CIRRUS CS2100-CP-CZZR

CS2100-CP
Fractional-N Clock Multiplier
Features
General Description
 Clock Multiplier / Jitter Reduction
The CS2100-CP is an extremely versatile system
clocking device that utilizes a programmable phase
lock loop. The CS2100-CP is based on a hybrid analog-digital PLL architecture comprised of a unique
combination of a Delta-Sigma Fractional-N Frequency
Synthesizer and a Digital PLL. This architecture allows
for generation of a low-jitter clock relative to an external noisy synchronization clock at frequencies as low
as 50 Hz. The CS2100-CP supports both I²C and SPI
for full software control.
–





Generates a Low Jitter 6 - 75 MHz Clock
from a Jittery or Intermittent 50 Hz to 30
MHz Clock Source
Highly Accurate PLL Multiplication Factor
– Maximum Error Less Than 1 PPM in HighResolution Mode
®
I²C / SPI™ Control Port
Configurable Auxiliary Output
Flexible Sourcing of Reference Clock
– External Oscillator or Clock Source
– Supports Inexpensive Local Crystal
Minimal Board Space Required
– No External Analog Loop-filter
Components
The CS2100-CP is available in a 10-pin MSOP package in Commercial (-10°C to +70°C) grade. Customer
development kits are also available for device evaluation. Please see “Ordering Information” on page 32 for
complete details.
3.3 V
I²C/SPI
Software Control
Timing Reference
Frequency Reference
PLL Output
Lock Indicator
I²C / SPI
8 MHz to 75 MHz
Low-Jitter Timing
Reference
Fractional-N
Frequency Synthesizer
Auxiliary
Output
6 to 75 MHz
PLL Output
N
50 Hz to 30 MHz
Frequency
Reference
Digital PLL & Fractional
N Logic
Output to Input
Clock Ratio
Preliminary Product Information
http://www.cirrus.com
This document contains information for a new product.
Cirrus Logic reserves the right to modify this product without notice.
Copyright © Cirrus Logic, Inc. 2008
(All Rights Reserved)
JUN '08
DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
TABLE OF CONTENTS
1. PIN DESCRIPTION ................................................................................................................................. 4
2. TYPICAL CONNECTION DIAGRAM ..................................................................................................... 5
3. CHARACTERISTICS AND SPECIFICATIONS ...................................................................................... 6
RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS .................................................................................... 6
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS ........................................................................................................ 6
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS ................................................................................................ 6
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS ................................................................................................ 7
CONTROL PORT SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS- I²C FORMAT ................................................... 8
CONTROL PORT SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS - SPI FORMAT ................................................. 9
4. ARCHITECTURE OVERVIEW ............................................................................................................. 10
4.1 Delta-Sigma Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer ......................................................................... 10
4.2 Hybrid Analog-Digital Phase Locked Loop .................................................................................... 10
5. APPLICATIONS ................................................................................................................................... 12
5.1 Timing Reference Clock Input ........................................................................................................ 12
5.1.1 Internal Timing Reference Clock Divider ............................................................................... 12
5.1.2 Crystal Connections (XTI and XTO) ...................................................................................... 12
5.1.3 External Reference Clock (REF_CLK) .................................................................................. 13
5.2 Frequency Reference Clock Input, CLK_IN ................................................................................... 13
5.2.1 CLK_IN Frequency Detector ................................................................................................. 13
5.2.2 CLK_IN Skipping Mode ......................................................................................................... 13
5.2.3 Adjusting the Minimum Loop Bandwidth for CLK_IN ............................................................ 15
5.3 Output to Input Frequency Ratio Configuration ............................................................................. 16
5.3.1 User Defined Ratio (RUD) ..................................................................................................... 16
5.3.2 Manual Ratio Modifier (R-Mod) ............................................................................................. 17
5.3.3 Automatic Ratio Modifier (Auto R-Mod) ................................................................................. 17
5.3.4 Effective Ratio (REFF) .......................................................................................................... 18
5.3.5 Ratio Configuration Summary ............................................................................................... 19
5.4 PLL Clock Output ........................................................................................................................... 20
5.5 Auxiliary Output .............................................................................................................................. 20
5.6 Clock Output Stability Considerations ............................................................................................ 21
5.6.1 Output Switching ................................................................................................................... 21
5.6.2 PLL Unlock Conditions .......................................................................................................... 21
6. SPI / I²C CONTROL PORT ................................................................................................................... 22
6.1 SPI Control ..................................................................................................................................... 22
6.2 I²C Control ...................................................................................................................................... 22
6.3 Memory Address Pointer ............................................................................................................... 24
6.3.1 Map Auto Increment .............................................................................................................. 24
7. REGISTER QUICK REFERENCE ........................................................................................................ 24
8. REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS ................................................................................................................ 25
8.1 Device I.D. and Revision (Address 01h) ....................................................................................... 25
8.1.1 Device Identification (Device[4:0]) - Read Only ..................................................................... 25
8.1.2 Device Revision (Revision[2:0]) - Read Only ........................................................................ 25
8.2 Device Control (Address 02h) ........................................................................................................ 25
8.2.1 Unlock Indicator (Unlock) - Read Only .................................................................................. 25
8.2.2 PLL Input Sample Rate Indicator (FsDet[1:0]) - Read Only .................................................. 25
8.2.3 Auto R-Modifier Enable (AutoRMod) ..................................................................................... 26
8.2.4 Auxiliary Output Disable (AuxOutDis) ................................................................................... 26
8.2.5 PLL Clock Output Disable (ClkOutDis) .................................................................................. 26
8.3 Device Configuration 1 (Address 03h) ........................................................................................... 26
8.3.1 R-Mod Selection (RModSel[2:0]) ........................................................................................... 26
8.3.2 Auxiliary Output Source Selection (AuxOutSrc[1:0]) ............................................................. 27
8.3.3 Enable Device Configuration Registers 1 (EnDevCfg1) ........................................................ 27
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CS2100-CP
8.4 Global Configuration (Address 05h) ............................................................................................... 27
8.4.1 Device Configuration Freeze (Freeze) ................................................................................ 27
8.4.2 Enable Device Configuration Registers 2 (EnDevCfg2) ....................................................... 27
8.5 Ratio (Address 06h - 09h) .............................................................................................................. 28
8.6 Function Configuration 1 (Address 16h) ........................................................................................ 28
8.6.1 Clock Skip Enable (ClkSkipEn) ............................................................................................. 28
8.6.2 AUX PLL Lock Output Configuration (AuxLockCfg) .............................................................. 28
8.6.3 Reference Clock Input Divider (RefClkDiv[1:0]) .................................................................... 28
8.7 Function Configuration 2 (Address 17h) ........................................................................................ 29
8.7.1 Enable PLL Clock Output on Unlock (ClkOutUnl) ................................................................. 29
8.7.2 Low-Frequency Ratio Configuration (LFRatioCfg) ................................................................ 29
8.8 Function Configuration 3 (Address 1Eh) ........................................................................................ 29
8.8.1 Clock Input Bandwidth (ClkIn_BW[2:0]) ................................................................................ 29
9. CALCULATING THE USER DEFINED RATIO .................................................................................... 30
9.1 High Resolution 12.20 Format ....................................................................................................... 30
9.2 High Multiplication 20.12 Format ................................................................................................... 30
10. PACKAGE DIMENSIONS .................................................................................................................. 31
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS ......................................................................................................... 31
11. ORDERING INFORMATION .............................................................................................................. 32
12. REFERENCES .................................................................................................................................... 32
13. REVISION HISTORY .......................................................................................................................... 32
LIST OF FIGURES
Figure 1. Typical Connection Diagram ........................................................................................................ 5
Figure 2. Control Port Timing - I²C Format .................................................................................................. 8
Figure 3. Control Port Timing - SPI Format (Write Only) ............................................................................ 9
Figure 4. Delta-Sigma Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer ..................................................................... 10
Figure 5. Hybrid Analog-Digital PLL .......................................................................................................... 11
Figure 6. Internal Timing Reference Clock Divider ................................................................................... 12
Figure 7. External Component Requirements for Crystal Circuit .............................................................. 12
Figure 8. CLK_IN removed for > 223 SysClk cycles .................................................................................. 14
Figure 9. CLK_IN removed for < 223 SysClk cycles but > tCS ................................................................... 14
Figure 10. CLK_IN removed for < tCS ....................................................................................................... 14
Figure 11. Low bandwidth and new clock domain .................................................................................... 15
Figure 12. High bandwidth with CLK_IN domain re-use ........................................................................... 15
Figure 13. Ratio Feature Summary ........................................................................................................... 19
Figure 14. PLL Clock Output Options ....................................................................................................... 20
Figure 15. Auxiliary Output Selection ........................................................................................................ 20
Figure 16. Control Port Timing in SPI Mode ............................................................................................. 22
Figure 17. Control Port Timing, I²C Write .................................................................................................. 23
Figure 18. Control Port Timing, I²C Aborted Write + Read ....................................................................... 23
LIST OF TABLES
Table 1. PLL Input Clock Range Indicator ................................................................................................ 13
Table 2. Ratio Modifier .............................................................................................................................. 17
Table 3. Automatic Ratio Modifier ............................................................................................................. 17
Table 4. Example Audio Oversampling Clock Generation from CLK_IN .................................................. 18
Table 5. Example 12.20 R-Values ............................................................................................................ 30
Table 6. Example 20.12 R-Values ............................................................................................................ 30
DS840PP1
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CS2100-CP
1. PIN DESCRIPTION
VD
1
10
SDA/CDIN
GND
2
9
SCL/CCLK
CLK_OUT
3
8
AD0/CS
AUX_OUT
4
7
XTI/REF_CLK
CLK_IN
5
6
XTO
Pin Name
#
Pin Description
VD
1
Digital Power (Input) - Positive power supply for the digital and analog sections.
GND
2
Ground (Input) - Ground reference.
CLK_OUT
3
PLL Clock Output (Output) - PLL clock output.
4
Auxiliary Output (Output) - This pin outputs a buffered version of one of the input or output clocks,
or a status signal, depending on register configuration.
5
Frequency Reference Clock Input (Input) - Clock input for the Digital PLL frequency reference.
6
7
Crystal Connections (XTI/XTO) / Timing Reference Clock Input (REF_CLK) (Input/Output) XTI/XTO are I/O pins for an external crystal which may be used to generate the low-jitter PLL input
clock. REF_CLK is an input for an externally generated low-jitter reference clock.
8
Address Bit 0 (I²C) / Control Port Chip Select (SPI) (Input) - AD0 is a chip address pin in I²C
Mode. CS is the chip select signal in SPI Mode.
9
Control Port Clock (Input) - SCL/CCLK is the serial clock for the serial control port in I²C and SPI
mode.
AUX_OUT
CLK_IN
XTO
XTI/REF_CLK
AD0/CS
SCL/CCLK
SDA/CDIN
4
10 Serial Control Data (Input/Output) - SDA is the data I/O line in I²C Mode. CDIN is the input data
line for the control port interface in SPI Mode.
DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
2. TYPICAL CONNECTION DIAGRAM
Note1
Notes:
1. Resistors
required for I2C
operation.
0.1 µF
2 kΩ
1 µF
+3.3 V
2 kΩ
VD
SCL/CCLK
System MicroController
SDA/CDIN
AD0/CS
CS2100-CP
Frequency Reference
CLK_IN
1
or
2
XTI/REF_CLK
CLK_OUT
To circuitry which requires
a low-jitter clock
AUX_OUT
To other circuitry or
Microcontroller
XTO
GND
Low-Jitter
Timing Reference
REF_CLK
1
N.C. x
XTO
or
Crystal
XTI
2
XTO
40 pF
40 pF
Figure 1. Typical Connection Diagram
DS840PP1
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CS2100-CP
3. CHARACTERISTICS AND SPECIFICATIONS
RECOMMENDED OPERATING CONDITIONS
GND = 0 V; all voltages with respect to ground. (Note 1)
Parameters
DC Power Supply
Symbol
Min
Typ
Max
Units
VD
3.1
3.3
3.5
V
TAC
-10
-
+70
°C
Ambient Operating Temperature (Power Applied)
Commercial Grade
Notes: 1. Device functional operation is guaranteed within these limits. Functionality is not guaranteed or implied
outside of these limits. Operation outside of these limits may adversely affect device reliability.
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
GND = 0 V; all voltages with respect to ground.
Parameters
Symbol
Min
Max
Units
DC Power Supply
VD
-0.3
6.0
V
Input Current
IIN
-
±10
mA
Digital Input Voltage (Note 1)
VIN
-0.3
VD + 0.4
V
Ambient Operating Temperature (Power Applied)
TA
-55
125
°C
Storage Temperature
Tstg
-65
150
°C
WARNING: Operation at or beyond these limits may result in permanent damage to the device.
Notes: 1. The maximum over/under voltage is limited by the input current except on the power supply pin.
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Test Conditions (unless otherwise specified): VD = 3.1 V to 3.5 V; TA = -10°C to +70°C (Commercial Grade).
Parameters
Symbol
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Power Supply Current - Unloaded
(Note 2)
ID
-
12
18
mA
Power Dissipation - Unloaded
(Note 2)
PD
-
40
60
mW
Input Leakage Current
IIN
-
-
±10
µA
Input Capacitance
IC
-
8
-
pF
High-Level Input Voltage
VIH
70%
-
-
VD
Low-Level Input Voltage
VIL
-
-
30%
VD
High-Level Output Voltage (IOH = -1.2 mA)
VOH
80%
-
-
VD
Low-Level Output Voltage (IOH = 1.2 mA)
VOL
-
-
20%
VD
Notes: 2. To calculate the additional current consumption due to loading (per output pin), multiply clock output
frequency by load capacitance and power supply voltage.
For example, fCLK_OUT (49.152 MHz) * CL (15 pF) * VD (3.3 V) = 2.4 mA of additional current due to
these loading conditions on CLK_OUT.
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DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Test Conditions (unless otherwise specified): VD = 3.1 V to 3.5 V; TA = -10°C to +70°C (Commercial Grade);
CL = 15 pF.
Parameters
Crystal Frequency
Symbol
Conditions
Min
Typ
Max
Units
fXTAL
Fundamental Mode
8
-
50
MHz
Reference Clock Input Frequency
fREF_CLK
8
-
75
MHz
Reference Clock Input Duty Cycle
DREF_CLK
45
-
55
%
Internal System Clock Frequency
fSYS_CLK
8
18.75
MHz
Clock Input Frequency (Auto R-Mod Disabled)
fCLK_IN
50 Hz
-
30
MHz
Clock Input Frequency (Auto R-mod Enabled)
fCLK_IN
Auto R Modifier = 1
Auto R Modifier = 0.5
Auto R Modifier = 0.25
4
72
168
-
59
138
256
kHz
kHz
kHz
pwCLK_IN
fCLK_IN < fSYS_CLK/96
fCLK_IN > fSYS_CLK/96
2
10
-
-
UI
ns
tCS
(Notes 4, 5)
20
-
-
ms
Clock Skipping Input Frequency
fCLK_SKIP
(Note 5)
50 Hz
-
80
kHz
PLL Clock Output Frequency
fCLK_OUT
6
-
75
MHz
Clock Input Pulse Width (Note 3)
Clock Skipping Timeout
PLL Clock Output Duty Cycle
tOD
Measured at VD/2
48
50
52
%
Clock Output Rise Time
tOR
20% to 80% of VD
-
1.7
3.0
ns
Clock Output Fall Time
tOF
80% to 20% of VD
-
1.7
3.0
ns
Period Jitter
tJIT
(Note 6)
-
70
150
ps rms
Base Band Jitter (100 Hz to 40 kHz)
(Notes 6, 7)
-
50
-
ps rms
Wide Band JItter (100 Hz Corner)
(Notes 6, 8)
-
175
-
ps rms
-
100
1
200
3
UI
ms
PLL Lock Time - CLK_IN (Note 9)
tLC
fCLK_IN < 200 kHz
fCLK_IN > 200 kHz
PLL Lock Time - REF_CLK
tLR
fREF_CLK = 8 to 75 MHz
-
1
2
ms
Output Frequency Synthesis Resolution (Note 10)
ferr
High Resolution
High Multiplication
0
0
-
±0.5
±112
ppm
ppm
Notes: 3. 1 UI (unit interval) corresponds to tSYS_CLK or 1/fSYS_CLK.
4. tCS represents the time from the removal of CLK_IN by which CLK_IN must be re-applied to ensure that
PLL_OUT continues while the PLL re-acquires lock. This timeout is based on the internal VCO frequency, with the minimum timeout occurring at the maximum VCO frequency. Lower VCO frequencies will
result in larger values of tCS.
5. Only valid in clock skipping mode; See “CLK_IN Skipping Mode” on page 13 for more information.
6. fCLK_OUT = 24.576 MHz; Sample size = 10,000 points; AuxOutSrc[1:0] = 11.
7. In accordance with AES-12id-2006 section 3.4.2. Measurements are Time Interval Error taken with 3rd
order 100 Hz to 40 kHz bandpass filter.
8. In accordance with AES-12id-2006 section 3.4.1. Measurements are Time Interval Error taken with 3rd
order 100 Hz Highpass filter.
9. 1 UI (unit interval) corresponds to tCLK_IN or 1/fCLK_IN.
10. The frequency accuracy of the PLL clock output is directly proportional to the frequency accuracy of the
reference clock.
DS840PP1
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CS2100-CP
CONTROL PORT SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS- I²C FORMAT
Inputs: Logic 0 = GND; Logic 1 = VD; CL = 20 pF.
Parameter
Symbol
Min
Max
Unit
SCL Clock Frequency
fscl
-
100
kHz
Bus Free-Time Between Transmissions
tbuf
4.7
-
µs
Start Condition Hold Time (prior to first clock pulse)
thdst
4.0
-
µs
Clock Low Time
tlow
4.7
-
µs
Clock High Time
thigh
4.0
-
µs
Setup Time for Repeated Start Condition
tsust
4.7
-
µs
SDA Hold Time from SCL Falling
(Note 11)
thdd
0
-
µs
tsud
250
-
ns
Rise Time of SCL and SDA
tr
-
1
µs
Fall Time SCL and SDA
tf
-
300
ns
SDA Setup Time to SCL Rising
Setup Time for Stop Condition
tsusp
4.7
-
µs
Acknowledge Delay from SCL Falling
tack
300
1000
ns
Delay from Supply Voltage Stable to Control Port Ready
tdpor
100
-
µs
Notes: 11. Data must be held for sufficient time to bridge the transition time, tf, of SCL.
VD
t dpor
Repeated
Start
Stop
SDA
t buf
t
t high
t hdst
tf
hdst
t susp
SCL
Stop
Start
t
low
t
hdd
t sud
t sust
tr
Figure 2. Control Port Timing - I²C Format
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DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
CONTROL PORT SWITCHING CHARACTERISTICS - SPI FORMAT
Inputs: Logic 0 = GND; Logic 1 = VD; CL = 20 pF.
Parameter
Symbol
Min
Max
Unit
fccllk
-
6
MHz
tspi
500
-
ns
CS High Time Between Transmissions
tcsh
1.0
-
µs
CS Falling to CCLK Edge
tcss
20
-
ns
CCLK Low Time
tscl
66
-
ns
CCLK High Time
tsch
66
-
ns
CCLK Clock Frequency
CCLK Edge to CS Falling
(Note 12)
CDIN to CCLK Rising Setup Time
tdsu
40
-
ns
CCLK Rising to DATA Hold Time
(Note 13)
tdh
15
-
ns
Rise Time of CCLK and CDIN
(Note 14)
tr2
-
100
ns
Fall Time of CCLK and CDIN
(Note 14)
tf2
-
100
ns
tdpor
100
-
µs
Delay from Supply Voltage Stable to Control Port Ready
Notes: 12. tspi is only needed before first falling edge of CS after power is applied. tspi = 0 at all other times.
13. Data must be held for sufficient time to bridge the transition time of CCLK.
14. For fcclk < 1 MHz.
VD
tdpor
CS
t spi
t css
t scl
t sch
t csh
CCLK
t r2
t f2
CDIN
t dsu
tdh
Figure 3. Control Port Timing - SPI Format (Write Only)
DS840PP1
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CS2100-CP
4. ARCHITECTURE OVERVIEW
4.1
Delta-Sigma Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer
The core of the CS2100 is a Delta-Sigma Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer which has very high-resolution for Input/Output clock ratios, low phase noise, very wide range of output frequencies and the ability to
quickly tune to a new frequency. In very simplistic terms, the Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer multiplies
the Timing Reference Clock by the value of N to generate the PLL output clock. The desired output to input
clock ratio is the value of N that is applied to the delta-sigma modulator (see Figure 4).
The analog PLL based frequency synthesizer uses a low-jitter timing reference clock as a time and phase
reference for the internal voltage controlled oscillator (VCO). The phase comparator compares the fractional-N divided clock with the original timing reference and generates a control signal. The control signal is filtered by the internal loop filter to generate the VCO’s control voltage which sets its output frequency. The
delta-sigma modulator modulates the loop integer divide ratio to get the desired fractional ratio between the
reference clock and the VCO output (thus the one’s density of the modulator sets the fractional value). This
allows the design to be optimized for very fast lock times for a wide range of output frequencies without the
need for external filter components. As with any Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer the timing reference
clock should be stable and jitter-free.
Timing Reference
Clock
Phase
Comparator
Internal
Loop Filter
Voltage Controlled
Oscillator
PLL Output
Fractional-N
Divider
Delta-Sigma
Modulator
N
Figure 4. Delta-Sigma Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer
4.2
Hybrid Analog-Digital Phase Locked Loop
The addition of the Digital PLL and Fractional-N Logic (shown in Figure 5) to the Fractional-N Frequency
Synthesizer creates the Hybrid Analog-Digital Phase Locked Loop with many advantages over classical analog PLL techniques. These advantages include the ability to operate over extremely wide frequency ranges
without the need to change external loop filter components while maintaining impressive jitter reduction performance. In the Hybrid architecture, the Digital PLL calculates the ratio of the PLL output clock to the frequency reference and compares that to the desired ratio. The digital logic generates a value of N which is
then applied to the Fractional-N frequency synthesizer to generate the desired PLL output frequency. Notice
that the frequency and phase of the timing reference signal do not affect the output of the PLL since the
digital control loop will correct for the PLL output. A major advantage of the Digital PLL is the ease with which
the loop filter bandwidth can be altered. The PLL bandwidth is automatically set to a wide-bandwidth mode
to quickly achieve lock and then reduced for optimal jitter rejection.
10
DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
Delta-Sigma Fractional-N Frequency Synthesizer
Timing Reference
Clock
Phase
Comparator
Internal
Loop Filter
Voltage Controlled
Oscillator
PLL Output
Fractional-N
Divider
Delta-Sigma
Modulator
Digital PLL and Fractional-N Logic
N
Digital Filter
Frequency Reference
Clock
Frequency
Comparator for
Frac-N Generation
Output to Input Ratio for Hybrid mode
Figure 5. Hybrid Analog-Digital PLL
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CS2100-CP
5. APPLICATIONS
5.1
Timing Reference Clock Input
The low jitter timing reference clock (RefClk) can be provided by either an external reference clock or an
external crystal in conjunction with the internal oscillator. In order to maintain a stable and low-jitter PLL output the timing reference clock must also be stable and low-jitter; the quality of the timing reference clock
directly affects the performance of the PLL and hence the quality of the PLL output.
5.1.1
Internal Timing Reference Clock Divider
The Internal Timing Reference Clock (SysClk) has a smaller maximum frequency than what is allowed on
the XTI/REF_CLK pin. The CS2100 supports the wider external frequency range by offering an internal
divider for RefClk. The RefClkDiv[1:0] bits should be set such that SysClk, the divided RefClk, then falls
within the valid range as indicated in Figure 6.
Timing Reference Clock
XTI/REF_CLK
8 MHz < RefClk <
50 MHz (XTI)
75 MHz (REF_CLK)
Timing Reference
Clock Divider
÷1
÷2
÷4
Internal Timing
Reference Clock
8 MHz < SysClk < 18.75 MHz
Fractional-N
Frequency
Synthesizer
PLL Output
N
RefClkDiv[1:0]
Figure 6. Internal Timing Reference Clock Divider
It should be noted that the maximum allowable input frequency of the XTI/REF_CLK pin is dependent
upon its configuration as either a crystal connection or external clock input. See the “AC Electrical Characteristics” on page 7 for more details.
Referenced Control
Register Location
RefClkDiv[1:0] .......................“Reference Clock Input Divider (RefClkDiv[1:0])” on page 28
5.1.2
Crystal Connections (XTI and XTO)
An external crystal may be used to generate RefClk. To accomplish this, a 20 pF fundamental mode parallel resonant crystal must be connected between the XTI and XTO pins as shown in Figure 7. As shown,
nothing other than the crystal and its load capacitors should be connected to XTI and XTO. Please refer
to the “AC Electrical Characteristics” on page 7 for the allowed crystal frequency range.
XTI
40 pF
XTO
40 pF
Figure 7. External Component Requirements for Crystal Circuit
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CS2100-CP
5.1.3
External Reference Clock (REF_CLK)
For operation with an externally generated REF_CLK signal, XTI/REF_CLK should be connected to the
reference clock source and XTO should be left unconnected or pulled low through a 47 kΩ resistor to
GND.
5.2
Frequency Reference Clock Input, CLK_IN
The frequency reference clock input (CLK_IN) is used by the Digital PLL and Fractional-N Logic block to
dynamically generate a fractional-N value for the Frequency Synthesizer (see “Hybrid Analog-Digital PLL”
on page 11). The Digital PLL first compares the CLK_IN frequency to the PLL output. The Fractional-N logic
block then translates the desired ratio based off of CLK_IN to one based off of the internal timing reference
clock (SysClk). This allows the low-jitter timing reference clock to be used as the clock which the Frequency
Synthesizer multiplies while maintaining synchronicity with the frequency reference clock through the Digital
PLL. The allowable frequency range for CLK_IN is found in the “AC Electrical Characteristics” on page 7.
5.2.1
CLK_IN Frequency Detector
The CLK_IN frequency range detector determines and indicates the ratio between the frequency of the
internal SysClk and the CLK_IN input signal.
The result of the ratio measurement is available in the read-only FsDet[1:0] bits and is also used by the
device to determine the Auto R-Mod value.
FsDetect[1:0]
fSysClk / fCLK_IN Ratio
00
> 224
01
96 - 224
10
< 96
11
Reserved
Table 1. PLL Input Clock Range Indicator
Because fSysClk is known, FsDet[1:0] can then be interpreted as a range for fCLK_IN. This feature is particularly useful when used in conjunction with the Auto R-Mod feature (see section 5.3.3 on page 17).
Referenced Control
Register Location
FsDet[1:0]..............................“PLL Input Sample Rate Indicator (FsDet[1:0]) - Read Only” section on page 25
5.2.2
CLK_IN Skipping Mode
CLK_IN skipping mode allows the PLL to maintain lock even when the CLK_IN signal has missing pulses
for up to 20 ms (tCS) at a time (see “AC Electrical Characteristics” on page 7 for specifications). CLK_IN
skipping mode can only be used when the CLK_IN frequency is below 80 kHz. The ClkSkipEn bit enables
this function.
Regardless of the setting of the ClkSkipEn bit the PLL output will continue for 223 SysClk cycles (466 ms
to 1048 ms) after CLK_IN is removed (see Figure 8). This is true as long as CLK_IN does not glitch or
have an effective change in period as the clock source is removed, otherwise the PLL will interpret this as
a change in frequency causing clock skipping and the 223 SysClk cycle time-out to be bypassed and the
PLL to immediately unlock. If the prior conditions are met while CLK_IN is removed and 223 SysClk cycles
pass, the PLL will unlock and the PLL_OUT state will be determined by the ClkOutUnl bit; See “PLL Clock
Output” on page 20. If CLK_IN is re-applied after such time, the PLL will remain unlocked for the specified
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time listed in the “AC Electrical Characteristics” on page 7 after which lock will be acquired and the PLL
output will resume.
223 SysClk cycles
223 SysClk cycles
Lock Time
Lock Time
CLK_IN
ClkSkipEn=0 or 1
ClkOutUnl=0
CLK_IN
ClkSkipEn=0 or 1
ClkOutUnl=1
PLL_OUT
UNLOCK
PLL_OUT
UNLOCK
= invalid clocks
Figure 8. CLK_IN removed for > 223 SysClk cycles
If CLK_IN is removed and then reapplied within 223 SysClk cycles but later than tCS, the ClkSkipEn bit will
have no effect and the PLL output will continue until CLK_IN is re-applied (see Figure 9). Once CLK_IN
is re-applied, the PLL will go unlocked only for the time it takes to acquire lock; the PLL_OUT state will be
determined by the ClkOutUnl bit during this time.
223 SysClk cycles
223 SysClk cycles
tCS
tCS
Lock Time
Lock Time
CLK_IN
ClkSkipEn=0 or 1
ClkOutUnl=0
CLK_IN
ClkSkipEn=0 or 1
ClkOutUnl=1
PLL_OUT
UNLOCK
PLL_OUT
UNLOCK
= invalid clocks
Figure 9. CLK_IN removed for < 223 SysClk cycles but > tCS
If CLK_IN is removed and then re-applied within tCS, the ClkSkipEn bit determines whether PLL_OUT
continues while the PLL re-acquires lock (see Figure 10). When ClkSkipEn is disabled and CLK_IN is removed the PLL output will continue until CLK_IN is re-applied at which point the PLL will go unlocked only
for the time it takes to acquire lock; the PLL_OUT state will be determined by the ClkOutUnl bit during this
time. When ClkSkipEn is enabled and CLK_IN is removed the PLL output clock will remain continuous
throughout the missing CLK_IN period including the time while the PLL re-acquires lock.
tCS
tCS
Lock Time
CLK_IN
ClkSkipEn=1
ClkOutUnl=0 or 1
CLK_IN
ClkSkipEn=0
ClkOutUnl=1
PLL_OUT
UNLOCK
PLL_OUT
UNLOCK
= invalid clocks
tCS
Lock Time
CLK_IN
ClkSkipEn=0
ClkOutUnl=0
PLL_OUT
UNLOCK
Figure 10. CLK_IN removed for < tCS
Referenced Control
Register Location
ClkSkipEn..............................“Clock Skip Enable (ClkSkipEn)” on page 28
ClkOutUnl..............................“Enable PLL Clock Output on Unlock (ClkOutUnl)” on page 29
14
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CS2100-CP
5.2.3
Adjusting the Minimum Loop Bandwidth for CLK_IN
The CS2000 allows the minimum loop bandwidth of the Digital PLL to be adjusted between 1 Hz and 128
Hz using the ClkIn_BW[2:0] bits. The minimum loop bandwidth of the Digital PLL directly affects the jitter
transfer function; specifically, jitter frequencies below the loop bandwidth corner are passed from the PLL
input directly to the PLL output without attenuation. In some applications it is desirable to have a very low
minimum loop bandwidth to reject very low jitter frequencies, commonly referred to as wander. In others
it may be preferable to remove only higher frequency jitter, allowing the input wander to pass through the
PLL without attenuation.
Typically, applications in which the PLL_OUT signal creates a new clock domain from which all other system clocks and associated data are derived will benefit from the maximum jitter and wander rejection of
the lowest PLL bandwidth setting. See Figure 11.
PLL
BW = 1 Hz
CLK_IN
Wander > 1 Hz
PLL_OUT
Wander and Jitter > 1 Hz Rejected
MCLK
Jitter
MCLK
Subclocks generated
from new clock domain.
or
LRCK
LRCK
SCLK
SCLK
D0
SDATA
D1
SDATA
D0
D1
Figure 11. Low bandwidth and new clock domain
Systems in which some clocks and data are derived from the PLL_OUT signal while other clocks and data
are derived from the CLK_IN signal will often require phase alignment of all the clocks and data in the
system. See Figure 12. If there is substantial wander on the CLK_IN signal in these applications, it may
be necessary to increase the minimum loop bandwidth allowing this wander to pass through to the
CLK_OUT signal in order to maintain phase alignment. For these applications, it is advised to experiment
with the loop bandwidth settings and choose the lowest bandwidth setting that does not produce system
timing errors due to wandering between the clocks and data synchronous to the CLK_IN domain and
those synchronous to the PLL_OUT domain.
PLL
BW = 128 Hz
CLK_IN
Wander < 128 Hz
PLL_OUT
Jitter > 128 Hz Rejected
Wander < 128 Hz Passed to Output
MCLK
Jitter
MCLK
or
Subclocks and data re-used
from previous clock domain.
LRCK
LRCK
SCLK
SCLK
SDATA
D0
D1
SDATA
D0
D1
Figure 12. High bandwidth with CLK_IN domain re-use
It should be noted that manual adjustment of the minimum loop bandwidth is not necessary to acquire
lock; this adjustment is made automatically by the Digital PLL. While acquiring lock, the digital loop bandwidth is automatically set to a large value. Once lock is achieved, the digital loop bandwidth will settle to
the minimum value selected by the ClkIn_BW[2:0] bits.
Referenced Control
Register Location
ClkIn_BW[2:0] .......................“Clock Input Bandwidth (ClkIn_BW[2:0])” on page 29
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CS2100-CP
5.3
5.3.1
Output to Input Frequency Ratio Configuration
User Defined Ratio (RUD)
The User Defined Ratio, RUD, is a 32-bit un-signed fixed-point number, stored in the Ratio register set,
which determines the basis for the desired input to output clock ratio. The 32-bit RUD can be expressed
in either a high resolution (12.20) or high multiplication (20.12) format selectable by the LFRatioCfg bit,
with 20.12 being the default.
The RUD for high resolution (12.20) format is encoded with 12 MSBs representing the integer binary portion with the remaining 20 LSBs representing the fractional binary portion. The maximum multiplication
factor is approximately 4096 with a resolution of 0.954 PPM in this configuration. See “Calculating the
User Defined Ratio” on page 30 for more information.
The RUD for high multiplication (20.12) format is encoded with 20 MSBs representing the integer binary
portion with the remaining 12 LSBs representing the fractional binary portion. In this configuration, the
maximum multiplication factor is approximately 1,048,575 with a resolution of 244 PPM. It is recommended that the 12.20 High-Resolution format be utilized whenever the desired ratio is less than 4096 since
the output frequency accuracy of the PLL is directly proportional to the accuracy of the timing reference
clock and the resolution of the RUD.
The status of internal dividers, such as the internal timing reference clock divider, are automatically taken
into account. Therefore RUD is simply the desired ratio of the output to input clock frequencies.
Referenced Control
Register Location
Ratio......................................“Ratio (Address 06h - 09h)” on page 28
LFRatioCfg ............................“Low-Frequency Ratio Configuration (LFRatioCfg)” on page 29
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CS2100-CP
5.3.2
Manual Ratio Modifier (R-Mod)
The manual Ratio Modifier is used to internally multiply/divide the RUD (the Ratio stored in the register
space remains unchanged). The available options for RMOD are summarized in Table 2 on page 17.
The R-Mod value selected by RModSel[2:0] is always used in the calculation for the Effective Ratio
(REFF), see “Effective Ratio (REFF)” on page 18. If R-Mod is not desired, RModSel[2:0] should be left at
its default value of ‘000’, which corresponds to an R-Mod value of 1, thereby effectively disabling the ratio
modifier.
RModSel[2:0]
Ratio Modifier
000
1
001
2
010
4
011
8
100
0.5
101
0.25
110
0.125
111
0.0625
Table 2. Ratio Modifier
Referenced Control
Register Location
Ratio......................................“Ratio (Address 06h - 09h)” on page 28
RModSel[2:0] ........................“R-Mod Selection (RModSel[2:0])” section on page 26
5.3.3
Automatic Ratio Modifier (Auto R-Mod)
The Automatic R-Modifier uses the status of the CLK_IN Frequency Range Indicator (see section 5.2.1
on page 13) to implement a frequency dependent multiply of the currently addressed RUD as shown in
Table 3.
Like with R-Mod, the Ratio stored in the register space remain unchanged. The Automatic Ratio-Modifier
is enabled by the AutoRMod bit.
FsDetect[1:0]
fSysClk / fCLK_IN
Auto R Modifier
00
> 224
1
01
96 - 224
0.5
10
< 96
0.25
Table 3. Automatic Ratio Modifier
It is important to note that Auto R-Mod (if enabled) is applied in addition to any R-Mod already selected
by the RModSel[2:0] bits and is used to calculate the Effective Ratio (see Section 5.3.4 on page 18).
Auto R-Mod can be used to generate the appropriate oversampling clock (MCLK) for audio A/D and D/A
converters. For example, if the clock applied to CLK_IN is the audio sample rate, Fs (also known as the
word, frame or Left/Right clock), and SysClk is 12.288 MHz (REF_CLK = 12.288 MHz with RefClkDiv[1:0]
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CS2100-CP
set to 10), the Frequency Range Indicator would then reflect the frequency range of the audio sample rate.
An RUD of 512 would then generate the audio oversampling clocks as shown in Table 4.
FsDetect[1:0]
Inferred Audio Sample Rate
when SysClk=12.288 MHz
Speed Mode (used for
audio converters)
Audio Oversampling
Clock
00
< 54.8 kHz
Single Speed
512 x
01
54.8 kHz to 128 kHz
Double Speed
256 x
> 128 kHz
Quad Speed
128 x
10
Table 4. Example Audio Oversampling Clock Generation from CLK_IN
Referenced Control
Register Location
Ratio......................................“Ratio (Address 06h - 09h)” on page 28
RModSel[2:0] ........................“R-Mod Selection (RModSel[2:0])” section on page 26
AutoRMod .............................“Auto R-Modifier Enable (AutoRMod)” on page 26
5.3.4
Effective Ratio (REFF)
The Effective Ratio (REFF) is an internal calculation comprised of RUD and the appropriate modifiers, as
previously described. REFF is calculated as follows:
REFF = RUD • RMOD • Auto R-Mod
To simplify operation the device handles some of the ratio calculation functions automatically (such as
when the internal timing reference clock divider is set). For this reason, the Effective Ratio does not need
to be altered to account for internal dividers.
Ratio modifiers which would produce an overflow or truncation of REFF should not be used; For example
if RUD is 1024 an RMOD of 8 would produce an REFF value of 8192 which exceeds the 4096 limit of the
12.20 format. In all cases, the maximum and minimum allowable values for REFF are dictated by the frequency limits for both the input and output clocks as shown in the “AC Electrical Characteristics” on
page 7.
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CS2100-CP
5.3.5
Ratio Configuration Summary
The RUD is the user defined ratio stored in the register space. The resolution for the RUD is selectable by
setting LFRatioCfg. R-Mod is applied if selected. The user defined ratio, ratio modifier, and automatic ratio
modifier make up the effective ratio REFF, the final calculation used to determine the output to input clock
ratio. The effective ratio is then corrected for the internal dividers. The conceptual diagram in Figure 13
summarizes the features involved in the calculation of the ratio values used to generate the fractional-N
value which controls the Frequency Synthesizer.
RefClkDiv[1:0]
Timing Reference Clock
(XTI/REF_CLK)
Divide
SysClk
Frequency
Synthesizer
PLL Output
Effective Ratio REFF
User Defined Ratio RUD
Ratio
Ratio Format
12.20
20.12
RModSel[2:0]
RefClkDiv[1:0]
Ratio
Modifier
Auto
R-Mod
R Correction
LFRatioCfg
AutoRMod
N
Digital PLL &
Fractional N Logic
Frequency Reference Clock
(CLK_IN)
FsDet[1:0]
Figure 13. Ratio Feature Summary
Referenced Control
Register Location
Ratio......................................“Ratio (Address 06h - 09h)” on page 28
LFRatioCfg ............................“Low-Frequency Ratio Configuration (LFRatioCfg)” on page 29
RModSel[2:0] ........................“R-Mod Selection (RModSel[2:0])” section on page 26
AutoRMod .............................“Auto R-Modifier Enable (AutoRMod)” on page 26
FsDet[1:0]..............................“PLL Input Sample Rate Indicator (FsDet[1:0]) - Read Only” section on page 25
RefClkDiv[1:0] .......................“Reference Clock Input Divider (RefClkDiv[1:0])” on page 28
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CS2100-CP
5.4
PLL Clock Output
The PLL clock output pin (CLK_OUT) provides a buffered version of the output of the frequency synthesizer.
The driver can be set to high-impedance with the ClkOutDis bit.
The output from the PLL automatically drives a static low condition while the PLL is un-locked (when the
clock may be unreliable). This feature can be disabled by setting the ClkOutUnl bit, however the state
CLK_OUT may then be unreliable during an unlock condition.
ClkOutUnl
PLL Locked/Unlocked
0
0
2:1 Mux
ClkOutDis
0
1
2:1 Mux
PLL Clock Output
PLL Clock Output Pin
(CLK_OUT)
PLLClkOut
1
PLL Output
Figure 14. PLL Clock Output Options
Referenced Control
Register Location
ClkOutUnl..............................“Enable PLL Clock Output on Unlock (ClkOutUnl)” on page 29
ClkOutDis ..............................“PLL Clock Output Disable (ClkOutDis)” on page 26
5.5
Auxiliary Output
The auxiliary output pin (AUX_OUT) can be mapped, as shown in Figure 15, to one of four signals: reference clock (RefClk), input clock (CLK_IN), additional PLL clock output (CLK_OUT), or a PLL lock indicator
(Lock). The mux is controlled via the AuxOutSrc[1:0] bits. If AUX_OUT is set to Lock, the AuxLockCfg bit is
then used to control the output driver type and polarity of the LOCK signal (see section 8.6.2 on page 28).
If AUX_OUT is set to CLK_OUT the phase of the PLL Clock Output signal on AUX_OUT may differ from the
CLK_OUT pin. The driver for the pin can be set to high-impedance using the AuxOutDis bit.
AuxOutSrc[1:0]
Timing Reference Clock
(RefClk)
AuxOutDis
Frequency Reference Clock
(CLK_IN)
Auxiliary Output Pin
(AUX_OUT)
4:1 Mux
PLL Clock Output
(PLLClkOut)
AuxLockCfg
PLL Lock/Unlock Indication
(Lock)
Figure 15. Auxiliary Output Selection
Referenced Control
Register Location
AuxOutSrc[1:0]......................“Auxiliary Output Source Selection (AuxOutSrc[1:0])” on page 27
AuxOutDis .............................“Auxiliary Output Disable (AuxOutDis)” on page 26
AuxLockCfg...........................“AUX PLL Lock Output Configuration (AuxLockCfg)” section on page 28
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CS2100-CP
5.6
5.6.1
Clock Output Stability Considerations
Output Switching
CS2100 is designed such that re-configuration of the clock routing functions do not result in a partial clock
period on any of the active outputs (CLK_OUT and/or AUX_OUT). In particular, enabling or disabling an
output, changing the auxiliary output source between REF_CLK and CLK_OUT, and the automatic disabling of the output(s) during unlock will not cause a runt or partial clock period.
The following exceptions/limitations exist:
•
Enabling/disabling AUX_OUT when AuxOutSrc = 11 (unlock indicator).
•
Switching AuxOutSrc[1:0] to or from 01 (PLL clock input) and to or from 11 (unlock indicator)
(Transitions between AuxOutSrc[1:0] = [00,10] will not produce a glitch).
•
Changing the ClkOutUnl bit while the PLL is in operation.
When any of these exceptions occur, a partial clock period on the output may result.
5.6.2
PLL Unlock Conditions
Certain changes to the clock inputs and registers can cause the PLL to lose lock which will affect the presence the clock signal on CLK_OUT. The following outlines which conditions cause the PLL to go unlocked:
•
Changes made to the registers which affect the Fraction-N value that is used by the Frequency Synthesizer. This includes all the bits shown in Figure 13 on page 19.
•
Any discontinuities on the Timing Reference Clock, REF_CLK.
•
Discontinuities on the Frequency Reference Clock, CLK_IN, except when the Clock Skipping feature
is enabled and the requirements of Clock Skipping are satisfied (see “CLK_IN Skipping Mode” on
page 13).
•
Gradual changes in CLK_IN frequency greater than ±30% from the starting frequency.
•
Step changes in CLK_IN frequency.
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CS2100-CP
6. SPI / I²C CONTROL PORT
The control port is used to access the registers and allows the device to be configured for the desired operational
modes and formats. The operation of the control port may be completely asynchronous with respect to device inputs
and outputs. However, to avoid potential interference problems, the control port pins should remain static if no operation is required.
The control port operates with either the SPI or I²C interface, with the CS2100 acting as a slave device. SPI Mode
is selected if there is a high-to-low transition on the AD0/CS pin after power-up. I²C Mode is selected by connecting
the AD0/CS pin through a resistor to VD or GND, thereby permanently selecting the desired AD0 bit address state.
In both modes the EnDevCfg1 and EnDevCfg2 bits must be set to 1 for normal operation.
WARNING: All “Reserved” registers must maintain their default state to ensure proper functional operation.
Referenced Control
Register Location
EnDevCfg1 ............................“Enable Device Configuration Registers 1 (EnDevCfg1)” on page 27
EnDevCfg2 ............................“Enable Device Configuration Registers 2 (EnDevCfg2)” section on page 27
6.1
SPI Control
In SPI Mode, CS is the chip select signal; CCLK is the control port bit clock (sourced from a microcontroller),
and CDIN is the input data line from the microcontroller. Data is clocked in on the rising edge of CCLK. The
device only supports write operations.
Figure 16 shows the operation of the control port in SPI Mode. To write to a register, bring CS low. The first
eight bits on CDIN form the chip address and must be 10011110. The next eight bits form the Memory Address Pointer (MAP), which is set to the address of the register that is to be updated. The next eight bits are
the data which will be placed into the register designated by the MAP.
There is MAP auto increment capability, enabled by the INCR bit in the MAP register. If INCR is a zero, the
MAP will stay constant for successive read or writes. If INCR is set to a 1, the MAP will automatically increment after each byte is read or written, allowing block writes of successive registers.
CS
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
CCLK
CHIP ADDRESS
CDIN
1
0
0
1
1
1
MAP BYTE
1
0
INCR
6
5
4
3
2
DATA +n
DATA
1
0
7
6
1
0
7
6
1
0
Figure 16. Control Port Timing in SPI Mode
6.2
I²C Control
In I²C Mode, SDA is a bidirectional data line. Data is clocked into and out of the device by the clock, SCL.
There is no CS pin. The AD0 pin forms the least-significant bit of the chip address and should be connected
to VD or GND as appropriate. The state of the AD0 pin should be maintained throughout operation of the
device.
The signal timings for a read and write cycle are shown in Figure 17 and Figure 18. A Start condition is defined as a falling transition of SDA while the clock is high. A Stop condition is a rising transition while the
clock is high. All other transitions of SDA occur while the clock is low. The first byte sent to the CS2100 after
a Start condition consists of the 7-bit chip address field and a R/W bit (high for a read, low for a write). The
upper 6 bits of the 7-bit address field are fixed at 100111 followed by the logic state of the AD0 pin. The
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CS2100-CP
eighth bit of the address is the R/W bit. If the operation is a write, the next byte is the Memory Address Pointer (MAP) which selects the register to be read or written. If the operation is a read, the contents of the register pointed to by the MAP will be output. Setting the auto increment bit in MAP allows successive reads or
writes of consecutive registers. Each byte is separated by an acknowledge bit. The ACK bit is output from
the CS2100 after each input byte is read and is input from the microcontroller after each transmitted byte.
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19
24 25 26 27 28
SCL
CHIP ADDRESS (WRITE)
1
SDA
0
0
1
1
1
AD0
MAP BYTE
0
INCR
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
ACK
7
6
DATA +n
DATA +1
DATA
1
0
ACK
7
6
1
0
7
6
1
0
ACK
ACK
STOP
START
Figure 17. Control Port Timing, I²C Write
0
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
SCL
CHIP ADDRESS (WRITE)
SDA
1
0
0
1
STOP
MAP BYTE
1 1 AD0 0
INCR
6
5
4
3
2
1
ACK
START
CHIP ADDRESS (READ)
1
0
0
ACK
0
1
0
DATA
1 AD0 1
7
ACK
START
DATA +1
0
7
ACK
0
DATA + n
7
0
NO
ACK
STOP
Figure 18. Control Port Timing, I²C Aborted Write + Read
Since the read operation cannot set the MAP, an aborted write operation is used as a preamble. As shown
in Figure 17, the write operation is aborted after the acknowledge for the MAP byte by sending a stop condition. The following pseudocode illustrates an aborted write operation followed by a read operation.
Send start condition.
Send 100111x0 (chip address & write operation).
Receive acknowledge bit.
Send MAP byte, auto increment off.
Receive acknowledge bit.
Send stop condition, aborting write.
Send start condition.
Send 100111x1(chip address & read operation).
Receive acknowledge bit.
Receive byte, contents of selected register.
Send acknowledge bit.
Send stop condition.
Setting the auto increment bit in the MAP allows successive reads or writes of consecutive registers. Each
byte is separated by an acknowledge bit.
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CS2100-CP
6.3
Memory Address Pointer
The Memory Address Pointer (MAP) byte comes after the address byte and selects the register to be read
or written. Refer to the pseudocode above for implementation details.
6.3.1
Map Auto Increment
The device has MAP auto increment capability enabled by the INCR bit (the MSB) of the MAP. If INCR is
set to 0, MAP will stay constant for successive I²C writes or reads and SPI writes. If INCR is set to 1, MAP
will auto increment after each byte is read or written, allowing block reads or writes of successive registers.
7. REGISTER QUICK REFERENCE
This table shows the register and bit names with their associated default values.
EnDevCfg1 and EnDevCfg2 bits must be set to 1 for normal operation.
WARNING: All “Reserved” registers must maintain their default state to ensure proper functional operation.
Adr
Name
01h Device ID
p 25
02h Device Ctrl
p 25
03h Device Cfg 1
p 26
05h Global Cfg
p 27
06h
- 32-Bit Ratio
09h
16h Funct Cfg 1
p 28
17h Funct Cfg 2
p 29
1Eh Funct Cfg 3
p 29
24
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
Device4
Device3
Device2
Device1
Device0
Revision2
Revision1
0
0
0
0
0
x
x
Unlock
FsDet1
FsDet0
Reserved AutoRMod
Reserved
AuxOutDis
x
x
x
0
0
0
0
RModSel2 RModSel1 RModSel0 Reserved
Reserved AuxOutSrc1 AuxOutSrc0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
Freeze
Reserved
Reserved
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
MSB
...........................................................................................................................
MSB-8
...........................................................................................................................
LSB+15
...........................................................................................................................
LSB+7
...........................................................................................................................
ClkSkipEn AuxLockCfg Reserved RefClkDiv1 RefClkDiv0 Reserved
Reserved
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Reserved
Reserved
Reserved ClkOutUnl LFRatioCfg Reserved
Reserved
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Reserved ClkIn_BW2 ClkIn_BW1 ClkIn_BW0 Reserved
Reserved
Reserved
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
Revision0
x
ClkOutDis
0
EnDevCfg1
0
EnDevCfg2
0
MSB-7
MSB-15
LSB+8
LSB
Reserved
0
Reserved
0
Reserved
0
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CS2100-CP
8. REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS
In I²C Mode all registers are read/write unless otherwise stated. In SPI mode all registers are write only. All “Reserved” registers must maintain their default state to ensure proper functional operation. The default state of each
bit after a power-up sequence or reset is indicated by the shaded row in the bit decode table and in the “Register
Quick Reference” on page 24.
Control port mode is entered when the device recognizes a valid chip address input on its I²C/SPI serial control pins
and the EnDevCfg1 and EnDevCfg2 bits are set to 1.
8.1
Device I.D. and Revision (Address 01h)
7
Device4
8.1.1
6
Device3
5
Device2
4
Device1
3
Device0
2
Revision2
1
Revision1
0
Revision0
2
Reserved
1
AuxOutDis
0
ClkOutDis
Device Identification (Device[4:0]) - Read Only
I.D. code for the CS2100.
8.1.2
Device[4:0]
Device
00000
CS2100.
Device Revision (Revision[2:0]) - Read Only
CS2100 revision level.
8.2
REVID[2:0]
Revision Level
100
B2.
Device Control (Address 02h)
7
Unlock
8.2.1
6
FsDet1
5
FsDet0
4
Reserved
3
AutoRMod
Unlock Indicator (Unlock) - Read Only
Indicates the lock state of the PLL.
8.2.2
Unlock
PLL Lock State
0
PLL is Locked.
1
PLL is Unlocked.
PLL Input Sample Rate Indicator (FsDet[1:0]) - Read Only
Indicates the range of the frequency of CLK_IN relative to the frequency of SysClk. For audio applications,
this can be used to distinguish single-, double-, and quad-speed modes.
FsDet[1:0]
fSysClk / fCLK_IN
00
> 224.
01
96 to 224.
10
< 96.
11
Reserved.
Application:
“CLK_IN Frequency Detector” on page 13
DS840PP1
25
CS2100-CP
8.2.3
Auto R-Modifier Enable (AutoRMod)
Controls the automatic ratio modifier function.
AutoRMod
8.2.4
Automatic R-Mod State
0
Disabled.
1
Enabled.
Application:
“Automatic Ratio Modifier (Auto R-Mod)” on page 17
Auxiliary Output Disable (AuxOutDis)
This bit controls the output driver for the AUX_OUT pin.
AuxOutDis
8.2.5
Output Driver State
0
AUX_OUT output driver enabled.
1
AUX_OUT output driver set to high-impedance.
Application:
“Auxiliary Output” on page 20
PLL Clock Output Disable (ClkOutDis)
This bit controls the output driver for the CLK_OUT pin.
8.3
ClkOutDis
Output Driver State
0
CLK_OUT output driver enabled.
1
CLK_OUT output driver set to high-impedance.
Application:
“PLL Clock Output” on page 20
Device Configuration 1 (Address 03h)
7
RModSel2
8.3.1
6
RModSel1
5
RModSel0
4
Reserved
3
Reserved
2
AuxOutSrc1
1
AuxOutSrc0
0
EnDevCfg1
R-Mod Selection (RModSel[2:0])
Selects the R-Mod value, which is used as a factor in determining the PLL’s Fractional N.
26
RModSel[2:0]
R-Mod Selection
000
Left-shift R-value by 0 (x 1).
001
Left-shift R-value by 1 (x 2).
010
Left-shift R-value by 2 (x 4).
011
Left-shift R-value by 3 (x 8).
100
Right-shift R-value by 1 (÷ 2).
101
Right-shift R-value by 2 (÷ 4).
110
Right-shift R-value by 3 (÷ 8).
111
Right-shift R-value by 4 (÷ 16).
Application:
“Manual Ratio Modifier (R-Mod)” on page 17
DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
8.3.2
Auxiliary Output Source Selection (AuxOutSrc[1:0])
Selects the source of the AUX_OUT signal.
AuxOutSrc[1:0]
Auxiliary Output Source
00
RefClk.
01
CLK_IN.
10
CLK_OUT.
11
PLL Lock Status Indicator.
Application:
“Auxiliary Output” on page 20
Note: When set to 11, AuxLckCfg sets the polarity and driver type (“AUX PLL Lock Output Configuration (AuxLockCfg)” on page 28).
8.3.3
Enable Device Configuration Registers 1 (EnDevCfg1)
This bit, in conjunction with EnDevCfg2, enables control port mode. Both bits must be set to 1 during initialization.
EnDevCfg1
Disabled.
1
Enabled.
Application:
“SPI / I²C Control Port” on page 22
Note:
8.4
EnDevCfg2 must also be set to enable control port mode (“SPI / I²C Control Port” on page 22).
Global Configuration (Address 05h)
7
Reserved
8.4.1
Register State
0
6
Reserved
5
Reserved
4
Reserved
3
Freeze
2
Reserved
1
Reserved
0
EnDevCfg2
Device Configuration Freeze (Freeze)
Setting this bit allows writes to the Device Control and Device Configuration registers (address 02h - 04h)
but keeps them from taking effect until this bit is cleared.
8.4.2
FREEZE
Device Control and Configuration Registers
0
Register changes take effect immediately.
1
Modifications may be made to Device Control and Device Configuration registers (registers 02h-04h) without
the changes taking effect until after the FREEZE bit is cleared.
Enable Device Configuration Registers 2 (EnDevCfg2)
This bit, in conjunction with EnDevCfg1, enables control port mode. Both bits must be set to 1 during initialization.
EnDevCfg2
Register State
0
Disabled.
1
Enabled.
Application:
“SPI / I²C Control Port” on page 22
Note:
DS840PP1
EnDevCfg1 must also be set to enable control port mode (“SPI / I²C Control Port” on page 22).
27
CS2100-CP
8.5
Ratio (Address 06h - 09h)
7
MSB
MSB-8
LSB+15
LSB+7
6
5
4
3
2
1
...................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................
...................................................................................................................................................
0
MSB-7
MSB-15
LSB+8
LSB
These registers contain the User Defined Ratio as shown in the “Register Quick Reference” section on
page 24. These 4 registers form a single 32-bit ratio value as shown above. See “Output to Input Frequency
Ratio Configuration” on page 16 and “Calculating the User Defined Ratio” on page 30 for more details.
8.6
Function Configuration 1 (Address 16h)
7
ClkSkipEn
8.6.1
6
AuxLockCfg
5
Reserved
4
RefClkDiv1
3
RefClkDiv0
2
Reserved
1
Reserved
0
Reserved
Clock Skip Enable (ClkSkipEn)
This bit enables clock skipping mode for the PLL and allows the PLL to maintain lock even when the
CLK_IN has missing pulses.
ClkSkipEn
Disabled.
1
Enabled.
Application:
“CLK_IN Skipping Mode” on page 13
Note:
8.6.2
PLL Clock Skipping Mode
0
fCLK_IN must be < 80 kHz to use this feature.
AUX PLL Lock Output Configuration (AuxLockCfg)
When the AUX_OUT pin is configured as a lock indicator (AuxOutSrc[1:0] = 11), this bit configures the
AUX_OUT driver to either push-pull or open drain. It also determines the polarity of the lock signal. If
AUX_OUT is configured as a clock output, the state of this bit is disregarded.
AuxLockCfg
AUX_OUT Driver Configuration
0
Push-Pull, Active High (output ‘high’ for unlocked condition, ‘low’ for locked condition).
1
Open Drain, Active Low (output ‘low’ for unlocked condition, high-Z for locked condition).
Application:
“Auxiliary Output” on page 20
Note: AUX_OUT is an unlock indicator, signalling an error condition when the PLL is unlocked. Therefore, the pin polarity is defined relative to the unlock condition.
8.6.3
Reference Clock Input Divider (RefClkDiv[1:0])
Selects the input divider for the timing reference clock.
28
RefClkDiv[1:0]
Reference Clock Input Divider
REF_CLK Frequency Range
00
÷ 4.
32 MHz to 75 MHz (50 MHz with XTI)
01
÷ 2.
16 MHz to 37.5 MHz
10
÷ 1.
8 MHz to 18.75 MHz
11
Reserved.
Application:
“Internal Timing Reference Clock Divider” on page 12
DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
8.7
Function Configuration 2 (Address 17h)
7
Reserved
8.7.1
6
Reserved
5
Reserved
4
ClkOutUnl
3
LFRatioCfg
2
Reserved
1
Reserved
0
Reserved
Enable PLL Clock Output on Unlock (ClkOutUnl)
Defines the state of the PLL output during the PLL unlock condition.
8.7.2
ClkOutUnl
Clock Output Enable Status
0
Clock outputs are driven ‘low’ when PLL is unlocked.
1
Clock outputs are always enabled (results in unpredictable output when PLL is unlocked).
Application:
“PLL Clock Output” on page 20
Low-Frequency Ratio Configuration (LFRatioCfg)
Determines how to interpret the 32-bit User Defined Ratio.
8.8
LFRatioCfg
Ratio Bit Encoding Interpretation
0
20.12 - High Multiplier.
1
12.20 - High Accuracy.
Application:
“User Defined Ratio (RUD)” on page 16
Function Configuration 3 (Address 1Eh)
7
Reserved
8.8.1
6
ClkIn_BW2
5
ClkIn_BW1
4
ClkIn_BW0
3
Reserved
2
Reserved
1
Reserved
0
Reserved
Clock Input Bandwidth (ClkIn_BW[2:0])
Sets the minimum loop bandwidth when locked to CLK_IN.
ClkIn_BW[2:0]
Minimum Loop Bandwidth
000
1 Hz
001
2 Hz
010
4 Hz
011
8 Hz
100
16 Hz
101
32 Hz
110
64 Hz
111
128 Hz
Application:
“Adjusting the Minimum Loop Bandwidth for CLK_IN” on page 15
Note: In order to guarantee that a change in minimum bandwidth takes effect, these bits must be set
prior to acquiring lock (removing and re-applying CLK_IN can provide the unlock condition necessary to
initiate the setting change). In production systems these bits should be configured with the desired values
prior to setting the EnDevCfg bits; this guarantees that the setting takes effect prior to acquiring lock.
DS840PP1
29
CS2100-CP
9. CALCULATING THE USER DEFINED RATIO
Note:
The software for use with the evaluation kit has built in tools to aid in calculating and converting the User
Defined Ratio. This section is for those who are not interested in the software or who are developing their
systems without the aid of the evaluation kit.
Most calculators do not interpret the fixed point binary representation which the CS2100 uses to define the output
to input clock ratio (see Section 5.3.1 on page 16); However, with a simple conversion we can use these tools to
generate a binary or hex value which can be written to the Ratio register.
9.1
High Resolution 12.20 Format
To calculate the User Defined Ratio (RUD) to store in the register(s), divide the desired output clock frequency by the given input clock (CLK_IN). Then multiply the desired ratio by the scaling factor of 220 to get the
scaled decimal representation; then use the decimal to binary/hex conversion function on a calculator and
write to the register. A few examples have been provided in Table 5.
Scaled Decimal
Representation =
(output clock/input clock) • 220
Hex Representation of
Binary RUD
12.288 MHz/10 MHz=1.2288
1288490
00 13 A9 2A
11.2896 MHz/44.1 kHz=256
268435456
10 00 00 00
Desired Output to Input Clock Ratio
(output clock/input clock)
Table 5. Example 12.20 R-Values
9.2
High Multiplication 20.12 Format
To calculate the User Defined Ratio (RUD) to store in the register(s), divide the desired output clock frequency by the given input clock (CLK_IN). Then multiply the desired ratio by the scaling factor of 212 to get the
scaled decimal representation; then use the decimal to binary/hex conversion function on a calculator and
write to the register. A few examples have been provided in Table 6.
Desired Output to Input Clock Ratio
(output clock/input clock)
Scaled Decimal
Representation =
(output clock/input clock) • 212
Hex Representation of
Binary RUD
12.288 MHz/60 Hz=204,800
838860800
32 00 00 00
11.2896 MHz/59.97 Hz =188254.127...
771088904
2D F5 E2 08
Table 6. Example 20.12 R-Values
30
DS840PP1
CS2100-CP
10.PACKAGE DIMENSIONS
10L MSOP (3 mm BODY) PACKAGE DRAWING (Note 1)
N
D
E11
c
E
A2
A
∝
e
b
A1
SIDE VIEW
1 2 3
END VIEW
L
SEATING
PLANE
L1
TOP VIEW
DIM
MIN
INCHES
NOM
A
A1
A2
b
c
D
E
E1
e
L
L1
-0
0.0295
0.0059
0.0031
----0.0157
--
-----0.1181 BSC
0.1929 BSC
0.1181 BSC
0.0197 BSC
0.0236
0.0374 REF
MAX
0.0433
0.0059
0.0374
0.0118
0.0091
----0.0315
--
MIN
MILLIMETERS
NOM
NOTE
MAX
-0
0.75
0.15
0.08
----0.40
--
-----3.00 BSC
4.90 BSC
3.00 BSC
0.50 BSC
0.60
0.95 REF
1.10
0.15
0.95
0.30
0.23
----0.80
--
4, 5
2
3
Notes: 1. Reference document: JEDEC MO-187
2. D does not include mold flash or protrusions which is 0.15 mm max. per side.
3. E1 does not include inter-lead flash or protrusions which is 0.15 mm max per side.
4. Dimension b does not include a total allowable dambar protrusion of 0.08 mm max.
5. Exceptions to JEDEC dimension.
THERMAL CHARACTERISTICS
Parameter
Junction to Ambient Thermal Impedance
DS840PP1
JEDEC 2-Layer
JEDEC 4-Layer
Symbol
Min
Typ
Max
Units
θJA
θJA
-
170
100
-
°C/W
°C/W
31
CS2100-CP
11.ORDERING INFORMATION
Product
Description
Package
Pb-Free
CS2100-CP
Clocking Device
10L-MSOP
Yes
CS2100-CP
Clocking Device
10L-MSOP
Yes
CDK2000
Evaluation Platform
-
Yes
Grade
Temp Range Container
Commercial
-
Order#
-10° to +70°C
Rail
CS2100-CP-CZZ
-10° to +70°C
Tape and
Reel
CS2100-CP-CZZR
-
-
CDK-2000-CLK
12.REFERENCES
1. Audio Engineering Society AES-12id-2006: “AES Information Document for digital audio measurements Jitter performance specifications,” May 2007.
2. Philips Semiconductor, “The I²C-Bus Specification: Version 2,” Dec. 1998.
http://www.semiconductors.philips.com
13.REVISION HISTORY
Release
A1
PP1
Changes
Initial Release
Updated “AC Electrical Characteristics” on page 7
Contacting Cirrus Logic Support
For all product questions and inquiries, contact a Cirrus Logic Sales Representative.
To find one nearest you, go to www.cirrus.com
IMPORTANT NOTICE
“Preliminary” product information describes products that are in production, but for which full characterization data is not yet available.
Cirrus Logic, Inc. and its subsidiaries (“Cirrus”) believe that the information contained in this document is accurate and reliable. However, the information is subject
to change without notice and is provided “AS IS” without warranty of any kind (express or implied). Customers are advised to obtain the latest version of relevant
information to verify, before placing orders, that information being relied on is current and complete. All products are sold subject to the terms and conditions of sale
supplied at the time of order acknowledgment, including those pertaining to warranty, indemnification, and limitation of liability. No responsibility is assumed by Cirrus
for the use of this information, including use of this information as the basis for manufacture or sale of any items, or for infringement of patents or other rights of third
parties. This document is the property of Cirrus and by furnishing this information, Cirrus grants no license, express or implied under any patents, mask work rights,
copyrights, trademarks, trade secrets or other intellectual property rights. Cirrus owns the copyrights associated with the information contained herein and gives consent for copies to be made of the information only for use within your organization with respect to Cirrus integrated circuits or other products of Cirrus. This consent
does not extend to other copying such as copying for general distribution, advertising or promotional purposes, or for creating any work for resale.
CERTAIN APPLICATIONS USING SEMICONDUCTOR PRODUCTS MAY INVOLVE POTENTIAL RISKS OF DEATH, PERSONAL INJURY, OR SEVERE PROPERTY OR ENVIRONMENTAL DAMAGE (“CRITICAL APPLICATIONS”). CIRRUS PRODUCTS ARE NOT DESIGNED, AUTHORIZED OR WARRANTED FOR USE
IN PRODUCTS SURGICALLY IMPLANTED INTO THE BODY, AUTOMOTIVE SAFETY OR SECURITY DEVICES, LIFE SUPPORT PRODUCTS OR OTHER CRITICAL APPLICATIONS. INCLUSION OF CIRRUS PRODUCTS IN SUCH APPLICATIONS IS UNDERSTOOD TO BE FULLY AT THE CUSTOMER’S RISK AND CIRRUS DISCLAIMS AND MAKES NO WARRANTY, EXPRESS, STATUTORY OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND
FITNESS FOR PARTICULAR PURPOSE, WITH REGARD TO ANY CIRRUS PRODUCT THAT IS USED IN SUCH A MANNER. IF THE CUSTOMER OR CUSTOMER’S CUSTOMER USES OR PERMITS THE USE OF CIRRUS PRODUCTS IN CRITICAL APPLICATIONS, CUSTOMER AGREES, BY SUCH USE, TO FULLY
INDEMNIFY CIRRUS, ITS OFFICERS, DIRECTORS, EMPLOYEES, DISTRIBUTORS AND OTHER AGENTS FROM ANY AND ALL LIABILITY, INCLUDING ATTORNEYS’ FEES AND COSTS, THAT MAY RESULT FROM OR ARISE IN CONNECTION WITH THESE USES.
Cirrus Logic, Cirrus, and the Cirrus Logic logo designs are trademarks of Cirrus Logic, Inc. All other brand and product names in this document may be trademarks
or service marks of their respective owners.
I²C is a registered trademark of Philips Semiconductor.
SPI is a trademark of Motorola, Inc.
32
DS840PP1