter Register [nlm_low, nlm_high; 0x50, 0x51].
26
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.2 Receive Section
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
The SNR alarm provides a rapid indication of impulse noise disturbances and
loss of signal so that corrective action can be taken. The alarm is based on a second noise level meter. The meter is the same as the preceding noise level meter
except it operates on a dedicated SNR alarm timer. The absolute value of the
slicer error is accumulated during the timer period. At the end of the measurement
interval, the 16 MSBs of the accumulator are compared against the SNR Alarm
Threshold Register [snr_alarm_th_low, snr_alarm_th_high; 0x34, 0x35]. If the
result is greater than this threshold, an interrupt is set in the irq_source register.
The threshold is set via the microcomputer interface.
N8960DSB
27
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.3 Timing Recovery and Clock Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.3 Timing Recovery and Clock Interface
The timing recovery and clock interface block diagram consists of the timing
recovery circuit and the crystal amplifier, as detailed in Figure 2-5. The main purpose of this circuitry is to recover the clock from the received data. Control fields
include the hclk_freq[1,0] bits of the Serial Monitor Source Select Register
[serial_monitor_source; 0x01], the PLL Modes Register [pll_modes; 0x22], the
Timing Recovery PLL Phase Offset Register [pll_phase_offsset_low,
pll_phase_offset_high; 0x24, 0x25] and the PLL Frequency Register
[pll_frequency_low, pll_frequency_high; 0x5E, 0x5F]. See the Register section
of this datasheet for descriptions of these control fields.
Figure 2-5. Timing Recovery and Clock Interface Block Diagram
Control
Registers
Detected
Symbol
Phase Detector
Meter Register
[0x40, 0x41]
QCLK (87)
Timing
Recovery
Circuit
Equalizer
Error
HCLK (35)
XOUT (36)
Crystal
Amplifier
XTALI (40)
Y1
C10
Digital Ground
28
N8960DSB
XTALO (39)
C11
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.3 Timing Recovery and Clock Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.3.0.7 Timing
Recovery Circuit
The timing recovery circuit uses the Bt8960’s internal detected symbol and equalizer error signals to regenerate the received data symbol clock (QCLK). The
HCLK output is synchronized with the edges of the symbol clock (QCLK), unlike
the XOUT output which is a buffered output of the crystal amplifier. HCLK can
be programmed for rates of 16, 32, or 64 times the symbol rate.
The timing recovery circuit includes a phase detector meter that measures the
average value of the phase correction signal. This information can be used during
startup to set the phase offset in the Receive Phase Select Register
[receive_phase_select; 0x07]. The output of the phase detector is accumulated
over the meter timer interval [meter_low, meter_high; 0x18, 0x19]. At the end of
the measurement interval, the value is loaded into the Phase Detector Meter Register [pdm_low, pdm_high; 0x40, 0x41].
The user can also bypass the timing recovery circuit and directly specify the
frequency via the PLL Frequency Register [pll_frequency_low,
pll_frequency_high; 0x5E, 0x5F].
2.3.0.8 Crystal
Amplifier
The crystal amplifier reduces the support circuitry needed for the Bt8960 by eliminating the need for an external Voltage-Controlled Crystal Oscillator (VCXO) or
a Crystal Oscillator (XO). A crystal can be connected directly to the XTALI and
XTALO pins. Table 2-6 gives the recommended component values for this circuit. The crystal amplifier can also accommodate an external clock input by connecting the external clock to the XTALI input pin.
Table 2-6. Crystal Oscillator Circuit Component Values
Component
Value
Y1
32 times the data rate
N8960DSB
29
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.4 Channel Unit Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.4 Channel Unit Interface
The quaternary signals of the channel unit interface have four modes which are
programmable through bits 0 and 1 of the Channel Unit Interface Modes Register
[cu_interface_modes; 0x06]. They are: serial sign-bit first, serial magnitude-bit
first, parallel master, and parallel slave.
In serial mode, a Bit Rate Clock (BCLK) is output at twice the symbol rate.
The sign and magnitude bits of the receive data are output through RDAT on the
rising edge of BCLK. The sign and magnitude bits of the transmit data are sampled on the falling edge of BCLK at the TDAT input. The sign bit is transferred
first, followed by the magnitude bit of a given symbol in sign-bit first mode, while
the opposite occurs in magnitude-bit first mode. The clock relationships for serial
sign-bit first mode are illustrated in Figure 2-6.
Figure 2-6. Serial Sign-Bit First Mode
BCLK
Bit-Rate Clock
QCLK
RDAT
Sign0
Magnitude0
Sign1
Magnitude1
Sign2
TDAT
Sign0
Magnitude0
Sign1
Magnitude1
Sign2
In parallel master mode, the sign and magnitude receive data is output through
RQ[1] and RQ[0], respectively, on the rising edge of QCLK. The quaternary
transmit data is sampled on the falling edge of QCLK. This clock and data relationship is illustrated in Figure 2-7.
Figure 2-7. Parallel Master Mode
QCLK
RQ[1]/TQ[1]
RQ[0]/TQ[0]
30
Sign0
Magnitude0
N8960DSB
Sign1
Magnitude1
Sign2
Magnitude2
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.4 Channel Unit Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Parallel slave mode uses RBCLK and TBCLK inputs to synchronize data
transfer. RBCLK and TBCLK must be frequency-locked to QCLK, though the
use of two internal FIFOs allow an arbitrary phase relationship to QCLK. TQ[1]
and TQ[0] are sampled on the active edge of TBCLK, as programmed through the
MCI. RQ[1] and RQ[0] are output on the active edge of RBCLK, also as programmed through the MCI. The clock relationships for the case where TBCLK is
programmed to be falling-edge active and RBCLK is rising-edge active are illustrated in Figure 2-8.
Figure 2-8. Parallel Slave Mode
TBCLK
TQ[1]
TQ[0]
Sign0
Magnitude0
Sign1
Magnitude1
Sign2
Magnitude2
RBCLK
RQ[1]
RQ[0]
Sign0
Magnitude0
N8960DSB
Sign1
Magnitude1
Sign2
Magnitude2
31
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.5 Microcomputer Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.5 Microcomputer Interface
The microcomputer interface provides operational mode control and status
through internal registers. A microcomputer write sets the operating modes to the
appropriate registers. A read to a register verifies the operating mode or provides
the status. The microcomputer interface can be programmed to generate an interrupt on certain conditions.
2.5.1 Source Code
Rockwell provides portable C-source code under a no-cost licensing agreement.
This source code provides a startup procedure, as well as diagnostic and system
monitoring functions.
2.5.2 Microcomputer Read/Write
The microcomputer interface uses either an 8-bit-wide multiplexed address-data
bus (Intel-style), or an 8-bit-wide data bus and another separate 8-bit-wide
address bus (Motorola-style) for external data communications. The interface
provides access to the internal control and status registers, coefficients, and
microcode RAM. The interface is compatible with Intel or Motorola microcomputers, and is configured with the inputs, MOTEL and MUXED. MOTEL low
selects Intel-type microcomputer and control signals: ALE, CS, RD, and WR.
MOTEL high selects Motorola-type microcomputer and control signals: ALE,
CS, DS, and R/W. MUXED high configures the interface to use the multiplexed
address-data bus with both the address and data on the AD[7:0] pins. MUXED
low configures the interface to use separate address and data bused with the data
on the AD[7:0] pins and the address on the ADDR[7:0] pins. The READY pin is
provided to indicate when the Bt8960 is ready to transfer data and can be used by
the microcomputer to insert wait states in read or write cycle.
The microcomputer interface provides access to a 256-byte internal address
space. These registers provide configuration, control, status, and monitoring capabilities. Meter values are read lower-byte then upper-byte. When the lower-byte is
read, the upper-byte is latched at the corresponding value. This ensures that multiple byte values correspond to the same reading. Most information can be directly
read or written; however, the filter coefficients require an indirect access.
32
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.5 Microcomputer Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.5.2.1 RAM Access
Registers
The internal RAMs of the transmit filter, LEC, NEC, DFE, equalizer, and microcode are accessed indirectly. They all share a common data register which is used
for both read and write operations: Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0];
[0x7C–0x7F]. Each RAM has an individual read select and write select register.
These registers specify the location to access and trigger the actual RAM read or
write.
To perform a read, the address of the desired RAM location is first written to
the corresponding read tap select register. Two symbol periods afterwards, the
individual bytes of that location are available for reading from the Access Data
Register.
To perform a write, the value to be written is first stored in the Access Data
Register. The address of the affected RAM location is then written to the corresponding write tap select register. When writing the same value to multiple locations, it is not necessary to rewrite the Access Data Register.
To assure reliable access to the embedded RAMs, internal read and write
operations are performed synchronous to the symbol clock. This has the effect of
limiting access to these internal RAMs to one every other cycle.
When reading or writing multiple filter coefficients, it may be desirable to
freeze adaptation so that all values will correspond to the same state.
2.5.2.2 Multiplexed
Address/Data Bus
The timing for a read or write cycle is stated explicitly in the Electrical and
Mechanical Specifications section. During a read operation, an external microcomputer places an address on the address-data bus which is then latched on the
falling edge of ALE. Data is placed on the address-data bus after CS, RD, or DS
go low. The read cycle is completed with the rising edge of CS, RD, or DS.
A write operation latches the address from the address-data bus at the falling
edge of ALE. The microcomputer places data on the address-data bus after CS,
WR, or DS go low. Motorola MCI will have R/W falling edge preceding the falling edge of CS and DS. The rising edge of R/W will occur after the rising edge of
CS and DS. Data is latched on the address-data bus on the rising edge of WR or
DS.
2.5.2.3 Separated
Address/
Data Bus
The timing for a read or write cycle using the separated address and data buses is
essentially the same as over the multiplexed bus. The one exception is that the
address must be driven onto the ADDR[7:0] bus rather than the AD[7:0] bus.
2.5.3 Interrupt Request
The twelve interrupt sources consist of: eight timers, a far-end signal high alarm,
a far-end signal low alarm, a SNR alarm, and a scrambler synchronization detection. All of the interrupts are requested on a common pin, IRQ. Each interrupt
may be individually enabled or disabled through the Interrupt Mask Registers
[mask_low_reg, mask_high_reg; 0x02, 0x03]. The cause of an interrupt is determined by reading the Timer Source Register [timer_source; 0x04] and the IRQ
Source Register [irq_source; 0x05].
The timer interrupt status is set only when the timer transitions to zero. Alarm
interrupts cannot be cleared while the alarm is active. In other words, it cannot be
cleared while the condition still exists.
IRQ is an open-drain output and must be tied to a pull-up resistor. This allows
IRQ to be tied together with a common interrupt request.
N8960DSB
33
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.5 Microcomputer Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.5.4 Reset
The reset input (RST) is an active-low input that places the transceiver in an inactive state by setting the mode bit (0) in the Global Modes and Status Register
[global_modes; 0x00]. An internal supply monitor circuit ensures that the transceiver will be in an inactive state upon initial application of power to the chip.
2.5.5 Registers
The Bt8960 has many directly addressable registers. These registers include control and monitoring functions. Write operations to undefined registers will have
unpredictable effects. Read operations from undefined registers will have undefined results.
2.5.6 Timers
Eight timers are integrated into the Bt8960 to control the various on-chip meters
and to aid the microcomputer in stepping through the events of the startup
sequence.
The structure of each timer includes down counter, zero detect logic, and control circuitry, which determines when the counter is reloaded or decremented.
For each of the eight timers, there is a 2-byte timer interval register that determines the value from which the timer decrements. There are three 8-bit registers:
the Timer Restart Register [timer_restart; 0x0C], the Timer Enable Register
[timer_enable; 0x0D], and the Timer Continuous Mode Register
[timer_continuous; 0x0E]. These registers control the operation of the timers.
Each bit of the 8-bit registers corresponds to a timer. Each logic-high bit in
timer_restart acts as an event that causes the corresponding timer to reload. Each
logic-high bit in timer_enable acts to enable the corresponding timer. Each
logic-high bit in timer_continuous acts to reload the counter after timing out.
Each counter is loaded with the value in its interval register. The counter decrements until it reaches zero. Upon reaching zero, an interrupt is generated if
enabled by the Interrupt Mask Low Register [mask_low_reg, mask_high_reg;
0x02, 0x03]. The interrupt is edge-triggered so that only one interrupt will be
caused by a single time out.
34
N8960DSB
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.5 Microcomputer Interface
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
A prescaler may precede the timer. This increases the time span available at
the expense of resolution. Only the startup timers have prescalers. Table 2-7 provides summary information on the timers.
Table 2-7. Timers
Timer Name
Purpose
Clock Rate
Control Bits
Startup Timer 1
Startup Events
Symbol rate ÷ 1024
sut 1
Startup Timer 2
Startup Events
Symbol rate ÷ 1024
sut 2
Startup Timer 3
Startup Events
Symbol rate ÷ 1024
sut 3
Startup Timer 4
Startup Events
Symbol rate ÷ 1024
sut 4
SNR Alarm Timer
SNR Measurement
Symbol rate
snr
Meter Timer
Measurement
Symbol rate
meter
General Purpose Timer 3
Miscellaneous
Symbol rate
t3
General Purpose Timer 4
Miscellaneous
Symbol rate
t4
Four timers are provided for use in timing startup events. These timers share a
single prescaler which divides the symbol clock by 1,024 and supplies this slow
clock to the four counters. The timers are: Startup Timer 1, Startup Timer 2,
Startup Timer 3, and Startup Timer 4. Each one is independent, with separate
interval timer values and interrupts.
Two timers control the measurement intervals for the various meters: the SNR
Alarm Timer and the Meter Timer. The SNR Alarm Timer is used only by the low
SNR, while the Meter Timer is used by all other meters, excluding the low SNR
meter. Their respective interrupts for each timer signal are set when they expire.
There are no prescalers for these timers; they count at the symbol rate. Both timers are normally used in the continuous mode.
Two timers are provided for general use: General Purpose Timer 3 and General Purpose Timer 4. Both timers are identical. There are no prescalers for these
timers; they count at the symbol rate. Each timer signals an interrupt when it
expires.
N8960DSB
35
Bt8960
2.0 Functional Description
2.6 Test and Diagnostic Interface (JTAG)
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
2.6 Test and Diagnostic Interface (JTAG)
As the complexity of communications chips increases, the need to easily access
individual chips for PCB verification is becoming vital. As a result, special circuitry has been incorporated within the transceiver which complies fully with
IEEE standard 1149.1-1990, “Standard Test Access Port and Boundary Scan
Architecture” set by the Joint Test Action Group.
JTAG has four dedicated pins that comprise the Test Access Port (TAP): Test
Mode Select (TMS), Test Clock (TCK), Test Data Input (TDI), and Test Data Out
(TDO). Verification of the integrated circuit and its connection to other modules
on the printed circuit board can be achieved through these four TAP pins.
JTAG’s approach to testability utilizes boundary scan cells placed at each digital pin, both inputs and outputs. All scan cells are interconnected into a boundary-scan register which applies or captures test data used for functional
verification of the PC board interconnection. JTAG is particularly useful for board
testers using functional testing methods.
With boundary-scan cells at each digital pin, the ability to apply and capture
the respective logic levels is provided. Since all of the digital pins are interconnected as a long shift register, the TAP logic has access and control of all necessary pins to verify functionality. For mixed signal ICs, the chip boundary
definition is expanded to include the on-chip interface between digital and analog
circuitry. Internal supply monitor circuitry ensures that each pin is initialized to
operate as an 2B1Q transceiver, instead of JTAG test mode during a power-up
sequence.
The JTAG standard defines an optional device identification register. This register is included and contains a revision number, a part number, and a manufacturers identification code specific to Rockwell. Access to this register is through the
TAP controller via the standard JTAG instruction set (see Table 2-8).
A variety of verification procedures can be performed through the TAP controller. Board connectivity can be verified at all digital pins through a set of four
instructions accessible through the use of a state machine standard to all JTAG
controllers. Refer to the IEEE 1149.1 specification for details concerning the
Instruction Register and JTAG state machine. A Boundry Scan Description Language (BSDL) file for the Bt8960 is also available from the factory upon request.
Table 2-8. JTAG Device Identification Register
Version(1)
0
0
0
Part Number
0
0
0
1
0
0
0
1
1
0
0
Manufacturer ID
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
1
0
1
0x0
0x2300
0x0D6
4 bits
16 bits
11 bits
Notes: (1). Consult factory for current version number.
36
0
N8960DSB
0
1
1
0
1
TDO
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Unless otherwise noted, the following conventions apply to all applicable register descriptions:
• For storage of multiple-bit data fields within a single byte-wide register, the Least Significant Bits
(LSBs) of the field are located at the lower register-bit positions, while the Most Significant Bits
(MSBs) are located at the higher positions.
• If only a single data field is stored in a byte-wide register, the field will be justified such that the LSB of
the field is located in the lowest register-bit position, bit 0.
• For storage of multiple-byte data words across multiple byte-wide registers, the least significant bytes
of the word are located at the lower byte-address locations, while the most significant bytes are located
at the higher byte-address locations.
• When writing to any control or data register with less than all 8-bit positions defined, a logic zero value
must be assigned to each unused/undefined/reserved position. Writing a logic one value to any of these
positions may cause undefined behavior.
• When reading from any control/status or data register with less than all 8-bit positions defined, an indeterminate value will be returned from each unused/undefined/reserved position.
• Register values are not affected by RST pin assertion, except for the mode bit of the Global Modes and
Status Register [global_modes; 0x00], the hclk_freq[1,0] field of the Serial Monitor Source Select Register [serial_monitor_source; 0x01] and the clk_freq[1,0] field of the PLL Modes Register [pll_modes;
0x22]. Upon RST pin assertion, all RAM is lost except for the equalizer microcode and scratch pad
RAM.
• The initial values of all registers and RAM are undefined after power is applied. Exceptions include the
mode bit of the Global Modes and Status Register, the hclk_freq[1,0] field of the Serial Monitor Source
Select Register and the clk_freq[1,0] field of the PLL Modes Register. In addition, the JTAG state is
reset when power is applied.
• The register and bit mnemonics used here are based on the mnemonics used in the Rockwell bit pump
software.
N8960DSB
37
Table 3-1. Register Table (1 of 6)
ADDR
(hex)
Register
Label
Read
Write
0x00
global_modes
0x01
Registers
Register Summary
38
3.2 Register Summary
Bit Number
N8960DSB
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
hw_revision[
3]
hw_revision[2]
hw_revision[1]
hw_revision[0]
part_id[2]
part_id[1]
part_id[0]
mode
serial_monitor_source
R/W
hclk_freq[1]
hclk_freq[0]
smon[5]
smon[4]
smon[3]
smon[2]
smon[1]
smon[0]
0x02
mask_low_reg
R/W
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
0x03
mask_high_reg
R/W
—
—
—
—
sync
high_felm
low_felm
low_snr
0x04
timer_source
R/W
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
0x05
irq_source
R/W
—
—
—
—
sync
high_felm
low_felm
low_snr
0x06
cu_interface_modes
R/W
—
—
—
tbclk_pol
rbclk_pol
fifos_mode
interface_
mode1
interface_
mode[0]
0x07
receive_phase_select
R/W
—
—
—
—
rphs[3]
rphs[2]
rphs[1]
rphs[0]
0x08
linear_ec_modes
R/W
—
—
enable_dc_tap
adapt_coefficien
ts
zero_coefficients
zero_output
adapt_gain[1]
adapt_gain[0]
0x09
nonlinear_ec_modes
R/W
negate_symb
ol
symbol_
delay[2]
symbol_
delay[1]
symbol_delay[0]
adapt_
coefficients
zero_
coefficients
zero_output
adapt_gain
0x0A
dfe_modes
R/W
—
—
—
—
adapt_
coefficients
zero_
coefficients
zero_output
adapt_gain
0x0B
transmitter_modes
R/W
—
isolated_
pulse[1]
isolated_
pulse[0]
transmitter_off
htur_lfsr
data_source[2]
data_source[1]
data_source[0]
0x0C
timer_restart
R/W
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
0x0D
timer_enable
R/W
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
0x0E
timer_continuous
R/W
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
Bt8960
6
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
7
Register
Label
Read
Write
0x0F
reserved2
0x10
Bit Number
N8960DSB
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
sut1_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x11
sut1_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x12
sut2_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x13
sut2_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x14
sut3_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x15
sut3_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x16
sut4_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x17
sut4_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x18
meter_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x19
meter_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x20
reserved9
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x1A
snr_timer_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x1B
snr_timer_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x1C
t3_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x1D
t3_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x1E
t4_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x1F
t4_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x21
adc_control
R/W
—
—
loop_back[1]
loop_back[0]
—
gain[2]
gain[1]
gain[0]
0x22
pll_modes
R/W
clk_freq[1]
clk_freq[0]
—
phase_detector_
gain[1]
phase_detector_
gain[0]
freeze_pll
pll_gain[1]
pll_gain[0]
Registers
6
Register Summary
39
7
Bt8960
ADDR
(hex)
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 3-1. Register Table (2 of 6)
Register
Label
Read
Write
0x23
reserved10
0x24
Bit Number
N8960DSB
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
pll_phase_offset_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x25
pll_phase_offset_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x26
dc_offset_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x27
dc_offset_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x28
tx_calibrate
R/W
—
—
tx_calibrate[3]
tx_calibrate[2]
tx_calibrate[1]
tx_calibrate[0]
—
—
0x29
tx_gain
R/W
—
—
tx_gain[3]
tx_gain[2]
tx_gain[1]
tx_gain[0]
—
—
0x2A
noise_histogram_th_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x2B
noise_histogram_th_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x2C
ep_pause_th_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x2D
ep_pause_th_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x2E
scr_sync_th
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x30
far_end_high_alarm_th_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x31
far_end_high_alarm_th_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x32
far_end_low_alarm_th_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x33
far_end_low_alarm_th_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x34
snr_alarm_th_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x35
snr_alarm_th_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x36
cursor_level_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x37
cursor_level_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
Bt8960
6
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
7
Registers
ADDR
(hex)
Register Summary
40
Table 3-1. Register Table (3 of 6)
Register
Label
Read
Write
0x38
dagc_target_low
0x39
Bit Number
N8960DSB
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
dagc_target_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x3A
detector_modes
R/W
enable_peak_
detector
output_mux_
control[1]
output_mux_
control[0]
scr_out_to_dfe
two_level
lfsr_lock
htur_lfsr
descr_on
0x3B
peak_detector_delay
R/W
—
—
—
—
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x3C
dagc_modes
R/W
—
—
—
—
—
eq_error_
adaption
adapt_
coefficient
adapt_gain
0x3D
ffe_modes
R/W
—
—
—
—
adapt_last_coeff
zero_
coefficients
adapt_
coefficient
adapt_gain
0x3E
ep_modes
R/W
—
—
—
—
zero_output
zero_
coefficients
adapt_
coefficients
adapt_gain
0x40
pdm_low
R/W
D[17]
D[16]
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
0x41
pdm_high
R/W
D[25]
D[24]
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
0x42
overflow_meter
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x44
dc_meter_low
R/W
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
0x45
dc_meter_high
R/W
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
0x46
slm_low
R/W
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
0x47
slm_high
R/W
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
0x48
felm_low
R/W
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
0x49
felm_high
R/W
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
0x4A
noise_histogram_low
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x4B
noise_histogram_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
41
Registers
6
Register Summary
7
Bt8960
ADDR
(hex)
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 3-1. Register Table (4 of 6)
Register
Label
Read
Write
0x4C
ber_meter_low
0x4D
Bit Number
N8960DSB
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
ber_meter_high
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x4E
symbol_histogram
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x50
nlm_low
R/W
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
0x51
nlm_high
R/W
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
0x5E
pll_frequency_low
R/W
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
D[15]
0x5F
pll_frequency_high
R/W
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
D[23]
0x70
linear_ec_tap_select_read
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x71
linear_ec_tap_select_write
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x72
nonlinear_ec_tap_select_read
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x73
nonlinear_ec_tap_select_write
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x74
dfe_tap_select_read
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x75
dfe_tap_select_write
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x76
sp_tap_select_read
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x77
sp_tap_select_write
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x78
eq_add_read
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x79
eq_add_write
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
Bt8960
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
7
Registers
ADDR
(hex)
Register Summary
42
Table 3-1. Register Table (5 of 6)
Register
Label
Read
Write
0x7A
eq_microcode_add_read
0x7B
Bit Number
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
eq_microcode_add_write
R/W
—
—
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x7C
access_data_byte0
R/W
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
0x7D
access_data_byte1
R/W
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
0x7E
access_data_byte2
R/W
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
0x7F
access_data_byte3
R/W
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
Bt8960
ADDR
(hex)
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 3-1. Register Table (6 of 6)
N8960DSB
Registers
Register Summary
43
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.1 0x00—Global Modes and Status Register (global_modes)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
hw_revision[3]
hw_revision[2]
hw_revision[1]
hw_revision[0]
part_id[2]
part_id[1]
part_id[0]
mode
hw_revision[3:0]
Chip Revision Number—Read-only unsigned binary field encoded with the chip revision
number. Smaller values represent earlier versions while larger values represent later versions.
The zero value represents the original prototype release. Consult factory for current value and
revision.
part_id[2:0]
Part ID—Read-only binary field set to binary 001 identifying the part as Bt8960.
mode
Power Down Mode—Read/write control bit. When set, stops all filter processing and zeros the
transmit output for reduced power consumption. All RAM contents are preserved. The mode
bit is automatically set by RST assertion and upon initial power application. It can be cleared
only by writing a logic zero, at which time filter processing and transmitter operation can proceed.
3.2.2 0x01—Serial Monitor Source Select Register (serial_monitor_source)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
hclk_freq[1]
hclk_freq[0]
smon[5]
smon[4]
smon[3]
smon[2]
smon[1]
smon[0]
hclk_freq[1,0]
44
HCLK Frequency Select—Read/write binary field selects the frequency of the HCLK output.
hclk_freq[1]
hclk_freq[0]
HCLK Frequency
0
0
Symbol Frequency (FQCLK) times 64 hclk_freq[1,0] is set to “00” upon
assertion of the RST pin and power-on detection.
0
1
Symbol Frequency (FQCLK) times 16
1
0
Symbol Frequency (FQCLK) times 32
1
1
Symbol Frequency (FQCLK) times 64
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
smon[5:0]
Serial Monitor Source Select—Read/write binary field selects the Serial Monitor (SMON) output source.
smon[5:0]
Source
Decimal
Binary
0 – 47
00 0000 – 10 1111
48
11 0000
Digital Front-End Output/LEC Input
49
11 0001
Linear Echo Replica
50
11 0010
DFE Subtactor Output/EP Input
51
11 0011
EP Subtractor Output/Slicer Input
52
11 0100
Timing Recovery Phase Detector Output/Loop Filter Input
53
11 0101
Timing Recovery Loop Filter Output/Frequency Synthesizer Input
Equalizer Register File
3.2.3 0x02—Interrupt Mask Register Low (mask_low_reg)
Independent read/write mask bits for each of the Timer Source Register [timer_source; 0x04] interrupt flags. A
logic one represents the masked condition. A logic zero represents the unmasked condition. All mask bits
behave identically with respect to their corresponding interrupt flags. Setting a mask bit prevents the corresponding interrupt flag from affecting the IRQ output. Clearing a mask allows the interrupt flag to affect IRQ
output. Unmasking an active interrupt flag will immediately cause the IRQ output to go active, if currently inactive. Masking an active interrupt flag will cause IRQ to go inactive, if no other unmasked interrupt flags are set.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
t4
t3
snr
meter
su4
sut3
sut2
sut1
t4
General Purpose Timer 4
t3
General Purpose Timer 3
snr
SNR Alarm Timer
meter
Meter Timer
sut4
Startup Timer 4
sut3
Startup Timer 3
sut2
Startup Timer 2
sut1
Startup Timer 1
N8960DSB
45
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.4 0x03—Interrupt Mask Register High (mask_high_reg)
Independent read/write mask bits for each of the IRQ Source Register [irq_source; 0x05] interrupt flags. Individual mask bit behavior is identical to that specified for Interrupt Mask Register Low [mask_low_reg; 0x02].
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
sync
high_felm
low_felm
low_snr
sync
Sync Indication
high_felm
Far-End Level Meter High Alarm
low_felm
Far-End Level Meter High Alarm
low_snr
Signal-to-Noise Ratio Low Alarm
3.2.5 0x04—Timer Source Register (timer_source)
Independent read/write (zero only) interrupt flags, one for each of eight internal timers. Each flag bit is set and
stays set when its corresponding timer value transitions from one to zero. If unmasked, this event will cause the
IRQ output to be activated. Flags are cleared by writing them with a logic zero value. Once cleared, a steadystate timer value of zero will not cause a flag to be reasserted. Clearing an unmasked flag will cause the IRQ
output to return to the inactive state, if no other unmasked interrupt flags are set.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
t4
General Purpose Timer 4
t3
General Purpose Timer 3
snr
SNR Alarm Timer
meter
Meter Timer
sut4
Startup Timer 4
sut3
Startup Timer 3
sut2
Startup Timer 2
sut1
Startup Timer 1
46
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.6 0x05—IRQ Source Register (irq_source)
Independent read/write (zero only) interrupt flags, one for each of four internal sources. Each flag bit is set and
stays set when its corresponding source indicates that a valid interrupt condition exists. If unmasked, this event
will cause the IRQ output to be activated. Writing a logic zero to an interrupt flag whose underlying condition
no longer exists will cause the flag to be immediately cleared. Attempting to clear a flag whose underlying condition still exists will not immediately clear the flag, but will allow it to remain set until the underlying condition
expires, at which time the flag will be cleared automatically. The clearing of an unmasked flag will cause the
IRQ output to return to an inactive state, if no other unmasked interrupt flags are set.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
sync
high_felm
low_felm
low_snr
sync
Sync Indication—Active when the sync detector is enabled and its accumulated equivalent
comparisons exceeds (greater than) the threshold value stored in the Scrambler Sync Threshold Register [scr_sync_th; 0x2E].
high_felm
Far-End Level Meter High Alarm—Active when the far-end level meter value exceeds (greater
than) the threshold stored in the Far-End High Alarm Threshold Registers
[far_end_high_alarm_th_low, far_end_high_alarm_th_high; 0x30–0x31].
low_felm
Far-End Level Meter Low Alarm—Active when the far-end level meter value exceeds (less
than) the threshold stored in the Far-End Low Alarm Threshold Registers
[far_end_low_alarm_th_low, far_end_low_alarm_th_high; 0x32–0x33].
low_snr
Signal-to-Noise Ratio Low Alarm—Active when the SNR Alarm meter value exceeds (greater
than) the threshold stored in the SNR Alarm Threshold Registers [snr_alarm_th_low,
snr_alarm_th_high; 0x34–0x35].
3.2.7 0x06—Channel Unit Interface Modes Register (cu_interface_modes)
7
6
5
4
3
2
–
–
–
tbclk_pol
rbclk_pol
fifos_mode
1
0
interface_mode[1] interface_mode[0]
tbclk_pol
Transmit Baud Clock Polarity—Read/write control bit defines the polarity of the TBCLK
input while in the parallel slave interface mode. When set, TQ[1,0] is sampled on the falling
edge of TBCLK; when cleared, TQ[1,0] is sampled on the rising edge.
rbclk_pol
Receive Baud Clock Polarity—Read/write control bit defines the polarity of the RBCLK input
while in the parallel slave interface mode. When set, RQ[1,0] is updated on the falling edge of
RBCLK; when cleared, RQ[1,0] is updated on the rising edge.
fifos_mode
FIFO’s Mode—Read/write control bit used to stagger the transmit and receive FIFO’s read and
write pointers while in the parallel slave interface mode. A logic one forces the pointers to a
staggered position, while a logic zero allows them to operate normally. Must be first set, then
cleared once after QCLK-TBCLK-RBCLK frequency lock is achieved to maximize phaseerror tolerance.
interface_
mode[1,0]
Interface Mode—Read/write binary field specifies one of four operating modes for the channel
unit interface.
N8960DSB
47
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Interface
mode
[1:0]
Pin Functions
Mode
91
90
88
89
85
86
00
Parallel Master —Parallel quat transfer
synchronized to QCLK out.
Not
used
Not
used
RQ[1]
RQ[0]
TQ[1]
TQ[0]
01
Parallel Slave—Parallel quat transfer
synchronized to separate TBCLK and
RBCLK inputs.
TBCLK
RBCLK
RQ[1]
RQ[0]
TQ[1]
TQ[0]
10
Serial, Magnitude First. Serial quat
transfer synchronized to BCLK out;
magnitude-bit first followed by sign bit.
Not
used
Not
used
RDAT
BCLK
TDAT
Not
used
11
Serial, Sign First. Serial quat transfer
synchronized to BCLK out; sign-bit first
followed by magnitude bit.
Not
used
Not
used
RDAT
BCLK
TDAT
Not
used
3.2.8 0x07—Receive Phase Select Register (receive_phase_select)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
rphs[3]
rphs[2]
rphs[1]
rphs[0]
rphs[3:0]
Receive Phase Select—Read/write binary field that defines the relative phase relationship
between QCLK and the sampling point of the ADC. The rising edges of QCLK corresponds to
the ADC sampling point when rphs = 0000. Each binary increment of rphs represents a onesixteenth QCLK period delay in the sampling point relative to QCLK.
3.2.9 0x08—Linear Echo Canceller Modes Register (linear_ec_modes)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
enable_dc_tap
adapt_
coefficients
zero_coefficients
zero_output
adapt_gain[1]
adapt_gain[0]
enable_dc_tap
Enable DC Tap—Read/write control bit which, when set, forces a constant +1 value into the
last data tap of the Linear Echo Canceller (LEC). This condition enables cancellation of any
residual DC offset present at the input to the LEC. When cleared, the last data tap operates normally, as the oldest transmit data sample.
adapt_coefficents
Adapt Coefficients—Read/write control bit which enables coefficient adaptation when set; disables/freezes adaptation when cleared. Coefficient values are preserved when adaptation is disabled.
zero_coefficients
Zero Coefficients—Read/write control bit that continuously zeros all coefficients when set;
allows normal coefficient updates, if enabled, when cleared. This behavior differs slightly from
the similar function (zero_coefficients) of the FFE and EP filters.
48
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
zero_output
Zero Output—Read/write control bit which, when set, zeros the echo replica before subtraction from the input signal. Achieves the affect of disabling or bypassing the echo cancellation
function. Does not disable coefficient adaptation. When cleared, normal echo Canceller operation is performed.
adapt_gain[1,0]
Adaptation Gain—Read/write binary field which specifies the adaptation gain.
adapt_gain[1,0]
Normalized Gain
00
1
01
4
10
64
11
512
3.2.10 0x09—Nonlinear Echo Canceller Modes Register (nonlinear_ec_modes)
7
negate_symbol
6
5
4
symbol_delay[2] symbol_delay[1] symbol_delay[0]
3
2
1
0
adapt_
coefficients
zero_coefficients
zero_output
adapt_gain
negate_symbol
Negate Symbol—Read/write control bit which, when set, inverts (2’s complement) the receive
signal path at the output of the nonlinear echo canceller. When cleared, the signal path is unaffected. This function is independent of all other NEC mode settings.
symbol_delay[2:0]
Symbol Delay—Read/write binary field which specifies the number of symbol delays inserted
in the transmit symbol input path.
adapt_coefficients
Adapt Coefficients—Same function as LEC Modes Register [linear_ec_modes; 0x08].
zero_coefficients
Zero Coefficients—Same function as LEC Modes Register.
zero_output
Zero Output—Same function as LEC Modes Register.
adapt_gain
Adaptation Gain—Read/write control bit which specifies the adaptation gain. When set, the
adaptation gain is eight times higher than when cleared.
N8960DSB
49
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.11 0x0A—Decision Feedback Equalizer Modes Register (dfe_modes)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
adapt_
coefficients
zero_coefficients
zero_output
adapt_gain
adapt_coefficents
Adapt Coefficients—Read/write control bit which enables coefficient adaptation when set; disables/freezes adaptation when cleared. Coefficient values are preserved when adaptation is disabled.
zero_coefficients
Zero Coefficients—Read/write control bit which continuously zeros all coefficients when set;
allows normal coefficient updates, if enabled, when cleared.
zero_output
Zero Output—Read/write control bit which, when set, zeros the equalizer correction signal
before subtraction from the input signal. Achieves the affect of disabling or bypassing the
equalization function. Does not disable coefficient adaptation. When cleared, normal equalizer
operation is performed.
adapt_gain
Adaptation Gain—Read/write control bit which specifies the adaptation gain. When set, the
adaptation gain is eight times higher than when cleared.
3.2.12 0x0B—Transmitter Modes Register (transmitter_modes)
7
–
6
5
isolated_pulse[1] isolated_pulse[0]
isolated_pulse[1,0]
4
3
2
1
0
transmitter_off
htur_lfsr
data_source[2]
data_source[1]
data_source[0]
Isolated Pulse Level Select—Read/write binary field that selects one of four output pulse levels while in the isolated pulse transmitter mode.
isolated_pulse[1,0]
Output Pulse Level
00
–3
01
–1
10
+3
11
+1
transmitter_off
Transmitter Off—Read/write control bit that zeros the output of the transmitter when set;
allows normal transmitter operation (as defined by data_source[2:0]) when cleared.
htur_lfsr
Remote Unit (HTU-R/NTU) Polynomial Select—Read/write control bit selects one of two
feedback polynomials for the transmit scrambler. When set, this bit selects the remote unit
transmit polynomial (x–23 + x–18 + 1); when cleared, it selects the local unit (HTU-C/LTU)
polynomial (x–23 + x–5 + 1).
data_source[2:0]
Data Source—Read/write binary field that selects the data source and mode of the transmitter
output. The transmitter must be enabled (transmitter_off = 0) for these modes to be active.
50
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
data_source
[2:0]
Transmitter Mode
000
Isolated pulse. Level selected by isolated_pulse[1:0]. The meter timer must be enabled
and in the continuous mode. The pulse repetition interval is determined by the meter
timer countdown interval.
001
Four-level scrambled detector loopback. Sign and magnitude bits from the receiver
detector are scrambled and looped back to the transmitter. Feedback polynomial determined by the htur_lfsr control bit.
010
Four-level unscrambled data. Transmits the four-level (2B1Q) sign and magnitude bits
from the channel unit transmit interface without scrambling.
011
Four-level scrambled ones. Transmits a scrambled, constant high logic level as a fourlevel (2B1Q) signal. Feedback polynomial determined by the htur_lfsr control bit.
100
Reserved.
101
Four-level scrambled data. Scrambles and transmits the four-level (2B1Q) sign and magnitude bits from the channel unit transmit interface. Feedback polynomial determined by
the htur_lfsr control bit.
110
Two-level unscrambled data. Constantly forces the magnitude bit from the channel unit
transmit interface to a logic zero and transmits the resulting two-level signal (as determined by the sign bit) without scrambling. Valid output levels limited to +3, –3.
111
Two-level scrambled ones. Transmits a scrambled, constant high-logic level as a twolevel signal. Feedback polynomial determined by the htur_lfsr control bit. Scrambler is
run at the symbol rate (half-bit rate) to produce the sign bit of the transmitted signal
while the magnitude bit is sourced with a constant logic zero. Valid output levels limited
to +3, –3.
N8960DSB
51
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.13 0x0C—Timer Restart Register (timer_restart)
Independent read/write restart bits, one for each of the eight internal timers. Setting an individual bit causes the
associated timer to be reloaded with the contents of its interval register. For the four symbol-rate timers (meter,
snr, t3, t4), reloading will occur within one symbol period. For the four startup timers (sut1–4), reloading will
occur within 1,024 symbol periods. Once reloaded, the restart bit is automatically cleared. If a restart bit is set
and then cleared (by writing a logic zero) before the reload actually takes place, no timer reload will occur.
Once reloaded, if enabled in the Timer Enable Register [timer_enable; 0x0D], the timer will begin counting
down toward zero; otherwise, it will hold at the interval register value.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
t4
General Purpose Timer 4
t3
General Purpose Timer 3
snr
SNR Alarm Timer
meter
Meter Timer
sut4
Startup Timer 4
sut3
Startup Timer 3
sut2
Startup Timer 2
sut1
Startup Timer 1
3.2.14 0x0D—Timer Enable Register (timer_enable)
Independent read/write enable bits, one for each of the eight internal timers. When any individual bit is set, the
corresponding timer is enabled for counting down from its current value toward zero. For the four symbol-rate
timers (meter, snr, t3, t4), counting will begin within one symbol period. For the four startup timers (sut1-4),
counting will begin within 1,024 symbol periods. When an enable bit is cleared, the timer is disabled from
counting while it holds its current value. If an enable bit is set and then cleared before a count actually takes
place, no timer countdown will occur.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
t4
General Purpose Timer 4
t3
General Purpose Timer 3
snr
SNR Alarm Timer
meter
Meter Timer
sut4
Startup Timer 4
sut3
Startup Timer 3
sut2
Startup Timer 2
sut1
Startup Timer 1
52
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.15 0x0E—Timer Continuous Mode Register (timer_continuous)
Independent read/write mode bits, one for each of the eight internal timers. When any individual bit is set, the
corresponding timer is placed in the continuous count mode. While in this mode, after reaching the zero count,
an enabled timer will reload the contents of its interval register and continue counting. When a mode bit is
cleared, the timer is taken out of the continuous mode. While in this configuration, after reaching the zero count,
an enabled timer will simply stop counting and remain at zero.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
t4
t3
snr
meter
sut4
sut3
sut2
sut1
3.2.16 0x0F—Test Register (reserved2)
A 1-byte read/write register used for device testing by Rockwell. This register is automatically initialized to
0x00 upon RST assertion and initial power application. This register must be initialized according to the device
driver provided by Rockwell.
3.2.17 0x10, 0x11—Startup Timer 1 Interval Register (sut1_low, sut1_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for Startup Timer 1 in unsigned binary format. Each
increment represents 1,024 symbol periods. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into its associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous mode.
3.2.18 0x12, 0x13—Startup Timer 2 Interval Register (sut2_low, sut2_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for Startup Timer 2 in unsigned binary format. Each
increment represents 1,024 symbol periods. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into its associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous mode.
3.2.19 0x14, 0x15—Startup Timer 3 Interval Register (sut3_low, sut3_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for Startup Timer 3 in unsigned binary format. Each
increment represents 1,024 symbol periods. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into its associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous mode.
3.2.20 0x16, 0x17—Startup Timer 4 Interval Register (sut4_low, sut4_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for Startup Timer 4 in unsigned binary format. Each
increment represents 1,024 symbol periods. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into its associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous mode.
3.2.21 0x18, 0x19—Meter Timer Interval Register (meter_low, meter_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for the Meter Timer in unsigned binary format. Each
increment represents one symbol period. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into its associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous mode.
N8960DSB
53
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.22 0x20—Test Register (reserved9)
A 1-byte read/write register used for device testing by Rockwell. This register is automatically initialized to
0x00 upon RST assertion and initial power application. This register must be initialized according to the device
driver provided by Rockwell.
3.2.23 0x1A, 0x1B—SNR Alarm Timer Interval Register (snr_timer_low,
snr_timer_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for the SNR Alarm Timer in unsigned binary format.
Each increment represents one symbol period. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into its
associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous
mode.
3.2.24 0x1C, 0x1D—General Purpose Timer 3 Interval Register (t3_low, t3_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for General Purpose Timer 3 in unsigned binary format. Each increment represents one symbol period. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into
its associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous mode.
3.2.25 0x1E, 0x1F—General Purpose Timer 4 Interval Register (t4_low, t4_high)
A 2-byte read/write register stores the countdown interval for General Purpose Timer 4 in unsigned binary format. Each increment represents one symbol period. The contents of this register are automatically loaded into
its associated timer after the timer’s timer_restart bit is set, or after it counts down to zero while in the continuous mode.
54
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.26 0x21—ADC Control Register (adc_control)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
loop_back[1]
loop_back[0]
–
gain[2]
gain[1]
gain[0]
loop_back[1,0]
gain[2:0]
Loopback Control—Read/write binary field specifying if loopback is enabled, and the type of
loopback that is enabled. During transmitting loopback, the differential receiver inputs (RXP,
RXN) are disabled. The loopback path is intended to go from the transmitter outputs (TXP,
TXN), through the external hybrid circuit, back into the differential receiver balance inputs
(RXBP, RXBN). During silent loop back, the transmitter is turned off, and the output of the
pulse-shaping filter in the transmit section is internally connected to the input of the ADC in
the receive section.
loop_back[1,0]
Function
00
Normal Operation (Loop Back Disabled)
01
Hybrid Inputs Disabled (RXBP, RXBN)
10
Transmitting Loopback
11
Silent Loop Back
Gain Control—Read/write binary field specifies the gain of the VGA.
gain[2:0]
VGA Gain
000
0dB
001
3 dB
010
6 dB
011
9 dB
100
12 dB
101
15 dB
110
15 dB
111
15 dB
N8960DSB
55
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.27 0x22—PLL Modes Register (pll_modes)
7
6
5
clk_freq[1]
clk_freq[0]
negate_symbol
clk_freq[1,0]
phase_detector_
gain[1,0]
4
3
phase_detector_ phase_detector_
gain[1]
gain[0]
2
1
0
freeze_pll
pll_gain[1]
pll_gain[0]
Clock Frequency Select—Read/write binary field specifies one of four data rate ranges for
Bt8960 operation. The 00 state is automatically selected by RST assertion and upon initial
power application. The crystal or external clock frequency must be equal to 32 times the data
rate.
clk_freq[1,0]
Range Data Rate
00
221 to 252kbps
01
Above 352 kbps
10
160 to 221 kbps
11
Reserved
Phase Detector Gain—Read/write binary field specifies one of four gain settings for the timing-recovery phase detector function.
phase_detector_gain[1,0]
Normalized Gain
00
1
01
2
10
4
11
Reserved
freeze_pll
Freeze PLL—Read/write control bit. When set, this bit zeros the proportional term of the loop
compensation filter and disables accumulator updates causing the PLL to hold its current frequency. When cleared, proportional term effects and accumulator updates are enabled allowing
the PLL to track the phase of the incoming data.
pll_gain[1,0]
PLL Gain—Read/write binary field specifies the gain (proportional and integral coefficients)
of the loop compensation filter.
56
pll_gain[1:0]
Normalized
Proportional Coefficients
Normalized
Integral Coefficients
00
1
1
01
4
32
10
16
256
11
64
4096
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.28 0x23—Test Register (reserved10)
A 3-byte read/write register used for device testing by Rockwell. This register is automatically initialized to
0x000000 upon RST assertion and initial power application. This register must be initialized according to the
device driver provided by Rockwell.
3.2.29 0x24, 0x25—Timing Recovery PLL Phase Offset Register
(pll_phase_offset_low, pll_phase_offset_high)
A 2-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The value of this register is subtracted from the output of the timing-recovery phase detector after the phase-detector meter but before the loop
compensation filter.
3.2.30 0x26, 0x27—Receiver DC Offset Register (dc_offset_low, dc_offset_high)
A 2-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The value of this register is subtracted from the receiver signal path at the output of the digital front end’s format conversion block, ahead of the
DC level and signal level meters.
3.2.31 0x28—Transmitter Calibration Register (tx_calibrate)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
tx_calibrate[3]
tx_calibrate[2]
tx_calibrate[1]
tx_calibrate[0]
–
–
tx_calibrate[3:0]
Transmit Calibrate—4-bit, 2’s-complement, read-only field containing the nominal setting for
the transmitter gain. The value of the Transmit Calibration Register is set during manufacturing testing by Rockwell and corresponds to the value required to operate the Bt8960 at a nominal 13.5 dBm transmit power, assuming the recommended transformer coupling/hybrid circuit
is used. Users may override this calibration by writing their own value into the Transmitter
Gain Register [tx_gain; 0x29].
N8960DSB
57
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.32 0x29—Transmitter Gain Register (tx_gain)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
tx_gain[3]
tx_gain[2]
tx_gain[1]
tx_gain[0]
–
–
tx_gain[3:0]
58
Transmit Gain—A 4-bit, 2’s-complement, read/write field controlling the transmitter gain.
Upon initialization, the value in the Transmitter Calibration Register [tx_calibrate; 0x28] may
be written into this register by software to set the transmitter gain to the nominal value, or the
user may set it to another desired value.
tx_gain[3:0]
Relative Transmitter Gain (dB)
1000
–1.60
1001
–1.36
1010
–1.13
1011
–0.91
1100
–0.69
1101
–0.48
1110
–0.27
1111
–0.07
0000
0.13
0001
0.32
0010
0.51
0011
0.70
0100
0.88
0101
1.05
0110
1.23
0111
1.40
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.33 0x2A, 0x2B—Noise-Level Histogram Threshold Register
(noise_histogram_th_low, noise_histogram_th_high)
Two-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The range of meaningful values is
limited to positive integers between 0x0000 and 0x7FFF. The value of this register is compared to the absolute
value of the slicer error signal produced by the detector. A count of error samples that exceed this threshold
(greater than) is accumulated in the noise-level histogram meter.
3.2.34 0x2C, 0x2D—Error Predictor Pause Threshold Register (ep_pause_th_low,
ep_pause_th_high)
Two-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The range of meaningful values is
limited to positive integers between 0x0000 and 0x7FFF. The value of this register is compared to the absolute
value of the slicer error signal produced by the detector. The result of this comparison (slicer error greater than
this threshold) is used to initiate a pause condition by zeroing the output of the error predictor correction signal
before subtraction from the receive signal path. Error predictor coefficient updates are not affected. The pause
condition lasts for a fixed 5-symbol period from the time the threshold was last exceeded.
3.2.35 0x2E—Scrambler Synchronization Threshold Register (scr_sync_th)
A 7-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary number. The contents of this register are used to test
for scrambler synchronization during the automatic-scrambler synchronization mode of the symbol detector.
The test passes when the count of equivalent scrambler and detector output bits exceeds (greater than) the value
of this register. When the auto-scrambler sync mode is not enabled, the contents of this register are not used.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.36 0x30, 0x31—Far-End High Alarm Threshold Register
(far_end_high_alarm_th_low, far_end_high_alarm_th_high)
A 2-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The range of meaningful values is
limited to positive integers between 0x0000 and 0x7FFF. The value of this register is compared to the value of
the far-end level meter. If the meter reading exceeds (greater than) this threshold, the high_felm interrupt flag is
set in the IRQ Source Register [irq_source; 0x05].
3.2.37 0x32, 0x33—Far-End Low Alarm Threshold Register
(far_end_low_alarm_th_low, far_end_low_alarm_th_high)
A 2-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The range of meaningful values is
limited to positive integers between 0x0000 and 0x7FFF. The value of this register is compared to the value of
the far-end level meter. If the meter reading exceeds (less than) this threshold, the low_felm interrupt flag is set
in the IRQ Source Register [irq_source; 0x05].
N8960DSB
59
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.38 0x34, 0x35—SNR Alarm Threshold Register (snr_alarm_th_low,
snr_alarm_th_high)
A 2-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The range of meaningful values is
limited to positive integers between 0x0000 and 0x7FFF. The value of this register is compared to the value of
the SNR alarm meter. If the meter reading exceeds (greater than) this threshold, the low_snr interrupt flag is set
in the IRQ Source Register [irq_source; 0x05].
3.2.39 0x36, 0x37—Cursor Level Register (cursor_level_low, cursor_level_high)
A 2-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The range of meaningful values is
limited to positive integers between 0x0000 and 0x2AAA (one-third of the maximum positive value). The value
of this register represents the expected level of a noise-free +1 receive symbol at the output of the DFE. It is
multiplied by 2 to produce the positive and negative slicing levels, in addition to zero, used by the symbol detector in four-level slicing mode. This value is also used to scale the detector output when computing the equalizer
error and slicer error signals. The detected symbol (–3, –1, +1, +3) is multiplied by the value of this register to
produce the scaled output.
3.2.40 0x38, 0x39—DAGC Target Register (dagc_target_low, dagc_target_high)
A 2-byte read/write register interpreted as a 16-bit, 2’s-complement number. The range of meaningful values is
limited to positive integers between 0x0000 and 0x7FFF. The value of this register is subtracted from the absolute value of the receive signal at the output of the DAGC function. The difference is used as the error input to
the DAGC while in the self-adaptation mode. In the DAGC’s equalizer-error adaptation mode, the contents of
this register are not used.
60
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.41 0x3A—Symbol Detector Modes Register (detector_modes)
7
6
5
4
enable_peak_det output_mux_con output_mux_con
scr_out_to_dfe
ector
trol[1]
trol[0]
enable_peak_
detector
output_mux_
control[1,0]
3
2
1
0
two_level
lfsr_lock
htur_lfsr
descr_on
Enable Peak Detector—Read/write control bit that enables the peak detection function when
set; disables the function when cleared. When enabled, the peak detector output overrides the
slicer output if the peak detection criteria are met. If the criteria are not met, or if the function
is disabled, the slicer output is used and peak detector output is ignored.
Output Multiplexer Control—Read/write binary field that selects the source of the detector
output connected to the channel unit receive interface.
output_mux_control[1,0]
Detector Output to CU Receive Interface
00
Same as scr_out_to_dfe selection.
01
Transmitter loopback output from CU transmit interface.
10
Scrambler/descrambler output.
11
Reserved.
scr_out_to_dfe
Scrambler Output to DFE—Read/write control bit that selects the source of the detector output
connected to the DFE and timing recovery module inputs, and the transmitter’s detector loopback input. When set, this bit selects the scrambler/descrambler function; when cleared, it
selects the slicer/peak detector output.
two_level
Two-Level Mode—Read/write control bit that selects two-level mode when set, four-level
mode when cleared. Affects the slicer and the scrambler/descrambler function. In two-level
mode, the slicer uses a single threshold set at zero to recover sign bits only; all magnitude
information is lost. Scrambler/descrambler updates are slowed to the symbol rate (half the normal bit rate) to process only sign information as well; all magnitude output bits are sourced
with a constant logic zero value producing two-level symbols constrained to +3 and –3 values.
In 4-level mode, the slicer uses two thresholds derived from the Cursor Level Register
[cursor_level_low, cursor_level_high; 0x36–0x37], as well as the zero threshold, to recover
both sign and magnitude information. The scrambler/descrambler is updated at the full bit rate
to process both sign and magnitude bits as well.
lfsr_lock
LFSR Lock—Read/write control bit that enables the auto scrambler synchronization mode
(lfsr_lock) in the detector when set; disables this mode when cleared. Affects the behavior of
the scrambler/descrambler function, overriding the descr_on setting. When enabled, the
scrambler/descrambler is forced into the descrambler mode for 23 cycles. It is then switched to
the scrambled-ones mode for 128 cycles. While in this mode, the outputs of the scrambler and
the slicer/peak detector are compared against one another. The number of equivalent bits
(equal comparisons) is accumulated and compared to the value of the scrambler synchronization threshold register [scr_sync_th; 0x2E].
At any time during the 128 cycles, if the count exceeds the threshold (greater than), the sync
interrupt flag is set in the IRQ Source Register [irq_source; 0x05] and the process terminates
with the scrambler/descrambler left in the scrambled-ones mode. (The sync interrupt flag canN8960DSB
61
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
not be cleared while lfsr_lock remains high.) After 128 cycles, if the threshold is not exceeded,
the accumulator is cleared, the scrambler/descrambler re-enters the descrambler mode for
another 23 cycles, and the process repeats until either sync is achieved or this mode is disabled. Once disabled, the sync interrupt flag can be cleared (if active) and the scrambler/descrambler returns to the mode specified by descr_on.
htur_lfsr
Remote Unit (HTU-R/NTU) Polynomial Select—Read/write control bit that selects one of two
feedback polynomials for the scrambler/descrambler. When set, this bit selects the remote unit
(HTU-R/NTU) receive polynomial (x–23 + x–5 + 1); when cleared, is selects the local unit
(HTU-C/LTU) polynomial (x–23 + x–18 + 1).
descr_on
Descrambler/Scrambler Select—Read/write control bit that configures the scrambler/descrambler function as a descrambler when set, and as a scrambler when cleared. As a scrambler, this
bit can only generate a scrambled all ones sequence (constant high logic-level input); all
incoming data is ignored. In the auto scrambler synchronization mode (lfsr_lock = 1), this
selection is overwritten though the value of the control bit is unaffected.
3.2.42 0x3B—Peak Detector Delay Register (peak_detector_delay)
A 4-bit read/write register interpreted as an unsigned binary number. Specifies a number of additional symbol
delays inserted in the peak detector input path of the symbol detector. Must be set to a value that equalizes the
total path delay in each of the peak detector and slicer input paths according to the following formula: peak
detector delay register value = DAGC delays + FFE delays – fixed peak detector input delays. The DAGC and
FFE delays are not fixed, but result from the microprogrammed implementation of these functions. If used
unmodified, they equal 0 and 7, respectively. The fixed peak detector input delay is equal to 3.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.43 0x3C—Digital AGC Modes Register (dagc_modes)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
–
eq_error_
adaptation
adapt_coefficient
adapt_gain
eq_error_
adaptation
Equalizer Error Adaptation—Read/write control bit that selects between the equalizer error
adaptation mode when set, and the self-adaptation mode when cleared. Equalizer error adaptation uses the equalizer error signal produced by the slicer as the DAGC error input signal. In
self adaptation, the value of the DAGC Target Register [dagc_target_low, dagc_target_high;
0x38–0x39] is subtracted from the absolute value of the receive signal at the output of the
DAGC, and this difference is used as the error input signal.
adapt_coefficient
Adapt Coefficients—Read/write control bit that enables coefficient adaptation when set; disables/freezes adaptation when cleared. Coefficient values are preserved when adaptation is disabled.
adapt_gain
Adaptation Gain—Read/write control bit that specifies the adaptation gain. When set, the
adaptation gain is eight times higher than when cleared.
62
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.44 0x3D—Feed Forward Equalizer Modes Register (ffe_modes)
7
6
5
4
–
–
–
–
3
2
adapt_last_coeff zero_coefficents
1
0
adapt_
coefficents
adapt_gain
adapt_last_coeff
Adapt Last Coefficient—Read/write control bit enables adaptation of the last (oldest) coefficient only when set; allows all coefficient adaptation when cleared. Overall coefficient adaptation must be enabled (adapt_coefficients = 1) for this behavior to occur. If coefficient
adaptation is disabled (adapt_coefficients = 0), the value of this control bit is not used.
zero_coefficients
Zero Coefficients—Read/write control bit which, with coefficient adaptation enabled
(adapt_coefficients = 1), continuously zeros all coefficients when set; allows normal coefficient updates when cleared. If coefficient adaptation is disabled (adapt_coefficients = 0), this
control bit has no affect. This behavior differs slightly from the similar function
(zero_coefficients) of the LEC, NEC, and DFE filters.
adapt_coefficents
Adapt Coefficients—Read/write control bit enables coefficient adaptation when set; disables/freezes adaptation when cleared. Coefficient values are preserved when adaptation is disabled. This overall coefficient adaptation must be enabled for adapt_last_coeff to have an
affect.
adapt_gain
Adaptation Gain—Read/write control bit specifies the adaptation gain. When set, the adaptation gain is four times higher than when cleared.
3.2.45 0x3E—Error Predictor Modes Register (ep_modes)
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
–
–
zero_output
zero_coefficients
adapt_
coefficients
adapt_gain
zero_output
Zero Output—Read/write control bit which, when set, zeros the error predictor correction signal before subtraction from the input signal. Achieves the affect of disabling, or bypassing, the
error predictor function. Does not disable coefficient adaptation. When cleared, normal error
predictor operation is performed.
zero_coefficients
Zero Coefficients—Read/write control bit which, with coefficient adaptation enabled
(adapt_coefficients = 1), continuously zeros all coefficients when set; allows normal coefficient updates when cleared. If coefficient adaptation is disabled (adapt_coefficients = 0), this
control bit has no affect. This behavior differs slightly from the similar function
(zero_coefficients) of the LEC, NEC, and DFE filters.
adapt_coefficents
Adapt Coefficients—Read/write control bit enables coefficient adaptation when set; disables/freezes adaptation when cleared. Coefficient values are preserved when adaptation is disabled.
adapt_gain
Adaptation Gain—Read/write control bit specifies the adaptation gain. When set, the adaptation gain is four times higher than when cleared.
N8960DSB
63
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.46 0x40, 0x41—Phase Detector Meter Register (pdm_low, pdm_high)
A 2-byte read-only register containing the 16 MSBs of the 26-bit, 2’s-complement phase detector meter accumulator. This meter sums the output of the timing recovery module’s phase detector—prior to being offset by
the Phase Offset Register [pll_phase_offset_low, pll_phase_offset_high; 0x24, 0x25]—over each Meter Timer
countdown interval. Automatically loaded at the end of each interval, the meter register must be read low byte
first, followed by high byte, unseparated by any other meter-register read access.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[17]
D[16]
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[25]
D[24]
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
3.2.47 0x42—Overflow Meter Register (overflow_meter)
A single-byte read-only register containing all 8 bits of the unsigned overflow meter accumulator. This meter
counts the number of ADC overflow conditions which occur during each Meter Timer countdown interval, limited to a maximum count of 255 (0xFF). The meter register is automatically loaded at the end of each countdown interval.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.48 0x44, 0x45—DC Level Meter Register (dc_meter_low, dc_meter_high)
A 2-byte read-only register containing the 16 MSBs of the 32-bit, 2’s-complement DC-level meter accumulator.
This meter sums the value of the receive signal input path—after format conversion and DC offset correction
but before echo cancellation—over each Meter Timer countdown interval. Automatically loaded at the end of
each interval, the meter register must be read low byte first, followed by high byte, unseparated by any other
meter-register read access.
64
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.49 0x46, 0x47—Signal Level Meter Register (slm_low, slm_high)
A 2-byte read-only register containing 16 MSBs of the 32-bit unsigned signal-level meter accumulator. This
meter sums the absolute value of the receive signal input path—after format conversion and DC offset correction but before echo cancellation (same point as the DC level meter)—over each Meter Timer countdown interval. Automatically loaded at the end of each interval, the meter register must be read low byte first, followed by
high byte, unseparated by any other meter-register read access.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
3.2.50 0x48, 0x49—Far-End Level Meter Register (felm_low, felm_high)
A 2-byte read-only register containing 16 MSBs of the 32-bit unsigned far-end level meter accumulator. This
meter sums the absolute value of the receive signal path—after echo cancellation but before the DAGC function—over each Meter Timer countdown interval. Automatically loaded at the end of each interval, the meter
register must be read low byte first, followed by high byte, unseparated by any other meter-register read access.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
3.2.51 0x4A, 0x4B—Noise Level Histogram Meter Register (noise_histogram_low,
noise_histogram_high)
A 2-byte read-only register containing all 16 bits of the unsigned noise-level histogram meter accumulator. This
meter counts the number of high-noise-level conditions which occur during each Meter Timer countdown interval. A high-noise-level condition is defined as the absolute value of the slicer error signal exceeding (greater
than) the threshold specified in the Noise-level Histogram Threshold Register [0x2A, 2B]. Automatically loaded
at the end of each countdown interval, the meter register must be read low byte first, followed by high byte,
unseparated by any other meter-register read access.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
N8960DSB
65
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.52 0x4C, 0x4D—Bit Error Rate Meter Register (ber_meter_low,
ber_meter_high)
A 2-byte read-only register containing all 16 bits of the unsigned bit-error-rate meter accumulator. This meter
counts the number of error-free bits recovered by the detector during each Meter Timer countdown interval. An
error-free bit is defined as a match (equal comparison) of the detector’s slicer/peak detector output and its
scrambler/descrambler output, when operating as a scrambler. When operating as a descrambler, the meter simply counts the number of logic ones produced by the descrambler. The meter register is automatically loaded at
the end of each countdown interval, and must be read low byte first, followed by high byte, unseparated by any
other meter-register read access.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
D[15]
D[14]
D[13]
D[12]
D[11]
D[10]
D[9]
D[8]
3.2.53 0x4E—Symbol Histogram Meter Register (symbol_histogram)
A single-byte read-only register containing 8 MSBs of the 16-bit unsigned symbol histogram meter accumulator. This meter counts the number of plus-one or minus-one symbols (+1, –1) detected during each Meter Timer
countdown interval. No increment occurs when a plus-three or minus-three symbol (+3, –3) is detected. The
meter register is automatically loaded at the end of each countdown interval.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[7]
D[6]
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.54 0x50, 0x51—Noise Level Meter Register (nlm_low, nlm_high)
A 2-byte read-only register containing 16 MSBs of the 32-bit unsigned noise-level meter accumulator. This
meter sums the absolute value of the detector’s slicer-error signal over each Meter Timer countdown interval.
Automatically loaded at the end of each interval, the meter register must be read the low byte first, followed by
high byte, unseparated by any other meter-register read access.
66
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[23]
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
D[31]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.55 0x5E, 0x5F— PLL Frequency Register (pll_frequency_low,
pll_frequency_high)
A 2-byte read/write register comprising the 16 MSBs of the 31-bit, 2’s-complement timing recovery loop compensation filter accumulator. Treated much like a meter register, the frequency register must be read low byte
first, followed by high byte, unseparated by any timing-function or meter-register read access. Writes must
occur in the same order, with the low byte written first, followed by the high byte. Write accesses may be separated by any number of other read or write accesses.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
D[22]
D[21]
D[20]
D[19]
D[18]
D[17]
D[16]
D[15]
D[30]
D[29]
D[28]
D[27]
D[26]
D[25]
D[24]
D[23]
3.2.56 0x70—LEC Read Tap Select Register (linear_ec_tap_select_read)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 59 decimals.
When written, it causes the selected 32-bit coefficient of the LEC to be subsequently loaded into the Access
Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] within two symbol periods. Does not affect the value of the
coefficient.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.57 0x71—LEC Write Tap Select Register (linear_ec_tap_select_write)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 59 decimals.
When written, it causes all 32 bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] to be subsequently written to the selected LEC coefficient within two symbol periods. Does not affect the value of the
access data register.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.58 0x72—NEC Read Tap Select Register (nonlinear_ec_tap_select_read)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 63 decimals.
When written, it causes the selected 14-bit coefficient of the NEC to be subsequently loaded into the lowestorder bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] within two symbol periods. Does
not affect the value of the coefficient.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
N8960DSB
67
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.59 0x73—NEC Write Tap Select Register (nonlinear_ec_tap_select_write)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 63 decimals.
When written, it causes the lowest-order 14 bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–
0x7F] to be subsequently written to the selected NEC coefficient within two symbol periods. Does not affect the
value of the access data register.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.60 0x74—DFE Read Tap Select Register (dfe_tap_select_read)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 57 decimals.
When written, it causes the selected 16-bit coefficient of the DFE to be subsequently loaded into the lowestorder bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] within two symbol periods. Does
not affect the value of the coefficient.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.61 0x75—DFE Write Tap Select Register (dfe_tap_select_write)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 57 decimals.
When written, it causes the lowest-order 16 bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–
0x7F] to be subsequently written to the selected DFE coefficient within two symbol periods. Does not affect the
value of the access data register.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.62 0x76—Scratch Pad Read Tap Select (sp_tap_select_read)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 63 decimals.
When written, it causes the selected 8-bit scratch pad memory location to be subsequently loaded into the lowest-order bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] within two symbol periods.
Does not affect the value of the memory.
68
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
N8960DSB
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.63 0x77—Scratch Pad Write Tap Select (sp_tap_select_write)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 63 decimals.
When written, it causes the lowest-order 8 bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–
0x7F] to be subsequently written to the selected scratch pad memory location within two symbol periods. Does
not affect the value of the access data register.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.64 0x78—Equalizer Read Select Register (eq_add_read)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 47 decimals.
When written, it causes the selected 16-bit location of the equalizer register file to be subsequently loaded into
the lowest-order bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] within two symbol periods. Does not affect the value of the register file location. An address map of the shared register file, as defined
by the factory-delivered microcode, is shown below.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
D[5:0]
Stored Parameter
Decimal
Binary
0–7
00 0000–00 0111
FFE Coefficients 0–7
8–15
00 1000–00 1111
FFE Data Taps 0–7
16–20
01 0000–01 0100
EP Coefficients 0–4
21–25
01 0101–01 1001
EP Data Taps 0–4
26
01 1010
DAGC Gain - Least-Significant Word
27
01 1011
DAGC Gain - Most-Significant Word
28
01 1100
DAGC Output
29
01 1101
FFE Output
30
01 1110
DAGC Input
31
01 1111
FFE Output, Delayed 1 Symbol Period
32
10 0000
DAGC Error Signal
33
10 0001
Equalizer Error Signal
34
10 0010
Slicer Error Signal
35–47
10 0011–10 1111
Reserved
N8960DSB
69
Bt8960
3.0 Registers
3.1 Conventions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
3.2.65 0x79—Equalizer Write Select Register (eq_add_write)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 47 decimals.
When written, it causes the lowest-order 16 bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–
0x7F] to be subsequently written to the selected equalizer register file location within two symbol periods. Does
not affect the value of the access data register. An address map of the shared register file, as defined by the factory-delivered microcode, is shown below.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.66 0x7A—Equalizer Microcode Read Select Register (eq_microcode_add_read)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 63 decimals.
When written, it causes the selected 32-bit location of the equalizer microprogram store to be subsequently
loaded into the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] within two symbol periods. Does not
affect the value of the microprogram store location.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.67 0x7B—Equalizer Microcode Write Select Register
(eq_microcode_add_write)
A 6-bit read/write register representing an unsigned binary address defined over a range of 0 to 63 decimals.
When written, it causes all 32 bits of the Access Data Register [access_data_byte[3:0]; 0x7C–0x7F] to be subsequently written to the selected equalizer microprogram store location within two symbol periods. Does not
affect the value of the access data register. Factory-developed equalizer microcode is included with the no-fee
licensed HDSL transceiver software available from Rockwell.
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
–
–
D[5]
D[4]
D[3]
D[2]
D[1]
D[0]
3.2.68 0x7C–0x7F—Access Data Register (access_data_byte3:0)
A 4-byte read/write register stores filter coefficient, equalizer register file, and equalizer microprogram store
contents during indirect accesses to these RAM-based locations. Writes to addresses 0x70 through 0x7B, utilize
the contents of this shared register as specified in each of the individual register descriptions.
70
N8960DSB
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
Stresses above those listed may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only. Functional
operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those listed in the operational sections of this
specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect
device reliability.
Table 4-1. Absolute Maximum Ratings
Symbol
Minimum
Maximum
Units
Supply Voltage(1)
–0.5
+7
V
VI
Input Voltage on any Signal Pin(2)
–0.5
VDD2 + 0.5
V
TST
Storage Temperature
–65
+125
˚C
+220
˚C
VSupply
TVSOL
Parameter
Vapor-Phase Soldering Temperature (1
minute)
Notes: (1). VDD1, VDD2, relative to DGND. VAA relative to AGND.
(2). Relative to DGND.
N8960DSB
71
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.2 Recommended Operating Conditions
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.2 Recommended Operating Conditions
Table 4-2. Recommended Operating Conditions
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Typical
Maximum
Units
VDD1
Digital Core-Logic Supply Voltage
4.75
5.0
5.25
V
VDD2
Digital I/O-Buffer Supply Voltage
4.75
5.0
5.25
V
VAA
Analog Supply Voltage
4.75
5.0
5.25
V
VIH
High-Level Input Voltage
2.0
VDD2 + 0.3
V
VIL
Low-Level Input Voltage
–0.3
+0.8
V
VIHX
High-Level Input Voltage for XTALI / MCLK
0.8*VDD2
VDD2 + 0.3
V
VILX
Low-Level Input Voltage for XTALI / MCLK
–0.3
0.2*VDD2
V
60
pF
+85
˚C
CL
Output Capacitive Loading(1)
TA
Ambient Operating Temperature(2)
–40
Notes: (1). Capacitive loading over which all digital output switching characteristics are guaranteed.
(2). Still-air temperature range over which all electrical characteristics and timing requirements/characteristics are guaranteed.
72
N8960DSB
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.3 Electrical Characteristics
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.3 Electrical Characteristics
Typical characteristics measured at nominal operating conditions: TA = 25 ˚C; VDD/AA = 5.0 V minimum/maximum characteristics guaranteed over extreme operating conditions: min ≤ TA ≤ max; min ≤ VDD/AA ≤ max.
Table 4-3. Electrical Characteristics
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Typical
Maximum
Units
VOH
High-Level Output Voltage @ IOH = –400 µA
VOLL
Low-Level Output Voltage @ IOL = 6 mA (IRQ and READY)
0.4
V
VOL
Low-Level Output Voltage @ IOL = 3 mA (All Other Outputs)
0.4
V
Input Leakage Current @ VSS2 ≤ VI ≤ VDD2
±10
µA
IOZ
High-Impedance Output Leakage Current @ VSS2 ≤ VO ≤ VDD2
±10
µA
IPR
Resistive Pull-Up Current @ VI = VSS2 (TDI and TMS)
–800
µA
II
2.4
V
–100
ITOTAL
Total Supply Current @ FQCLK = 208 kHz (N=6)(1)
133
147
mA
ITOTAL
Total Supply Current @ FQCLK = 144 kHz (N=4)(1)
120
131
mA
ITOTAL
Total Supply Current @ FQCLK = 80 kHz (N=2)(1)
106
117
mA
IPD
Total Power-Down Current @ FQCLK = 208 kHz (N=6)(2)
TBD
mA
IPD
Total Power-Down Current @ FQCLK = 144 kHz (N=4)(2)
TBD
mA
IPD
Total Power-Down Current @ FQCLK = 80 kHz (N=2)(2)
TBD
mA
CI
Input Capacitance
10
pF
High-Impedance Output Capacitance
10
pF
COZ
Notes: (1). ITOTAL = IDD1 + IDD2 + IAA during normal operation.
(2). ITOTAL = IDD1 + IDD2 + IAA during power-down operation.
N8960DSB
73
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.4 Clock Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.4 Clock Timing
Table 4-4. External Clock Timing Requirements (MCLK)
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
Units
196
ns
1
MCLK Period (TMCLK)(1)
75
2
MCLK Pulse-Width Low
30
ns
3
MCLK Pulse-Width High
30
ns
Note: (1). If an external clock is applied to XTALI/MCLK, it is referred to as MCLK.
Figure 4-1. MCLK Timing Requirements
1
2
3
MCLK
Table 4-5. HCLK Switching Characteristics
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Typical
Maximum
4
HCLK Period (THCLK), hclk_freq[1:0] = ‘00’
or ‘11’ (N=6)(1)
TQCLK ÷64
TQCLK ÷64
TQCLK ÷64
5
HCLK Period (THCLK), hclk_freq[1:0] = ‘01’
(N=2)(1)
TQCLK ÷16
TQCLK ÷16
TQCLK ÷16
6
HCLK Period (THCLK), hclk_freq[1:0] = ‘10’
(N=4)(1)
TQCLK ÷32
TQCLK ÷32
TQCLK ÷32
7
HCLK Pulse-Width High
THCLK ÷ 2 – 10
THCLK ÷ 2
THCLK ÷ 2 + 10
ns
8
HCLK Pulse-Width Low
THCLK ÷ 2 – 10
THCLK ÷ 2
THCLK ÷ 2 + 10
ns
Notes: (1). The hclk_freq[1:0] control bits are located in the Serial Monitor Source Select Register [addr. 0x01].
74
N8960DSB
Units
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.4 Clock Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 4-6. Symbol Clock (QCLK) Switching Characteristics
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
Units
9
QCLK Period (TQCLK)(1)
K x THCLK
K x THCLK
10
QCLK Pulse-Width High
TQCLK ÷ 2 –
20
TQCLK ÷ 2 +
20
ns
11
QCLK Pulse-Width Low
TQCLK ÷ 2 –
20
TQCLK ÷ 2 +
20
ns
12
QCLK Hold after HCLK Rising Edge
13
QCLK Delay after HCLK High
–20
20
Note: (1). K = 16, 32 or 64 according to hclk_freq[1,0]. QCLK can be frequency locked to the incoming data symbol rate.
Figure 4-2. Clock Control Timing
4,5,6
7
HCLK
8
13
12
9
10
QCLK
11
N8960DSB
75
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.5 Channel Unit Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.5 Channel Unit Interface Timing
Table 4-7. Channel Unit Interface Timing Requirements, Parallel Master Mode
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
Units
14
TQ[1,0] Setup prior to QCLK Falling Edge
100
ns
15
TQ[1,0] Hold after QCLK Low
25
ns
Table 4-8. Channel Unit Interface Switching Characteristics, Parallel Master Mode
Symbol
Parameter
16
RQ[1,0] Hold after QCLK Rising Edge
17
RQ[1,0] Delay after QCLK High
Minimum
–50
RQ[1,0]
16
17
QCLK
14
TQ[1,0]
N8960DSB
15
Units
ns
50
Figure 4-3. Channel Unit Interface Timing, Parallel Master Mode
76
Maximum
ns
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.5 Channel Unit Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 4-9. Channel Unit Interface Timing Requirements, Parallel Slave Mode
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
TQCLK
TQCLK
Units
18
TBCLK, RBCLK Period(1)
19
TBCLK, RBCLK Pulse-Width High
TQCLK ÷ 4
20
TBCLK, RBCLK Pulse-Width Low
TQCLK ÷ 4
21
TQ[1,0] Setup prior to TBCLK Active Edge(2)
25
ns
22
TQ[1,0] Hold after TBCLK High/Low(2)
25
ns
Notes: (1). TBCLK and RBCLK must be frequency locked to QCLK though they may have independent phase relationships to QCLK
and to one another.
(2). TBCLK polarity (edge sensitivity) is programmable through the CU Interface Modes Register [cu_interface_modes
0x06].
Table 4-10. Channel Unit Interface Switching Characteristics, Parallel Slave Mode
Symbol
Parameter
23
RQ[1,0] Hold after RBCLK Active Edge(1)
24
RQ[1,0] Delay after RBCLK High/Low(1)
Minimum
Maximum
0
Units
ns
100
ns
Notes: (1). RBCLK polarity (edge sensitivity) is programmable through the CU Interface Modes Register [cu_interface_modes;
0x06].
Figure 4-4. Channel Unit Interface Timing, Parallel Slave Mode
18
RBCLK
19
20
24
23
RQ[1:0]
18
TBCLK
19
20
21
22
TQ[1:0]
Note:
TBCLK and RBCLK polarities are programmable through the CU Interface Modes register. The figure depicts both clocks
programmed to falling-edge active.
N8960DSB
77
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.5 Channel Unit Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 4-11. Channel Unit Interface Timing Requirements, Serial Mode
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
Units
25
TDAT Setup prior to BCLK Falling Edge
100
ns
26
TDAT Hold after BCLK Low
25
ns
Table 4-12. Channel Unit Interface Switching Characteristics, Serial Mode
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
TQCLK ÷ 2
TQCLK ÷ 2
27
BCLK Period
28
BCLK Pulse-Width High
TQCLK ÷ 4 – 20
TQCLK ÷ 4 + 20
ns
29
BCLK Pulse-Width Low
TQCLK ÷ 4 – 20
TQCLK ÷ 4 + 20
ns
30
BCLK Hold after HCLK Rising Edge
31
BCLK Delay after HCLK High
32
RDAT, QCLK Hold after BCLK Rising Edge
33
RDAT, QCLK Delay after BCLK High
0
ns
50
–50
50
HCLK
31
27
28
30
BCLK
29
33
32
QCLK
RDAT
25
26
TDAT
N8960DSB
ns
ns
Figure 4-5. Channel Unit Interface Timing, Serial Mode
78
Units
ns
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Table 4-13. Microcomputer Interface Timing Requirements
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
Units
34
ALE Pulse-Width High
30
ns
35
Address Setup prior to ALE Falling Edge(1)
12
ns
36
Address Hold after ALE Low(1)
5
ns
37
ALE low prior to Write Strobe Falling Edge(2)
20
ns
38
ALE low prior to Read Strobe Falling Edge(3,4)
–27
ns
39
Write Strobe Pulse-Width Low(2,5)
2*Tmclk +25
ns
40
Read Strobe Pulse-Width Low(3,5)
2*Tmclk +25
ns
41
Data In Setup prior to Write Strobe Rising Edge(2)
30
ns
42
Data In Hold after Write Strobe High(2)
5
ns
43
R/W Setup prior to Read/Write Strobe Falling Edge
10
ns
44
R/W Hold after Read/Write Strobe High
10
ns
45
ALE Falling Edge after Write Strobe High
20
ns
46
ALE Falling Edge after Read Strobe High
20
ns
47
RST Pulse-Width Low
50
ns
48
Write Strobe Rising Edge after READY low
0
ns
Notes: (1). Address is defined as AD[7:0] when MUXED = 1, and ADDR[7:0] when MUXED = 0.
(2). In Intel mode, Write Strobe is defined as WR and CS asserted. In Motorola mode, it is defined as DS and CS asserted
when R/W is low.
(3). In Intel mode, Read Strobe is defined as RD and CS asserted. In Motorola mode, it is defined as DS and CS asserted
when R/W is high.
(4). Parameter 38 is –27 ns only if separate address and data busses are used (i.e., muxed = 0). If muxed = 1, then parameter
38 is 20 ns.
(5). The timing listed is for the synchronous mode of the MCI. It can also be set to synchronous mode by setting bit 0 of the
reserved2 register (address 0x0F) to a 1. In this case the minimum timing changes to 40 us for symbol 39, and 50 us
for symbols 40 and 50. Synchronous mode is preferred because it reduces internal switching noise, however no significant performance degradation has been measured as a result of using the asynchronous mode.
N8960DSB
79
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 4-14. Microcomputer Interface Switching Characteristics
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
49
Data Out Enable (Low Z) after Read Strobe Falling Edge(1)
50
Data Out Valid after Read Strobe Low(1,7)
51
Data Out Hold after Read Strobe Rising Edge(1)
52
Data Out Disable (High Z) after Read Strobe High(1)
53
IRQ Hold after Write Strobe Rising Edge(2,3)
54
IRQ Delay after Write Strobe High(2,3)
55
Internal Register Delay after Write Strobe High(3,4)
56
Maximum
2
Units
ns
2* Tmclk +25
2
ns
ns
25
5
ns
ns
Tqclk ÷ 32 + 20
ns
Tqclk ÷ 32
ns
Internal RAM Delay after Write Strobe High(3,5)
2*Tqclk
ns
57
Access Data Register Delay after Write Strobe High(3,6)
2* Tqclk
ns
58
READY Falling Edge after Write Strobe Low(3)
0
2*Tmclk +25
ns
59
READY Rising Edge after Write Strobe High(3)
0
50
ns
60
READY Falling Edge after Read Strobe Low(1)
0
2*Tmclk +25
ns
61
READY Rising Edge after Read Strobe High(1)
0
50
ns
62
Data Out Valid after READY low
10
ns
Notes: (1). Read Strobe is defined as RD and CS asserted in Intel mode, and DS and CS asserted when R/W is high in Motorola
mode.
(2). When writing an interrupt mask or status register.
(3). Write Strobe is defined as WR and CS asserted in Intel mode, and DS and CS asserted when R/W is low in Motorola
mode.
(4). Writes to internal registers are synchronized to an internal 64-times symbol-rate clock. Data is available for reading after
the specified time. This parameter may extend the overall read access time from internal register locations under high
bus speed/low symbol rate conditions.
(5). When performing an indirect write to RAM-based locations using a write select register [odd addresses: 0x71–0x7B]
and the Access Data Register. Subsequent writes to any read/write select register or the Access Data Register, as initiated
by a Write Strobe falling edge, is prohibited for the specified time. This parameter will extend the overall write access
time to RAM-based locations under normal bus speed/symbol rate conditions.
(6). When performing an indirect read from RAM-based locations using a read select register [even addresses: 0x70–0x7A]
and the Access Data Register. Subsequent writes to any read/write select register, as initiated by a Write Strobe falling
edge, is prohibited for the specified time. Data is available for reading from the Access Data Register after the specified
time. This parameter will extend the overall read access time from RAM-based locations under normal bus speed/symbol rate conditions. Direct writes to the Access Data Register are as specified for internal registers.
(7). The timing listed is for the synchronous mode of the MCI. It can also be set to synchronous mode by setting bit 0 of the
reserved2 register (address 0x0F) to a 1. In this case the minimum timing changes to 40 us for symbol 39, and 50 us
for symbols 40 and 50. Synchronous mode is preferred because it reduces internal switching noise, however no significant performance degradation has been measured as a result of using the asynchronous mode.
80
N8960DSB
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 4-6. MCI Write Timing, Intel Mode (MOTEL = 0)
AD[7:0]
or
ADDR[7:0]
Address
Data (Input)
36
35
41
42
Write
Strobe
37
39
34
45
48
ALE
58
59
READY
Figure 4-7. MCI Write Timing, Motorola Mode (MOTEL = 1)
AD[7:0]
or
ADDR[7:0]
Address
35
Data (Input)
36
41
42
Write
Strobe
37
39
48
R/W
43
44
34
45
58
ALE
59
READY
N8960DSB
81
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 4-8. MCI Read Timing, Intel Mode (MOTEL = 0)
AD[7:0]
or
ADDR[7:0]
Address
35
Data (Output)
36
49
51
38
50
52
62
Read
Strobe
40
34
46
ALE
61
60
READY
Figure 4-9. MCI Read Timing, Motorola Mode (MOTEL = 1)
AD[7:0]
or
ADDR[7:0]
Address
35
Data (Output)
36
49
38
51
50
52
62
Read
Strobe
40
43
44
R/W
34
46
ALE
60
61
READY
82
N8960DSB
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 4-10. Internal Write Timing
Write
Strobe
54
53
IRQ
55
Internal
Register
56
Internal
RAM
57
Access
Data
Register
N8960DSB
83
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.6.1 Test and Diagnostic Interface Timing
Table 4-15. Test and Diagnostic Interface Timing Requirements
Symbol
Parameter
Minimum
Maximum
Units
56
TCK Pulse-Width High
80
ns
57
TCK Pulse-Width Low
80
ns
58
TMS, TDI Setup prior to TCK Rising Edge(1)
20
ns
59
TMS, TDI Hold after TCK High(1)
20
ns
Note: (1). Also applies to functional inputs for SAMPLE/PRELOAD and EXTEST instructions.
Table 4-16. Test and Diagnostic Interface Switching Characteristics
Symbol
Parameter
60
TDO Hold after TCK Falling Edge(1)
61
TDO Delay after TCK Low(1)
62
TDO Enable (Low Z) after TCK Falling Edge(1)
63
TDO Disable (High Z) after TCK Low(1)
64
SMON Hold after HCLK Rising Edge(2)
65
SMON Delay after HCLK High(2)
Minimum
0
2
ns
ns
25
0
ns
ns
50
N8960DSB
Units
ns
50
Notes: (1). Also applies to functional outputs for the EXTEST instruction.
(2). HCLK must be programmed to operate at 16 times the symbol rate (16 x FQCLK).
84
Maximum
ns
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 4-11. JTAG Interface Timing
TDO
62
60
56
63
61
TCK
58
57
59
TDI
TMS
Figure 4-12. SMON Timing
HCLK
65
64
SMON
N8960DSB
85
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.6.2 Analog Specifications
Table 4-17. Receiver Analog Requirements and Specifications
Parameter
Input Signals
Comments
Typ
Max
Units
+4.5
V
RXP, RXN, RXBP, and RXBN
Input Voltage Range
Balanced Differential
Input Resistance
DC to 1 MHz
Common Mode Voltage
VCOMI
Variable Gain Amplifier (VGA)
Min
–4.5
28
kΩ
0.4*VAA
Six gains from 0 dB to +15 dB
Gain Step
2.55
3.0
Gain Error
3.42
dB
±10
%
210
kHz
6.6
VP
Analog-to-Digital Converter
Output Symbol Rate (FQCLK)
QCLK frequency (Data Rate/2)
75
Differential Voltage Range (Full
Scale Input, FS)(1)
(VRXP–VRXN)—(VRXBP–VRXBN)
5.4
±64
Timing Recovery PLL Pull-In
Range
6.0
ppm
Note: (1). Corresponds to the voltages that will produce a full scale reading from the ADC when the VGA gain equals O dB. Input
voltage range is reduced proportionally as VGA gain is increased.
86
N8960DSB
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 4-18. Transmitter Analog Requirements and Specifications
Parameter
Comments
Min
Max
Units
75
210
kHz
14.0
dBm
0.24
dB
25
mV
Transmit Symbol Rate (fqclk)
QCLK Frequency (Data Rate/2)
Pulse Template(1, 2,3)
See Figure 4-13, RL = 135 Ω
Average Power(1, 2,4)
DC to 2xFQCLK, RL = 135 Ω, 0dB gain
setting
13.4
Gain Adjustment Step
Controlled by Transmit Gain Register
[0x29]. Seven steps above and eight
steps below 0 dB.
0.17
Typ
0.20
Output Referred Offset Voltage
Output Current
125
mA
Common-Mode Voltage
VCOMO
VAA/2
V
Output Impedance(1)
DC to 1 MHz
Linearity
At Output Symbol Peak
0.01
%FSR(5)
Harmonic Distortion
3 kHz, 3.4 V Peak Sine Wave Output, RL
=0Ω
–70
dB
2
W
Notes: (1). Guaranteed by design and characterization.
(2). See 4-14 of the Test Conditions section of this datasheet for test circuit.
(3). Measured after the transmitter is calibrated by writing the value in the Transmitter Calibration Register [tx_calibrate;
0x28] to the Transmitter Gain Register [tx_gain; 0x29].
(4). Measured with a pseudo-random code sequence of pulses.
(5). FSR is Full Scale Range.
N8960DSB
87
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 4-13. Transmitted Pulse Template
–0.4T
0.4T
B = 1.07
C = 1.00
D = 0.93
T = 1/FQCLK
1.25T
E = 0.03
A = 0.01
F = –0.01
–1.2T
–0.6T
A = 0.01
F = –0.01
0.5T
14T
G = –0.16
H = –0.05
50T
Table 4-19. Transmitted Pulse Template
Normalized Level
88
Quaternary Symbols
+3
+1
–1
–3
A
0.01
0.0264
0.0088
–0.0088
–0.0264
B
1.07
2.8248
0.9416
–0.9416
–2.8248
C
1.00
2.6400
0.8800
–0.8800
–2.6400
D
0.93
2.4552
0.8184
–0.8184
–2.4552
E
0.03
0.0792
0.0264
–0.0264
–0.0792
F
–0.01
–0.0264
–0.0088
0.0088
0.0264
G
–0.16
–0.4224
–0.1408
0.1408
0.4224
H
–0.05
–0.1320
–0.0440
0.0440
0.1320
N8960DSB
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.6.3 Test Conditions
Figure 4-14. Transmitter Test Circuit
3.01 kΩ
1 kΩ
1 kΩ
TXPSP (67)
TXLDIP (69)
C8
1 kΩ
1 kΩ
TXPSN (68)
TXLDIN (70)
TXP (71)
+
Line
Driver
+
-
-
TXN (74)
3.01 kΩ
16.2Ω
16.2Ω
1:2
+
+
Line
Transformer
-
RL
_
Note:
See Table 4-20 for C8 and transformer values.
N8960DSB
89
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.6 Microcomputer Interface Timing
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Table 4-20. Transmitter Test Circuit Component Values
Data Rate
Component
288 kbps
416 kbps
C8
1.8 nF
4.7 nF
L (Primary Inductance - Line Side)
5.0 mH
3.5 mH
Figure 4-15. Standard Output Load (Totem Pole and Three-State Outputs)
IOL
From
Bt8960
1.5 V
CL
IOH
Figure 4-16. Open-Drain Output Load (IRQ)
IOD
From
Bt8960
90
CL
N8960DSB
VDD2
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.7 Timing Measurements
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
4.7 Timing Measurements
The input waveforms are shown in Figure 4-17. Output waveforms are displayed
in Figures 4-18 and 4-19.
Figure 4-17. Input Waveforms for Timing Tests
3V
2.0 V
0.8 V
0V
Input
high
Input
Low
Input
Low
Input
high
Figure 4-18. Output Waveforms for Timing Tests
≈VDD
2.4 V
0.4 V
≈0 V
Output
high
Output
Low
N8960DSB
Output
Low
Output
high
91
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.8 Mechanical Specifications
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 4-19. Output Waveforms for Three-state Enable and Disable Tests
VOH - 0.2 V
1.7 V
1.5 V
1.3 V
VOL + 0.2 V
Output
Disabled
Output
Enabled
4.8 Mechanical Specifications
92
N8960DSB
Output
Disabled
Bt8960
4.0 Electrical & Mechanical Specifications
4.8 Mechanical Specifications
Single-Chip 2B1Q Transceiver
Figure 4-20. 100-Pin Plastic Quad Flat Pack
N8960DSB
93
Please mail or fax this form to:
Rockwell Semiconductor Systems
Manager, Technical Publications Dept.
(619) 597–4338
READER RESPONSE PAGE
e welcome your evaluation of this
publication. Your comments and suggestions will help us make improvements to all current and future
documents. Please rate the following characteristics
of the publication you received:
W
Poor
Excellent
1. Overall usefulness of the publication.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
2. Organization of the publication.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
3. Completeness and thoroughness of the material.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
4. Clarity and accuracy of the material.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
11. In what format(s) would you prefer to receive
future documents? (Check all that apply.)
❏ Printed books
❏ Internet/PDF delivery
❏ CD-ROM
❏ Other: _____________________________
12. How would you rank the importance of the following publication features? (1=Very important)
____ Publication design and layout
____ Accuracy of content
____ Detailed diagrams and illustrations
____ Receiving the publication in a timely manner
13. We would like to hear your thoughts on how we
could improve this publication. Please write
your comments or suggestions below:
_____________________________________
5. Usefulness of the diagrams and illustrations.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
6. Quantity of diagrams and Illustrations.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
7. Ease of finding specific information.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
8. Publication page layout and format.
❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍ ❍
9. I received the publication(s): (Please mark one).
❏ Within one week after ordering it
❏ Within two weeks after ordering it
❏ Within three or more weeks after ordering it
_____________________________________
_____________________________________
Thank you for taking the time to evaluate this publication.
Document title:____________________________
Revision No.: _____________________________
Your Name: ______________________________
Title: ____________________________________
Company: ________________________________
10. The publication delivery time was: (Please mark
one).
❏ Earlier than I needed for my needs
❏ Just in time for my needs
❏ Too late for my needs
E-mail: __________________________________
Phone: __________________________________