TI CC1100E

CC1100E
Low-Power Sub-GHz RF Transceiver
(470-510 MHz & 950-960 MHz)
Applications
 Ultra low-power wireless applications
operating in the 470/950 MHz ISM/SRD
bands
 Wireless sensor networks
 Home and building automation
 Advanced Metering Infrastructure (AMI)
 Wireless metering
 Wireless alarm and security systems
Product Description
The CC1100E is a Sub-GHz high performance
radio transceiver designed for very low power
RF applications. It is intended for the
Industrial, Scientific and Medical (ISM) and
Short Range Device (SRD) frequency bands
at 470-510 MHz and 950-960 MHz. The
CC1100E is especially suited for wireless
applications targeted at the Japanese ARIB
STD-T96 and the Chinese Short Range
Device Regulations at 470-510 MHz.
The CC1100E is code, package and pin out
compatible with both the CC1101 [1] and CC1100
[2] RF transceivers. The CC1100E, CC1101 and
CC1100 support complementary frequency
bands and can be used to cover RF designs at
the most commonly used sub-1 GHz license
free frequencies around the world:
The CC1100E provides extensive hardware
support for packet handling, data buffering,
burst
transmissions,
clear
channel
assessment, link quality indication, and wakeon-radio.
The main operating parameters and the 64byte transmit/receive FIFOs of the CC1100E can
be controlled via an SPI interface. In a typical
system, the CC1100E will be used with a
microcontroller and a few additional passive
components.
 CC1100E : 470-510 MHz and 950-960 MHz
 CC1101 : 300-348 MHz, 387-464 MHz and
779-928 MHz
 CC1100 : 300-348 MHz, 400-464 MHz and
800-928 MHz
The CC1100E RF transceiver is integrated with
a highly configurable baseband modem. The
modem supports various modulation formats
and has a configurable data rate of up to 500
kBaud.
This product shall not be used in any of the following products or systems without prior express written permission from
Texas Instruments:
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
implantable cardiac rhythm management systems, including without limitation pacemakers,
defibrillators and cardiac resynchronization devices,
external cardiac rhythm management systems that communicate directly with one or more implantable
medical devices; or
other devices used to monitor or treat cardiac function, including without limitation pressure sensors,
biochemical sensors and neurostimulators.
Please contact [email protected] if your application might fall within the category described above.
SWRS082
Page 1 of 92
CC1100E
Key Features

RF Performance






High sensitivity (–112 dBm at 1.2 kBaud,
480 MHz, 1% packet error rate)
Low current consumption (15.5 mA in RX,
1.2 kBaud, 480 MHz)
Programmable output power up to +10
dBm for all supported frequencies
Excellent receiver selectivity and blocking
performance
Programmable data rate from 1.2 to 500
kBaud
Frequency bands: 470-510 MHz and 950960 MHz



Low-Power Features


Analog Features




2-FSK, GFSK, and MSK supported as well
as OOK and flexible ASK shaping
Suitable for frequency hopping systems
due to a fast settling frequency
synthesizer; 90 μs settling time
Automatic
Frequency
Compensation
(AFC) can be used to align the frequency
synthesizer to the actual received signal
center frequency
Integrated analog temperature sensor
Digital Features







SWRS082
400 nA sleep mode current consumption
Fast start-up time; 240 μs from sleep to
RX or TX mode (measured on EM
reference design [3] and [4])
Wake-on-radio functionality for automatic
low-power RX polling
Separate 64-byte RX and TX data FIFOs
(enables burst mode data transmission)
General



Flexible support for packet oriented
systems; On-chip support for sync word
detection, address check, flexible packet
length, and automatic CRC handling
Efficient SPI interface; All registers can be
programmed with one “burst” transfer
Digital RSSI output
Programmable channel filter bandwidth
Programmable Carrier
Sense (CS)
indicator
Programmable Preamble Quality Indicator
(PQI) for improved protection against false
sync word detection in random noise
Support for automatic Clear Channel
Assessment (CCA) before transmitting (for
listen-before-talk systems)
Support for per-package Link Quality
Indication (LQI)
Optional automatic whitening and dewhitening of data



Few external components; Completely onchip frequency synthesizer, no external
filters or RF switch needed
Green package: RoHS compliant and no
antimony or bromine
Small size (QFN 4x4 mm package, 20
pins)
Suited for systems targeting compliance
with ARIB STD-T96
Suited for systems targeting compliance
with the Chinese Short Range Device
Regulations at 470-510 MHz
Support
for
asynchronous
and
synchronous serial receive/transmit mode
for backwards compatibility with existing
radio communication protocols
Page 2 of 92
CC1100E
Abbreviations
Abbreviations used in this data sheet are described below.
ACP
ADC
AFC
AGC
AMR
ARIB
ASK
BER
BT
CCA
CFR
CRC
CS
CW
DC
DVGA
ESR
FEC
FIFO
FHSS
2-FSK
GFSK
IF
I/Q
ISM
LC
LNA
LO
LSB
LQI
MCU
MSB
Adjacent Channel Power
Analog to Digital Converter
Automatic Frequency Compensation
Automatic Gain Control
Automatic Meter Reading
Association of Radio Industries and Businesses
Amplitude Shift Keying
Bit Error Rate
Bandwidth-Time product
Clear Channel Assessment
Code of Federal Regulations
Cyclic Redundancy Check
Carrier Sense
Continuous Wave (Unmodulated Carrier)
Direct Current
Digital Variable Gain Amplifier
Equivalent Series Resistance
Forward Error Correction
First-In-First-Out
Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum
Binary Frequency Shift Keying
Gaussian shaped Frequency Shift Keying
Intermediate Frequency
In-Phase/Quadrature
Industrial, Scientific, Medical
Inductor-Capacitor
Low Noise Amplifier
Local Oscillator
Least Significant Bit
Link Quality Indicator
Microcontroller Unit
Most Significant Bit
SWRS082
MSK
N/A
NRZ
OOK
PA
PCB
PD
PER
PLL
POR
PQI
PQT
PTAT
QFN
QPSK
RC
RF
RSSI
RX
SAW
SMD
SNR
SPI
SRD
TBD
T/R
TX
UHF
VCO
WOR
XOSC
XTAL
Minimum Shift Keying
Not Applicable
Non Return to Zero (Coding)
On-Off Keying
Power Amplifier
Printed Circuit Board
Power Down
Packet Error Rate
Phase Locked Loop
Power-On Reset
Preamble Quality Indicator
Preamble Quality Threshold
Proportional To Absolute Temperature
Quad Leadless Package
Quadrature Phase Shift Keying
Resistor-Capacitor
Radio Frequency
Received Signal Strength Indicator
Receive, Receive Mode
Surface Acoustic Wave
Surface Mount Device
Signal to Noise Ratio
Serial Peripheral Interface
Short Range Devices
To Be Defined
Transmit/Receive
Transmit, Transmit Mode
Ultra High frequency
Voltage Controlled Oscillator
Wake on Radio, Low power polling
Crystal Oscillator
Crystal
Page 3 of 92
CC1100E
Table of Contents
APPLICATIONS .................................................................................................................................................. 1
PRODUCT DESCRIPTION................................................................................................................................ 1
KEY FEATURES ................................................................................................................................................. 1
KEY FEATURES ................................................................................................................................................. 2
RF PERFORMANCE .......................................................................................................................................... 2
ANALOG FEATURES ........................................................................................................................................ 2
DIGITAL FEATURES......................................................................................................................................... 2
LOW-POWER FEATURES................................................................................................................................ 2
GENERAL ............................................................................................................................................................ 2
ABBREVIATIONS............................................................................................................................................... 3
TABLE OF CONTENTS ..................................................................................................................................... 4
1
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS ..................................................................................................... 7
2
OPERATING CONDITIONS ................................................................................................................. 7
3
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS......................................................................................................... 7
4
ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS ....................................................................................................... 8
4.1
CURRENT CONSUMPTION ............................................................................................................................ 8
4.2
RF RECEIVE SECTION ................................................................................................................................ 10
4.3
RF TRANSMIT SECTION ............................................................................................................................. 13
4.4
CRYSTAL OSCILLATOR .............................................................................................................................. 14
4.5
LOW POWER RC OSCILLATOR ................................................................................................................... 14
4.6
FREQUENCY SYNTHESIZER CHARACTERISTICS .......................................................................................... 15
4.7
ANALOG TEMPERATURE SENSOR .............................................................................................................. 15
4.8
DC CHARACTERISTICS .............................................................................................................................. 16
4.9
POWER-ON RESET ..................................................................................................................................... 16
5
PIN CONFIGURATION........................................................................................................................ 16
6
CIRCUIT DESCRIPTION .................................................................................................................... 18
7
APPLICATION CIRCUIT .................................................................................................................... 18
7.1
BIAS RESISTOR .......................................................................................................................................... 18
7.2
BALUN AND RF MATCHING ....................................................................................................................... 18
7.3
CRYSTAL ................................................................................................................................................... 19
7.4
REFERENCE SIGNAL .................................................................................................................................. 19
7.5
ADDITIONAL FILTERING ............................................................................................................................ 19
7.6
POWER SUPPLY DECOUPLING .................................................................................................................... 19
7.7
ANTENNA CONSIDERATIONS ..................................................................................................................... 20
7.8
PCB LAYOUT RECOMMENDATIONS ........................................................................................................... 22
8
CONFIGURATION OVERVIEW ........................................................................................................ 23
9
CONFIGURATION SOFTWARE........................................................................................................ 25
10
4-WIRE SERIAL CONFIGURATION AND DATA INTERFACE .................................................. 25
10.1 CHIP STATUS BYTE ................................................................................................................................... 27
10.2 REGISTER ACCESS ..................................................................................................................................... 27
10.3 SPI READ .................................................................................................................................................. 28
10.4 COMMAND STROBES ................................................................................................................................. 28
10.5 FIFO ACCESS ............................................................................................................................................ 28
10.6 PATABLE ACCESS ................................................................................................................................... 29
11
MICROCONTROLLER INTERFACE AND PIN CONFIGURATION .......................................... 30
11.1 CONFIGURATION INTERFACE ..................................................................................................................... 30
11.2 GENERAL CONTROL AND STATUS PINS ..................................................................................................... 30
11.3 OPTIONAL RADIO CONTROL FEATURE ...................................................................................................... 30
12
DATA RATE PROGRAMMING.......................................................................................................... 31
13
RECEIVER CHANNEL FILTER BANDWIDTH .............................................................................. 31
SWRS082
Page 4 of 92
CC1100E
14
14.1
14.2
14.3
15
15.1
15.2
15.3
15.4
15.5
15.6
16
16.1
16.2
16.3
17
17.1
17.2
17.3
17.4
17.5
17.6
18
18.1
18.2
19
19.1
19.2
19.3
19.4
19.5
19.6
19.7
20
21
22
22.1
23
24
25
26
27
27.1
27.2
28
28.1
28.2
28.3
28.4
28.5
28.6
28.7
29
29.1
29.2
DEMODULATOR, SYMBOL SYNCHRONIZER, AND DATA DECISION.................................. 32
FREQUENCY OFFSET COMPENSATION........................................................................................................ 32
BIT SYNCHRONIZATION ............................................................................................................................. 32
BYTE SYNCHRONIZATION .......................................................................................................................... 32
PACKET HANDLING HARDWARE SUPPORT .............................................................................. 33
DATA WHITENING ..................................................................................................................................... 33
PACKET FORMAT ....................................................................................................................................... 34
PACKET FILTERING IN RECEIVE MODE ...................................................................................................... 36
PACKET HANDLING IN TRANSMIT MODE ................................................................................................... 36
PACKET HANDLING IN RECEIVE MODE ..................................................................................................... 37
PACKET HANDLING IN FIRMWARE ............................................................................................................. 37
MODULATION FORMATS ................................................................................................................. 38
FREQUENCY SHIFT KEYING ....................................................................................................................... 38
MINIMUM SHIFT KEYING........................................................................................................................... 38
AMPLITUDE MODULATION ........................................................................................................................ 39
RECEIVED SIGNAL QUALIFIERS AND LINK QUALITY INFORMATION ............................ 39
SYNC WORD QUALIFIER ............................................................................................................................ 39
PREAMBLE QUALITY THRESHOLD (PQT) .................................................................................................. 39
RSSI.......................................................................................................................................................... 40
CARRIER SENSE (CS)................................................................................................................................. 41
CLEAR CHANNEL ASSESSMENT (CCA) ..................................................................................................... 43
LINK QUALITY INDICATOR (LQI) .............................................................................................................. 43
FORWARD ERROR CORRECTION WITH INTERLEAVING ..................................................... 43
FORWARD ERROR CORRECTION (FEC)...................................................................................................... 43
INTERLEAVING .......................................................................................................................................... 44
RADIO CONTROL................................................................................................................................ 45
POWER-ON START-UP SEQUENCE ............................................................................................................. 45
CRYSTAL CONTROL ................................................................................................................................... 46
VOLTAGE REGULATOR CONTROL.............................................................................................................. 47
ACTIVE MODES ......................................................................................................................................... 47
WAKE ON RADIO (WOR).......................................................................................................................... 48
TIMING ...................................................................................................................................................... 49
RX TERMINATION TIMER .......................................................................................................................... 49
DATA FIFO ............................................................................................................................................ 50
FREQUENCY PROGRAMMING........................................................................................................ 51
VCO ......................................................................................................................................................... 52
VCO AND PLL SELF-CALIBRATION .......................................................................................................... 52
VOLTAGE REGULATORS ................................................................................................................. 52
OUTPUT POWER PROGRAMMING ................................................................................................ 52
SHAPING AND PA RAMPING............................................................................................................ 53
GENERAL PURPOSE / TEST OUTPUT CONTROL PINS ............................................................. 54
ASYNCHRONOUS AND SYNCHRONOUS SERIAL OPERATION .............................................. 56
ASYNCHRONOUS SERIAL OPERATION ........................................................................................................ 56
SYNCHRONOUS SERIAL OPERATION .......................................................................................................... 56
SYSTEM CONSIDERATIONS AND GUIDELINES ......................................................................... 57
SRD REGULATIONS ................................................................................................................................... 57
FREQUENCY HOPPING AND MULTI-CHANNEL SYSTEMS ............................................................................ 57
DATA BURST TRANSMISSIONS................................................................................................................... 58
CONTINUOUS TRANSMISSIONS .................................................................................................................. 58
LOW COST SYSTEMS ................................................................................................................................. 59
BATTERY OPERATED SYSTEMS ................................................................................................................. 59
INCREASING OUTPUT POWER .................................................................................................................... 59
CONFIGURATION REGISTERS........................................................................................................ 59
CONFIGURATION REGISTER DETAILS – REGISTERS WITH PRESERVED VALUES IN SLEEP STATE ............... 64
CONFIGURATION REGISTER DETAILS – REGISTERS THAT LOOSE PROGRAMMING IN SLEEP STATE ......... 84
SWRS082
Page 5 of 92
CC1100E
29.3 STATUS REGISTER DETAILS....................................................................................................................... 85
30
PACKAGE DESCRIPTION (QFN 20)................................................................................................. 89
30.1 RECOMMENDED PCB LAYOUT FOR PACKAGE (QFN 20)........................................................................... 89
30.2 SOLDERING INFORMATION ........................................................................................................................ 89
30.3 ORDERING INFORMATION .......................................................................................................................... 90
REFERENCES ................................................................................................................................................... 90
REFERENCES ................................................................................................................................................... 91
31
GENERAL INFORMATION................................................................................................................ 92
31.1 DOCUMENT HISTORY ................................................................................................................................ 92
SWRS082
Page 6 of 92
CC1100E
1
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Under no circumstances must the absolute maximum ratings given in Table 1 be violated. Stress
exceeding one or more of the limiting values may cause permanent damage to the device.
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
Supply voltage
–0.3
3.9
V
Voltage on any digital pin
–0.3
VDD + 0.3
Condition
All supply pins must have the same voltage
max 3.9
V
2.0
V
Voltage ramp-up rate
120
kV/µs
Input RF level
+10
dBm
150
C
Solder reflow temperature
260
C
According to IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020
ESD
2000
V
According to JEDEC STD 22, method A114,
Human Body Model (HBM)
ESD
750
V
According to JEDEC STD 22, C101C,
Charged Device Model (CDM)
Voltage on the pins RF_P, RF_N,
and DCOUPL
–0.3
Storage temperature range
–50
Table 1: Absolute Maximum Ratings
Caution!
ESD
sensitive
device.
Precaution should be used when handling
the device in order to prevent permanent
damage.
2
Operating Conditions
The operating conditions for the CC1100E are listed Table 2 in below.
Parameter
Min
Max
Unit
Operating temperature
-40
85
C
Operating supply voltage
1.8
3.6
V
Condition
All supply pins must have the same voltage
Table 2: Operating Conditions
3
General Characteristics
Parameter
Min
Frequency range
Data rate
Typ
Max
Unit
Condition/Note
470
510
MHz
950
960
MHz
1.2
500
kBaud
2-FSK
1.2
250
kBaud
GFSK, OOK, and ASK
26
500
kBaud
(Shaped) MSK (also known as differential offset
QPSK)
Optional Manchester encoding (the data rate in kbps
will be half the baud rate)
Table 3: General Characteristics
SWRS082
Page 7 of 92
CC1100E
4
Electrical Specifications
4.1
Current Consumption
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V if nothing else stated. All measurement results are obtained using the CC1100E EM reference designs
([3] and[4]). Reduced current settings (MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1) gives a slightly lower current consumption at the cost
of a reduction in sensitivity. See Table 6: RF Receive Section for additional details on current consumption and sensitivity.
Parameter
Current consumption in power
down modes
Current consumption
Current consumption,
480 MHz
Min
Typ
Max
Unit Condition
0.3
A
Voltage regulator to digital part off, register values retained
(SLEEP state). All GDO pins programmed to 0x2F (HW to 0)
0.7
A
Voltage regulator to digital part off, register values retained, lowpower RC oscillator running (SLEEP state with WOR enabled)
100
A
Voltage regulator to digital part off, register values retained,
XOSC running (SLEEP state with MCSM0.OSC_FORCE_ON set)
165
A
Voltage regulator to digital part on, all other modules in power
down (XOFF state)
10.0
A
Automatic RX polling once each second, using low-power RC
oscillator, with 460 kHz filter bandwidth and 250 kBaud data rate,
PLL calibration every 4th wakeup. Average current with signal in
channel below carrier sense level (MCSM2.RX_TIME_RSSI=1)
35
A
Same as above, but with signal in channel above carrier sense
level, 1.95 ms RX timeout, and no preamble/sync word found
1.3
A
Automatic RX polling every 15th second, using low-power RC
oscillator, with 460 kHz filter bandwidth and 250 kBaud data rate,
PLL calibration every 4th wakeup. Average current with signal in
channel below carrier sense level (MCSM2.RX_TIME_RSSI=1)
32
A
Same as above, but with signal in channel above carrier sense
level, 29.3 ms RX timeout, and no preamble/sync word found
1.7
mA
Only voltage regulator to digital part and crystal oscillator running
(IDLE state)
9
mA
Only the frequency synthesizer is running (FSTXON state). This
currents consumption is also representative for the other
intermediate states when going from IDLE to RX or TX, including
the calibration state
16.5
mA
Receive mode, 1.2 kBaud, reduced current, input at sensitivity
limit
15.4
mA
Receive mode, 1.2 kBaud, reduced current, input well above
sensitivity limit
16.6
mA
Receive mode, 38.4 kBaud , reduced current, input at sensitivity
limit
15.5
mA
Receive mode, 38.4 kBaud , reduced current, input well above
sensitivity limit
17.5
mA
Receive mode, 250 kBaud, reduced current, input at sensitivity
limit
16.1
mA
Receive mode, 250 kBaud, reduced current, input well above
sensitivity limit
20
mA
Receive mode, 500 kBaud, input at sensitivity limit
18.7
mA
Receive mode, 500 kBaud, input well above sensitivity limit
29.6
mA
Transmit mode, +10 dBm output power
16.6
mA
Transmit mode, 0 dBm output power
16.5
mA
Transmit mode, –6 dBm output power
SWRS082
Page 8 of 92
CC1100E
Parameter
Min
Current consumption,
955 MHz
Typ
Max
Unit Condition
16.3
mA
Receive mode, 1.2 kBaud , reduced current, input at sensitivity
limit
15.2
mA
Receive mode, 1.2 kBaud , reduced current, input well above
sensitivity limit
17.7
mA
Receive mode, 38.4 kBaud , reduced current, input at sensitivity
limit
17.0
mA
Receive mode, 38.4 kBaud , reduced current, input well above
sensitivity limit
16.8
mA
Receive mode, 76.8 kBaud , reduced current, input at sensitivity
limit
15.1
mA
Receive mode, 76.8 kBaud , reduced current, input well above
sensitivity limit
30.9
mA
Transmit mode, +10 dBm output power
16.5
mA
Transmit mode, 0 dBm output power
15.8
mA
Transmit mode, –6 dBm output power
Table 4: Electrical Specifications
Temperature [°C]
Supply Voltage
VDD = 1.8 V
-40
25
85
Supply Voltage
VDD = 3.0 V
-40
25
85
Supply Voltage
VDD = 3.6 V
-40
25
85
Current [mA]
29.3
31.6
31.9
28.7
28.1
30.9
30.3
31.2
30.6
Table 5: Typical Variation in TX Current Consumption over Temperature and Supply Voltage,
955 MHz and +10 dBm Output Power Setting
Current Consumption vs. Input Power
19
18.5
Current (mA)
18
-40c
17.5
25c
85c
17
16.5
16
-100.00
-80.00
-60.00
-40.00
-20.00
Input Power (dBm)
Figure 1: Typical Variation in RX Current Consumption overt Temperature and Input Power Level,
955 MHz, 76.8 kBaud GFSK, Sensitivity Optimized Setting
SWRS082
Page 9 of 92
CC1100E
4.2
RF Receive Section
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V if nothing else stated. All measurement results are obtained using the CC1100E EM reference designs
([3] and[4]).
Parameter
Digital channel
filter bandwidth
Min
Typ
58
Max
Unit
Condition/Note
812
kHz
User programmable. The bandwidth limits are
proportional to crystal frequency (given values
assume a 26.0 MHz crystal)
480 MHz, 1.2 kBaud data rate, sensitivity optimized, MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=0
(GFSK with BT=1, 1% packet error rate, 20 bytes packet length, 5.2 kHz deviation, 58 kHz digital channel filter bandwidth)
Receiver
sensitivity
-112
dBm
Sensitivity can be traded for current consumption by
setting MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1. The typical
current consumption is then reduced from 17.9 mA
to 16.5 mA at sensitivity limit. The sensitivity is
typically reduced to -110 dBm
480 MHz, 38.4 kBaud data rate, sensitivity optimized, MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=0
(GFSK with BT=1, 1% packet error rate, 20 bytes packet length, 20 kHz deviation, 100 kHz digital channel filter bandwidth)
Receiver
sensitivity
–104
dBm
Sensitivity can be traded for current consumption by
setting MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1. The typical
current consumption is then reduced from 18mA to
16.6 mA at sensitivity limit.
480 MHz, 250 kBaud data rate, sensitivity optimized, MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=0
(GFSK with BT=1, 1% packet error rate, 20 bytes packet length, 127 kHz deviation, 540 kHz digital channel filter bandwidth)
Receiver
sensitivity
-95
dBm
Sensitivity can be traded for current consumption by
setting MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1. The typical
current consumption is then reduced from 19.2mA to
17.5 mA at sensitivity limit.
480 MHz, 500 kBaud data rate, sensitivity optimized, MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=0
(MSK, 1% packet error rate, 20 bytes packet length, 812 kHz digital channel filter bandwidth)
Receiver
sensitivity
-88
dBm
Setting MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1 is not an
valid option at 500 kBaud dara rate
955 MHz, 1.2 kBaud data rate, sensitivity optimized, MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=0
(GFSK with BT=1, 1% packet error rate, 20 bytes packet length, 5.2 kHz deviation, 58 kHz digital channel filter bandwidth)
Receiver
sensitivity
–111
dBm
Sensitivity can be traded for current consumption by
setting MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1. The typical
current consumption is then reduced from 18.2 mA
to 16.3 mA at sensitivity limit. The sensitivity is
typically reduced to -109 dBm
Saturation
-15
dBm
FIFOTHR.CLOSE_IN_RX=0. See more in DN010
[11]
Adjacent channel
rejection
28
dB
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit. 200
kHz channel spacing
Alternate channel
rejection
37
dB
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit. 200
kHz channel spacing
See Figure 2 for plot of selectivity versus frequency
offset
Image channel
rejection,
955 MHz
32
dB
IF frequency 152 kHz
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit
SWRS082
Page 10 of 92
CC1100E
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V if nothing else stated. All measurement results are obtained using the CC1100E EM reference designs
([3] and[4])
955 MHz, 38.4 kBaud data rate, sensitivity optimized, MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=0
(GFSK with BT=1, 1% packet error rate, 20 bytes packet length, 20 kHz deviation, 100 kHz digital channel filter bandwidth)
Receiver
sensitivity
-104
dBm
Sensitivity can be traded for current consumption by
setting MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1. The typical
current consumption is then reduced from 18.3mA to
17.7 mA at sensitivity limit.
Saturation
-18
dBm
FIFOTHR.CLOSE_IN_RX=0. See more in DN010
[11]
Adjacent channel
rejection
12
dB
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit. 200
kHz channel spacing
Alternate channel
rejection
27
dB
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit. 200
kHz channel spacing
See Figure 3 for plot of selectivity versus frequency
offset
Image channel
rejection,
955 MHz
Parameter
23
dB
IF frequency 152 kHz
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
Condition/Note
955 MHz, 76.8 kBaud data rate, sensitivity optimized, MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=0
(GFSK with BT=1, 1% packet error rate, 20 bytes packet length, 32 kHz deviation, 232 kHz digital channel filter bandwidth)
-100
Receiver sensitivity
dBm Sensitivity can be traded for current consumption by setting
MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1. The typical current
consumption is then reduced from 18.6mA to 16.8 mA at
sensitivity limit.
Blocking
Blocking at ±2 MHz offset,
1.2 kBaud, 955 MHz
-49
dBm
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit
Blocking at ±2 MHz offset,
38.4 kBaud, 955 MHz
-49
dBm
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit
Blocking at ±10 MHz
offset, 1.2 kBaud, 955
MHz
-39
dBm
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit
Blocking at ±10 MHz
offset, 38.4 kBaud, 955
MHz
-40
dBm
Desired channel 3 dB above the sensitivity limit
dBm
25 MHz – 1 GHz
General
Spurious Emmissions
-38
Excluding the 470-510 MHz band, signal at 960 MHz, 2nd
harmonicAbove 1 GHz
-32
dBm
Typical radiated spurious emission is -49 dBm measured at
the VCO frequency
Data above is for the 470-510 MHz band, for spurious
emmisions at 950-960 MHz, look at section 28.
RX latency
9
Bit
Serial operation. Time from start of reception until data is
available on the receiver data output pin is equal to 9 bits.
Table 6: RF Receive Section
SWRS082
Page 11 of 92
CC1100E
Supply
VDD = 1.8 V
Voltage
Supply
VDD = 3.0 V
Voltage
Supply
VDD = 3.6 V
Voltage
Temperature [°C]
-40
25
85
-40
25
85
-40
25
85
Sensitivity [dBm]
-101
-100
-96
-102
-100
-98
-102
-100
-98
Table 7: Typical Variation in Sensitivity over Temperature and Supply Voltage, 955 MHz, 76.8
kBaud GFSK, Sensitivity Optimized Setting, 770 MHz notch filter Used
60.0
50.0
Selectivity [dB]
40.0
30.0
20.0
10.0
0.0
-10.0
-20.0
-1.0 -0.9 -0.8 -0.7 -0.6 -0.5 -0.4 -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
Frequency offset [MHz]
Figure 2: Typical Selectivity at 1.2 kBaud Data Rate, 955 MHz, GFSK, 5.2 kHz Deviation. IF
Frequency is 152.3 kHz and the Digital Channel Filter Bandwidth is 58 kHz
50.0
40.0
Selectivity [dB]
30.0
20.0
10.0
0.0
-10.0
-20.0
-1.0 -0.9 -0.8 -0.7 -0.6 -0.5 -0.4 -0.3 -0.2 -0.1 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1.0
Frequency offset [MHz]
Figure 3: Typical Selectivity at 38.4 kBaud Data Rate, 955 MHz, GFSK, 20 kHz Deviation. IF
Frequency is 152.3 kHz and the Digital Channel Filter Bandwidth is 100 kHz
SWRS082
Page 12 of 92
CC1100E
4.3
RF Transmit Section
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V, +10dBm if nothing else stated. All measurement results are obtained using the CC1100E EM
reference designs ([3] and[4]).
Parameter
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
Differential load
impedance
480 MHz
132 – j2

955 MHz
59 – j67

Output power, highest
setting
Condition/Note
Differential impedance as seen from the RF-port (RF_P and
RF_N) towards the antenna. Follow the CC1100E EM
reference designs ([3] and 0) available from the TI website
Output power is programmable, and full range is available in all
frequency bands. Output power may be restricted by
regulatory limits.
480 MHz
+10
dBm
955 MHz
+9
dBm
Output power, lowest
setting
-30
dBm
Delivered to a 50  single-ended load via the CC1100E EM
reference designs ([3] and 0) RF matching network
Output power is programmable, and full range is available in all
frequency bands
Delivered to a 50 single-ended load via the CC1100E EM
reference designs ([3] and 0) RF matching network
Harmonics, conducted
480 MHz
2nd Harm, 480 MHz
3rd Harm, 480 MHz
-40
-48
dBm
dBm
955 MHz
2nd Harm, 955 MHz
3rd Harm, 955 MHz
-34
-50
dBm
dBm
Spurious emissions,
conducted, harmonics
not included
480 MHz
955MHz
Measured with 10 dBm CW, TX frequency at 480 / 955 MHz
Frequencies below 960 MHz
Frequencies above 960 MHz
Measured with +10 dBm CW, TX frequency at 480 / 955 MHz
-39
-50
dBm
dBm
Frequencies below 1 GHz, outside 470-510 MHz band
Frequencies above 1 GHz
Refer to section 28.1 for information on Spurious Emissions
General
TX latency
8
bit
Serial operation. Time from sampling the data on the
transmitter data input pin until it is observed on the RF output
ports
Table 8: RF Transmit Section
SWRS082
Page 13 of 92
CC1100E
Supply Voltage
VDD = 1.8 V
Supply Voltage
VDD = 3.0 V
Supply Voltage
VDD = 3.6 V
Temperature [°C]
-40
25
85
-40
25
85
-40
25
85
Output Power [dBm]
10.1
10.8
10.8
10.2
10.4
10.5
9.2
9.9
9.9
Table 9: Typical Variation in Output Power over Temperature and Supply Voltage, 480 MHz,
+10 dBm Output Power Setting
Supply Voltage
VDD = 1.8 V
Supply Voltage
VDD = 3.0 V
Supply Voltage
VDD = 3.6 V
Temperature [°C]
-40
25
85
-40
25
85
-40
25
85
Output Power [dBm]
8.8
8.4
7.9
9.6
9.2
8.8
9.6
9.2
8.8
Table 10: Typical Variation in Output Power over Temperature and Supply Voltage, 955 MHz,
+10 dBm Output Power Setting
4.4
Crystal Oscillator
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V if nothing else is stated. All measurement results obtained using the CC1100E EM reference designs
([3] and[4]).
Parameter
Crystal frequency
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
26
26
27
MHz
Tolerance
Load capacitance
±40
10
ppm
13
ESR
Start-up time
20
pF
100

150
µs
Condition/Note
This is the total tolerance including a) initial tolerance, b) crystal
loading, c) aging, and d) temperature dependence. The
acceptable crystal tolerance depends on RF frequency and
channel spacing / bandwidth.
Simulated over operating conditions
This parameter is to a large degree crystal dependent. Measured
on the CC1100E EM reference designs ([3] and[4]) using crystal
AT-41CD2 from NDK
Table 11: Crystal Oscillator Parameters
4.5
Low Power RC Oscillator
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V if nothing else is stated. All measurement results obtained using the CC1100E EM reference designs
([3] and[4]).
Parameter
Min
Typ
Max
Calibrated frequency
34.7
34.7
36
kHz
±1
%
Frequency accuracy after
calibration
Unit
Condition/Note
Calibrated RC Oscillator frequency is XTAL
frequency divided by 750
+0.5
% / C
Frequency drift when temperature changes after
calibration
Supply voltage coefficient
+3
%/V
Frequency drift when supply voltage changes after
calibration
Initial calibration time
2
ms
Temperature coefficient
When the RC Oscillator is enabled, calibration is
continuously done in the background as long as
the crystal oscillator is running
Table 12: RC Oscillator Parameters
SWRS082
Page 14 of 92
CC1100E
4.6
Frequency Synthesizer Characteristics
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V if nothing else is stated. All measurement results are obtained using the CC1100E EM reference
designs ([3] and[4]). Min figures are given using a 27 MHz crystal. Typ and max figures are given using a 26 MHz crystal.
Parameter
Programmed frequency
resolution
Min
Typ
397
Max
FXOSC/
216
Unit
412
Condition/Note
Hz
26-27 MHz crystal. The resolution (in Hz) is equal
for all frequency bands
Given by crystal used. Required accuracy
(including temperature and aging) depends on
frequency band and channel bandwidth / spacing
Synthesizer frequency
tolerance
±40
ppm
RF carrier phase noise
–92
dBc/Hz
@ 50 kHz offset from carrier
RF carrier phase noise
–92
dBc/Hz
@ 100 kHz offset from carrier
RF carrier phase noise
–92
dBc/Hz
@ 200 kHz offset from carrier
RF carrier phase noise
–98
dBc/Hz
@ 500 kHz offset from carrier
RF carrier phase noise
–107
dBc/Hz
@ 1 MHz offset from carrier
RF carrier phase noise
–113
dBc/Hz
@ 2 MHz offset from carrier
RF carrier phase noise
–119
dBc/Hz
@ 5 MHz offset from carrier
RF carrier phase noise
–129
dBc/Hz
@ 10 MHz offset from carrier
PLL turn-on / hop time
85.1
88.4
88.4
s
Time from leaving the IDLE state until arriving in
the RX, FSTXON or TX state, when not
performing calibration. Crystal oscillator running
PLL RX/TX settling time
9.3
9.6
9.6
s
Settling time for the 1·IF frequency step from RX
to TX
PLL TX/RX settling time
20.7
21.5
21.5
s
Settling time for the 1·IF frequency step from TX
to RX
PLL calibration time
694
721
721
s
Calibration can be initiated manually or
automatically before entering or after leaving
RX/TX
Table 13: Frequency Synthesizer Parameters
4.7
Analog Temperature Sensor
TA = 25C, VDD = 3.0 V if nothing else is stated. All measurement results obtained using the CC1100E EM reference designs
([3] and[4]). Note that it is necessary to write 0xBF to the PTEST register to use the analog temperature sensor in the IDLE
state.
Parameter
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
Output voltage at –40C
0.651
V
Output voltage at 0C
0.747
V
Output voltage at +40C
0.847
V
Output voltage at +80C
0.945
V
Temperature coefficient
Error in calculated
temperature, calibrated
2.47
-2
*
0
mV/C
2
*
C
Condition/Note
Fitted from –20 C to +80 C
From –20 C to +80 C when using 2.47 mV / C, after
1-point calibration at room temperature
*
The indicated minimum and maximum error with 1point calibration is based on simulated values for
typical process parameters
Current consumption
increase when enabled
0.3
mA
Table 14: Analog Temperature Sensor Parameters
SWRS082
Page 15 of 92
CC1100E
4.8
DC Characteristics
TA = 25C if nothing else stated.
Digital Inputs/Outputs
Min
Max
Unit
Condition
Logic "0" input voltage
0
0.7
V
Logic "1" input voltage
VDD-0.7
VDD
V
Logic "0" output voltage
0
0.5
V
For up to 4 mA output current
Logic "1" output voltage
VDD-0.3
VDD
V
For up to 4 mA output current
Logic "0" input current
N/A
–50
nA
Input equals 0V
Logic "1" input current
N/A
50
nA
Input equals VDD
Table 15: DC Characteristics
4.9
Power-On Reset
When the power supply complies with the requirements in Table 16 below, proper Power-On-Reset
functionality is guaranteed. Otherwise, the chip should be assumed to have unknown state until
transmitting an SRES strobe over the SPI interface. See Section 19.1 on page 45 for further details.
Parameter
Min
Typ
Power-up ramp-up time
Power off time
Max
Unit
5
ms
From 0V until reaching 1.8V
ms
Minimum time between power-on and power-off
1
Condition/Note
Table 16: Power-On Reset Requirements
5
Pin Configuration
GND
RBIAS
DGUARD
GND
SI
The CC1100E pin-out is shown in Figure 4 and Table 17. See Section 26 for details on the I/O
configuration.
20 19 18 17 16
SCLK 1
15 AVDD
SO (GDO1) 2
14 AVDD
GDO2 3
13 RF_N
DVDD 4
12 RF_P
DCOUPL 5
11 AVDD
7
8
9 10
GDO0 (ATEST)
CSn
XOSC_Q1
AVDD
XOSC_Q2
6
GND
Exposed die
attach pad
Figure 4: Pin out Top View
.
Note: The exposed die attach pad must be connected to a solid ground plane as this is the main
ground connection for the chip
SWRS082
Page 16 of 92
CC1100E
Pin #
Pin Name
Pin type
Description
1
SCLK
Digital Input
Serial configuration interface, clock input
2
SO (GDO1)
Digital Output
Serial configuration interface, data output
Optional general output pin when CSn is high
3
GDO2
Digital Output
Digital output pin for general use:
 Test signals
 FIFO status signals
 Clear channel indicator
 Clock output, down-divided from XOSC
 Serial output RX data
4
DVDD
Power (Digital)
1.8 - 3.6 V digital power supply for digital I/O’s and for the digital core
voltage regulator
5
DCOUPL
Power (Digital)
1.6 - 2.0 V digital power supply output for decoupling
NOTE: This pin is intended for use only by the CC1100E. It can not be used to
provide supply voltage to other devices
6
GDO0
Digital I/O
Digital output pin for general use:
 Test signals
(ATEST)
 FIFO status signals
 Clear channel indicator
 Clock output, down-divided from XOSC
 Serial output RX data
 Serial input TX data
Also used as analog test I/O for prototype/production testing
7
CSn
Digital Input
Serial configuration interface, chip select
8
XOSC_Q1
Analog I/O
Crystal oscillator pin 1, or external clock input
9
AVDD
Power (Analog)
1.8 - 3.6 V analog power supply connection
10
XOSC_Q2
Analog I/O
Crystal oscillator pin 2
11
AVDD
Power (Analog)
1.8 - 3.6 V analog power supply connection
12
RF_P
RF I/O
Positive RF input signal to LNA in receive mode
Positive RF output signal from PA in transmit mode
13
RF_N
RF I/O
Negative RF input signal to LNA in receive mode
Negative RF output signal from PA in transmit mode
14
AVDD
Power (Analog)
1.8 - 3.6 V analog power supply connection
15
AVDD
Power (Analog)
1.8 - 3.6 V analog power supply connection
16
GND
Ground (Analog)
Analog ground connection
17
RBIAS
Analog I/O
External bias resistor for reference current
18
DGUARD
Power (Digital)
Power supply connection for digital noise isolation
19
GND
Ground (Digital)
Ground connection for digital noise isolation
20
SI
Digital Input
Serial configuration interface, data input
Table 17: Pin out Overview
SWRS082
Page 17 of 92
CC1100E
6
Circuit Description
90
PA
RC OSC
BIAS
RBIAS
XOSC
XOSC_Q1
RXFIFO
DIGITAL INTERFACE TO MCU
0
RF_N
TXFIFO
FREQ
SYNTH
MODULATOR
RF_P
PACKET HANDLER
ADC
FEC / INTERLEAVER
ADC
LNA
DEMODULATOR
RADIO CONTROL
SCLK
SO (GDO1)
SI
CSn
GDO0 (ATEST)
GDO2
XOSC_Q2
Figure 5: CC1100E Simplified Block Diagram
A simplified block diagram of the CC1100E is
shown in Figure 5.
The CC1100E features a low-IF receiver. The
received RF signal is amplified by the lownoise amplifier (LNA) and down-converted in
quadrature (I and Q) to the intermediate
frequency (IF). At IF, the I/Q signals are
digitized by the ADCs. Automatic gain control
(AGC), fine channel filtering and demodulation
bit/packet synchronization are performed
digitally.
The transmitter part of the CC1100E is based on
direct synthesis of the RF frequency. The
7
A 4-wire SPI serial interface is used for
configuration and data buffer access.
The digital baseband includes support for
channel configuration, packet handling, and
data buffering.
are described in Table 18, and typical values
are given in Table 19.
Bias Resistor
The bias resistor R171 is used to set an
7.2
A crystal is to be connected to XOSC_Q1 and
XOSC_Q2. The crystal oscillator generates the
reference frequency for the synthesizer, as
well as clocks for the ADC and the digital part.
Application Circuit
Only a few external components are required for
using the CC1100E. The recommended
application circuits for the CC1100E are shown in
Figure 6 and Figure 7. The external components
7.1
frequency synthesizer includes a completely
on-chip LC VCO and a 90 degree phase
shifter for generating the I and Q LO signals to
the down-conversion mixers in receive mode.
accurate bias current.
Balun and RF Matching
The balanced RF input and output of the
CC1100E share two common pins and are
designed for a simple, low-cost matching and
balun network on the printed circuit board. The
receive and transmit switching at the CC1100E
front-end is controlled by a dedicated on-chip
SWRS082
function, eliminating the need for an external
RX/TX-switch.
A few external passive components combined
with the internal RX/TX switch/termination
circuitry ensures match in both RX and TX
mode. The components between the
RF_N/RF_P pins and the point where the two
Page 18 of 92
CC1100E
signals are joined together (C131, C121, L121
and L131 for the 470 MHz reference design
[3], and L121, L131, C121, L122, C131, C122
and L132 for the 950 MHz reference design
[4]) form a balun that converts the differential
RF signal on the CC1100E to a single-ended RF
signal. C124 is needed for DC blocking.
Together with an appropriate LC network, the
balun components also transform the
impedance to match a 50  load. C125
provides DC blocking and is only needed if
there is a DC path in the antenna. For the 950
7.3
CL 
1
1
1

C81 C101
 C parasitic
The crystal oscillator is amplitude regulated.
This means that a high current is used to start
up the oscillations. When the amplitude builds
up, the current is reduced to what is necessary
to maintain approximately 0.4 Vpp signal
swing. This ensures a fast start-up, and keeps
the drive level to a minimum. The ESR of the
crystal should be within the specification in
order to ensure a reliable start-up (see Section
4.4 on page 14).
Reference Signal
XOSC_Q1 input. The sine wave must be
connected to XOSC_Q1 using a serial
capacitor. This capacitor can be omitted when
using a full-swing digital signal. The XOSC_Q2
line must be left un-connected. C81 and C101
can be omitted when using a reference signal.
Additional Filtering
In the 950 MHz reference design, C126 and
L125 together with C125 build an optional filter
to reduce emission at 770 MHz. This filter is
necessary for applications with an external
antenna connector that target compliance with
ARIB STD-T96. If this filtering is not
necessary, C125 will work as a DC block (only
7.6
The parasitic capacitance is constituted by pin
input capacitance and PCB stray capacitance.
Total parasitic capacitance is typically 2.5 pF.
The initial tolerance, temperature drift, aging
and load pulling should be carefully specified
in order to meet the required frequency
accuracy in a certain application.
The chip can alternatively be operated with a
reference signal from 26 to 27 MHz instead of
a crystal. This input clock can either be a fullswing digital signal (0 V to VDD) or a sine
wave of maximum 1 V peak-peak amplitude.
The reference signal must be connected to the
7.5
The balun and LC filter component values and
their placement are important to keep the
performance
optimized.
It
is
highly
recommended to follow the CC1100E EM
reference design ([3] and 0). Gerber files and
schematics for the reference designs are
available for download from the TI website.
Crystal
A crystal in the frequency range 26-27 MHz
must be connected between the XOSC_Q1
and XOSC_Q2 pins. The oscillator is designed
for parallel mode operation of the crystal. In
addition, loading capacitors (C81 and C101)
for the crystal are required. The loading
capacitor values depend on the total load
capacitance, CL, specified for the crystal. The
total load capacitance seen between the
crystal terminals should equal CL for the
crystal to oscillate at the specified frequency.
7.4
MHz reference design, this component may
also be used for additional filtering, see
section 7.5 below. Suggested values for 470
MHz, and 950 MHz are listed in Table 19.
necessary if there is a DC path in the
antenna). C126 and L125 should in that case
be left unmounted.
Additional external components (e.g. an RF
SAW filter) may be used in order to improve
the performance in specific applications.
Power Supply Decoupling
The power supply must be properly decoupled
close to the supply pins. Note that decoupling
capacitors are not shown in the application
circuit. The placement and the size of the
SWRS082
decoupling capacitors are very important to
achieve the optimum performance. The
CC1100E EM reference designs ([3] and 0)
should be followed closely.
Page 19 of 92
CC1100E
7.7
Antenna Considerations
The reference designs ([3] and 0) contain an
SMA connector and are matched for a 50 
load. The SMA connector makes it easy to
connect evaluation modules and prototypes to
different test equipment for example a
Component
C51
spectrum analyzer. The SMA connector can
also be replaced by an antenna suitable for
the desired application. Please refer to the
antenna selection guide [14] for further details
regarding antenna solutions provided by TI.
Description
Decoupling capacitor for on-chip voltage regulator to digital part
C81/C101
Crystal loading capacitors
C121/C131
RF balun/matching capacitors
C122
RF LC filter/matching filter capacitor (470 MHz). RF balun/matching capacitor (950 MHz).
C123
RF LC filter/matching capacitor
C124
RF balun DC blocking capacitor
C125
RF LC filter DC blocking capacitor and part of optional RF LC filter (950 MHz)
C126
Part of optional RF LC filter and DC-block (950 MHz)
L121/L131
RF balun/matching inductors (wire wound or multi-layer type)
L122
RF LC filter/matching filter inductor (470 MHz). RF balun/matching inductor (950 MHz). (wire wound
or multi-layer type)
L123
RF LC filter/matching filter inductor (wire wound or multi-layer type)
L124
RF LC filter/matching filter inductor (wire wound or multi-layer type)
L125
Optional RF LC filter/matching filter inductor (950 MHz) (wire wound or multi-layer type)
L132
RF balun/matching inductor. (wire wound or multi-layer type)
R171
Resistor for internal bias current reference
XTAL
26MHz - 27MHz crystal
Table 18: Overview of External Components (excluding supply decoupling capacitors)
SWRS082
Page 20 of 92
CC1100E
1.8V-3.6V power supply
R171
1 SCLK
2 SO
(GDO1)
GND 16
RBIAS 17
DGUARD 18
SI 20
SO
(GDO1)
GDO2
(optional)
Antenna
(50 Ohm)
AVDD 15
CC1100E
3 GDO2
AVDD 14
C131
L131
C125
RF_N 13
DIE ATTACH PAD:
RF_P 12
9 AVDD
7 CSn
C51
8 XOSC_Q1
5 DCOUPL
10 XOSC_Q2
4 DVDD
6 GDO0
Digital Inteface
SCLK
GND 19
SI
AVDD 11
C121
L121
L122
L123
C122
C123
C124
GDO0
(optional)
CSn
XTAL
C81
C101
RBIAS 17
GND 16
10 XOSC_Q2
9 AVDD
GND 19
DGUARD 18
8 XOSC_Q1
7 CSn
6 GDO0
Digital Interface
SI 20
Figure 6: Typical Application and Evaluation Circuit 470 MHz (excluding supply decoupling
capacitors)
Figure 7: Typical Application and Evaluation Circuit 950 MHz (excluding supply decoupling
capacitors)
SWRS082
Page 21 of 92
CC1100E
Component
Value at 470MHz
Value at 950MHz
Manufacturer
C51
100 nF ± 10%, 0402 X5R
Murata GRM1555C series
C81
27 pF ± 5%, 0402 NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
C101
27 pF ± 5%, 0402 NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
C121
3.9 pF ± 0.25 pF,
0402 NP0
1.0 pF ± 0.25 pF,
0402 NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
C122
6.8 pF ± 5% pF,
0402 NP0
1.5 pF ± 0.25 pF,
0402 NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
C123
5.6 pF ± 0.5 pF,
0402 NP0
2.7 pF ± 0.25 pF,
0402 NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
C124
.220 pF pF ± 5%,
0402 NP0
100 pF ± 5%, 0402
NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
C125
220 pF ± 5%, 0402
NP0
100 pF ± 5%, 0402
NP0 or 11 pF ± 5%,
0402 NP0 when
part of optional filter
Murata GRM1555C series
47 pF ± 5%, 0402
NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
C126
C131
3.9 pF ± 0.25 pF,
0402 NP0
1.5 pF ± 0.25 pF,
0402 NP0
Murata GRM1555C series
L121
27 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
12 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
Murata LQW15 series
L122
22 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
18 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
Murata LQW15 series
L123
27 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
12 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
Murata LQW15 series
L124
12 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
Murata LQW15 series
L125
2.7 nH ± 0.2nH,
0402 wire wound
Murata LQW15 series
12 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
Murata LQW15 series
18 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
Murata LQW15 series
L131
27 nH ± 5%, 0402
wire wound
L132
R171
56k Ω, 0402, 1%
Koa RK73 series
XTAL
26.0 MHz surface mount crystal
NDK, AT-41CD2
Table 19: Bill Of Materials for the Application Circuit
7.8
PCB Layout Recommendations
The top layer should be used for signal
routing, and the open areas should be filled
with metallization connected to ground using
several vias.
The area under the chip is used for grounding
and shall be connected to the bottom ground
plane with several vias for good thermal
performance and sufficiently low inductance to
ground.
In the CC1100E EM reference designs ([3]
and 0), 5 vias are placed inside the exposed
SWRS082
die attached pad. These vias should be
“tented” (covered with solder mask) on the
component side of the PCB to avoid migration
of solder through the vias during the solder
reflow process.
The solder paste coverage should not be
100%. If it is, out gassing may occur during the
reflow process, which may cause defects
(splattering, solder balling). Using “tented” vias
reduces the solder paste coverage below
Page 22 of 92
CC1100E
100%. See Figure 8 for top solder resist and
top paste masks.
Each decoupling capacitor should be placed
as close as possible to the supply pin it
decouples. Each decoupling capacitor should
be connected to the power line (or power
plane) by separate vias. The best routing is
from the power line (or power plane) to the
decoupling capacitor and then to the CC1100E
supply pin. Supply power filtering is very
important.
Each decoupling capacitor ground pad should
be connected to the ground plane by separate
vias. Direct connections between neighboring
power pins will increase noise coupling and
should be avoided unless absolutely
necessary. Routing in the ground plane
underneath the chip or the balun/RF matching
circuit, or between the chip’s ground vias and
the decoupling capacitor’s ground vias should
be avoided. This improves the grounding and
ensures the shortest possible current return
path.
The external components should ideally be as
small as possible (0402 is recommended) and
surface
mount
devices
are
highly
recommended. Please note that components
with different sizes than those specified may
have differing characteristics.
Precaution should be used when placing the
microcontroller in order to avoid noise
interfering with the RF circuitry.
A CC1100E DK Development Kit with a fully
assembled CC1100E EM Evaluation Module is
available. It is strongly advised that this
reference layout is followed very closely in
order to get the best performance. The
schematic, BOM and layout Gerber files are all
available from the TI website ([3] and 0).
Figure 8: Left: Top Solder Resist Mask (Negative). Right: Top Paste Mask. Circles are Vias
8
Configuration Overview
The CC1100E can be configured to achieve
optimum performance for many different
applications. Configuration is done using the
SPI interface. See Section 10 below for more
description of the SPI interface. The following
key parameters can be programmed:











Details of each configuration register can be
found in Section 29, starting on page 59.
Power-down / power up mode
Crystal oscillator power-up / power-down
Receive / transmit mode
RF channel selection
Data rate
Modulation format
RX channel filter bandwidth
RF output power
Data buffering with separate 64-byte
receive and transmit FIFOs
SWRS082


Packet radio hardware support
Forward Error Correction (FEC)
interleaving
Data whitening
Wake-On-Radio (WOR)
with
Figure 9 shows a simplified state diagram that
explains the main CC1100E states together with
typical usage and current consumption. For
detailed information on controlling the CC1100E
state machine, and a complete state diagram,
see Section 19, starting on page 45.
Page 23 of 92
CC1100E
Sleep
SPWD or wake-on-radio (WOR)
SIDLE
Default state when the radio is not
receiving or transmitting. Typ.
current consumption: 1.7 mA.
CSn = 0
Lowest power mode. Most
register values are retained.
Current consumption typ
300 nA, or typ 700 nA when
wake-on-radio (WOR) is
enabled.
IDLE
SXOFF
SCAL
Used for calibrating frequency
synthesizer upfront (entering
CSn = 0
receive or transmit mode can
Manual freq.
then be done quicker).
synth. calibration SRX or STX or SFSTXON or wake-on-radio (WOR)
Transitional state. Typ. current
consumption: 9 mA.
SFSTXON
Frequency synthesizer is on,
ready to start transmitting.
Transmission starts very
quickly after receiving the STX
command strobe.Typ. current
consumption: 9 mA.
Frequency
synthesizer startup,
optional calibration,
settling
Crystal
oscillator off
All register values are
retained. Typ. current
consumption; 165 µA.
Frequency synthesizer is turned on, can optionally be
calibrated, and then settles to the correct frequency.
Transitional state. Typ. current consumption: 9 mA.
Frequency
synthesizer on
STX
SRX or wake-on-radio (WOR)
STX
TXOFF_MODE = 01
SFSTXON or RXOFF_MODE = 01
Typ. current consumption:
15.8 mA at -6 dBm output,
16.5 mA at 0 dBm output,
30.9 mA at +10 dBm output.
STX or RXOFF_MODE=10
Transmit mode
SRX or TXOFF_MODE = 11
TXOFF_MODE = 00
In FIFO-based modes,
transmission is turned off and
this state entered if the TX
FIFO becomes empty in the
middle of a packet. Typ.
current consumption: 1.7 mA.
Receive mode
RXOFF_MODE = 00
Optional transitional state. Typ.
current consumption: 9 mA.
TX FIFO
underflow
Typ. current
consumption:
from 15.2 mA (strong
input signal) to 16.3 mA
(weak input signal).
Optional freq.
synth. calibration
SFTX
RX FIFO
overflow
In FIFO-based modes,
reception is turned off and this
state entered if the RX FIFO
overflows. Typ. current
consumption: 1.7 mA.
SFRX
IDLE
Figure 9: Simplified State Diagram, with Typical Current Consumption at 1.2 kBaud Data Rate
and MDMCFG2.DEM_DCFILT_OFF=1 (current optimized). Frequency Band = 955 MHz
SWRS082
Page 24 of 92
CC1100E
9
Configuration Software
The CC1100E can be configured using the
SmartRF Studio software [8]. The SmartRF
Studio software is highly recommended for
obtaining optimum register settings, and for
evaluating performance and functionality. A
screenshot of the SmartRF Studio user
interface for the CC1100E is shown in Figure 10.
After chip reset, all the registers have default
values as shown in the tables in Section 29.
The optimum register setting might differ from
the default value. After a reset all registers that
shall be different from the default value
therefore needs to be programmed through
the SPI interface.
Figure 10: SmartRF Studio [8] User Interface
10 4-wire Serial Configuration and Data Interface
The CC1100E is configured via a simple 4-wire
SPI-compatible interface (SI, SO, SCLK and
CSn) where the CC1100E is the slave. This
interface is also used to read and write
buffered data. All transfers on the SPI interface
are done most significant bit first.
All transactions on the SPI interface start with
a header byte containing an R/W;¯ bit, a burst
access bit (B), and a 6-bit address (A5 – A0).
The CSn pin must be kept low during transfers
on the SPI bus. If CSn goes high during the
SWRS082
transfer of a header byte or during read/write
from/to a register, the transfer will be
cancelled. The timing for the address and data
transfer on the SPI interface is shown in Figure
11 with reference to Table 20.
When CSn is pulled low, the MCU must wait
until the CC1100E SO pin goes low before
starting to transfer the header byte. This
indicates that the crystal is running. Unless the
chip was in the SLEEP or XOFF states, the
SO pin will always go low immediately after
taking CSn low.
Page 25 of 92
CC1100E
tsp
tch
tcl
tsd
thd
tns
SCLK:
CSn:
Write to register:
SI
X
0
B
A5
SO
Hi-Z
S7
B
S5
SI
X
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
S4
S3
S2
S1
S0
X
DW7
DW 6
S6
S7
DW5
S5
DW4
DW 3
DW2
DW1
DW0
S3
S2
S1
S0
DR2
DR1
S4
X
Hi-Z
Read from register:
SO Hi-Z
1
B
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
S7
B
S5
S4
S3
S2
S1
S0
X
DR7
DR6
DR5
DR4
DR3
DR0
Hi-Z
Figure 11: Configuration Registers Write and Read Operations
Parameter
Description
Min
Max
Units
fSCLK
SCLK frequency
-
10
MHz
-
9
-
6.5
100 ns delay inserted between address byte and data byte (single access), or
between address and data, and between each data byte (burst access).
SCLK frequency, single access
No delay between address and data byte
SCLK frequency, burst access
No delay between address and data byte, or between data bytes
tsp,pd
CSn low to positive edge on SCLK, in power-down mode
150
-
s
tsp
CSn low to positive edge on SCLK, in active mode
20
-
ns
tch
Clock high
50
-
ns
tcl
Clock low
50
-
ns
trise
Clock rise time
-
5
ns
tfall
Clock fall time
-
5
ns
tsd
Setup data (negative SCLK edge) to
positive edge on SCLK
Single access
55
-
ns
Burst access
76
-
(tsd applies between address and data bytes, and between
data bytes)
thd
Hold data after positive edge on SCLK
20
-
ns
tns
Negative edge on SCLK to CSn high.
20
-
ns
Table 20: SPI Interface Timing Requirements
Note: The minimum tsp,pd figure in Table 20 can be used in cases where the user does not read
the CHIP_RDYn signal. CSn low to positive edge on SCLK when the chip is woken from powerdown depends on the start-up time of the crystal being used. The 150 μs in Table 20 is the
crystal oscillator start-up time measured on CC1100E EM reference designs (0 and 0) using
crystal AT-41CD2 from NDK.
SWRS082
Page 26 of 92
CC1100E
10.1 Chip Status Byte
When the header byte, data byte, or command
strobe is sent on the SPI interface, the chip
status byte is sent by the CC1100E on the SO
pin. The status byte contains key status
signals, useful for the MCU. The first bit, s7, is
the CHIP_RDYn signal; this signal must go low
before the first positive edge of SCLK. The
CHIP_RDYn signal indicates that the crystal is
running.
Bits 6, 5, and 4 comprise the STATE value.
This value reflects the state of the chip. The
XOSC and power to the digital core are on in
the IDLE state, but all other modules are in
power down. The frequency and channel
configuration should only be updated when the
chip is in this state. The RX state will be active
when the chip is in the receive mode.
Likewise, TX is active when the chip is
transmitting.
Bits
The last four bits (3:0) in the status byte
contains FIFO_BYTES_AVAILABLE. For read
operations (the R/W;¯ bit in the header byte is
set to 1), the FIFO_BYTES_AVAILABLE field
contains the number of bytes available for
reading from the RX FIFO. For write
operations (the R/W;¯ bit in the header byte is
set to 0), the FIFO_BYTES_AVAILABLE field
contains the number of bytes that can be
written
to
the
TX
FIFO.
When
FIFO_BYTES_AVAILABLE=15, 15 or more
bytes are available/free.
Table 21 gives a status byte summary.
Name
Description
7
CHIP_RDYn
Stays high until power and crystal have stabilized. Should always be low when using
the SPI interface.
6:4
STATE[2:0]
Indicates the current main state machine mode
Value
State
Description
000
IDLE
IDLE state
(Also reported for some transitional states instead
of SETTLING or CALIBRATE)
3:0
FIFO_BYTES_AVAILABLE[3:0]
001
RX
Receive mode
010
TX
Transmit mode
011
FSTXON
Fast TX ready
100
CALIBRATE
Frequency synthesizer calibration is running
101
SETTLING
PLL is settling
110
RXFIFO_OVERFLOW
RX FIFO has overflowed. Read out any
useful data, then flush the FIFO with SFRX
111
TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW
TX FIFO has underflowed. Acknowledge with
SFTX
The number of bytes available in the RX FIFO or free bytes in the TX FIFO
Table 21: Status Byte Summary
10.2 Register Access
The configuration registers on the CC1100E are
located on SPI addresses from 0x00 to 0x2E.
Table 39 on page 61 lists all configuration
registers. It is highly recommended to use
®
SmartRF Studio [8] to generate optimum
register settings. The detailed description of
each register is found in Section 29.1 and
29.2, starting on page 64. All configuration
registers can be both written to and read. The
SWRS082
R/W;¯ bit controls if the register should be
written to or read. When writing to registers,
the status byte is sent on the SO pin each time
a header byte or data byte is transmitted on
the SI pin. When reading from registers, the
status byte is sent on the SO pin each time a
header byte is transmitted on the SI pin.
Registers with consecutive addresses can be
accessed in an efficient way by setting the
Page 27 of 92
CC1100E
burst bit (B) in the header byte. The address
bits (A5 – A0) set the start address in an
internal address counter. This counter is
incremented by one each new byte (every 8
clock pulses). The burst access is either a
read or a write access and must be terminated
by setting CSn high.
status registers when burst bit is one, and
between command strobes when burst bit is
zero. See more in Section 10.3 below.
Because of this, burst access is not available
for status registers and they must be accessed
one at a time. The status registers can only be
read.
For register addresses in the range 0x300x3D, the burst bit is used to select between
10.3 SPI Read
When reading register fields over the SPI
interface while the register fields are updated
by the radio hardware (e.g. MARCSTATE or
TXBYTES), there is a small, but finite,
probability that a single read from the register
is corrupt. As an example, the probability of
any single read from TXBYTES being corrupt,
assuming the maximum data rate is used, is
approximately 80 ppm. Refer to the CC1100E
Errata Note [5] for more details.
10.4 Command Strobes
Command Strobes may be viewed as single
byte instructions to the CC1100E. By addressing
a
command
strobe
register,
internal
sequences will be started. These commands
are used to disable the crystal oscillator,
enable receive mode, enable wake-on-radio
etc. The 13 command strobes are listed in
Table 38 on page 60.
Note: An SIDLE strobe will clear all
pending command strobes until IDLE
state is reached. This means that if for
example an SIDLE strobe is issued
while the radio is in RX state, any other
command strobes issued before the
radio reaches IDLE state will be
ignored.
address bits (in the range 0x30 through 0x3D)
are written. The R/W;¯ bit can be either one or
zero
and
will
determine
how
the
FIFO_BYTES_AVAILABLE field in the status
byte should be interpreted.
When writing command strobes, the status
byte is sent on the SO pin.
A command strobe may be followed by any
other SPI access without pulling CSn high.
However, if an SRES strobe is being issued,
one will have to wait for SO to go low again
before the next header byte can be issued as
shown in Figure 12. The command strobes are
executed immediately, with the exception of
the SPWD and the SXOFF strobes that are
executed when CSn goes high.
The command strobe registers are accessed
by transferring a single header byte (no data is
being transferred). That is, only the R/W;¯ bit,
the burst access bit (set to 0), and the six
Figure 12: SRES Command Strobe
10.5 FIFO Access
The 64-byte TX FIFO and the 64-byte RX
FIFO are accessed through the 0x3F address.
When the R/W;¯ bit is zero, the TX FIFO is
accessed, and the RX FIFO is accessed when
the R/W;¯ bit is one.
SWRS082
The TX FIFO is write-only, while the RX FIFO
is read-only.
The burst bit is used to determine if the FIFO
access is a single byte access or a burst
access. The single byte access method
Page 28 of 92
CC1100E
expects a header byte with the burst bit set to
zero and one data byte. After the data byte, a
new header byte is expected; hence, CSn can
remain low. The burst access method expects
one header byte and then consecutive data
bytes until terminating the access by setting
CSn high.
Note that the status byte contains the number
of bytes free before writing the byte in
progress to the TX FIFO. When the last byte
that fits in the TX FIFO is transmitted on SI,
the status byte received concurrently on SO
will indicate that one byte is free in the TX
FIFO.
The following header bytes access the FIFOs:
The TX FIFO may be flushed by issuing a
SFTX command strobe. Similarly, a SFRX
command strobe will flush the RX FIFO. A
SFTX or SFRX command strobe can only be
issued in the IDLE, TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW, or
RXFIFO_OVERFLOW states. Both FIFOs are
flushed when going to the SLEEP state.

0x3F: Single byte access to TX FIFO

0x7F: Burst access to TX FIFO

0xBF: Single byte access to RX FIFO

0xFF: Burst access to RX FIFO
When writing to the TX FIFO, the status byte
(see Section 10.1) is output on SO for each
new data byte as shown in Figure 11. This
status byte can be used to detect TX FIFO
underflow while writing data to the TX FIFO.
Figure 13 gives a brief overview of different
register access types possible.
10.6 PATABLE Access
The 0x3E address is used to access the
PATABLE, which is used for selecting PA
power control settings. The SPI expects up to
eight data bytes after receiving the address.
By programming the PATABLE, controlled PA
power ramp-up and ramp-down can be
achieved, as well as ASK modulation shaping
®
for reduced bandwidth. See SmartRF Studio
[8] for recommended shaping / PA ramping
sequences. See also Section 24 on page 52
for details on output power programming.
The PATABLE is an 8-byte table that defines
the PA control settings to use for each of the
eight PA power values (selected by the 3-bit
value FREND0.PA_POWER). The table is
written and read from the lowest setting (0) to
the highest (7), one byte at a time. An index
counter is used to control the access to the
table. This counter is incremented each time a
byte is read or written to the table, and set to
the lowest index when CSn is high. When the
highest value is reached the counter restarts
at zero.
The access to the PATABLE is either single
byte or burst access depending on the burst
bit. When using burst access the index counter
will count up; when reaching 7 the counter will
restart at 0. The R/W;¯ bit controls whether the
access is a read or a write access.
If one byte is written to the PATABLE and this
value is to be read out, CSn must be set high
before the read access in order to set the
index counter back to zero.
Note that the content of the PATABLE is lost
when entering the SLEEP state, except for the
first byte (index 0).
Please referr to Design Note DN501 [17] for
more information
Figure 13: Register Access Types
SWRS082
Page 29 of 92
CC1100E
11 Microcontroller Interface and Pin Configuration
In a typical system, the CC1100E will interface to
a microcontroller. This microcontroller must be
able to:
 Program the CC1100E into different modes
 Read and write buffered data
 Read back status information via the 4-wire
SPI-bus configuration interface (SI, SO,
SCLK and CSn)
11.1 Configuration Interface
The microcontroller uses four I/O pins for the
SPI configuration interface (SI, SO, SCLK and
CSn). The SPI is described in Section 10 on
page 25.
11.2 General Control and Status Pins
The CC1100E has two dedicated configurable
pins (GDO0 and GDO2) and one shared pin
(GDO1) that can output internal status
information useful for control software. These
pins can be used to generate interrupts on the
MCU. See Section 26 page 54 for more details
on the signals that can be programmed.
GDO1 is shared with the SO pin in the SPI
interface. The default setting for GDO1/SO is
3-state output. By selecting any other of the
programming options, the GDO1/SO pin will
become a generic pin. When CSn is low, the
pin will always function as a normal SO pin.
In the synchronous and asynchronous serial
modes, the GDO0 pin is used as a serial TX
data input pin while in transmit mode.
The GDO0 pin can also be used for an on-chip
analog temperature sensor. By measuring the
voltage on the GDO0 pin with an external
ADC, the temperature can be calculated.
Specifications for the temperature sensor are
found in Section 4.7 on page 15. With default
PTEST register setting (0x7F), the temperature
sensor output is only available if the frequency
synthesizer is enabled (e.g. the MANCAL,
FSTXON, RX, and TX states). It is necessary
to write 0xBF to the PTEST register to use the
analog temperature sensor in the IDLE state.
Before leaving the IDLE state, the PTEST
register should be restored to its default value
(0x7F).
11.3 Optional Radio Control Feature
The CC1100E has an optional way of controlling
the radio by reusing SI, SCLK, and CSn from
the SPI interface. This feature allows for a
simple three-pin control of the major states of
the radio: SLEEP, IDLE, RX, and TX. This
optional functionality is enabled with the
MCSM0.PIN_CTRL_EN configuration bit.
SCLK are set to RX and CSn toggles. When
CSn is low the SI and SCLK has normal SPI
functionality.
All pin control command strobes are executed
immediately except the SPWD strobe. The
SPWD strobe is delayed until CSn goes high.
State changes are commanded as follows:
CSn
SCLK
SI
Function
 If CSn is high, the SI and SCLK are set to
the desired state according to Table 22.
1
X
X
Chip unaffected by SCLK/SI

0
0
Generates SPWD strobe
 If CSn goes low, the state of SI and SCLK
is latched and a command strobe is
generated internally according to the pin
configuration.

0
1
Generates STX strobe

1
0
Generates SIDLE strobe

1
1
Generates SRX strobe
It is only possible to change state with the
latter functionality. That means that for
instance RX will not be restarted if SI and
0
SPI
mode
SPI
mode
SPI mode (wakes up into
IDLE if in SLEEP/XOFF)
SWRS082
Table 22: Optional Pin Control Coding
Page 30 of 92
CC1100E
12 Data Rate Programming
The data rate used when transmitting, or the
data rate expected in receive is programmed
by
the
MDMCFG3.DRATE_M
and
the
MDMCFG4.DRATE_E configuration registers.
The data rate is given by the formula below.
As the formula shows, the programmed data
rate depends on the crystal frequency.
RDATA 
256  DRATE _ M   2DRATE _ E  f
2 28
XOSC
The following approach can be used to find
suitable values for a given data rate:

R
 2 20 

DRATE _ E  log 2  DATA

 f XOSC 
RDATA  2 28
DRATE _ M 
 256
f XOSC  2 DRATE _ E
If DRATE_M is rounded to the nearest integer
and becomes 256, increment DRATE_E and
use DRATE_M = 0.
The data rate can be set from 0.8 kBaud to
500 kBaud with the minimum step size
according to Table 23 below.
Min Data
Rate
[kBaud]
Typical Data
Rate
[kBaud]
Max Data
Rate
[kBaud]
Data rate
Step Size
[kBaud]
0.8
1.2 / 2.4
3.17
0.0062
3.17
4.8
6.35
0.0124
6.35
9.6
12.7
0.0248
12.7
19.6
25.4
0.0496
25.4
38.4
50.8
0.0992
50.8
76.8
101.6
0.1984
101.6
153.6
203.1
0.3967
203.1
250
406.3
0.7935
406.3
500
500
1.5869
Table 23: Data Rate Step Size
13 Receiver Channel Filter Bandwidth
In order to meet different channel width
requirements, the receiver channel filter is
programmable. The MDMCFG4.CHANBW_E and
MDMCFG4.CHANBW_M configuration registers
control the receiver channel filter bandwidth,
which scales with the crystal oscillator
frequency.
The following formula gives the relation
between the register settings and the channel
filter bandwidth:
BWchannel
f XOSC

8  ( 4  CHANBW _ M )·2 CHANBW _ E
Table 24 lists the channel filter bandwidths
supported by the CC1100E.
For best performance, the channel filter
bandwidth should be selected so that the
signal bandwidth occupies at most 80% of the
channel filter bandwidth. The channel centre
tolerance due to crystal inaccuracy should also
be subtracted from the channel filter
bandwidth. The following example illustrates
this:
With the channel filter bandwidth set to
500 kHz, the signal should stay within 80% of
SWRS082
500 kHz, which is 400 kHz. Assuming
955 MHz frequency and ±20 ppm frequency
uncertainty for both the transmitting device and
the receiving device, the total frequency
uncertainty is ±40 ppm of 955 MHz, which is
±38.2 kHz. If the whole transmitted signal
bandwidth is to be received within 400 kHz,
the transmitted signal bandwidth should be
maximum 400 kHz – 2·38.2 kHz, which is
323.6 kHz.
By compensating for a frequency offset
between the transmitter and the receiver, the
filter bandwidth can be reduced and the
sensitivity can be improved, see more in
DN005 [16] and in Section 14.1.
MDMCFG4.CHANBW_E
MDMCFG4.
CHANBW_M
00
01
10
11
00
812
406
203
102
01
650
325
162
81
10
541
270
135
68
11
464
232
116
58
Table 24: Channel Filter Bandwidths [kHz]
(assuming a 26 MHz crystal)
Page 31 of 92
CC1100E
14 Demodulator, Symbol Synchronizer, and Data Decision
The CC1100E contains an advanced and highly
configurable demodulator. Channel filtering
and frequency offset compensation is
performed digitally. To generate the RSSI level
(see Section 17.3 for more information), the
signal level in the channel is estimated. Data
filtering is also included for enhanced
performance.
14.1 Frequency Offset Compensation
The CC1100E has a very fine frequency
resolution (see Table 13). This feature can be
used to compensate for frequency offset and
drift.
When using 2-FSK, GFSK, or MSK
modulation, the demodulator will compensate
for the offset between the transmitter and
receiver frequency within certain limits, by
estimating the centre of the received data. The
frequency offset compensation configuration is
controlled from the FOCCFG register. By
compensating for a large frequency offset
between the transmitter and the receiver, the
sensitivity can be improved, see DN005 [16].
The tracking range of the algorithm is
selectable as fractions of the channel
bandwidth with the FOCCFG.FOC_LIMIT
configuration register.
If the FOCCFG.FOC_BS_CS_GATE bit is set,
the offset compensator will freeze until carrier
sense asserts. This may be useful when the
radio is in RX for long periods with no traffic,
since the algorithm may drift to the boundaries
when trying to track noise.
The tracking loop has two gain factors, which
affects the settling time and noise sensitivity of
the algorithm. FOCCFG.FOC_PRE_K sets the
gain before the sync word is detected, and
FOCCFG.FOC_POST_K selects the gain after
the sync word has been found.
Note: Frequency offset compensation is
not supported for ASK or OOK modulation.
The estimated frequency offset value is
available in the FREQEST status register. This
can be used for permanent frequency offset
compensation. By writing the value from
FREQEST into
FSCTRL0.FREQOFF, the
frequency synthesizer will automatically be
adjusted according to the estimated frequency
offset. More details regarding this permanent
frequency compensation algorithm can be
found in DN015 [12].
14.2 Bit Synchronization
The bit synchronization algorithm extracts the
clock from the incoming symbols. The
algorithm requires that the expected data rate
is programmed as described in Section 12 on
page 31. Re-synchronization is performed
continuously to adjust for error in the incoming
symbol rate.
14.3 Byte Synchronization
Byte synchronization is achieved by a
continuous sync word search. The sync word
is a 16 bit configurable field (can be repeated
to get a 32 bit) that is automatically inserted at
the start of the packet by the modulator in
transmit mode. The MSB in the sync word is
sent first. The demodulator uses this field to
find the byte boundaries in the stream of bits.
The sync word will also function as a system
identifier; since only packets with the correct
predefined sync word will be received if the
sync word detection in RX is enabled in
register MDMCFG2 (see Section 17.1). The
sync word detector correlates against the
user-configured 16 or 32 bit sync word. The
SWRS082
correlation threshold can be set to 15/16,
16/16, or 30/32 bits match. The sync word can
be further qualified using the preamble quality
indicator mechanism described below and/or a
carrier sense condition. The sync word is
configured through the SYNC1 and SYNC0
registers.
In order to make false detections of sync
words less likely, a mechanism called
preamble quality indication (PQI) can be used
to qualify the sync word. A threshold value for
the preamble quality must be exceeded in
order for a detected sync word to be accepted.
See Section 17.2 on page 39 for more details.
Page 32 of 92
CC1100E
15 Packet Handling Hardware Support
The CC1100E has built-in hardware support for
packet oriented radio protocols.
In transmit mode, the packet handler can be
configured to add the following elements to the
packet stored in the TX FIFO:



A programmable number of preamble
bytes
A two byte synchronization (sync) word.
Can be duplicated to give a 4-byte sync
word (recommended). It is not possible to
only insert preamble or only insert a sync
word
A CRC checksum computed over the data
field.
The recommended setting is 4-byte preamble
and 4-byte sync word, except for 500 kBaud
data rate where the recommended preamble
length is 8 bytes. In addition, the following can
be implemented on the data field and the
optional 2-byte CRC checksum:


Whitening of the data with a PN9
sequence
Forward Error Correction (FEC) by the use
of interleaving and coding of the data
(convolutional coding)
In receive mode, the packet handling support
will de-construct the data packet by
implementing the following (if enabled):





Preamble detection
Sync word detection
CRC computation and CRC check
One byte address check
Packet length check (length byte checked
against a programmable maximum length)
De-whitening
De-interleaving and decoding


Optionally, two status bytes (see Table 25 and
Table 26) with RSSI value, Link Quality
Indication, and CRC status can be appended
in the RX FIFO.
Bit
Field Name
Description
7:0
RSSI
RSSI value
Table 25: Received Packet Status Byte 1
(first byte appended after the data)
Bit
Field Name
Description
7
CRC_OK
1: CRC for received data OK
(or CRC disabled)
0: CRC error in received data
6:0
LQI
Indicating the link quality
Table 26: Received Packet Status Byte 2
(second byte appended after the data)
Note: Register fields that control the
packet handling features should only be
altered when CC1100E is in the IDLE state.
15.1 Data Whitening
From a radio perspective, the ideal over the air
data are random and DC free. This results in
the smoothest power distribution over the
occupied bandwidth. This also gives the
regulation loops in the receiver uniform
operation conditions (no data dependencies).
Real data often contain long sequences of
zeros and ones. In these cases, performance
can be improved by whitening the data before
transmitting, and de-whitening the data in the
receiver.
SWRS082
With the CC1100E, this can be done
automatically.
By
setting
PKTCTRL0.WHITE_DATA=1, all data, except
the preamble and the sync word will be XORed with a 9-bit pseudo-random (PN9)
sequence before being transmitted. This is
shown in Figure 14. At the receiver end, the
data are XOR-ed with the same pseudorandom sequence. In this way, the whitening is
reversed, and the original data appear in the
receiver. The PN9 sequence is initialized to all
1’s.
Page 33 of 92
CC1100E
Figure 14: Data Whitening in TX Mode
15.2 Packet Format
The format of the data packet can be
configured and consists of the following items
(see Figure 15):


Preamble
Synchronization word




Optional length byte
Optional address byte
Payload
Optional 2 byte CRC
Data field
16/32 bits
8
bits
8
bits
8 x n bits
Legend:
Inserted automatically in TX,
processed and removed in RX.
CRC-16
Address field
8 x n bits
Length field
Preamble bits
(1010...1010)
Sync word
Optional data whitening
Optionally FEC encoded/decoded
Optional CRC-16 calculation
Optional user-provided fields processed in TX,
processed but not removed in RX.
Unprocessed user data (apart from FEC
and/or whitening)
16 bits
Figure 15: Packet Format
The preamble pattern is an alternating
sequence of ones and zeros (10101010…).
The minimum length of the preamble is
programmable
through
the
value
of
MDMCFG1.NUM_PREAMBLE. When enabling
TX, the modulator will start transmitting the
preamble. When the programmed number of
preamble bytes has been transmitted, the
modulator will send the sync word and then
data from the TX FIFO if data is available. If
the TX FIFO is empty, the modulator will
continue to send preamble bytes until the first
byte is written to the TX FIFO. The modulator
will then send the sync word and then the data
bytes.
SWRS082
The synchronization word is a two-byte value
set in the SYNC1 and SYNC0 registers. The
sync word provides byte synchronization of the
incoming packet. A one-byte sync word can be
emulated by setting the SYNC1 value to the
preamble pattern. It is also possible to emulate
a
32
bit
sync
word
by
setting
MDMCFG2.SYNC_MODE to 3 or 7. The sync
word will then be repeated twice.
The CC1100E supports both constant packet
length protocols and variable length protocols.
Variable or fixed packet length mode can be
used for packets up to 255 bytes. For longer
Page 34 of 92
CC1100E
packets, infinite packet length mode must be
used.
Fixed packet length mode is selected by
setting PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=0. The
desired packet length is set by the PKTLEN
register.
In
variable
packet
length
mode,
PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=1, the packet
length is configured by the first byte after the
sync word. The packet length is defined as the
payload data, excluding the length byte and
the optional CRC. The PKTLEN register is
used to set the maximum packet length
allowed in RX. Any packet received with a
length byte with a value greater than PKTLEN
will be discarded.
With PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=2, the
packet length is set to infinite and transmission
and reception will continue until turned off
manually. As described in the next section,
this can be used to support packet formats
with different length configuration than natively
supported by the CC1100E. One should make
sure that TX mode is not turned off during the
transmission of the first half of any byte. Refer
to the CC1100E Errata Note [5] for more details.
Note: The minimum packet length
supported (excluding the optional length
byte and CRC) is one byte of payload
data.
15.2.1 Arbitrary Length Field Configuration
The packet length register, PKTLEN, can be
reprogrammed during receive and transmit. In
combination with fixed packet length mode
(PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=0), this opens
the possibility to have a different length field
configuration than supported for variable
length packets (in variable packet length mode
the length byte is the first byte after the sync
word). At the start of reception, the packet
length is set to a large value. The MCU reads
out enough bytes to interpret the length field in
the packet. Then the PKTLEN value is set
according to this value. The end of packet will
occur when the byte counter in the packet
SWRS082
handler is equal to the PKTLEN register. Thus,
the MCU must be able to program the correct
length, before the internal counter reaches the
packet length.
15.2.2 Packet Length > 255
The packet automation control register,
PKTCTRL0, can be reprogrammed during TX
and RX. This opens the possibility to transmit
and receive packets that are longer than 256
bytes and still be able to use the packet
handling hardware support. At the start of the
packet, the infinite packet length mode
(PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=2) must be
active. On the TX side, the PKTLEN register is
set to mod (length, 256). On the RX side the
MCU reads out enough bytes to interpret the
length field in the packet and sets the PKTLEN
register to mod (length, 256). When less than
256 bytes remains of the packet, the MCU
disables infinite packet length mode and
activates fixed packet length mode. When the
internal byte counter reaches the PKTLEN
value, the transmission or reception ends (the
radio enters the state determined by
TXOFF_MODE or RXOFF_MODE). Automatic
CRC appending/checking can also be used
(by setting PKTCTRL0.CRC_EN=1).
When for example a 600-byte packet is to be
transmitted, the MCU should do the following
(see also Figure 16)

Set PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=2.

Pre-program the PKTLEN register to mod
(600, 256) = 88.

Transmit at least 345 bytes (600 - 255), for
example by filling the 64-byte TX FIFO six
times (384 bytes transmitted).

Set PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=0.

The transmission ends when the packet
counter reaches 88. A total of 600 bytes
are transmitted.
Page 35 of 92
CC1100E
Internal byte counter in packet handler counts from 0 to 255 and then starts at 0 again
0,1,..........,88,....................255,0,........,88,..................,255,0,........,88,..................,255,0,.......................
Infinite packet length enabled
Fixed packet length
enabled when less than
256 bytes remains of
packet
600 bytes transmitted and
received
Length field transmitted and received. Rx and Tx PKTLEN value set to mod(600,256) = 88
Figure 16: Packet Length > 255
15.3 Packet Filtering in Receive Mode
The CC1100E supports three different types of
packet-filtering; address filtering, maximum
length filtering, and CRC filtering.
length. If the received length byte has a larger
value than this, the packet is discarded and
receive mode restarted (regardless of the
MCSM1.RXOFF_MODE setting).
15.3.1 Address Filtering
Setting PKTCTRL1.ADR_CHK to any other
value than zero enables the packet address
filter. The packet handler engine will compare
the destination address byte in the packet with
the programmed node address in the ADDR
register and the 0x00 broadcast address when
PKTCTRL1.ADR_CHK=10 or both the 0x00
and 0xFF broadcast addresses when
PKTCTRL1.ADR_CHK=11. If the received
address matches a valid address, the packet
is received and written into the RX FIFO. If the
address match fails, the packet is discarded
and receive mode restarted (regardless of the
MCSM1.RXOFF_MODE setting).
If the received address matches a valid
address when using infinite packet length
mode and address filtering is enabled, 0xFF
will be written into the RX FIFO followed by the
address byte and then the payload data.
15.3.2 Maximum Length Filtering
In
variable
packet
length
mode,
PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=1,
the
PKTLEN.PACKET_LENGTH register value is
used to set the maximum allowed packet
15.3.3 CRC Filtering
The filtering of a packet when CRC check fails
is
enabled
by
setting
PKTCTRL1.CRC_AUTOFLUSH=1. The CRC
auto flush function will flush the entire RX
FIFO if the CRC check fails. After auto flushing
the RX FIFO, the next state depends on the
MCSM1.RXOFF_MODE setting.
When using the auto flush function, the
maximum packet length is 63 bytes in variable
packet length mode and 64 bytes in fixed
packet length mode. Note that when
PKTCTRL1.APPEND_STATUS is enabled, the
maximum allowed packet length is reduced by
two bytes in order to make room in the RX
FIFO for the two status bytes appended at the
end of the packet. Since the entire RX FIFO is
flushed when the CRC check fails, the
previously received packet must be read out of
the FIFO before receiving the current packet.
The MCU must not read from the current
packet until the CRC has been checked as
OK.
15.4 Packet Handling in Transmit Mode
The payload that is to be transmitted must be
written into the TX FIFO. The first byte written
must be the length byte when variable packet
length is enabled. The length byte has a value
equal to the payload of the packet (including
the optional address byte). If address
recognition is enabled on the receiver, the
SWRS082
second byte written to the TX FIFO must be
the address byte.
If fixed packet length is enabled, the first byte
written to the TX FIFO should be the address
(assuming the receiver uses address
recognition).
Page 36 of 92
CC1100E
The modulator will first send the programmed
number of preamble bytes. If data is available
in the TX FIFO, the modulator will send the
two-byte (optionally 4-byte) sync word followed
by the payload in the TX FIFO. If CRC is
enabled, the checksum is calculated over all
the data pulled from the TX FIFO, and the
result is sent as two extra bytes following the
payload data. If the TX FIFO runs empty
before the complete packet has been
transmitted,
the
radio
will
enter
TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW state. The only way to
exit this state is by issuing an SFTX strobe.
Writing to the TX FIFO after it has underflowed
will not restart TX mode.
If whitening is enabled, everything following
the sync words will be whitened. This is done
before the optional FEC/Interleave stage.
Whitening
is
enabled
by
setting
PKTCTRL0.WHITE_DATA=1.
If FEC/Interleaving is enabled, everything
following the sync words will be scrambled by
the interleave and FEC encoded before being
modulated. FEC is enabled by setting
MDMCFG1.FEC_EN=1.
15.5 Packet Handling in Receive Mode
In receive mode, the demodulator and packet
handler will search for a valid preamble and
the sync word. When found, the demodulator
has obtained both bit and byte synchronism
and will receive the first payload byte.
If FEC/Interleaving is enabled, the FEC
decoder will start to decode the first payload
byte. The interleaver will de-scramble the bits
before any other processing is done to the
data.
If whitening is enabled, the data will be dewhitened at this stage.
When variable packet length mode is enabled,
the first byte is the length byte. The packet
handler stores this value as the packet length
and receives the number of bytes indicated by
the length byte. If fixed packet length mode is
used, the packet handler will accept the
programmed number of bytes.
Next, the packet handler optionally checks the
address and only continues the reception if the
address matches. If automatic CRC check is
enabled, the packet handler computes CRC
and matches it with the appended CRC
checksum.
At the end of the payload, the packet handler
will optionally write two extra packet status
bytes (see Table 25 and Table 26) that contain
CRC status, link quality indication, and RSSI
value.
15.6 Packet Handling in Firmware
When implementing a packet oriented radio
protocol in firmware, the MCU needs to know
when a packet has been received/transmitted.
Additionally, for packets longer than 64 bytes,
the RX FIFO needs to be read while in RX and
the TX FIFO needs to be refilled while in TX.
This means that the MCU needs to know the
number of bytes that can be read from or
written to the RX FIFO and TX FIFO
respectively. There are two possible solutions
to get the necessary status information:
a) Interrupt Driven Solution
The GDO pins can be used in both RX and TX
to give an interrupt when a sync word has
been received/transmitted or when a complete
packet has been received/transmitted by
setting IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=0x06. In addition,
there are two configurations for the
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG register that can be used
as an interrupt source to provide information
on how many bytes are in the RX FIFO and
SWRS082
TX
FIFO
respectively.
The
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=0x00
and
the
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=0x01 configurations are
associated with the RX FIFO while the
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=0x02
and
the
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=0x03 configurations are
associated with the TX FIFO. See Table 36 for
more information.
b) SPI Polling
The PKTSTATUS register can be polled at a
given rate to get information about the current
GDO2 and GDO0 values respectively. The
RXBYTES and TXBYTES registers can be
polled at a given rate to get information about
the number of bytes in the RX FIFO and TX
FIFO respectively. Alternatively, the number of
bytes in the RX FIFO and TX FIFO can be
read from the chip status byte returned on the
MISO line each time a header byte, data byte,
or command strobe is sent on the SPI bus.
Page 37 of 92
CC1100E
It is recommended to employ an interrupt
driven solution since high rate SPI polling
reduces the RX sensitivity. Furthermore, as
explained in Section 10.3 and the CC1100E
Errata Note [5], when using SPI polling, there
is a small, but finite, probability that a single
read from registers PKTSTATUS , RXBYTES
and TXBYTES is being corrupt. The same is
the case when reading the chip status byte.
Refer to the TI website for SW examples ([9]
and [10]).
16 Modulation Formats
The CC1100E supports amplitude, frequency,
and phase shift modulation formats. The
desired modulation format is set in the
MDMCFG2.MOD_FORMAT register.
Optionally, the data stream can be Manchester
coded by the modulator and decoded by the
demodulator. This option is enabled by setting
MDMCFG2.MANCHESTER_EN=1.
Note: Manchester encoding is not
supported at the same time as using the
FEC/Interleaver option or when using MSK
modulation.
16.1 Frequency Shift Keying
The CC1100E has the possibility to use
Gaussian shaped 2-FSK (GFSK). The 2-FSK
signal is then shaped by a Gaussian filter with
BT = 1, producing a GFSK modulated signal.
This spectrum-shaping feature improves
adjacent channel power (ACP) and occupied
bandwidth.
In ‘true’ 2-FSK systems with abrupt frequency
shifting, the spectrum is inherently broad. By
making the frequency shift ‘softer’, the
spectrum can be made significantly narrower.
Thus, higher data rates can be transmitted in
the same bandwidth using GFSK.
When 2-FSK/GFSK modulation is used, the
DEVIATN register specifies the expected
frequency deviation of incoming signals in RX
and should be the same as the TX deviation
for demodulation to be performed reliably and
robustly.
The frequency deviation is programmed with
the DEVIATION_M and DEVIATION_E values
in the DEVIATN register. The value has an
exponent/mantissa form, and the resultant
deviation is given by:
f dev 
f xosc
 (8  DEVIATION _ M )  2 DEVIATION _ E
217
The symbol encoding is shown in Table 27.
Format
Symbol
Coding
‘0’
– Deviation
‘1’
+ Deviation
2-FSK/GFSK
Table 27: Symbol Encoding for 2-FSK/GFSK
Modulation
16.2 Minimum Shift Keying
1
When using MSK , the complete transmission
(preamble, sync word, and payload) will be
MSK modulated.
This is equivalent to changing the shaping of
the symbol. The DEVIATN register setting has
no effect in RX when using MSK.
Phase shifts are performed with a constant
transition time. The fraction of a symbol period
used to change the phase can be modified
with the DEVIATN.DEVIATION_M setting.
When
using
MSK,
Manchester
encoding/decoding should be disabled by
setting MDMCFG2 MANCHESTER_EN = 0
1
Identical to offset QPSK with half-sine
shaping (data coding may differ).
SWRS082
The MSK modulation format implemented in
the CC1100E inverts the sync word and data
compared to e.g. signal generators.
Page 38 of 92
CC1100E
16.3 Amplitude Modulation
The CC1100E supports two different forms of
amplitude modulation: On-Off Keying (OOK)
and Amplitude Shift Keying (ASK).
OOK modulation simply turns the PA on or off
to modulate ones and zeros respectively.
The ASK variant supported by the CC1100E
allows programming of the modulation depth
(the difference between 1 and 0), and shaping
of the pulse amplitude. Pulse shaping
produces a more
output spectrum.
bandwidth
constrained
When using OOK/ASK, the AGC settings from
®
the SmartRF Studio [8] preferred FSK/MSK
settings are not optimum. DN022 [15] give
guidelines on how to find optimum OOK/ASK
settings from the preferred settings in
®
SmartRF Studio [8]. The DEVIATN register
setting has no effect in either TX or RX when
using OOK/ASK.
17 Received Signal Qualifiers and Link Quality Information
The CC1100E has several qualifiers that can be
used to increase the likelihood that a valid
sync word is detected:
 RSSI
 Sync Word Qualifier
 Clear Channel Assessment
 Preamble Quality Threshold
 Link Quality Indicator
17.1
 Carrier Sense
Sync Word Qualifier
If sync word detection in RX is enabled in the
MDMCFG2 register, the CC1100E will not start
filling the RX FIFO and perform the packet
filtering described in Section 15.3 before a
valid sync word has been detected. The sync
word
qualifier
mode
is
set
by
MDMCFG2.SYNC_MODE and is summarized in
Table 28. Carrier sense in Table 28 is
described in Section 17.4.
MDMCFG2.
Sync Word Qualifier Mode
SYNC_MODE
000
No preamble/sync
001
15/16 sync word bits detected
010
16/16 sync word bits detected
011
30/32 sync word bits detected
100
No preamble/sync + carrier sense
above threshold
101
15/16 + carrier sense above threshold
110
16/16 + carrier sense above threshold
111
30/32 + carrier sense above threshold
Table 28: Sync Word Qualifier Mode
17.2 Preamble Quality Threshold (PQT)
The Preamble Quality Threshold (PQT) sync
word qualifier adds the requirement that the
received sync word must be preceded with a
preamble with a quality above the
programmed threshold.
Another use of the preamble quality threshold
is as a qualifier for the optional RX termination
timer. See Section 19.7 on page 49 for details.
The preamble quality estimator increases an
internal counter by one each time a bit is
received that is different from the previous bit,
and decreases the counter by eight each time
a bit is received that is the same as the last bit.
SWRS082
The threshold is configured with the register
field PKTCTRL1.PQT. A threshold of 4∙PQT for
this counter is used to gate sync word
detection. By setting the value to zero, the
preamble quality qualifier of the sync word is
disabled.
A “Preamble Quality Reached” signal can be
observed on one of the GDO pins by setting
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=8. It is also possible to
determine if preamble quality is reached by
checking the PQT_REACHED bit in the
PKTSTATUS register. This signal / bit asserts
when the received signal exceeds the PQT.
Page 39 of 92
CC1100E
17.3 RSSI
The RSSI value is an estimate of the signal
power level in the chosen channel. This value
is based on the current gain setting in the RX
chain and the measured signal level in the
channel.
In RX mode, the RSSI value can be read
continuously from the RSSI status register
until the demodulator detects a sync word
(when sync word detection is enabled). At that
point the RSSI readout value is frozen until the
next time the chip enters the RX state.
The RSSI value read from the RSSI status
register is a 2’s complement number. The
following procedure can be used to convert the
RSSI reading to an absolute power level
(RSSI_dBm)
1) Read the RSSI status register
2) Convert the reading from a hexadecimal
number to a decimal number (RSSI_dec)
Note: It takes some time from the radio
enters RX mode until a valid RSSI value is
present in the RSSI register. Please see
DN505 [13] for details on how the RSSI
response time can be estimated.
3) If RSSI_dec ≥ 128 then RSSI_dBm =
(RSSI_dec - 256)/2 – RSSI_offset
4) Else if RSSI_dec < 128 then RSSI_dBm =
(RSSI_dec)/2 – RSSI_offset
The RSSI value is given in dBm with a ½ dB
resolution. The RSSI update rate, fRSSI,
depends on the receiver filter bandwidth
(BW channel is defined in Section 13) and
AGCCTRL0.FILTER_LENGTH.
f RSSI 
If PKTCTRL1.APPEND_STATUS is enabled,
the last RSSI value of the packet is
automatically added to the first byte appended
after the payload.
Table 29 gives typical values for the
RSSI_offset. Figure 17 and Figure 18 show
typical plots of RSSI readings as a function of
input power level for different data rates.
2  BWchannel
8  2 FILTER _ LENGTH
Data rate [kBaud]
RSSI_offset [dB], 490 MHz
RSSI_offset [dB], 955 MHz
1.2
75
75
38.4
75
75
76.8
N/A
79
250
79
N/A
Table 29: Typical RSSI_offset Values
SWRS082
Page 40 of 92
CC1100E
0
-10
-20
RSSI Readout (dBm)
-30
-40
-50
-60
-70
-80
-90
-100
-110
-120
-120
-110
-100
-90
-80
-70
-60
-50
-40
-30
-20
-10
0
Input Power (dBm)
1.2 kBaud
38.4 kBaud
250 kBaud
Figure 17: Typical RSSI Value vs. Input Power Level for Different Data Rates at 480 MHz
0.00
-10.00
-20.00
RSSI Readout (dBm)
-30.00
-40.00
-50.00
-60.00
-70.00
-80.00
-90.00
-100.00
-110.00
-120.00
-120 -110
-100
-90
-80
-70
-60
-50
-40
-30
-20
-10
0
Input Power (dBm)
1.2 kBaud
38.4 kBaud
76.8 kBaud
Figure 18: Typical RSSI Value vs. Input Power Level for Different Data Rates at 955 MHz
17.4 Carrier Sense (CS)
Carrier sense (CS) is used as a sync word
qualifier and for Clear Channel Assessment
(see Section 17.5). CS can be asserted based
on two conditions which can be individually
adjusted:

CS is asserted when the RSSI is above a
programmable absolute threshold, and deasserted when RSSI is below the same
SWRS082
threshold (with hysteresis). See more in
Section 17.4.1.

CS is asserted when the RSSI has
increased with a programmable number of
dB from one RSSI sample to the next, and
de-asserted when RSSI has decreased
with the same number of dB. This setting
is not dependent on the absolute signal
Page 41 of 92
CC1100E
level and is thus useful to detect signals in
environments with time varying noise floor.
See more in Section 17.4.2.
Other uses of Carrier sense include the TX-ifCCA function (see Section 17.5 on page 43)
and the optional fast RX termination (see
Section 19.7 on page 49).
CS can be used to avoid interference from
other RF sources in the ISM bands.
MAX_LNA_GAIN[2:0]
Carrier sense can be used as a sync word
qualifier that requires the signal level to be
higher than the threshold for a sync word
search to be performed and is set by setting
MDMCFG2 The carrier sense signal can be
observed on one of the GDO pins by setting
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=14 and in the status
register bit PKTSTATUS.CS.
MAX_DVGA_GAIN[1:0]
00
01
10
11
000
-97.5
-91.5
-85.5
-79.5
001
-94
-88
-82.5
-76
010
-90.5
-84.5
-78.5
-72.5
011
-88
-82.5
-76.5
-70.5
100
-85.5
-80
-73.5
-68
101
-84
-78
-72
-66
110
-82
-76
-70
-64
111
-79
-73.5
-67
-61
Table 30: Typical RSSI Value in dBm at CS
Threshold with Default MAGN_TARGET at 2.4
kBaud, 955 MHz
MAX_DVGA_GAIN[1:0]
00
01
10
11
000
-90.5
-84.5
-78.5
-72.5
001
-88
-82
-76
-70
010
-84.5
-78.5
-72
-66
011
-82.5
-76.5
-70
-64
100
-80.5
-74.5
-68
-62
101
-78
-72
-66
-60
110
-76.5
-70
-64
-58
111
-74.5
-68
-62
-56
The absolute threshold related to the RSSI
value depends on the following register fields:

AGCCTRL2.MAX_LNA_GAIN

AGCCTRL2.MAX_DVGA_GAIN

AGCCTRL1.CARRIER_SENSE_ABS_THR

AGCCTRL2.MAGN_TARGET
For given AGCCTRL2.MAX_LNA_GAIN and
AGCCTRL2.MAX_DVGA_GAIN settings, the
absolute threshold can be adjusted ±7 dB in
steps
of
1
dB
using
CARRIER_SENSE_ABS_THR.
The MAGN_TARGET setting is a compromise
between blocker tolerance/selectivity and
sensitivity. The value sets the desired signal
level in the channel into the demodulator.
Increasing this value reduces the headroom
for blockers, and therefore close-in selectivity.
®
It is strongly recommended to use SmartRF
Studio
[8]
to
generate
the
correct
MAGN_TARGET setting. Table 30 and Table
31 show the typical RSSI readout values at the
CS threshold at 2.4 kBaud and 250 kBaud
data
rate
respectively.
The
default
CARRIER_SENSE_ABS_THR=0 (0 dB) and
MAGN_TARGET=3 (33 dB) have been used.
For other data rates, the user must generate
similar tables to find the CS absolute
threshold.
SWRS082
MAX_LNA_GAIN[2:0]
17.4.1 CS Absolute Threshold
Table 31: Typical RSSI Value in dBm at CS
Threshold with Default MAGN_TARGET at 250
kBaud, 955 MHz
If the threshold is set high, i.e. only strong
signals are wanted; the threshold should be
adjusted upwards by first reducing the
MAX_LNA_GAIN
value
and
then
the
MAX_DVGA_GAIN value. This will reduce
power consumption in the receiver front end,
since the highest gain settings are avoided.
17.4.2 CS Relative Threshold
The relative threshold detects sudden changes
in the measured signal level. This setting does
not depend on the absolute signal level and is
thus useful to detect signals in environments
with a time varying noise floor. The register
field AGCCTRL1.CARRIER_SENSE_REL_THR
is used to enable/disable relative CS, and to
select threshold of 6 dB, 10 dB, or 14 dB RSSI
change.
Page 42 of 92
CC1100E
17.5 Clear Channel Assessment (CCA)
The Clear Channel Assessment (CCA) is used
to indicate if the current channel is free or
busy. The current CCA state is viewable on
any of the GDO pins by setting
IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG=0x09.
not enter TX or FSTXON state before a new
strobe command is sent on the SPI interface.
This feature is called TX-if-CCA. Four CCA
requirements can be programmed:

Always (CCA disabled, always goes to TX)
MCSM1.CCA_MODE selects the mode to use
when determining CCA.

If RSSI is below threshold

Unless currently receiving a packet

Both the above (RSSI below threshold and
not currently receiving a packet)
When the STX or SFSTXON command strobe is
given while the CC1100E is in the RX state, the
TX or FSTXON state is only entered if the
clear channel requirements are fulfilled.
Otherwise, the chip will remain in RX. If the
channel then becomes available, the radio will
17.6 Link Quality Indicator (LQI)
The Link Quality Indicator is a metric of the
current quality of the received signal. If
PKTCTRL1.APPEND_STATUS is enabled, the
value is automatically added to the last byte
appended after the payload. The value can
also be read from the LQI status register. The
LQI gives an estimate of how easily a received
signal can be demodulated by accumulating
the magnitude of the error between ideal
constellations and the received signal over the
64 symbols immediately following the sync
word. LQI is best used as a relative
measurement of the link quality (a high value
indicates a better link than what a low value
does), since the value is dependent on the
modulation format.
18 Forward Error Correction with Interleaving
18.1 Forward Error Correction (FEC)
The CC1100E has built in support for Forward
Error Correction (FEC). To enable this option,
set MDMCFG1.FEC_EN to 1. FEC is only
supported in fixed packet length mode, i.e.
when PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=0. FEC is
employed on the data field and CRC word in
order to reduce the gross bit error rate when
operating
near
the
sensitivity
limit.
Redundancy is added to the transmitted data
in such a way that the receiver can restore the
original data in the presence of some bit
errors.
phenomena will produce occasional errors
even in otherwise good reception conditions.
FEC will mask such errors and, combined with
interleaving of the coded data, even correct
relatively long periods of faulty reception (burst
errors).
The use of FEC allows correct reception at a
lower Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), thus
extending communication range if the receiver
bandwidth remains constant. Alternatively, for
a given SNR, using FEC decreases the bit
error rate (BER). The packet error rate (PER)
is related to BER by
The convolutional coder is a rate ½ code with
a constraint length of m = 4. The coder codes
one input bit and produces two output bits;
hence, the effective data rate is halved. This
means that in order to transmit at the same
effective data rate when using FEC, it is
necessary to use twice as high over-the-air
data rate. This will require a higher receiver
bandwidth, and thus reduce sensitivity. In
other words the improved reception by using
FEC and the degraded sensitivity from a
higher
receiver
bandwidth
will
be
counteracting factors. Please see Design Note
DN504 [18] for more information
PER  1  (1  BER) packet _ length
A lower BER can therefore be used to allow
longer packets, or a higher percentage of
packets of a given length, to be transmitted
successfully. Finally, in realistic ISM radio
environments, transient and time-varying
SWRS082
The FEC scheme adopted for the CC1100E is
convolutional coding, in which n bits are
generated based on k input bits and the m
most recent input bits, forming a code stream
able to withstand a certain number of bit errors
between each coding state (the m-bit window).
Page 43 of 92
CC1100E
18.2 Interleaving
Data received through radio channels will
often experience burst errors due to
interference and time-varying signal strengths.
In order to increase the robustness to errors
spanning multiple bits, interleaving is used
when FEC is enabled. After de-interleaving, a
continuous span of errors in the received
stream will become single errors spread apart.
passed onto the convolutional decoder is read
from the columns of the matrix.
When FEC and interleaving is used, at least
one extra byte is required for trellis
termination. In addition, the amount of data
transmitted over the air must be a multiple of
the size of the interleaver buffer (two bytes).
The packet control hardware therefore
automatically inserts one or two extra bytes at
the end of the packet, so that the total length
of the data to be interleaved is an even
number. Note that these extra bytes are
invisible to the user, as they are removed
before the received packet enters the RX
FIFO.
The CC1100E employs matrix interleaving, which
is illustrated in Figure 19. The on-chip
interleaving and de-interleaving buffers are 4 x
4 matrices. In the transmitter, the data bits
from the rate ½ convolutional coder are written
into the rows of the matrix, whereas the bit
sequence to be transmitted is read from the
columns of the matrix. Conversely, in the
receiver, the received symbols are written into
the rows of the matrix, whereas the data
When FEC and interleaving is used the
minimum data payload is 2 bytes.
Interleaver
Write buffer
Packet
Engine
Interleaver
Read buffer
FEC
Encoder
Modulator
Interleaver
Write buffer
Interleaver
Read buffer
FEC
Decoder
Demodulator
Packet
Engine
Figure 19: General Principle of Matrix Interleaving
SWRS082
Page 44 of 92
CC1100E
19 Radio Control
SIDLE
SPWD | SWOR
SLEEP
0
CAL_COMPLETE
MANCAL
3,4,5
IDLE
1
CSn = 0 | WOR
SXOFF
SCAL
CSn = 0
XOFF
2
SRX | STX | SFSTXON | WOR
FS_WAKEUP
6,7
FS_AUTOCAL = 01
&
SRX | STX | SFSTXON | WOR
FS_AUTOCAL = 00 | 10 | 11
&
SRX | STX | SFSTXON | WOR
SETTLING
9,10,11
SFSTXON
CALIBRATE
8
CAL_COMPLETE
FSTXON
18
STX
SRX
STX
TXOFF_MODE=01
SFSTXON | RXOFF_MODE = 01
STX | RXOFF_MODE = 10
TXOFF_MODE = 10
SRX | WOR
RXTX_SETTLING
21
TX
19,20
SRX | TXOFF_MODE = 11
TXOFF_MODE = 00
&
FS_AUTOCAL = 00 | 01
RX
13,14,15
RXOFF_MODE = 11
TXRX_SETTLING
16
RXOFF_MODE = 00
&
FS_AUTOCAL = 10 | 11
TXOFF_MODE = 00
&
FS_AUTOCAL = 10 | 11
TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW
( STX | SFSTXON ) & CCA
|
RXOFF_MODE = 01 | 10
CALIBRATE
12
TX_UNDERFLOW
22
SFTX
RXOFF_MODE = 00
&
FS_AUTOCAL = 00 | 01
RXFIFO_OVERFLOW
RX_OVERFLOW
17
SFRX
IDLE
1
Figure 20: Complete Radio Control State Diagram
The CC1100E has a built-in state machine that is
used to switch between different operational
states (modes). The change of state is done
either by using command strobes or by
internal events such as TX FIFO underflow.
shown in Figure 9 on page 24. The complete
radio control state diagram is shown in Figure
20. The numbers refer to the state number
readable in the MARCSTATE status register.
This register is primarily for test purposes.
A simplified state diagram, together with
typical usage and current consumption, is
19.1 Power-On Start-Up Sequence
When the power supply is turned on, the
system must be reset. This is achieved by one
of the two sequences described below, i.e.
Automatic power-on reset (POR) or manual
SWRS082
reset. After the automatic power-on reset or
manual reset, it is also recommended to
change the signal that is output on the GDO0
pin. The default setting is to output a clock
Page 45 of 92
CC1100E
signal with a frequency of CLK_XOSC/192.
However, to optimize performance in TX and
RX, an alternative GDO setting from the
settings found in Table 36 on page 55 should
be selected.
manual power-up sequence is as follows (see
Figure 22):

Set SCLK = 1 and SI = 0, to avoid
potential problems with pin control mode
(see Section 11.3 on page 30).
19.1.1 Automatic POR

Strobe CSn low / high.
A power-on reset circuit is included in the
CC1100E. The minimum requirements stated in
Table 16 must be followed for the power-on
reset to function properly. The internal powerup sequence is completed when CHIP_RDYn
goes low. CHIP_RDYn is observed on the SO
pin after CSn is pulled low. See Section 10.1
for more details on CHIP_RDYn.

Hold CSn low and then high for at least 40
µs relative to pulling CSn low

Pull CSn low and wait for SO to go low
(CHIP_RDYn).

Issue the SRES strobe on the SI line.

When SO goes low again, reset is
complete and the chip is in the IDLE state.
When the CC1100E reset is completed, the chip
will be in the IDLE state and the crystal
oscillator will be running. If the chip has had
sufficient time for the crystal oscillator to
stabilize after the power-on-reset, the SO pin
will go low immediately after taking CSn low. If
CSn is taken low before reset is completed,
the SO pin will first go high, indicating that the
crystal oscillator is not stabilized, before going
low as shown in Figure 21.
Figure 22: Power-On Reset with SRES
Note that the above reset procedure is
only required just after the power supply is
first turned on. If the user wants to reset
the CC1100E after this, it is only necessary
to issue an SRES command strobe.
Figure 21: Power-On Reset
19.1.2 Manual Reset
The other global reset possibility on the
CC1100E uses the SRES command strobe. By
issuing this strobe, all internal registers and
states are set to the default, IDLE state. The
19.2 Crystal Control
The crystal oscillator (XOSC) is either
automatically controlled or always on, if
MCSM0.XOSC_FORCE_ON is set.
In the automatic mode, the XOSC will be
turned off if the SXOFF or SPWD command
strobes are issued; the state machine then
goes to XOFF or SLEEP respectively. This
can only be done from the IDLE state. The
XOSC will be turned off when CSn is released
(goes high). The XOSC will be automatically
turned on again when CSn goes low. The
SWRS082
state machine will then go to the IDLE state.
The SO pin on the SPI interface must be
pulled low before the SPI interface is ready to
be used as described in Section 10.1 on page
27.
If the XOSC is forced on, the crystal will
always stay on even in the SLEEP state.
Crystal oscillator start-up time depends on
crystal ESR and load capacitances. The
electrical specification for the crystal oscillator
can be found in Section 4.4 on page 14.
Page 46 of 92
CC1100E
19.3 Voltage Regulator Control
The voltage regulator to the digital core is
controlled by the radio controller. When the
chip enters the SLEEP state which is the state
with the lowest current consumption, the
voltage regulator is disabled. This occurs after
CSn is released when a SPWD command
strobe has been sent on the SPI interface. The
chip is then in the SLEEP state. Setting CSn
low again will turn on the regulator and crystal
oscillator and make the chip enter the IDLE
state.
When Wake on Radio is enabled, the WOR
module will control the voltage regulator as
described in Section19.5.
19.4 Active Modes
The CC1100E has two active modes: receive
and transmit. These modes are activated
directly by the MCU by using the SRX and STX
command strobes, or automatically by Wake
on Radio.
The frequency synthesizer must be calibrated
regularly. The CC1100E has one manual
calibration option (using the SCAL strobe), and
three automatic calibration options that are
controlled by the MCSM0.FS_AUTOCAL setting:

Calibrate when going from IDLE to either
RX or TX (or FSTXON)

Calibrate when going from either RX or TX
to IDLE automatically

Calibrate every fourth time when going
from either RX or TX to IDLE automatically
If the radio goes from TX or RX to IDLE by
issuing an SIDLE strobe, calibration will not be
performed. The calibration takes a constant
number of XOSC cycles; see Table 32 for
timing details regarding calibration.
When RX is activated, the chip will remain in
receive mode until a packet is successfully
received or the RX termination timer expires
(see Section 19.7). The probability that a false
sync word is detected can be reduced by
using PQT, CS, maximum sync word length,
and sync word qualifier mode as described in
Section 17. After a packet is successfully
received, the radio controller goes to the state
indicated by the MCSM1.RXOFF_MODE setting.
The possible destinations are:

IDLE

FSTXON: Frequency synthesizer on and
ready at the TX frequency. Activate TX
with STX

TX: Start sending preamble
SWRS082

RX: Start search for a new packet
Note: When MCSM1.RXOFF_MODE=11
and a packet has been received, it will
take some time before a valid RSSI value
is present in the RSSI register again even
if the radio has never exited RX mode.
This time is the same as the RSSI
response time discussed in DN505 [13].
Similarly, when TX is active the chip will
remain in the TX state until the current packet
has been successfully transmitted. Then the
state will change as indicated by the
MCSM1.TXOFF_MODE setting. The possible
destinations are the same as for RX.
The MCU can manually change the state from
RX to TX and vice versa by using the
command strobes. If the radio controller is
currently in transmit and the SRX strobe is
used, the current transmission will be ended
and the transition to RX will be done.
If the radio controller is in RX when the STX or
SFSTXON command strobes are used, the TXif-CCA function will be used. If the channel is
not clear, the chip will remain in RX. The
MCSM1.CCA_MODE
setting
controls
the
conditions for clear channel assessment. See
Section 17.5 on page 43 for details.
The SIDLE command strobe can always be
used to force the radio controller to go to the
IDLE state.
Page 47 of 92
CC1100E
19.5 Wake On Radio (WOR)
The optional Wake on Radio (WOR)
functionality enables the CC1100E to periodically
wake up from SLEEP and listen for incoming
packets without MCU interaction.
When the SWOR strobe command is sent on
the SPI interface, the CC1100E will go to the
SLEEP state when CSn is released. The RC
oscillator must be enabled before the SWOR
strobe can be used, as it is the clock source
for the WOR timer. The on-chip timer will set
the CC1100E into IDLE state and then RX state.
After a programmable time in RX, the chip will
go back to the SLEEP state, unless a packet is
received. See Figure 23 and Section 19.7 for
details on how the timeout works.
To exit WOR mode, set the CC1100E into the
IDLE state
The CC1100E can be set up to signal the MCU
that a packet has been received by using the
GDO pins. If a packet is received, the
MCSM1.RXOFF_MODE
will determine the
behaviour at the end of the received packet.
When the MCU has read the packet, it can put
the chip back into SLEEP with the SWOR strobe
from the IDLE state.
Note: The FIFO looses its content in the
SLEEP state.
Figure 23: Event 0 and Event 1 Relationship
The time from the CC1100E enters SLEEP state
until the next Event0 is programmed to
appear, tSLEEP in Figure 23, should be larger
than 11.08 ms when using a 26 MHz crystal
and 10.67 ms when a 27 MHz crystal is used.
If tSLEEP is less than 11.08 (10.67) ms, there is
a chance that the consecutive Event 0 will
occur
750
 128 seconds
f XOSC
too early. Application Note AN047 [7] explains
in detail the theory of operation and the
different registers involved when using WOR,
as well as highlighting important aspects when
using WOR mode.
19.5.1 RC Oscillator and Timing
The WOR timer has two events, Event 0 and
Event 1. In the SLEEP state with WOR
activated, reaching Event 0 will turn on the
digital regulator and start the crystal oscillator.
Event 1 follows Event 0 after a programmed
timeout.
The time between two consecutive Event 0 is
programmed with a mantissa value given by
WOREVT1.EVENT0 and WOREVT0.EVENT0,
and
an
exponent
value
set
by
WORCTRL.WOR_RES. The equation is:
t Event 0 
750
 EVENT 0  2 5WOR _ RES
f XOSC
The Event 1 timeout is programmed with
WORCTRL.EVENT1. Figure 23 shows the
timing relationship between Event 0 timeout
and Event 1 timeout.
SWRS082
The frequency of the low-power RC oscillator
used for the WOR functionality varies with
temperature and supply voltage. In order to
keep the frequency as accurate as possible,
the RC oscillator will be calibrated whenever
possible, which is when the XOSC is running
and the chip is not in the SLEEP state. When
the power and XOSC are enabled, the clock
used by the WOR timer is a divided XOSC
clock. When the chip goes to the sleep state,
the RC oscillator will use the last valid
calibration result. The frequency of the RC
oscillator is locked to the main crystal
frequency divided by 750.
In applications where the radio wakes up very
often, typically several times every second, it
is possible to do the RC oscillator calibration
once and then turn off calibration to reduce the
current consumption. This is done by setting
WORCTRL.RC_CAL=0 and requires that RC
oscillator calibration values are read from
registers
RCCTRL0_STATUS
and
RCCTRL1_STATUS and written back to
RCCTRL0 and RCCTRL1 respectively. If the
Page 48 of 92
CC1100E
RC oscillator calibration is turned off, it will
have to be manually turned on again if the
temperature and/or the supply voltage
changes. Refer to Application Note AN047 [7]
for further details.
19.6 Timing
The radio controller controls most of the timing
in the CC1100E, such as synthesizer calibration,
PLL lock time, and RX/TX turnaround times.
Timing from IDLE to RX and IDLE to TX is
constant, dependent on the auto calibration
setting. RX/TX and TX/RX turnaround times
are constant. The calibration time is constant
18739 clock periods. Table 32 shows timing in
crystal clock cycles for key state transitions.
Power on time and XOSC start-up times are
variable, but within the limits stated in Table
11.
Note that in a frequency hopping spread
spectrum or a multi-channel protocol the
calibration time can be reduced from 721 µs to
approximately 150 µs. This is explained in
Section 28.2.
Description
XOSC
Periods
26 MHz
Crystal
IDLE to RX, no calibration
2298
88.4μs
IDLE to RX, with calibration
~21037
809μs
IDLE to TX/FSTXON, no
calibration
2298
88.4μs
IDLE to TX/FSTXON, with
calibration
~21037
809μs
TX to RX switch
560
21.5μs
RX to TX switch
250
9.6μs
RX or TX to IDLE, no calibration
2
0.1μs
RX or TX to IDLE, with calibration
~18739
721μs
Manual calibration
~18739
721μs
Table 32: State Transition Timing
19.7 RX Termination Timer
The CC1100E has optional functions for
automatic termination of RX after a
programmable time. The main use for this
functionality is Wake on Radio, but it may also
be useful for other applications. The
termination timer starts when in RX state. The
timeout
is
programmable
with
the
MCSM2.RX_TIME setting. When the timer
expires, the radio controller will check the
condition for staying in RX; if the condition is
not met, RX will terminate.
The programmable conditions are:

MCSM2.RX_TIME_QUAL=0:
Continue
receive if sync word has been found

MCSM2.RX_TIME_QUAL=1:
Continue
receive if sync word has been found, or if
the preamble quality is above threshold
(PQT)
If the system expects the transmission to have
started when enabling the receiver, the
MCSM2.RX_TIME_RSSI function can be used.
The radio controller will then terminate RX if
the first valid carrier sense sample indicates
no carrier (RSSI below threshold). See Section
17.4 on page 41 for details on Carrier Sense.
SWRS082
For ASK/OOK modulation, lack of carrier
sense is only considered valid after eight
symbol
periods.
Thus,
the
MCSM2.RX_TIME_RSSI function can be used
in ASK/OOK mode when the distance between
“1” symbols is eight or less.
If RX terminates due to no carrier sense when
the MCSM2.RX_TIME_RSSI function is used,
or if no sync word was found when using the
MCSM2.RX_TIME timeout function, the chip
will always go back to IDLE if WOR is disabled
and back to SLEEP if WOR is enabled.
Otherwise, the MCSM1.RXOFF_MODE setting
determines the state to go to when RX ends.
This means that the chip will not automatically
go back to SLEEP once a sync word has been
received. It is therefore recommended to
always wake up the microcontroller on sync
word detection when using WOR mode. This
can be done by selecting output signal 6 (see
Table 36 on page 55) on one of the
programmable GDO output pins, and
programming the microcontroller to wake up
on an edge-triggered interrupt from this GDO
pin.
Page 49 of 92
CC1100E
20 Data FIFO
The CC1100E contains two 64 byte FIFOs, one
for received data and one for data to be
transmitted. The SPI interface is used to read
from the RX FIFO and write to the TX FIFO.
Section 10.5 contains details on the SPI FIFO
access. The FIFO controller will detect
overflow in the RX FIFO and underflow in the
TX FIFO.
When writing to the TX FIFO it is the
responsibility of the MCU to avoid TX FIFO
overflow. A TX FIFO overflow will result in an
error in the TX FIFO content.
Likewise, when reading the RX FIFO the MCU
must avoid reading the RX FIFO past its empty
value since a RX FIFO underflow will result in
an error in the data read out of the RX FIFO.
3. Repeat steps 1 and 2 until n = # of bytes
remaining in packet.
4. Read the remaining bytes from the RX
FIFO.
The 4-bit FIFOTHR.FIFO_THR setting is used
to program threshold points in the FIFOs.
Table 33 lists the 16 FIFO_THR settings and
the corresponding thresholds for the RX and
TX FIFOs. The threshold value is coded in
opposite directions for the RX FIFO and TX
FIFO. This gives equal margin to the overflow
and underflow conditions when the threshold
is reached.
FIFO_THR
Bytes in TX FIFO
Bytes in RX FIFO
0 (0000)
61
4
The chip status byte that is available on the
SO pin while transferring the SPI header and
contains the fill grade of the RX FIFO if the
access is a read operation and the fill grade of
the TX FIFO if the access is a write operation.
Section 10.1 on page 27 contains more details
on this.
1 (0001)
57
8
2 (0010)
53
12
3 (0011)
49
16
4 (0100)
45
20
5 (0101)
41
24
6 (0110)
37
28
7 (0111)
33
32
The number of bytes in the RX FIFO and TX
FIFO can be read from the status registers
RXBYTES.NUM_RXBYTES
and
TXBYTES.NUM_TXBYTES respectively. If a
received data byte is written to the RX FIFO at
the exact same time as the last byte in the RX
FIFO is read over the SPI interface, the RX
FIFO pointer is not properly updated and the
last read byte will be duplicated. To avoid this
problem, the RX FIFO should never be
emptied before the last byte of the packet is
received.
8 (1000)
29
36
9 (1001)
25
40
10 (1010)
21
44
11 (1011)
17
48
12 (1100)
13
52
13 (1100E)
9
56
14 (1110)
5
60
15 (1111)
1
64
For packet lengths less than 64 bytes it is
recommended to wait until the complete
packet has been received before reading it out
of the RX FIFO.
If the packet length is larger than 64 bytes, the
MCU must determine how many bytes can be
read
from
the
RX
FIFO
(RXBYTES.NUM_RXBYTES-1). The following
software routine can be used:
1. Read
RXBYTES.NUM_RXBYTES
repeatedly at a rate guaranteed to be at
least twice that of which RF bytes are
received until the same value is returned
twice; store value in n.
Table 33: FIFO_THR Settings and the
Corresponding FIFO Thresholds
A signal will assert when the number of bytes
in the FIFO is equal to or higher than the
programmed threshold. This signal can be
viewed on the GDO pins (see Table 36 on
page 55).
Figure 24 shows the number of bytes in both
the RX FIFO and TX FIFO when the threshold
signal toggles in the case of FIFO_THR=13.
Figure 25 shows the signal on the GDO pin as
the respective FIFO is filled above the
threshold, and then drained below in the case
of FIFO_THR=13.
2. If n < # of bytes remaining in packet, read
n-1 bytes from the RX FIFO.
SWRS082
Page 50 of 92
CC1100E
Figure 24 Example of FIFOs at Threshold
Overflow
margin
FIFO_THR=13
NUM_RXBYTES
53 54 55 56 57 56 55 54 53
GDO
56 bytes
NUM_TXBYTES
6
7
8
9 10 9
8
7
6
GDO
Figure 25: Number of Bytes in FIFO vs. the
GDO Signal (GDOx_CFG=0x00 in RX and
GDOx_CFG=0x02 in TX, FIFO_THR=13)
FIFO_THR=13
Underflow
margin
8 bytes
RXFIFO
TXFIFO
21 Frequency Programming
The frequency programming in the CC1100E is
designed to minimize the programming
needed in a channel-oriented system.
To set up a system with channel numbers, the
desired channel spacing is programmed with
the
MDMCFG0.CHANSPC_M
and
MDMCFG1.CHANSPC_E registers. The channel
spacing registers are mantissa and exponent
respectively. The base or start frequency is set
f carrier 

The desired channel number is programmed
with the 8-bit channel number register,
CHANNR.CHAN, which is multiplied by the
channel offset. The resultant carrier frequency
is given by:

f XOSC
 FREQ  CHAN  256  CHANSPC _ M   2 CHANSPC _ E  2
216
With a 26 MHz crystal the maximum channel
spacing is 405 kHz. To get e.g. 1 MHz channel
spacing, one solution is to use 333 kHz
channel spacing and select each third channel
in CHANNR.CHAN.
The preferred IF frequency is programmed
with the FSCTRL1.FREQ_IF register. The IF
frequency is given by:
f IF 
by the 24 bit frequency word located in the
FREQ2, FREQ1, and FREQ0 registers. This
word will typically be set to the centre of the
lowest channel frequency that is to be used.
f XOSC
 FREQ _ IF
210
SWRS082

®
Note that the SmartRF Studio software [8]
automatically
calculates
the
optimum
FSCTRL1.FREQ_IF register setting based on
channel spacing and channel filter bandwidth.
If any frequency programming register is
altered when the frequency synthesizer is
running, the synthesizer may give an
undesired response. Hence, the frequency
programming should only be updated when
the radio is in the IDLE state.
Page 51 of 92
CC1100E
22 VCO
The VCO is completely integrated on-chip.
22.1 VCO and PLL Self-Calibration
The VCO characteristics vary with temperature
and supply voltage changes as well as the
desired operating frequency. In order to
ensure reliable operation, the CC1100E includes
frequency synthesizer self-calibration circuitry.
This calibration should be done regularly, and
must be performed after turning on power and
before using a new frequency (or channel).
The number of XOSC cycles for completing
the PLL calibration is given in Table 32 on
page 49.
The calibration can be initiated automatically
or manually. The synthesizer can be
automatically calibrated each time the
synthesizer is turned on, or each time the
synthesizer is turned off automatically. This is
configured with the MCSM0.FS_AUTOCAL
register setting. In manual mode, the
calibration is initiated when the SCAL
command strobe is activated in the IDLE
mode.
Note:
The
calibration
values
are
maintained in SLEEP mode, so the
calibration is still valid after waking up from
SLEEP mode unless supply voltage or
temperature has changed significantly.
To check that the PLL is in lock, the user can
program register IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG
to
0x0A, and use the lock detector output
available on the GDOx pin as an interrupt for
the MCU (x = 0,1, or 2). A positive transition
on the GDOx pin means that the PLL is in
lock. As an alternative the user can read
register FSCAL1. The PLL is in lock if the
register content is different from 0x3F. Refer
also to the CC1100E Errata Note [5].
For more robust operation, the source code
could include a check so that the PLL is recalibrated until PLL lock is achieved if the PLL
does not lock the first time.
23 Voltage Regulators
The CC1100E contains several on-chip linear
voltage regulators that generate the supply
voltages needed by low-voltage modules.
These voltage regulators are invisible to the
user, and can be viewed as integral parts of
the various modules. The user must however
make sure that the absolute maximum ratings
and required pin voltages in Table 1 and Table
17 are not exceeded.
By setting the CSn pin low, the voltage
regulator to the digital core turns on and the
crystal oscillator starts. The SO pin on the SPI
interface must go low before the first positive
edge of SCLK (setup time is given in Table
20).
If the chip is programmed to enter power-down
mode (SPWD strobe issued), the power will be
turned off after CSn goes high. The power and
crystal oscillator will be turned on again when
CSn goes low.
The voltage regulator for the digital core
requires one external decoupling capacitor.
The voltage regulator output should only be
used for driving the CC1100E.
24 Output Power Programming
The RF output power level from the device has
two levels of programmability as illustrated in
Figure 26. The special PATABLE register can
hold up to eight user selected output power
settings. The 3-bit FREND0.PA_POWER value
selects the PATABLE entry to use. This twolevel functionality provides flexible PA power
ramp up and ramp down at the start and end
of transmission as well as ASK modulation
SWRS082
shaping. All the PA power settings in the
PATABLE
from index 0 up to the
FREND0.PA_POWER value are used.
The power ramping at the start and at the end
of a packet can be turned off by setting
FREND0.PA_POWER=0 and then program the
desired output power to index 0 in the
PATABLE.
Page 52 of 92
CC1100E
If OOK modulation is used, the logic 0 and
logic 1 power levels shall be programmed to
index 0 and 1 respectively.
See Section 10.6 on page 29 for PATABLE
programming details. PATABLE must be
programmed in burst mode if you want to write
to other entries than PATABLE[0].
Table 33 contains recommended PATABLE
settings for various output levels and
frequency bands. DN013 Error! Reference
source not found. gives the complete tables
for the different frequency bands. Using PA
settings from 0x61 to 0x6F is not
recommended.
Note: All content of the PATABLE except
for the first byte (index 0) is lost when
entering the SLEEP state.
Table 34 contains output power and current
consumption for default PATABLE setting
(0xC6).
480 MHz
Output
Power
[dBm]
955 MHz
Setting
Current
Consumption,
Typ. [mA]
Setting
Current
Consumption,
Typ. [mA]
-30
0x04
12.5
0x30
13.0
-20
0x0E
13.0
0x14
12.9
-15
0x1C
13.5
0x18
13.6
-10
0x26
14.9
0x24
14.6
-5
0x2B
16.9
0x28
16.2
0
0x60
16.6
0x60
16.5
5
0x86
19.8
0x86
19.1
7
0xCB
24.6
0xC7
26.3
10 (9)
0xC2
29.6
0xC0
30.9
Table 34: Optimum PATABLE Settings for Various Output Power Levels and Frequency
Bands
480 MHz
955 MHz
Default
Power
Setting
Output
Power
[dBm]
Current
Consumption,
Typ. [mA]
Output
Power
[dBm]
0xC6
8.8
26.9
7.3
Current
Consumption,
Typ. [mA]
26.7
Table 35: Output Power and Current Consumption for Default PATABLE Setting
25 Shaping and PA Ramping
With ASK modulation, up to eight power
settings are used for shaping. The modulator
contains a counter that counts up when
transmitting a one and down when transmitting
a zero. The counter counts at a rate equal to 8
times the symbol rate. The counter saturates
SWRS082
at FREND0.PA_POWER and 0 respectively.
This counter value is used as an index for a
lookup in the power table. Thus, in order to
utilize the whole table, FREND0.PA_POWER
should be 7 when ASK is active. The shaping
of the ASK signal is dependent on the
Page 53 of 92
CC1100E
shows some examples of ASK shaping.
configuration of the PATABLE. Figure 27
PATABLE(7)[7:0]
PATABLE(6)[7:0]
The PA uses this
setting.
PATABLE(5)[7:0]
PATABLE(4)[7:0]
PATABLE(3)[7:0]
PATABLE(2)[7:0]
PATABLE(1)[7:0]
Settings 0 to PA_POWER are
used during ramp-up at start of
transmission and ramp-down at
end of transmission, and for
ASK/OOK modulation.
PATABLE(0)[7:0]
Index into PATABLE(7:0)
e.g 6
PA_POWER[2:0]
in FREND0 register
The SmartRF® Studio software
should be used to obtain optimum
PATABLE settings for various
output powers.
Figure 26: PA_POWER and PATABLE
Figure 27: Shaping of ASK Signal
26 General Purpose / Test Output Control Pins
The three digital output pins GDO0, GDO1,
and GDO2 are general control pins configured
with
IOCFG0.GDO0_CFG,
IOCFG1.GDO1_CFG, and IOCFG2.GDO2_CFG
respectively. Table 36 shows the different
signals that can be monitored on the GDO
pins. These signals can be used as inputs to
the MCU.
GDO1 is the same pin as the SO pin on the
SPI interface, thus the output programmed on
this pin will only be valid when CSn is high.
The default value for GDO1 is 3-stated which
is useful when the SPI interface is shared with
other devices.
The default value for GDO0 is a 135-141 kHz
clock output (XOSC frequency divided by
192). Since the XOSC is turned on at poweron-reset, this can be used to clock the MCU in
systems with only one crystal. When the MCU
is up and running, it can change the clock
frequency by writing to IOCFG0.GDO0_CFG.
SWRS082
An on-chip analog temperature sensor is
enabled by writing the value 128 (0x80) to the
IOCFG0 register. The voltage on the GDO0
pin is then proportional to temperature. See
Section 4.7 on page 15 for temperature sensor
specifications.
If the IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG setting is less than
0x20 and IOCFGx_GDOx_INV is 0 (1), the
GDO0 and GDO2 pins will be hardwired to 0
(1), and the GDO1 pin will be hardwired to 1
(0) in the SLEEP state. These signals will be
hardwired until the CHIP_RDYn signal goes
low.
If the IOCFGx.GDOx_CFG setting is 0x20 or
higher, the GDO pins will work as programmed
also in SLEEP state. As an example, GDO1 is
high
impedance
in
all
states
if
IOCFG1.GDO1_CFG=0x2E.
Page 54 of 92
CC1100E
GDOx_CFG[5:0]
0 (0x00)
1 (0x01)
2 (0x02)
3 (0x03)
4 (0x04)
5 (0x05)
6 (0x06)
7 (0x07)
8 (0x08)
9 (0x09)
10 (0x0A)
11 (0x0B)
12 (0x0C)
13 (0x0D)
14 (0x0E)
15 (0x0F)
16 (0x10)
17 (0x11)
18 (0x12)
19 (0x13)
20 (0x14)
21 (0x15)
22 (0x16)
23 (0x17)
24 (0x18)
25 (0x19)
26 (0x1A)
27 (0x1B)
28 (0x1C)
29 (0x1D)
30 (0x1E)
31 (0x1F)
32 (0x20)
33 (0x21)
34 (0x22)
35 (0x23)
36 (0x24)
37 (0x25)
38 (0x26)
39 (0x27)
40 (0x28)
41 (0x29)
42 (0x2A)
43 (0x2B)
44 (0x2C)
45 (0x2D)
46 (0x2E)
47 (0x2F)
48 (0x30)
49 (0x31)
50 (0x32)
51 (0x33)
52 (0x34)
53 (0x35)
54 (0x36)
55 (0x37)
56 (0x38)
57 (0x39)
58 (0x3A)
59 (0x3B)
60 (0x3C)
61 (0x3D)
62 (0x3E)
63 (0x3F)
Description
Associated to the RX FIFO: Asserts when RX FIFO is filled at or above the RX FIFO threshold. De-asserts when RX FIFO
is drained below the same threshold.
Associated to the RX FIFO: Asserts when RX FIFO is filled at or above the RX FIFO threshold or the end of packet is
reached. De-asserts when the RX FIFO is empty.
Associated to the TX FIFO: Asserts when the TX FIFO is filled at or above the TX FIFO threshold. De-asserts when the TX
FIFO is below the same threshold.
Associated to the TX FIFO: Asserts when TX FIFO is full. De-asserts when the TX FIFO is drained below the TX FIFO
threshold.
Asserts when the RX FIFO has overflowed. De-asserts when the FIFO has been flushed.
Asserts when the TX FIFO has underflowed. De-asserts when the FIFO is flushed.
Asserts when sync word has been sent / received, and de-asserts at the end of the packet. In RX, the pin will de-assert
when the optional address check fails or the RX FIFO overflows. In TX the pin will de-assert if the TX FIFO underflows.
Asserts when a packet has been received with CRC OK. De-asserts when the first byte is read from the RX FIFO.
Preamble Quality Reached. Asserts when the PQI is above the programmed PQT value.
Clear channel assessment. High when RSSI level is below threshold (dependent on the current CCA_MODE setting).
Lock detector output. The PLL is in lock if the lock detector output has a positive transition or is constantly logic high. To
check for PLL lock the lock detector output should be used as an interrupt for the MCU.
Serial Clock. Synchronous to the data in synchronous serial mode.
In RX mode, data is set up on the falling edge by the CC1100E when GDOx_INV=0.
In TX mode, data is sampled by the CC1100E on the rising edge of the serial clock when GDOx_INV=0.
Serial Synchronous Data Output. Used for synchronous serial mode.
Serial Data Output. Used for asynchronous serial mode.
Carrier sense. High if RSSI level is above threshold.
CRC_OK. The last CRC comparison matched. Cleared when entering/restarting RX mode.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
RX_HARD_DATA [1]. Can be used together with RX_SYMBOL_TICK for alternative serial RX output.
RX_HARD_DATA [0]. Can be used together with RX_SYMBOL_TICK for alternative serial RX output.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
RX_SYMBOL_TICK. Can be used together with RX_HARD_DATA for alternative serial RX output.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
Reserved – used for test.
WOR_EVNT0.
WOR_EVNT1.
Reserved – used for test.
CLK_32k.
Reserved – used for test.
CHIP_RDYn.
Reserved – used for test.
XOSC_STABLE.
Reserved – used for test.
GDO0_Z_EN_N. When this output is 0, GDO0 is configured as input (for serial TX data).
High impedance (3-state).
HW to 0 (HW1 achieved by setting GDOx_INV=1). Can be used to control an external LNA/PA or RX/TX switch.
CLK_XOSC/1
CLK_XOSC/1.5
CLK_XOSC/2
CLK_XOSC/3
CLK_XOSC/4
Note: There are 3 GDO pins, but only one CLK_XOSC/n can be selected as an output at any
CLK_XOSC/6
time. If CLK_XOSC/n is to be monitored on one of the GDO pins, the other two GDO pins must
CLK_XOSC/8
be configured to values less than 0x30. The GDO0 default value is CLK_XOSC/192.
CLK_XOSC/12
To optimize RF performance, these signals should not be used while the radio is in RX or TX
CLK_XOSC/16
CLK_XOSC/24
mode.
CLK_XOSC/32
CLK_XOSC/48
CLK_XOSC/64
CLK_XOSC/96
CLK_XOSC/128
CLK_XOSC/192
Table 36: GDOx Signal Selection (x = 0, 1, or 2)
SWRS082
Page 55 of 92
CC1100E
27 Asynchronous and Synchronous Serial Operation
Several features and modes of operation have
been included in the CC1100E to provide
backward compatibility with previous Chipcon
products and other existing RF communication
systems. For new systems, it is recommended
to use the built-in packet handling features, as
they can give more robust communication,
significantly offload the microcontroller, and
simplify software development.
27.1 Asynchronous Serial Operation
Asynchronous transfer is included in the
CC1100E for backward compatibility with
systems that are already using the
asynchronous data transfer.
When asynchronous transfer is enabled,
several of the support mechanisms for the
MCU that are included in the CC1100E will be
disabled, such as packet handling hardware,
buffering in the FIFO, and so on. The
asynchronous transfer mode does not allow
for the use of the data whitener, interleaver,
and FEC, and it is not possible to use
Manchester encoding. MSK is not supported
for asynchronous transfer.
Setting
PKTCTRL0.PKT_FORMAT
to
3
enables asynchronous serial mode. In TX, the
GDO0 pin is used for data input (TX data).
Data output can be on GDO0, GDO1, or
GDO2.
This
is
set
by
the
IOCFG0.GDO0_CFG,
IOCFG1.GDO1_CFG
and IOCFG2.GDO2_CFG fields.
The CC1100E modulator samples the level of
the asynchronous input 8 times faster than the
programmed data rate. The timing requirement
for the asynchronous stream is that the error in
the bit period must be less than one eighth of
the programmed data rate.
27.2 Synchronous Serial Operation
Setting
PKTCTRL0.PKT_FORMAT
to
1
enables synchronous serial mode. In the
synchronous serial mode, data is transferred
on a two-wire serial interface. The CC1100E
provides a clock that is used to set up new
data on the data input line or sample data on
the data output line. Data input (TX data) is on
the GDO0 pin. This pin will automatically be
configured as an input when TX is active. The
TX latency is 8 bits. The data output pin can
be any of the GDO pins. This is set by the
IOCFG0.GDO0_CFG,
IOCFG1.GDO1_CFG,
and IOCFG2.GDO2_CFG fields. Time from
start of reception until data is available on the
receiver data output pin is equal to 9 bit.
Preamble and sync word insertion/detection
may or may not be active, dependent on the
sync mode set by the MDMCFG2.SYNC_MODE.
If preamble and sync word is disabled, all
other packet handler features and FEC should
also be disabled. The MCU must then handle
preamble and sync word insertion and
detection in software.
SWRS082
If preamble and sync word insertion/detection
is left on, all packet handling features and FEC
can be used. One exception is that the
address filtering feature is unavailable in
synchronous serial mode.
When using the packet handling features in
synchronous serial mode, the CC1100E will
insert and detect the preamble and sync word
and the MCU will only provide/get the data
payload.
This
is
equivalent
to
the
recommended FIFO operation mode.
An alternative serial RX output option is to
configure any of the GD0 pins for
RX_SYMBOL_TICK and RX_HARD_[1:0], see
Table 36. RX_HARD_[1:0] is the hard
decision symbol. RX_HARD_[1:0] contain
data for 4-ary modulation formats while
RX_HARD_DATA [1] contain data for 2-ary
modulation formats. The RX_SYMBOL_TICK
signal is the symbol clock and is high for one
half symbol period whenever a new symbol is
presented on the hard and soft data outputs.
This option may be used for both synchronous
and asynchronous interfaces.
Page 56 of 92
CC1100E
28 System Considerations and Guidelines
28.1 SRD Regulations
International regulations and national laws
regulate the use of radio receivers and
transmitters. The CC1100E is specifically
designed for use in the license free 470-510
MHz and 950-960 MHz frequency bands in
China and Japan, respectively.
with two and three unit channels. For data
rates higher than 100 kbps, the frequency
deviation may have to be reduced compared
to the default settings in order to comply with
the ARIB STD-T96 transmit specifications.
Typical margins to the transmit spectrum
mask measured according to the ARIB STDT96 using the CC1100E reference design at 0
dBm output power are shown in Table 37.
Higher margins can be achieved by reducing
the output power accordingly.
28.1.1 ARIB STD-T96
The applicable regulatory requirements for
using the CC1100E at the 950-956 MHz
frequency band in Japan are specified by the
ARIB STD-T96 [6].
Please note that compliance with regulations
is dependent on the complete system
performance. It is the customer’s responsibility
to ensure that the system complies with
regulations.
For applications targeting ARIB STD-T96,
FSCAL3 [7:4] needs to be set to 0xA and
FSCAL0 needs to be set to 0x07 for optimum
performance.
The CC1100E can support operation with one
(200 kHz), two (400 kHz) and three (600 kHz)
unit channels as defined by the ARIB STD-T96
but will typically be used in wireless systems
Data
Rate
[kbps]
Deviation
[kHz]
Typical
Sensitivity
Typical Margin [dB]
[dBm]
400 kHz
600 kHz
1.2
5.2
-111
3
4
4.8
25.4
-110
1.5
5.5
10
19
-106
3
4.5
38.4
20
-103
1.5
6.5
76.8
32
-100
3
6
100
47
-100
1
5.5
175
41
-91
2.5
5.5
200
100
-96
N/A
2
200
38
-89
1.5
4.5
250
70
-93
N/A
2.5
Table 37: CC1100E typical performance values for ARIB STD-T96 using the CC1100E reference
design, 25C and 3V (FSCAL3 [7:4] set to 0xA and FSCAL0 set to 0x07)
28.2 Frequency Hopping and Multi-Channel Systems
The 470 MHz and 950 MHz bands are shared
by many systems both in industrial, office, and
home
environments.
It
is
therefore
recommended to use frequency hopping
spread spectrum (FHSS) or a multi-channel
SWRS082
protocol because the frequency diversity
makes the system more robust with respect to
interference from other systems operating in
the same frequency band. FHSS also combats
multipath fading.
Page 57 of 92
CC1100E
The CC1100E is highly suited for FHSS or multichannel systems due to its agile frequency
synthesizer and effective communication
interface. Using the packet handling support
and data buffering is also beneficial in such
systems as these features will significantly
offload the host controller.
Charge pump current, VCO current, and VCO
capacitance array calibration data is required
for each frequency when implementing
frequency hopping for the CC1100E. There are 3
ways of obtaining the calibration data from the
chip:
1) Frequency hopping with calibration for each
hop. The PLL calibration time is approximately
720 µs. The blanking interval between each
frequency hop is then approximately 810 us.
2) Fast frequency hopping without calibration
for each hop can be done by performing the
necessary calibrating at startup and saving the
resulting FSCAL3, FSCAL2, and FSCAL1
register values in MCU memory. The VCO
capacitance array calibration FSCAL1 register
value must be found for each RF frequency to
be used. The VCO current calibration value
and the charge pump current calibration value
available in FSCAL2 and FSCAL3 respectively
are not dependent on the RF frequency, so the
same value can therefore be used for all RF
frequencies for these two registers. Between
each frequency hop, the calibration process
can then be replaced by writing the FSCAL3,
FSCAL2 and FSCAL1 register values that
corresponds to the next RF frequency. The
PLL turn on time is approximately 90 µs. The
blanking interval between each frequency hop
is then approximately 90 µs.
3) Run calibration on a single frequency at
startup. Next write 0 to FSCAL3 [5:4] to
disable the charge pump calibration. After
writing to FSCAL3 [5:4], strobe SRX (or
STX) with MCSM0.FS_AUTOCAL=1 for each
new frequency hop. That is, VCO current and
VCO capacitance calibration is done, but not
charge pump current calibration. When charge
pump current calibration is disabled the
calibration time is reduced from approximately
720 µs to approximately 150 µs. The blanking
interval between each frequency hop is then
approximately 240 µs.
There is a trade off between blanking time and
memory space needed for storing calibration
data in non-volatile memory. Solution 2) above
gives the shortest blanking interval, but
requires more memory space to store
calibration values. This solution also requires
that the supply voltage and temperature do not
vary much in order to have a robust solution.
Solution 3) gives approximately 570 µs smaller
blanking interval than solution 1).
The
recommended
settings
for
TEST0.VCO_SEL_CAL_EN
changes with
frequency. This means that one should always
®
use SmartRF Studio [8] to get the correct
settings for a specific frequency before doing a
calibration, regardless of which calibration
method is being used.
Note: The content in the TESTn registers
(n = 0, 1, or 2) are not retained in SLEEP
state, thus it is necessary to re-write these
registers when returning from the SLEEP
state.
28.3 Data Burst Transmissions
The high maximum data rate of the CC1100E
opens up for burst transmissions. A low
average data rate link (e.g. 10 kBaud) can be
realized by using a higher over-the-air data
rate. Buffering the data and transmitting in
bursts at high data rate (e.g. 500 kBaud) will
reduce the time in active mode, and hence
also reduce the average current consumption
significantly. Reducing the time in active mode
will reduce the likelihood of collisions with
other systems in the same frequency range.
Note: The sensitivity and thus transmission
range is reduced for high data rate bursts
compared to lower data rates.
28.4 Continuous Transmissions
In data streaming applications, the CC1100E
opens up for continuous transmissions at a
500 kBaud effective data rate. As the
modulation is done with a closed loop PLL,
there is no limitation in the length of a
SWRS082
transmission (open loop modulation used in
some transceivers often prevents this kind of
continuous data streaming and reduces the
effective data rate).
Page 58 of 92
CC1100E
28.5 Low Cost Systems
As the CC1100E provides 1.2 - 500 kBaud multichannel performance without any external
SAW or loop filters, a very low cost system
can be made.
The crystal package strongly influences the
price. In a size constrained PCB design, a
smaller, but more expensive, crystal may be
used.
A HC-49 type SMD crystal is used in the
CC1100E EM reference designs ([3] and 0).
28.6 Battery Operated Systems
In low power applications, the SLEEP state
with the crystal oscillator core switched off
should be used when the CC1100E is not
active. It is possible to leave the crystal
oscillator core running in the SLEEP state if
start-up time is critical. The WOR functionality
should be used in low power applications.
28.7 Increasing Output Power
In some applications it may be necessary to
extend the link range. Adding an external
power amplifier is the most effective way of
doing this. The power amplifier should be
inserted between the antenna and the balun
and matching circuit. Two T/R switches are
needed to disconnect the PA in RX mode, see
details in Figure 28.
Antenna
Filter
PA
Balun
and
Matching
T/R
switch
CC1100E
T/R
switch
Figure 28: Block Diagram of the CC1100E Usage with External Power Amplifier
29 Configuration Registers
The configuration of the CC1100E is done by
programming 8-bit registers. The optimum
configuration data based on selected system
parameters are most easily found by using the
SmartRF Studio software [8]. Complete
descriptions of the registers are given in the
following tables. After chip reset, all the
registers have default values as shown in the
tables. The optimum register setting might
differ from the default value. After a reset, all
registers that shall be different from the default
value therefore needs to be programmed
through the SPI interface.
There are 13 command strobe registers, listed
in Table 38. Accessing these registers will
initiate the change of an internal state or
mode. There are 47 normal 8-bit configuration
registers listed in Table 39. Many of these
SWRS082
registers are for test purposes only, and need
not be written for normal operation of the
CC1100E.
There are also 12 status registers that are
listed in Table 40. These registers, which are
read-only, contain information about the status
of the CC1100E.
The two FIFOs are accessed through one 8-bit
register. Write operations write to the TX FIFO,
while read operations read from the RX FIFO.
During the header byte transfer and while
writing data to a register or the TX FIFO, a
status byte is returned on the SO line. This
status byte is described in Table 21 on page
27.
Page 59 of 92
CC1100E
Table 41 summarizes the SPI address space.
The address to use is given by adding the
base address to the left and the burst and
read/write bits on the top. Note that the burst
bit has different meaning for base addresses
above and below 0x2F.
Address
Strobe
Name
Description
0x30
SRES
Reset chip.
0x31
SFSTXON
0x32
SXOFF
0x33
SCAL
Calibrate frequency synthesizer and turn it off. SCAL can be strobed from IDLE mode without
setting manual calibration mode (MCSM0.FS_AUTOCAL=0)
0x34
SRX
Enable RX. Perform calibration first if coming from IDLE and MCSM0.FS_AUTOCAL=1.
0x35
STX
In IDLE state: Enable TX. Perform calibration first if MCSM0.FS_AUTOCAL=1.
If in RX state and CCA is enabled: Only go to TX if channel is clear.
0x36
SIDLE
Exit RX / TX, turn off frequency synthesizer and exit Wake-On-Radio mode if applicable.
0x38
SWOR
Start automatic RX polling sequence (Wake-on-Radio) as described in Section 19.5 if
WORCTRL.RC_PD=0.
0x39
SPWD
Enter power down mode when CSn goes high.
0x3A
SFRX
Flush the RX FIFO buffer. Only issue SFRX in IDLE or RXFIFO_OVERFLOW states.
0x3B
SFTX
Flush the TX FIFO buffer. Only issue SFTX in IDLE or TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW states.
0x3C
SWORRST
0x3D
SNOP
Enable and calibrate frequency synthesizer (if MCSM0.FS_AUTOCAL=1). If in RX (with CCA):
Go to a wait state where only the synthesizer is running (for quick RX / TX turnaround).
Turn off crystal oscillator.
Reset real time clock to Event1 value.
No operation. May be used to get access to the chip status byte.
Table 38: Command Strobes
SWRS082
Page 60 of 92
CC1100E
Preserved in
SLEEP State
Details on
Page Number
GDO2 output pin configuration
GDO1 output pin configuration
GDO0 output pin configuration
Yes
64
Yes
64
Yes
64
RX FIFO and TX FIFO thresholds
Yes
65
Address
Register
Description
0x00
IOCFG2
0x01
IOCFG1
0x02
IOCFG0
0x03
FIFOTHR
0x04
SYNC1
Sync word, high byte
Yes
66
0x05
SYNC0
Sync word, low byte
Yes
66
0x06
PKTLEN
Packet length
Yes
66
0x07
PKTCTRL1
Packet automation control
Yes
66
0x08
PKTCTRL0
Packet automation control
Yes
67
0x09
ADDR
Device address
Yes
67
0x0A
CHANNR
Channel number
Yes
67
0x0B
FSCTRL1
Frequency synthesizer control
Yes
68
0x0C
FSCTRL0
Frequency synthesizer control
Yes
68
0x0D
FREQ2
Frequency control word, high byte
Yes
68
0x0E
FREQ1
Frequency control word, middle byte
Yes
68
0x0F
FREQ0
Frequency control word, low byte
Yes
68
0x10
MDMCFG4
Modem configuration
Yes
69
0x11
MDMCFG3
Modem configuration
Yes
69
0x12
MDMCFG2
Modem configuration
Yes
70
0x13
MDMCFG1
Modem configuration
Yes
71
0x14
MDMCFG0
Modem configuration
Yes
71
0x15
DEVIATN
Modem deviation setting
Yes
72
0x16
MCSM2
Main Radio Control State Machine configuration
Yes
73
0x17
MCSM1
Main Radio Control State Machine configuration
Yes
74
0x18
MCSM0
Main Radio Control State Machine configuration
Yes
75
0x19
FOCCFG
Frequency Offset Compensation configuration
Yes
76
0x1A
BSCFG
Bit Synchronization configuration
Yes
77
0x1B
AGCTRL2
AGC control
Yes
78
0x1C
AGCTRL1
AGC control
Yes
79
0x1D
AGCTRL0
AGC control
Yes
80
0x1E
WOREVT1
High byte Event 0 timeout
Yes
80
0x1F
WOREVT0
Low byte Event 0 timeout
Yes
81
0x20
WORCTRL
Wake On Radio control
Yes
81
0x21
FREND1
Front end RX configuration
Yes
82
0x22
FREND0
Front end TX configuration
Yes
82
0x23
FSCAL3
Frequency synthesizer calibration
Yes
82
0x24
FSCAL2
Frequency synthesizer calibration
Yes
83
0x25
FSCAL1
Frequency synthesizer calibration
Yes
83
0x26
FSCAL0
Frequency synthesizer calibration
Yes
83
0x27
RCCTRL1
RC oscillator configuration
Yes
83
0x28
RCCTRL0
RC oscillator configuration
Yes
83
0x29
FSTEST
Frequency synthesizer calibration control
No
84
0x2A
PTEST
Production test
No
84
0x2B
AGCTEST
AGC test
No
84
0x2C
TEST2
Various test settings
No
84
0x2D
TEST1
Various test settings
No
84
0x2E
TEST0
Various test settings
No
85
Table 39: Configuration Registers Overview
SWRS082
Page 61 of 92
CC1100E
Address
Register
Description
Details on page number
0x30 (0xF0)
PARTNUM
Part number for the CC1100E
85
0x31 (0xF1)
VERSION
Current version number
85
0x32 (0xF2)
FREQEST
Frequency Offset Estimate
85
0x33 (0xF3)
LQI
Demodulator estimate for Link Quality
85
0x34 (0xF4)
RSSI
Received signal strength indication
85
0x35 (0xF5)
MARCSTATE
Control state machine state
86
0x36 (0xF6)
WORTIME1
High byte of WOR timer
86
0x37 (0xF7)
WORTIME0
Low byte of WOR timer
86
0x38 (0xF8)
PKTSTATUS
Current GDOx status and packet status
87
VCO_VC_DAC
Current setting from PLL calibration
module
87
0x39 (0xF9)
TXBYTES
Underflow and number of bytes in the TX
FIFO
87
0x3A (0xFA)
RXBYTES
Overflow and number of bytes in the RX
FIFO
87
0x3B (0xFB)
0x3C (0xFC)
RCCTRL1_STATUS
Last RC oscillator calibration result
87
0x3D (0xFD)
RCCTRL0_STATUS
Last RC oscillator calibration result
88
Table 40: Status Registers Overview
SWRS082
Page 62 of 92
CC1100E
SRES
SFSTXON
SXOFF
SCAL
SRX
STX
SIDLE
SRES
SFSTXON
SXOFF
SCAL
SRX
STX
SIDLE
SWOR
SPWD
SFRX
SFTX
SWORRST
SNOP
PATABLE
TX FIFO
SWOR
SPWD
SFRX
SFTX
SWORRST
SNOP
PATABLE
RX FIFO
PATABLE
TX FIFO
Burst
+0xC0
R/W configuration registers, burst access possible
0x00
0x01
0x02
0x03
0x04
0x05
0x06
0x07
0x08
0x09
0x0A
0x0B
0x0C
0x0D
0x0E
0x0F
0x10
0x11
0x12
0x13
0x14
0x15
0x16
0x17
0x18
0x19
0x1A
0x1B
0x1C
0x1D
0x1E
0x1F
0x20
0x21
0x22
0x23
0x24
0x25
0x26
0x27
0x28
0x29
0x2A
0x2B
0x2C
0x2D
0x2E
0x2F
0x30
0x31
0x32
0x33
0x34
0x35
0x36
0x37
0x38
0x39
0x3A
0x3B
0x3C
0x3D
0x3E
0x3F
Read
Single Byte
+0x80
IOCFG2
IOCFG1
IOCFG0
FIFOTHR
SYNC1
SYNC0
PKTLEN
PKTCTRL1
PKTCTRL0
ADDR
CHANNR
FSCTRL1
FSCTRL0
FREQ2
FREQ1
FREQ0
MDMCFG4
MDMCFG3
MDMCFG2
MDMCFG1
MDMCFG0
DEVIATN
MCSM2
MCSM1
MCSM0
FOCCFG
BSCFG
AGCCTRL2
AGCCTRL1
AGCCTRL0
WOREVT1
WOREVT0
WORCTRL
FREND1
FREND0
FSCAL3
FSCAL2
FSCAL1
FSCAL0
RCCTRL1
RCCTRL0
FSTEST
PTEST
AGCTEST
TEST2
TEST1
TEST0
PARTNUM
VERSION
FREQEST
LQI
RSSI
MARCSTATE
WORTIME1
WORTIME0
PKTSTATUS
VCO_VC_DAC
TXBYTES
RXBYTES
RCCTRL1_STATUS
RCCTRL0_STATUS
PATABLE
RX FIFO
Command Strobes, Status registers
(read only) and multi byte registers
Write
Single Byte
Burst
+0x00
+0x40
Table 41: SPI Address Space
SWRS082
Page 63 of 92
CC1100E
29.1 Configuration Register Details – Registers with preserved values in SLEEP state
0x00: IOCFG2 – GDO2 Output Pin Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
6
GDO2_INV
0
R/W
Invert output, i.e. select active low (1) / high (0)
5:0
GDO2_CFG[5:0]
41 (0x29)
R/W
Default is CHP_RDYn (See Table 36 on page 55).
0x01: IOCFG1 – GDO1 Output Pin Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7
GDO_DS
0
R/W
Set high (1) or low (0) output drive strength on the GDO pins.
6
GDO1_INV
0
R/W
Invert output, i.e. select active low (1) / high (0)
5:0
GDO1_CFG[5:0]
46 (0x2E)
R/W
Default is 3-state (See Table 36 on page 55).
0x02: IOCFG0 – GDO0 Output Pin Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7
TEMP_SENSOR_ENABLE
0
R/W
Enable analog temperature sensor. Write 0 in all other register
bits when using temperature sensor.
6
GDO0_INV
0
R/W
Invert output, i.e. select active low (1) / high (0)
5:0
GDO0_CFG[5:0]
63 (0x3F)
R/W
Default is CLK_XOSC/192 (See Table 36 on page 55).
It is recommended to disable the clock output in initialization,
in order to optimize RF performance.
SWRS082
Page 64 of 92
CC1100E
0x03: FIFOTHR – RX FIFO and TX FIFO Thresholds
Bit
Field Name
7
6
ADC_RETENTION
Reset
R/W
Description
0
R/W
Reserved , write 0 for compatibility with possible future extensions
0
R/W
0: TEST1 = 0x31 and TEST2= 0x88 when waking up from SLEEP
1: TEST1 = 0x35 and TEST2 = 0x81 when waking up from SLEEP
Note that the changes in the TEST registers due to the
ADC_RETENTION bit setting are only seen INTERNALLY in the
analog part. The values read from the TEST registers when waking up
from SLEEP mode will always be the reset value.
The ADC_RETENTION bit should be set to 1 before going into SLEEP
mode if settings with an RX filter bandwidth below 325 kHz are wanted
at time of wake-up.
5:4
3:0
CLOSE_IN_RX [1:0]
FIFO_THR[3:0]
0 (00)
7 (0111)
R/W
R/W
For more details, please see DN010 [11]
Setting
RX Attenuation, Typical Values
0 (00)
0dB
1 (01)
6dB
2 (10)
12dB
3 (11)
18dB
Set the threshold for the TX FIFO and RX FIFO. The threshold is
exceeded when the number of bytes in the FIFO is equal to or higher
than the threshold value.
Setting
Bytes in TX FIFO
Bytes in RX FIFO
0 (0000)
61
4
1 (0001)
57
8
2 (0010)
53
12
3 (0011)
49
16
4 (0100)
45
20
5 (0101)
41
24
6 (0110)
37
28
7 (0111)
33
32
8 (1000)
29
36
9 (1001)
25
40
10 (1010)
21
44
11 (1011)
17
48
12 (1100)
13
52
13
(1100E)
9
56
14 (1110)
5
60
15 (1111)
1
64
SWRS082
Page 65 of 92
CC1100E
0x04: SYNC1 – Sync Word, High Byte
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
SYNC[15:8]
211 (0xD3)
R/W
8 MSB of 16-bit sync word
0x05: SYNC0 – Sync Word, Low Byte
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
SYNC[7:0]
145 (0x91)
R/W
8 LSB of 16-bit sync word
0x06: PKTLEN – Packet Length
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
PACKET_LENGTH
255 (0xFF)
R/W
Indicates the packet length when fixed packet length mode is enabled.
If variable packet length mode is used, this value indicates the
maximum packet length allowed.
0x07: PKTCTRL1 – Packet Automation Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:5
PQT[2:0]
0 (0x00)
R/W
Preamble quality estimator threshold. The preamble quality estimator
increases an internal counter by one each time a bit is received that is
different from the previous bit, and decreases the counter by 8 each time
a bit is received that is the same as the last bit.
A threshold of 4∙PQT for this counter is used to gate sync word detection.
When PQT=0 a sync word is always accepted.
4
0
R0
Not Used.
3
CRC_AUTOFLUSH
0
R/W
Enable automatic flush of RX FIFO when CRC is not OK. This requires
that only one packet is in the RXIFIFO and that packet length is limited to
the RX FIFO size.
2
APPEND_STATUS
1
R/W
When enabled, two status bytes will be appended to the payload of the
packet. The status bytes contain RSSI and LQI values, as well as CRC
OK.
1:0
ADR_CHK[1:0]
0 (00)
R/W
Controls address check configuration of received packages.
Setting
Address check configuration
0 (00)
No address check
1 (01)
Address check, no broadcast
2 (10)
Address check and 0 (0x00) broadcast
3 (11)
Address check and 0 (0x00) and 255 (0xFF)
broadcast
SWRS082
Page 66 of 92
CC1100E
0x08: PKTCTRL0 – Packet Automation Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7
6
WHITE_DATA
1
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R/W
Turn data whitening on / off
0: Whitening off
1: Whitening on
5:4
PKT_FORMAT[1:0]
3
2
CRC_EN
0 (00)
R/W
Format of RX and TX data
Setting
Packet format
0 (00)
Normal mode, use FIFOs for RX and TX
1 (01)
Synchronous serial mode, Data in on GDO0 and
data out on either of the GDOx pins
2 (10)
Random TX mode; sends random data using PN9
generator. Used for test.
Works as normal mode, setting 0 (00), in RX
3 (11)
Asynchronous serial mode, Data in on GDO0 and
data out on either of the GDOx pins
0
R0
Not used
1
R/W
1: CRC calculation in TX and CRC check in RX enabled
0: CRC disabled for TX and RX
1:0
LENGTH_CONFIG[1:0]
1 (01)
R/W
Configure the packet length
Setting
Packet length configuration
0 (00)
Fixed packet length mode. Length configured in
PKTLEN register
1 (01)
Variable packet length mode. Packet length
configured by the first byte after sync word
2 (10)
Infinite packet length mode
3 (11)
Reserved
0x09: ADDR – Device Address
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
DEVICE_ADDR[7:0]
0 (0x00)
R/W
Address used for packet filtration. Optional broadcast addresses are 0
(0x00) and 255 (0xFF).
0x0A: CHANNR – Channel Number
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
CHAN[7:0]
0 (0x00)
R/W
The 8-bit unsigned channel number, which is multiplied by the
channel spacing setting and added to the base frequency.
SWRS082
Page 67 of 92
CC1100E
0x0B: FSCTRL1 – Frequency Synthesizer Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
0
R/W
Reserved
15 (0x0F)
R/W
The desired IF frequency to employ in RX. Subtracted from FS base
frequency in RX and controls the digital complex mixer in the demodulator.
7:6
5
4:0
FREQ_IF[4:0]
f IF 
f XOSC
 FREQ _ IF
210
The default value gives an IF frequency of 381kHz, assuming a 26.0 MHz
crystal.
0x0C: FSCTRL0 – Frequency Synthesizer Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
FREQOFF[7:0]
0 (0x00)
R/W
Frequency offset added to the base frequency before being used by the
frequency synthesizer. (2s-complement).
Resolution is FXTAL/214 (1.59kHz-1.65kHz); range is ±202 kHz to ±210 kHz,
dependent of XTAL frequency.
0x0D: FREQ2 – Frequency Control Word, High Byte
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:6
FREQ[23:22]
0 (00)
R
FREQ[23:22] is always 0 (the FREQ2 register is less than 36 with 26-27
MHz crystal)
5:0
FREQ[21:16]
30 (0x1E)
R/W
FREQ [23:0] is the base frequency for the frequency synthesiser in
increments of fXOSC/216.
f carrier 
f XOSC
 FREQ 23 : 0 
216
0x0E: FREQ1 – Frequency Control Word, Middle Byte
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
FREQ[15:8]
196 (0xC4)
R/W
Ref. FREQ2 register
0x0F: FREQ0 – Frequency Control Word, Low Byte
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
FREQ[7:0]
236 (0xEC)
R/W
Ref. FREQ2 register
SWRS082
Page 68 of 92
CC1100E
0x10: MDMCFG4 – Modem Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
7:6
CHANBW_E[1:0]
2 (0x02)
R/W
5:4
CHANBW_M[1:0]
0 (0x00)
R/W
Description
Sets the decimation ratio for the delta-sigma ADC input stream and thus
the channel bandwidth.
BWchannel 
f XOSC
8  (4  CHANBW _ M )·2 CHANBW _ E
The default values give 203 kHz channel filter bandwidth, assuming a 26.0
MHz crystal.
3:0
DRATE_E[3:0]
12 (0x0C)
R/W
The exponent of the user specified symbol rate
0x11: MDMCFG3 – Modem Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
DRATE_M[7:0]
34 (0x22)
R/W
The mantissa of the user specified symbol rate. The symbol rate is
configured using an unsigned, floating-point number with 9-bit mantissa
and 4-bit exponent. The 9th bit is a hidden ‘1’. The resulting data rate is:
RDATA 
256  DRATE _ M   2 DRATE _ E  f
2 28
XOSC
The default values give a data rate of 115.051 kBaud (closest setting to
115.2 kBaud), assuming a 26.0 MHz crystal.
SWRS082
Page 69 of 92
CC1100E
0x12: MDMCFG2 – Modem Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7
DEM_DCFILT_OFF
0
R/W
Disable digital DC blocking filter before demodulator.
0 = Enable (better sensitivity)
1 = Disable (current optimized). Only for data rates
≤ 250 kBaud
The recommended IF frequency changes when the DC blocking is
disabled. Please use SmartRF Studio [8] to calculate correct register
setting.
6:4
MOD_FORMAT[2:0]
0 (000)
R/W
The modulation format of the radio signal
Setting
Modulation format
0 (000)
2-FSK
1 (001)
GFSK
2 (010)
-
3 (011)
ASK/OOK
4 (100)
-
5 (101)
-
6 (110)
-
7 (111)
MSK
ASK is only supported for output powers up to -1 dBm
MSK is only supported for data rates above 26 kBaud
3
MANCHESTER_EN
0
R/W
Enables Manchester encoding/decoding.
0 = Disable
1 = Enable
2:0
SYNC_MODE[2:0]
2 (010)
R/W
Combined sync-word qualifier mode.
The values 0 (000) and 4 (100) disables preamble and sync word
transmission in TX and preamble and sync word detection in RX.
The values 1 (001), 2 (010), 5 (101) and 6 (110) enables 16-bit sync word
transmission in TX and 16-bits sync word detection in RX. Only 15 of 16
bits need to match in RX when using setting 1 (001) or 5 (101). The values
3 (011) and 7 (111) enables repeated sync word transmission in TX and
32-bits sync word detection in RX (only 30 of 32 bits need to match).
Setting
Sync-word qualifier mode
0 (000)
No preamble/sync
1 (001)
15/16 sync word bits detected
2 (010)
16/16 sync word bits detected
3 (011)
30/32 sync word bits detected
4 (100)
No preamble/sync, carrier-sense
above threshold
5 (101)
15/16 + carrier-sense above threshold
6 (110)
16/16 + carrier-sense above threshold
7 (111)
30/32 + carrier-sense above threshold
SWRS082
Page 70 of 92
CC1100E
0x13: MDMCFG1– Modem Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7
FEC_EN
0
R/W
Enable Forward Error Correction (FEC) with interleaving for
packet payload
0 = Disable
1 = Enable (Only supported for fixed packet length mode, i.e.
PKTCTRL0.LENGTH_CONFIG=0)
6:4
NUM_PREAMBLE[2:0]
2 (010)
3:2
1:0
CHANSPC_E[1:0]
2 (10)
R/W
Sets the minimum number of preamble bytes to be transmitted
Setting
Number of preamble bytes
0 (000)
2
1 (001)
3
2 (010)
4
3 (011)
6
4 (100)
8
5 (101)
12
6 (110)
16
7 (111)
24
R0
Not used
R/W
2 bit exponent of channel spacing
0x14: MDMCFG0– Modem Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
CHANSPC_M[7:0]
248 (0xF8)
R/W
8-bit mantissa of channel spacing. The channel spacing is
multiplied by the channel number CHAN and added to the base
frequency. It is unsigned and has the format:
f CHANNEL 
f XOSC
 256  CHANSPC _ M   2 CHANSPC _ E
218
The default values give 199.951 kHz channel spacing (the
closest setting to 200 kHz), assuming 26.0 MHz crystal
frequency.
SWRS082
Page 71 of 92
CC1100E
0x15: DEVIATN – Modem Deviation Setting
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7
6:4
DEVIATION_E[2:0]
4 (100)
3
2:0
DEVIATION_M[2:0]
7 (111)
R/W
Description
R0
Not used.
R/W
Deviation exponent.
R0
Not used.
R/W
TX
Specifies the nominal frequency deviation from the carrier for
a ‘0’ (-DEVIATN) and ‘1’ (+DEVIATN) in a mantissa-exponent
format, interpreted as a 4-bit value with MSB implicit 1. The
resulting frequency deviation is given by:
2-FSK/
GFSK
f dev 
f xosc
 (8  DEVIATION _ M )  2 DEVIATION _ E
217
The default values give ±47.607 kHz deviation assuming 26.0
MHz crystal frequency.
MSK
Specifies the fraction of symbol period (1/8-8/8) during which
a phase change occurs (‘0’: +90deg, ‘1’:-90deg). Refer to the
SmartRF Studio software [8] for correct DEVIATN setting
when using MSK.
ASK/OOK
This setting has no effect.
RX
2-FSK/
GFSK
Specifies the expected frequency deviation of incoming signal,
must be approximately right for demodulation to be performed
reliably and robustly.
MSK/
This setting has no effect.
ASK/OOK
SWRS082
Page 72 of 92
CC1100E
0x16: MCSM2 – Main Radio Control State Machine Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:5
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
4
RX_TIME_RSSI
0
R/W
Direct RX termination based on RSSI measurement (carrier sense). For
ASK/OOK modulation, RX times out if there is no carrier sense in the first 8
symbol periods.
3
RX_TIME_QUAL
0
R/W
When the RX_TIME timer expires, the chip checks if sync word is found
when RX_TIME_QUAL=0, or either sync word is found or PQI is set when
RX_TIME_QUAL=1.
2:0
RX_TIME[2:0]
7 (111)
R/W
Timeout for sync word search in RX for both WOR mode and normal RX
operation. The timeout is relative to the programmed EVENT0 timeout.
The RX timeout in µs is given by EVENT0·C(RX_TIME, WOR_RES) ·26/X, where C is given by the table below and X is
the crystal oscillator frequency in MHz:
Setting
WOR_RES = 0
WOR_RES = 1
WOR_RES = 2
WOR_RES = 3
0 (000)
3.6058
18.0288
32.4519
46.8750
1 (001)
1.8029
9.0144
16.2260
23.4375
2 (010)
0.9014
4.5072
8.1130
11.7188
3 (011)
0.4507
2.2536
4.0565
5.8594
4 (100)
0.2254
1.1268
2.0282
2.9297
5 (101)
0.1127
0.5634
1.0141
1.4648
6 (110)
0.0563
0.2817
0.5071
0.7324
7 (111)
Until end of packet
As an example, EVENT0=34666, WOR_RES=0 and RX_TIME=6 corresponds to 1.96 ms RX timeout, 1 s polling interval
and 0.195% duty cycle. Note that WOR_RES should be 0 or 1 when using WOR because using WOR_RES > 1 will give a
very low duty cycle. In applications where WOR is not used all settings of WOR_RES can be used.
The duty cycle using WOR is approximated by:
Setting
WOR_RES=0
WOR_RES=1
0 (000)
12.50%
1.95%
1 (001)
6.250%
9765ppm
2 (010)
3.125%
4883ppm
3 (011)
1.563%
2441ppm
4 (100)
0.781%
NA
5 (101)
0.391%
NA
6 (110)
0.195%
NA
7 (111)
NA
Note that the RC oscillator must be enabled in order to use setting 0-6, because the timeout counts RC oscillator
periods. WOR mode does not need to be enabled.
The timeout counter resolution is limited: With RX_TIME=0, the timeout count is given by the 13 MSBs of EVENT0,
decreasing to the 7MSBs of EVENT0 with RX_TIME=6.
SWRS082
Page 73 of 92
CC1100E
0x17: MCSM1– Main Radio Control State Machine Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:6
5:4
3:2
CCA_MODE[1:0]
RXOFF_MODE[1:0]
3 (11)
0 (00)
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R/W
Selects CCA_MODE; Reflected in CCA signal
R/W
Setting
Clear channel indication
0 (00)
Always
1 (01)
If RSSI below threshold
2 (10)
Unless currently receiving a packet
3 (11)
If RSSI below threshold unless currently
receiving a packet
Select what should happen when a packet has been received
Setting
Next state after finishing packet reception
0 (00)
IDLE
1 (01)
FSTXON
2 (10)
TX
3 (11)
Stay in RX
It is not possible to set RXOFF_MODE to be TX or FSTXON and at the same
time use CCA.
1:0
TXOFF_MODE[1:0]
0 (00)
R/W
Select what should happen when a packet has been sent (TX)
Setting
Next state after finishing packet transmission
0 (00)
IDLE
1 (01)
FSTXON
2 (10)
Stay in TX (start sending preamble)
3 (11)
RX
SWRS082
Page 74 of 92
CC1100E
0x18: MCSM0– Main Radio Control State Machine Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:6
5:4
FS_AUTOCAL[1:0]
0 (00)
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R/W
Automatically calibrate when going to RX or TX, or back to IDLE
Setting
When to perform automatic calibration
0 (00)
Never (manually calibrate using SCAL strobe)
1 (01)
When going from IDLE to RX or TX (or FSTXON)
2 (10)
When going from RX or TX back to IDLE
automatically
3 (11)
Every 4th time when going from RX or TX to IDLE
automatically
In some automatic wake-on-radio (WOR) applications, using setting 3 (11)
can significantly reduce current consumption.
3:2
PO_TIMEOUT
1 (01)
R/W
Programs the number of times the six-bit ripple counter must expire after
XOSC has stabilized before CHP_RDYn goes low.
If XOSC is on (stable) during power-down, PO_TIMEOUT should be set so
that the regulated digital supply voltage has time to stabilize before
CHP_RDYn goes low (PO_TIMEOUT=2 recommended). Typical start-up
time for the voltage regulator is 50 μs.
If XOSC is off during power-down and the regulated digital supply voltage
has sufficient time to stabilize while waiting for the crystal to be stable,
PO_TIMEOUT can be set to 0. For robust operation it is recommended to
use PO_TIMEOUT=2.
Setting
Expire count
Timeout after XOSC start
0 (00)
1
Approx. 2.3 – 2.4 μs
1 (01)
16
Approx. 37 – 39 μs
2 (10)
64
Approx. 149 – 155 μs
3 (11)
256
Approx. 597 – 620 μs
Exact timeout depends on crystal frequency.
1
PIN_CTRL_EN
0
R/W
Enables the pin radio control option
0
XOSC_FORCE_ON
0
R/W
Force the XOSC to stay on in the SLEEP state.
SWRS082
Page 75 of 92
CC1100E
0x19: FOCCFG – Frequency Offset Compensation Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:6
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
5
FOC_BS_CS_GATE
1
R/W
If set, the demodulator freezes the frequency offset compensation and clock
recovery feedback loops until the CS signal goes high.
4:3
FOC_PRE_K[1:0]
2 (10)
R/W
The frequency compensation loop gain to be used before a sync word is
detected.
2
1:0
FOC_POST_K
FOC_LIMIT[1:0]
1
2 (10)
R/W
R/W
Setting
Freq. compensation loop gain before sync word
0 (00)
K
1 (01)
2K
2 (10)
3K
3 (11)
4K
The frequency compensation loop gain to be used after a sync word is
detected.
Setting
Freq. compensation loop gain after sync word
0
Same as FOC_PRE_K
1
K/2
The saturation point for the frequency offset compensation algorithm:
Setting
Saturation point (max compensated offset)
0 (00)
±0 (no frequency offset compensation)
1 (01)
±BWCHAN/8
2 (10)
±BWCHAN/4
3 (11)
±BWCHAN/2
Frequency offset compensation is not supported for ASK/OOK; Always use
FOC_LIMIT=0 with these modulation formats.
SWRS082
Page 76 of 92
CC1100E
0x1A: BSCFG – Bit Synchronization Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:6
BS_PRE_KI[1:0]
1 (01)
R/W
The clock recovery feedback loop integral gain to be used before a sync word
is detected (used to correct offsets in data rate):
5:4
3
2
1:0
BS_PRE_KP[1:0]
BS_POST_KI
BS_POST_KP
BS_LIMIT[1:0]
2 (10)
1
1
0 (00)
R/W
R/W
R/W
R/W
Setting
Clock recovery loop integral gain before sync word
0 (00)
KI
1 (01)
2KI
2 (10)
3KI
3 (11)
4KI
The clock recovery feedback loop proportional gain to be used before a sync
word is detected.
Setting
Clock recovery loop proportional gain before sync word
0 (00)
KP
1 (01)
2KP
2 (10)
3KP
3 (11)
4KP
The clock recovery feedback loop integral gain to be used after a sync word is
detected.
Setting
Clock recovery loop integral gain after sync word
0
Same as BS_PRE_KI
1
KI /2
The clock recovery feedback loop proportional gain to be used after a sync
word is detected.
Setting
Clock recovery loop proportional gain after sync word
0
Same as BS_PRE_KP
1
KP
The saturation point for the data rate offset compensation algorithm:
Setting
Data rate offset saturation (max data rate difference)
0 (00)
±0 (No data rate offset compensation performed)
1 (01)
±3.125 % data rate offset
2 (10)
±6.25 % data rate offset
3 (11)
±12.5 % data rate offset
SWRS082
Page 77 of 92
CC1100E
0x1B: AGCCTRL2 – AGC Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:6
MAX_DVGA_GAIN[1:0]
0 (00)
R/W
Reduces the maximum allowable DVGA gain.
5:3
2:0
MAX_LNA_GAIN[2:0]
MAGN_TARGET[2:0]
0 (000)
3 (011)
R/W
R/W
Setting
Allowable DVGA settings
0 (00)
All gain settings can be used
1 (01)
The highest gain setting can not be used
2 (10)
The 2 highest gain settings can not be used
3 (11)
The 3 highest gain settings can not be used
Sets the maximum allowable LNA + LNA 2 gain relative to the
maximum possible gain.
Setting
Maximum allowable LNA + LNA 2 gain
0 (000)
Maximum possible LNA + LNA 2 gain
1 (001)
Approx. 2.6 dB below maximum possible gain
2 (010)
Approx. 6.1 dB below maximum possible gain
3 (011)
Approx. 7.4 dB below maximum possible gain
4 (100)
Approx. 9.2 dB below maximum possible gain
5 (101)
Approx. 11.5 dB below maximum possible gain
6 (110)
Approx. 14.6 dB below maximum possible gain
7 (111)
Approx. 17.1 dB below maximum possible gain
These bits set the target value for the averaged amplitude from the
digital channel filter (1 LSB = 0 dB).
Setting
Target amplitude from channel filter
0 (000)
24 dB
1 (001)
27 dB
2 (010)
30 dB
3 (011)
33 dB
4 (100)
36 dB
5 (101)
38 dB
6 (110)
40 dB
7 (111)
42 dB
SWRS082
Page 78 of 92
CC1100E
0x1C: AGCCTRL1 – AGC Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
6
AGC_LNA_PRIORITY
1
R/W
Selects between two different strategies for LNA and LNA 2
gain adjustment. When 1, the LNA gain is decreased first.
When 0, the LNA 2 gain is decreased to minimum before
decreasing LNA gain.
5:4
CARRIER_SENSE_REL_THR[1:0]
0 (00)
R/W
Sets the relative change threshold for asserting carrier sense
3:0
CARRIER_SENSE_ABS_THR[3:0]
0
(0000)
R/W
Setting
Carrier sense relative threshold
0 (00)
Relative carrier sense threshold disabled
1 (01)
6 dB increase in RSSI value
2 (10)
10 dB increase in RSSI value
3 (11)
14 dB increase in RSSI value
Sets the absolute RSSI threshold for asserting carrier sense.
The 2-complement signed threshold is programmed in steps of
1 dB and is relative to the MAGN_TARGET setting.
Setting
Carrier sense absolute threshold
(Equal to channel filter amplitude when AGC
has not decreased gain)
SWRS082
-8 (1000)
Absolute carrier sense threshold disabled
-7 (1001)
7 dB below MAGN_TARGET setting
…
…
-1 (1111)
1 dB below MAGN_TARGET setting
0 (0000)
At MAGN_TARGET setting
1 (0001)
1 dB above MAGN_TARGET setting
…
…
7 (0111)
7 dB above MAGN_TARGET setting
Page 79 of 92
CC1100E
0x1D: AGCCTRL0 – AGC Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:6
HYST_LEVEL[1:0]
2 (10)
R/W
Sets the level of hysteresis on the magnitude deviation (internal AGC
signal that determine gain changes).
5:4
3:2
1:0
WAIT_TIME[1:0]
AGC_FREEZE[1:0]
FILTER_LENGTH[1:0]
1 (01)
0 (00)
1 (01)
R/W
R/W
R/W
Setting
Description
0 (00)
No hysteresis, small symmetric dead zone, high gain
1 (01)
Low hysteresis, small asymmetric dead zone, medium
gain
2 (10)
Medium hysteresis, medium asymmetric dead zone,
medium gain
3 (11)
Large hysteresis, large asymmetric dead zone, low
gain
Sets the number of channel filter samples from a gain adjustment
has been made until the AGC algorithm starts accumulating new
samples.
Setting
Channel filter samples
0 (00)
8
1 (01)
16
2 (10)
24
3 (11)
32
Control when the AGC gain should be frozen.
Setting
Function
0 (00)
Normal operation. Always adjust gain when required.
1 (01)
The gain setting is frozen when a sync word has been
found.
2 (10)
Manually freeze the analogue gain setting and
continue to adjust the digital gain.
3 (11)
Manually freezes both the analogue and the digital
gain setting. Used for manually overriding the gain.
Sets the averaging length for the amplitude from the channel filter.
Sets the OOK/ASK decision boundary for OOK/ASK reception.
Setting
Channel filter
samples
OOK/ASK decision boundary
0 (00)
8
4 dB
1 (01)
16
8 dB
2 (10)
32
12 dB
3 (11)
64
16 dB
0x1E: WOREVT1 – High Byte Event0 Timeout
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
EVENT0[15:8]
135 (0x87)
R/W
High byte of EVENT0 timeout register
t Event 0 
SWRS082
750
 EVENT 0  2 5WOR _ RES
f XOSC
Page 80 of 92
CC1100E
0x1F: WOREVT0 –Low Byte Event0 Timeout
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
EVENT0[7:0]
107 (0x6B)
R/W
Low byte of EVENT0 timeout register.
The default EVENT0 value gives 1.0s timeout, assuming a 26.0 MHz
crystal.
0x20: WORCTRL – Wake On Radio Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7
RC_PD
1
R/W
Power down signal to RC oscillator. When written to 0, automatic initial
calibration will be performed
6:4
EVENT1[2:0]
7 (111)
R/W
Timeout setting from register block. Decoded to Event 1 timeout. RC
oscillator clock frequency equals FXOSC/750, which is 34.7 – 36 kHz,
depending on crystal frequency. The table below lists the number of clock
periods after Event 0 before Event 1 times out.
3
RC_CAL
1
2
1:0
WOR_RES
0 (00)
Setting
tEvent1
0 (000)
4 (0.111 – 0.115 ms)
1 (001)
6 (0.167 – 0.173 ms)
2 (010)
8 (0.222 – 0.230 ms)
3 (011)
12 (0.333 – 0.346 ms)
4 (100)
16 (0.444 – 0.462 ms)
5 (101)
24 (0.667 – 0.692 ms)
6 (110)
32 (0.889 – 0.923 ms)
7 (111)
48 (1.333 – 1.385 ms)
R/W
Enables (1) or disables (0) the RC oscillator calibration.
R0
Not used
R/W
Controls the Event 0 resolution as well as maximum timeout of the WOR
module and maximum timeout under normal RX operation::
Setting
Resolution (1 LSB)
Max timeout
0 (00)
1 period (28 – 29 μs)
1.8 – 1.9 seconds
5
1 (01)
2 periods (0.89 – 0.92 ms)
58 – 61 seconds
2 (10)
210 periods (28 – 30 ms)
31 – 32 minutes
3 (11)
15
2 periods (0.91 – 0.94 s)
16.5 – 17.2 hours
Note that WOR_RES should be 0 or 1 when using WOR because
WOR_RES > 1 will give a very low duty cycle.
In normal RX operation all settings of WOR_RES can be used.
SWRS082
Page 81 of 92
CC1100E
0x21: FREND1 – Front End RX Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:6
LNA_CURRENT[1:0]
1 (01)
R/W
Adjusts front-end LNA PTAT current output
5:4
LNA2MIX_CURRENT[1:0]
1 (01)
R/W
Adjusts front-end PTAT outputs
3:2
LODIV_BUF_CURRENT_RX[1:0]
1 (01)
R/W
Adjusts current in RX LO buffer (LO input to mixer)
1:0
MIX_CURRENT[1:0]
2 (10)
R/W
Adjusts current in mixer
0x22: FREND0 – Front End TX Configuration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:6
5:4
LODIV_BUF_CURRENT_TX[1:0]
1 (0x01)
3
2:0
PA_POWER[2:0]
0 (0x00)
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R/W
Adjusts current TX LO buffer (input to PA). The value to
use in this field is given by the SmartRF Studio software
[8].
R0
Not used
R/W
Selects PA power setting. This value is an index to the
PATABLE, which can be programmed with up to 8 different
PA settings. In OOK/ASK mode, this selects the PATABLE
index to use when transmitting a ‘1’. PATABLE index zero
is used in OOK/ASK when transmitting a ‘0’. The PATABLE
settings from index ‘0’ to the PA_POWER value are used for
ASK TX shaping, and for power ramp-up/ramp-down at the
start/end of transmission in all TX modulation formats.
0x23: FSCAL3 – Frequency Synthesizer Calibration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:6
FSCAL3[7:6]
2 (0x02)
R/W
Frequency synthesizer calibration configuration. The value
to write in this field before calibration is given by the
SmartRF Studio software.
5:4
CHP_CURR_CAL_EN[1:0]
2 (0x02)
R/W
Disable charge pump calibration stage when 0.
3:0
FSCAL3[3:0]
9 (1001)
R/W
Frequency synthesizer calibration results register. Digital
bit vector defining the charge pump output current, on an
FSCAL3[3:0]/4
exponential scale: I_OUT = I0·2
Fast frequency hopping without calibration for each hop
can be done by calibrating upfront for each frequency and
saving the resulting FSCAL3, FSCAL2 and FSCAL1 register
values. Between each frequency hop, calibration can be
replaced by writing the FSCAL3, FSCAL2 and FSCAL1
register values corresponding to the next RF frequency.
Please note that for operation at 950-956 MHz targeting
ARIB STD-T96 FSCAL3 [7:4] needs to be set to 0xA
SWRS082
Page 82 of 92
CC1100E
0x24: FSCAL2 – Frequency Synthesizer Calibration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:6
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
5
VCO_CORE_H_EN
0
R/W
Choose high (1) / low (0) VCO
4:0
FSCAL2[4:0]
10 (0x0A)
R/W
Frequency synthesizer calibration results register. VCO current
calibration result and override value.
Fast frequency hopping without calibration for each hop can be done by
calibrating upfront for each frequency and saving the resulting FSCAL3,
FSCAL2 and FSCAL1 register values. Between each frequency hop,
calibration can be replaced by writing the FSCAL3, FSCAL2 and FSCAL1
register values corresponding to the next RF frequency.
0x25: FSCAL1 – Frequency Synthesizer Calibration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:6
5:0
FSCAL1[5:0]
32 (0x20)
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R/W
Frequency synthesizer calibration results register. Capacitor array
setting for VCO coarse tuning.
Fast frequency hopping without calibration for each hop can be done by
calibrating upfront for each frequency and saving the resulting FSCAL3,
FSCAL2 and FSCAL1 register values. Between each frequency hop,
calibration can be replaced by writing the FSCAL3, FSCAL2 and FSCAL1
register values corresponding to the next RF frequency.
0x26: FSCAL0 – Frequency Synthesizer Calibration
Bit
Field Name
Reset
FSCAL0[6:0]
13 (0x0D)
7
6:0
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R/W
Frequency synthesizer calibration control. The value to use in this
register is given by the SmartRF Studio software [8].
Please note that for operation at 950-956 MHz targeting ARIB STD-T96,
FSCAL0 needs to be set to 0x07
0x27: RCCTRL1 – RC Oscillator Configuration
Bit
Field Name
7
6:0
RCCTRL1[6:0]
Reset
R/W
Description
0
R0
Not used
65 (0x41)
R/W
RC oscillator configuration.
0x28: RCCTRL0 – RC Oscillator Configuration
Bit
Field Name
7
6:0
RCCTRL0[6:0]
Reset
R/W
Description
0
R0
Not used
0 (0x00)
R/W
RC oscillator configuration.
SWRS082
Page 83 of 92
CC1100E
29.2 Configuration Register Details – Registers that Loose Programming in SLEEP State
0x29: FSTEST – Frequency Synthesizer Calibration Control
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
FSTEST[7:0]
89 (0x59)
R/W
For test only. Do not write to this register.
0x2A: PTEST – Production Test
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
PTEST[7:0]
127 (0x7F)
R/W
Writing 0xBF to this register makes the on-chip temperature sensor
available in the IDLE state. The default 0x7F value should then be
written back before leaving the IDLE state. Other use of this register is
for test only.
0x2B: AGCTEST – AGC Test
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
AGCTEST[7:0]
63 (0x3F)
R/W
For test only. Do not write to this register.
0x2C: TEST2 – Various Test Settings
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
TEST2[7:0]
136 (0x88)
R/W
The value to use in this register is given by the SmartRF Studio
software [8]. This register will be forced to 0x88 or 0x81 when it wakes
up from SLEEP mode, depending on the configuration of FIFOTHR.
ADC_RETENTION.
Note that the value read from this register when waking up from SLEEP
always is the reset value (0x88) regardless of the ADC_RETENTION
setting. The inversion of some of the bits due to the ADC_RETENTION
setting is only seen INTERNALLY in the analog part.
0x2D: TEST1 – Various Test Settings
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
TEST1[7:0]
49 (0x31)
R/W
The value to use in this register is given by the SmartRF Studio
software [8]. This register will be forced to 0x31 or 0x35 when it wakes
up from SLEEP mode, depending on the configuration of FIFOTHR.
ADC_RETENTION.
Note that the value read from this register when waking up from SLEEP
always is the reset value (0x31) regardless of the ADC_RETENTION
setting. The inversion of some of the bits due to the ADC_RETENTION
setting is only seen INTERNALLY in the analog part.
SWRS082
Page 84 of 92
CC1100E
0x2E: TEST0 – Various Test Settings
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:2
TEST0[7:2]
2 (0x02)
R/W
The value to use in this register is given by the SmartRF Studio
software [8].
1
VCO_SEL_CAL_EN
1
R/W
Enable VCO selection calibration stage when 1
0
TEST0[0]
1
R/W
The value to use in this register is given by the SmartRF Studio
software [8].
29.3 Status Register Details
0x30 (0xF0): PARTNUM – Chip ID
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
PARTNUM[7:0]
0 (0x00)
R
Chip part number
0x31 (0xF1): VERSION – Chip ID
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
Description
7:0
VERSION[7:0]
5 (0x05)
R
Chip version number.
0x32 (0xF2): FREQEST – Frequency Offset Estimate from Demodulator
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:0
FREQOFF_EST
R/W
Description
R
The estimated frequency offset (2’s complement) of the carrier. Resolution is
FXTAL/214 (1.59 - 1.65 kHz); range is ±202 kHz to ±210 kHz, depending on
XTAL frequency.
Frequency offset compensation is only supported for 2-FSK, GFSK, and MSK
modulation. This register will read 0 when using ASK or OOK modulation.
0x33 (0xF3): LQI – Demodulator Estimate for Link Quality
Bit
Field Name
7
6:0
Reset
R/W
Description
CRC OK
R
The last CRC comparison matched. Cleared when entering/restarting RX
mode.
LQI_EST[6:0]
R
The Link Quality Indicator estimates how easily a received signal can be
demodulated. Calculated over the 64 symbols following the sync word
0x34 (0xF4): RSSI – Received Signal Strength Indication
Bit
Field Name
7:0
RSSI
Reset
R/W
Description
R
Received signal strength indicator
SWRS082
Page 85 of 92
CC1100E
0x35 (0xF5): MARCSTATE – Main Radio Control State Machine State
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:5
4:0
MARC_STATE[4:0]
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R
Main Radio Control FSM State
Value
State name
State (Figure 20, page 45)
0 (0x00)
SLEEP
SLEEP
1 (0x01)
IDLE
IDLE
2 (0x02)
XOFF
XOFF
3 (0x03)
VCOON_MC
MANCAL
4 (0x04)
REGON_MC
MANCAL
5 (0x05)
MANCAL
MANCAL
6 (0x06)
VCOON
FS_WAKEUP
7 (0x07)
REGON
FS_WAKEUP
8 (0x08)
STARTCAL
CALIBRATE
9 (0x09)
BWBOOST
SETTLING
10 (0x0A)
FS_LOCK
SETTLING
11 (0x0B)
IFADCON
SETTLING
12 (0x0C)
ENDCAL
CALIBRATE
13 (0x0D)
RX
RX
14 (0x0E)
RX_END
RX
15 (0x0F)
RX_RST
RX
16 (0x10)
TXRX_SWITCH
TXRX_SETTLING
17 (0x11)
RXFIFO_OVERFLOW
RXFIFO_OVERFLOW
18 (0x12)
FSTXON
FSTXON
19 (0x13)
TX
TX
20 (0x14)
TX_END
TX
21 (0x15)
RXTX_SWITCH
RXTX_SETTLING
22 (0x16)
TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW
TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW
Note: it is not possible to read back the SLEEP or XOFF state numbers
because setting CSn low will make the chip enter the IDLE mode from the
SLEEP or XOFF states.
0x36 (0xF6): WORTIME1 – High Byte of WOR Time
Bit
Field Name
7:0
TIME[15:8]
Reset
R/W
Description
R
High byte of timer value in WOR module
0x37 (0xF7): WORTIME0 – Low Byte of WOR Time
Bit
Field Name
7:0
TIME[7:0]
Reset
R/W
Description
R
Low byte of timer value in WOR module
SWRS082
Page 86 of 92
CC1100E
0x38 (0xF8): PKTSTATUS – Current GDOx Status and Packet Status
Bit
Field Name
7
Reset
R/W
Description
CRC_OK
R
The last CRC comparison matched. Cleared when entering/restarting RX
mode.
6
CS
R
Carrier sense
5
PQT_REACHED
R
Preamble Quality reached
4
CCA
R
Channel is clear
3
SFD
R
Sync word found. Asserted when sync word has been sent / received,
and de-asserted at the end of the packet. In RX, this bit will de-assert
when the optional address check fails or the radio enter
RX_OVERFLOW state. In TX this bit will de-assert if the radio enters
TX_UNDERFLOW state.
2
GDO2
R
Current GDO2 value. Note: the reading gives the non-inverted value
irrespective of what IOCFG2.GDO2_INV is programmed to.
It is not recommended to check for PLL lock by reading PKTSTATUS
[2] with GDO2_CFG=0x0A.
1
0
GDO0
R0
Not used
R
Current GDO0 value. Note: the reading gives the non-inverted value
irrespective of what IOCFG0.GDO0_INV is programmed to.
It is not recommended to check for PLL lock by reading PKTSTATUS
[0] with GDO0_CFG=0x0A.
0x39 (0xF9): VCO_VC_DAC – Current Setting from PLL Calibration Module
Bit
Field Name
Reset
7:0
VCO_VC_DAC[7:0]
R/W
Description
R
Status register for test only.
0x3A (0xFA): TXBYTES – Underflow and Number of Bytes
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
7
TXFIFO_UNDERFLOW
R
6:0
NUM_TXBYTES
R
Description
Number of bytes in TX FIFO
0x3B (0xFB): RXBYTES – Overflow and Number of Bytes
Bit
Field Name
Reset
R/W
7
RXFIFO_OVERFLOW
R
6:0
NUM_RXBYTES
R
Description
Number of bytes in RX FIFO
0x3C (0xFC): RCCTRL1_STATUS – Last RC Oscillator Calibration Result
Bit
Field Name
7
6:0
RCCTRL1_STATUS[6:0]
Reset
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R
Contains the value from the last run of the RC oscillator calibration
routine.
For usage description refer to AN047 [7]
SWRS082
Page 87 of 92
CC1100E
0x3D (0xFD): RCCTRL0_STATUS – Last RC Oscillator Calibration Result
Bit
Field Name
7
6:0
RCCTRL0_STATUS[6:0]
Reset
R/W
Description
R0
Not used
R
Contains the value from the last run of the RC oscillator calibration
routine.
For usage description refer to Application Note AN047 [7].
SWRS082
Page 88 of 92
CC1100E
30 Package Description (QFN 20)
30.1 Recommended PCB Layout for Package (QFN 20)
Figure 29: Recommended PCB Layout for QFN 20 Package
Note: Figure 29 is an illustration only and not to scale. There are five 10 mil via holes
distributed symmetrically in the ground pad under the package. See also the CC1100EEM
reference designs ([3] and [4]).
30.2 Soldering Information
The recommendations for lead-free reflow in IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020 should be followed.
SWRS082
Page 89 of 92
CC1100E
30.3 Ordering Information
Orderable
Device
Status
Package
Type
Package
Drawing
Pins
Package
Qty
Eco Plan (2)
(1)
Lead
Finish
MSL
Peak
Temp (3)
CC1100ERTKR
Active
QFN
RTK
20
3000
Green (RoHS &
no Sb/Br)
Cu NiPdAu
LEVEL3-260C
Green (RoHS &
no Sb/Br)
Cu NiPdAu
CC1100ERTKT
Active
QFN
RTK
20
250
1 YEAR
LEVEL3-260C
1 YEAR
Orderable Evaluation Module
Description
Minimum Order Quantity
CC1100E-EMK470
CC1100E Evaluation Module Kit, 470-510 MHz
1
CC1100E-EMK950
CC1100E Evaluation Module Kit, 950-960 MHz
1
Table 42: Ordering Information
SWRS082
Page 90 of 92
CC1100E
References
[1]
CC1101 Datasheet
[2]
CC1100 Datasheet
[3]
CC1100E EM 470 MHz Reference Design
[4]
CC1100E EM 950 MHz Reference Design
[5]
CC1100E Errata Note
[6]
ARIB STD-T96 ver.1.0
[7]
AN047 CC1100/CC2500 – Wake-On-Radio (swra126.pdf)
[8]
SmartRF Studio (swrc046.zip)
[9]
CC1100 CC1101 CC1100E CC2500 Examples Libraries (swrc021.zip)
[10]
CC1100/CC1150DK, CC1101DK, and CC2500/CC2550DK Examples and Libraries User
Manual (swru109.pdf)
[11]
DN010 Close-in Reception with CC1101 (and CC1100E) (swra147.pdf)
[12]
DN015 Permanent Frequency Offset Compensation (swra159.pdf)
[13]
DN505 RSSI Interpretation and Timing (swra114.pdf)
[14]
AN058 Antenna Selection Guide (swra161.pdf)
[15]
DN022 CC11xx OOK/ASK register settings (swra215.pdf)
[16]
DN005 CC11xx Sensitivity versus Frequency Offset and Crystal Accuracy (swra122.pdf)
[17]
DN501 PATABLE Access
[18]
DN504 FEC Implementation
®
SWRS082
Page 91 of 92
CC1100E
31
General Information
31.1 Document History
Revision
Date
Description/Changes
SWRS082
April 2009
First data sheet release
Table 43: Document History
SWRS082
Page 92 of 92
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
16-Feb-2012
TAPE AND REEL INFORMATION
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Package Pins
Type Drawing
SPQ
Reel
Reel
A0
Diameter Width (mm)
(mm) W1 (mm)
B0
(mm)
K0
(mm)
P1
(mm)
W
Pin1
(mm) Quadrant
CC1100ERTKR
VQFN
RTK
20
3000
330.0
12.4
4.3
4.3
1.5
8.0
12.0
Q2
CC1100ERTKT
VQFN
RTK
20
250
330.0
12.4
4.3
4.3
1.5
8.0
12.0
Q2
Pack Materials-Page 1
PACKAGE MATERIALS INFORMATION
www.ti.com
16-Feb-2012
*All dimensions are nominal
Device
Package Type
Package Drawing
Pins
SPQ
Length (mm)
Width (mm)
Height (mm)
CC1100ERTKR
VQFN
RTK
20
3000
338.1
338.1
20.6
CC1100ERTKT
VQFN
RTK
20
250
338.1
338.1
20.6
Pack Materials-Page 2
IMPORTANT NOTICE
Texas Instruments Incorporated and its subsidiaries (TI) reserve the right to make corrections, modifications, enhancements, improvements,
and other changes to its products and services at any time and to discontinue any product or service without notice. Customers should
obtain the latest relevant information before placing orders and should verify that such information is current and complete. All products are
sold subject to TI’s terms and conditions of sale supplied at the time of order acknowledgment.
TI warrants performance of its hardware products to the specifications applicable at the time of sale in accordance with TI’s standard
warranty. Testing and other quality control techniques are used to the extent TI deems necessary to support this warranty. Except where
mandated by government requirements, testing of all parameters of each product is not necessarily performed.
TI assumes no liability for applications assistance or customer product design. Customers are responsible for their products and
applications using TI components. To minimize the risks associated with customer products and applications, customers should provide
adequate design and operating safeguards.
TI does not warrant or represent that any license, either express or implied, is granted under any TI patent right, copyright, mask work right,
or other TI intellectual property right relating to any combination, machine, or process in which TI products or services are used. Information
published by TI regarding third-party products or services does not constitute a license from TI to use such products or services or a
warranty or endorsement thereof. Use of such information may require a license from a third party under the patents or other intellectual
property of the third party, or a license from TI under the patents or other intellectual property of TI.
Reproduction of TI information in TI data books or data sheets is permissible only if reproduction is without alteration and is accompanied
by all associated warranties, conditions, limitations, and notices. Reproduction of this information with alteration is an unfair and deceptive
business practice. TI is not responsible or liable for such altered documentation. Information of third parties may be subject to additional
restrictions.
Resale of TI products or services with statements different from or beyond the parameters stated by TI for that product or service voids all
express and any implied warranties for the associated TI product or service and is an unfair and deceptive business practice. TI is not
responsible or liable for any such statements.
TI products are not authorized for use in safety-critical applications (such as life support) where a failure of the TI product would reasonably
be expected to cause severe personal injury or death, unless officers of the parties have executed an agreement specifically governing
such use. Buyers represent that they have all necessary expertise in the safety and regulatory ramifications of their applications, and
acknowledge and agree that they are solely responsible for all legal, regulatory and safety-related requirements concerning their products
and any use of TI products in such safety-critical applications, notwithstanding any applications-related information or support that may be
provided by TI. Further, Buyers must fully indemnify TI and its representatives against any damages arising out of the use of TI products in
such safety-critical applications.
TI products are neither designed nor intended for use in military/aerospace applications or environments unless the TI products are
specifically designated by TI as military-grade or "enhanced plastic." Only products designated by TI as military-grade meet military
specifications. Buyers acknowledge and agree that any such use of TI products which TI has not designated as military-grade is solely at
the Buyer's risk, and that they are solely responsible for compliance with all legal and regulatory requirements in connection with such use.
TI products are neither designed nor intended for use in automotive applications or environments unless the specific TI products are
designated by TI as compliant with ISO/TS 16949 requirements. Buyers acknowledge and agree that, if they use any non-designated
products in automotive applications, TI will not be responsible for any failure to meet such requirements.
Following are URLs where you can obtain information on other Texas Instruments products and application solutions:
Products
Applications
Audio
www.ti.com/audio
Automotive and Transportation www.ti.com/automotive
Amplifiers
amplifier.ti.com
Communications and Telecom www.ti.com/communications
Data Converters
dataconverter.ti.com
Computers and Peripherals
www.ti.com/computers
DLP® Products
www.dlp.com
Consumer Electronics
www.ti.com/consumer-apps
DSP
dsp.ti.com
Energy and Lighting
www.ti.com/energy
Clocks and Timers
www.ti.com/clocks
Industrial
www.ti.com/industrial
Interface
interface.ti.com
Medical
www.ti.com/medical
Logic
logic.ti.com
Security
www.ti.com/security
Power Mgmt
power.ti.com
Space, Avionics and Defense
www.ti.com/space-avionics-defense
Microcontrollers
microcontroller.ti.com
Video and Imaging
www.ti.com/video
RFID
www.ti-rfid.com
OMAP Mobile Processors
www.ti.com/omap
Wireless Connectivity
www.ti.com/wirelessconnectivity
TI E2E Community Home Page
e2e.ti.com
Mailing Address: Texas Instruments, Post Office Box 655303, Dallas, Texas 75265
Copyright © 2012, Texas Instruments Incorporated