HSDL-3003 IrDA® Data Compliant Low Power 115.2 kbit/s with Remote Control Infrared Transceiver Data Sheet Description The HSDL-3003 is a small form factor enhanced infrared (IR) transceiver module that provides the capability of (1) interface between logic and IR signals for through-air, serial, half-duplex IR data link, and (2) IR remote control transmission operating at the optimum 940 nm wavelength for universal remote control applications. For IR data communication, the HSDL-3003 provides the flexibility of low power SIR applications and remote control applications with no external components needed for the selection of the type of application. The transceiver is compliant to IrDA® Physical Layer Specification Version 1.4 Low Power from 9.6 kbit/s to 115.2 kbit/s (SIR) and it is IEC 825-Class 1 Eye Safe. The HSDL-3003 has very low idle current and can be shutdown completely to achieve very low power consumption. In the shutdown mode, the PIN diode will be inactive and thus producing very little photocurrent even under very bright ambient light. Such features are ideal for battery operated handheld products such as PDAs and mobile phones. General Features • Guaranteed temperature performance, –20° to 70°C – Critical parameters are guaranteed over temperature and supply voltage • Low power consumption • Small module size – Height: 2.70 mm – Width: 8.00 mm – Depth: 2.95 mm • Minimum external components – Integrated single-biased LED resistor – Direct interoperability to MPU – Programmable Txd features – Integrated remote control FET • Withstands >100 mVp-p power supply ripple typically • VCC supply 2.4 to 3.6 volts • Integrated EMI shield • Designed to accommodate light loss with cosmetic windows • IEC 825-Class 1 eye safe • Lead-free and RoHS compliant Remote Control Features • Wide angle and high radiant intensity • Spectrally suited to remote control transmission function at 940 nm typically • Typical link distance up to 8 meters IrDA® Data Features • Fully compliant to IrDA® Physical Layer Specification 1.4 low power from 9.6 kbit/s to 115.2 kbit/s (SIR) – Excellent nose-to-nose operation – Link distance up to 50 cm typically • Complete shutdown for TxD_IrDA, RxD_IrDA, and PIN diode • Low power consumption – Low idle current, 50 µA typically – Low shutdown current, 10 nA typically • LED stuck-high protection Applications • Mobile data communication and universal remote control transmission – Personal digital assistants (PDAs) – Mobile phones CAUTION: The BiCMOS inherent to this design of this component increases the component’s susceptibility to damage from Electrostatic Discharge (ESD). It is advised that normal static precautions be taken in handling and assembly of this component to prevent damage and/or degradation, which may be induced by ESD. Order Information Part Number Packaging Type Package Quantity HSDL-3003-021 Tape and Reel Front View 2500 HSDL-3003-001 Tape and Reel Front View 500 Marking Information The unit is marked with a number ‘2’ and ‘YWWLL’ on the shield for front option. Y = year WW = work week LL = lot information VCC VCC (6) CX2 GND CX1 REAR VIEW GND (8) HSDL-3003 TRANSCEIVER MODULE TRANSCEIVER IC VOLTAGE/ CURRENT REFERENCE BLOCK 8 SHUTDOWN RxD_IrDA (4) SHIELD SHUTDOWN LEDA (1) SD (5) TxD_RC (7) TxD_IrDA (3) RC/IR TRANSMITTER SELECT EYE SAFETY -RC EYE SAFETY -IR TRANSMITTER IR_BUFFER CX3 R1 DETECTOR RC_BUFFER VLED PHOTODETECTOR PRE AMP OUTPUT BUFFER RECEIVER RC_LED IR_LED Figure 1. Functional block diagram of low power IrDA link distance and remote control. 2 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 I/O Pins Configuration Table Pin Symbol I/O Description Notes 1 LEDA I IR and Remote Control LED Driver Tied through external resistor, R1, to VLED from 2.4 to 4.5 Volt 2 N.C. – No Connection No Connection 3 TxD_IrDA I IrDA Transmitter Data Input. Active High Logic high turns on the IrDA LED. If held HIGH longer than ~50 µs, the IrDA LED is turned off. TxD_IrDA must be driven either HIGH or LOW. Do not leave the pin floating 4 RxD_IrDA O IrDA Receiver Data Output. Active Low Output is at LOW pulse response when light pulse is seen 5 SD I Shutdown. Active High Complete shutdown TxD_IrDA, RxD_IrDA, and PIN diode. Do not leave the pin floating 6 VCC I Supply Voltage Regulated, 2.4 to 3.6 Volt 7 TxD_RC I Remote Control Transmission Input. Active High Logic high turns on the RC LED. If held HIGH longer than ~50 µs, the RC LED is turned off. TxD_RC must be driven either HIGH or LOW. Do not leave the pin floating 8 GND I Connect to System Ground Tie this pin to system ground – Shield – EMI Shield Tie to system ground via a low inductance trace. For best performance, do not tie it to the HSDL-3003 GND pin directly Recommended Application Circuit Components Component Recommended Value R1 1.8 Ω ± 5%, 0.25 Watt for 2.4 ≤ VLED ≤ 2.7 V 2.7 Ω ± 5%, 0.25 Watt for 2.7 ≤ VLED ≤ 3.3 V 3.3 Ω ± 5%, 0.25 Watt for 3.0 ≤ VLED ≤ 3.6 V 4.7 Ω ± 5%, 0.25 Watt for 3.6 ≤ VLED ≤ 4.5 V CX1[1] 0.47 µF ± 20%, X7R Ceramic CX2[2] 6.8 µF ± 20%, Tantalum CX3 6.8 µF ± 20%, Tantalum Notes: 1. CX1 must be placed within 0.7 cm of HSDL-3003 to obtain optimum noise immunity. 2. The supply rejection performance can be enhanced by including CX2, as shown in Figure 1, in environment with noisy power supplies. 3 Different Remote Control Configurations for HSDL-3003 (TxD_IrDA input pin) is used to turn on either the 875 nm LED or the 940 nm LEDs while the TxD_RC input pin is grounded. The HSDL-3003 can operate in the single-TXD programmable mode or the two-TXD direct transmission mode. The transceiver is in default mode (IrDA) when powered up. User needs to apply the following programming sequence to both the TxD_IrDA and SD inputs to enable the transceiver to operate in either the IrDA or remote control mode. Single-TXD Programmable Mode In the single-TXD programmable mode, only one input pin tC tTL tC tB tA SHUTDOWN (ACTIVE HIGH) TxD_IrDA (ACTIVE HIGH) • • • SHUTDOWN DRIVE IrDA LED • • • RC MODE • • • RESET DRIVE RC LED DRIVE IrDA LED TxD_RC (GND) Figure 2. Two-TXD Direct Transmission Mode Transceiver Control I/O Truth Table for Two-TXD Direct Transmission Mode In the two-TXD direct transmission mode, the 875 nm LED and the 940 nm LEDs are turned on separately by two different input pins. The TxD_IrDA input pin is used to turn on the 875 nm LED while the TxD_RC input pin is used to turn on the 940 nm LEDs. SD TXD_IrDA TXD_RC IrDA LED RC LEDs Remarks 0 0 0 OFF OFF IR Rx enabled. Idle mode 0 0 1 OFF ON Remote control operation 0 1 0 ON OFF IrDA Tx operation 0 1 1 DIM ON Not recommended 1 0 0 OFF OFF Shutdown mode* Please refer to the Transceiver I/O truth table for more details. 4 * The shutdown condition will set the transceiver to the default mode (IrDA). Absolute Maximum Ratings at TA = 25°C For implementations where case to ambient thermal resistance is ≤ 50°C/W Parameter Symbol Min. Max. Units Conditions Storage Temperature TS -40 100 °C Operating Temperature TA -20 70 °C LED Supply Voltage VLED 0 6 V Supply Voltage VCC 0 6 V Output Voltage: RxD VO 0 6 V Total LED Current Pulse Amplitude IVLED 580 mA ≤ 90 µs Pulse Width ≤ 20% Duty Cycle IR LED Current Pulse Amplitude (IVLED)IR 280 mA ≤ 90 µs Pulse Width ≤ 20% Duty Cycle RC LED Current Pulse Amplitude (IVLED)RC 580 mA ≤ 90 µs Pulse Width ≤ 20% Duty Cycle Recommended Operating Conditions Parameter Symbol Min. Max. Units Operating Temperature TA -20 70 °C Supply Voltage VCC 2.4 3.6 V LED Supply Voltage VLED 2.4 4.5 V V Conditions Logic Input Voltage for TxD_IrDA, TxD_RC Logic High VIH 2/3 VCC VCC Logic Low VIL 0 1/3 VCC V Receiver Input Irradiance Logic High EIH 0.0081 500 mW/cm2 For in-band signals ≤ 115.2 kbit/s[3] Logic Low EIL 0.3 µW/cm2 For in-band signals[3] 115.2 kbit/s Receiver Data Rate 5 9.6 Electrical and Optical Specifications Specifications (Min. and Max. values) hold over the recommended operating conditions unless otherwise noted. Unspecified test conditions may be anywhere in their operating range. All typical values (Typ.) are at 25°C with VCC at 3.0 V unless otherwise noted. Parameter Symbol Min. Typ. Max. Units Conditions Infrared (IrDA) Receiver ° Viewing Angle 2θ1/2 Peak Sensitivity Wavelength λP RxD_IrDA Output Voltage Logic High VOH VCC - 0.2 VCC V Logic Low VOL 0 0.4 V tRPW 1 2.3 7.5 µs RxD_IrDA Pulse Width (SIR)[4] 30 875 nm IOH = -200 µA, EI ≤ 0.3 µW/cm2 θ1/2 ≤ 15°, CL= 9 pF RxD_IrDA Rise & Fall Times tr, tf 30 100 ns CL= 9 pF Receiver Latency Time[5] tL 26 50 µs EI = 9.0 µW/cm2 Receiver Wake Up Time[6] tRW 75 200 µs EI = 10 mW/cm2 Infrared (IrDA) Transmitter IR Radiant Intensity IEH 4 IR Viewing Angle 2θ1/2 30 mW/sr IVLEDA = 100 mA, θ1/2 ≤ 15°, TxD_IrDA ≥ VIH, TA = 25°C 13 60 ° IR Peak Wavelength λP TxD_IrDA Logic Levels High VIH 2/3 VCC VCC V Low VIL 0 1/3 VCC V 875 nm TxD_IrDA Input Current High IH 0.02 1 µA VI ≥ VIH Low IL -0.02 1 µA 0 ≤ VI ≤ VIL LED Current Shutdown VI (SD) ≥ VIH IVLED 0.02 10 µA Wake Up Time[7] tTW 180 500 ns Data setup time tA 25 ns Data pulsewidth tB 25 ns Programming time tC 75 ns Optical Pulse Width (SIR) tPW(SIR) 1.41 1.6 µs Maximum Optical Pulse Width[8] tPW(Max) 120 µs TxD Rise & Fall Times (Optical) tr, tf 600 ns LED Anode On-State Voltage VON (LEDA) tPW(TXD) = 1.6 µs at 115.2 kbit/s IVLEDA = 100 mA, VI (TxD) ≥ VIH 2.4 V 36 mW/sr IVLEDA = 400 mA, θ1/2 ≤ 15°, TxD_RC ≥ VIH, TA = 25°C Remote Control (RC) Transmitter RC Radiant Intensity IEH 15[9] RC Viewing Angle 2θ1/2 30 RC Peak Wavelength λP TxD_RC Logic Levels High VIH 2/3 VCC VCC V Low VIL 0 1/3 VCC V TxD_RC Input Current High IH 0.02 1 µA VI ≥ VIH Low IL -0.02 1 µA 0 ≤ VI ≤ VIL 120 µs 2.3 V 940 Maximum Optical Pulse Width [8] tPW(Max) LEDA Voltage VON (LEDA) 6 60 1.65 ° nm ILEDA = 400 mA, VI(TxD) ≥ VIH Transceiver Parameters Symbol Input Current Supply Current Min. Typ. Max. Units Conditions 0.01 1 µA VI ≥ VIH -0.02 1 µA 0 ≤ VI ≤ VIL High IH Low IL Shutdown ICC1 0.01 1 µA VSD ≥ VCC - 0.5, TA = 25°C Idle (Standby) ICC2 50 100 µA VI(TxD) ≤ VIL, EI = 0 Active ICC3 300 µA VI(TxD) ≥ VIL, EI = 10 mW/cm2 -1 Notes: 3. An in-band optical signal is a pulse/sequence where the peak wavelength, λP, is defined as 850 nm ≤ λP ≤ 900 nm, and the pulse characteristics are compliant with the IrDA Serial Infrared Physical Layer Link Specification version 1.4. 4. For in-band signals 9.6 kbit/s to 115.2 kbit/s where 9 µW/cm2 ≤ EI ≤ 500 mW/cm2 . 5. Latency is defined as the time from the last TxD_IrDA light output pulse until the receiver has recovered full sensitivity. 6. Receiver Wake Up Time is measured from VCC power ON to valid RxD_IrDA output. 7. Transmitter Wake Up Time is measured from VCC power ON to valid light output in response to a TxD_IrDA pulse. 8. The Optical PW is defined as the maximum time which the IrDA/RC LED will turn on, this is to prevent the long Turn On time for the IrDA and RC LED. 9. This Limits is Production Test Limits. 40 RADIANT INTENSITY (mW/Sr) 0.40 0.35 ILEDA (A) 0.30 0.25 0.20 0.15 0.10 0.05 0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 4.0 0 0.05 VLEDA (V) Figure 3. Typical 875 nm LED VLEDA vs. ILEDA at room temperature. RADIANT INTENSITY (mW/Sr) 0.6 ILEDA (A) 0.2 0.25 0.3 50 0.7 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 1.2 1.4 1.6 1.8 2.0 VLEDA (V) Figure 5. Typical 940 nm LED VLEDA vs. ILEDA at room temperature performance. 7 0.15 Figure 4. Typical 875 nm LED radiant intensity vs. ILED current at room temperature. 0.8 0 1.0 0.1 ILED CURRENT (A) 45 40 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 ILEDA CURRENT (A) Figure 6. Typical 940 nm LED radiant intensity vs. ILED current at room temperature. tpw VOH 90% 50% VOL 10% tf tr Figure 7. RXD output waveform. tpw LED ON 90% 50% 10% LED OFF tr tf Figure 8. LED optical waveform. TXD LED tpw (MAX.) Figure 9. TXD “Stuck ON” protection. SD SD RX LIGHT TXD RXD TX LIGHT tRW Figure 10. Receiver wakeup time definition. 8 tTW Figure 11. Transmitter wakeup time definition. HSDL-3003 Package Outline (With Integrated EMI Shield) 4.00 MOUNTING CENTER 1.025 8.00 1 2 3 4 2.70 1.425 2.70 ;; ; ;; ;; ; ;; ; ;;;; ;;;; 5.10 RECEIVER R 1.03 R 1.10 2.95 2.90 2 SD VCC TXD RC GND 1.20 EMITTER 1 5 6 7 8 2.10 1.20 0.95 VLEDA NC TXD IRDA RXD 3 4 PITCH 0.95 5 6 7 0.80 0.70 8 COPLANARITY: +0.05 TO -0.15 mm 0.60 0.425 0.50 NOTES: 1. ALL DIMENSIONS IN MILLIMETERS (mm). 2. DIMENSION TOLERANCE IS 0.2 mm UNLESS OTHERWISE SPECIFIED. Figure 12. Package outline drawing. 9 HSDL-3003 Tape and Reel Dimensions 4.0 ± 0.1 5.00° (MAX.) 1.55 ± 0.05 1.75 ± 0.10 2.0 ± 0.1 B POLARITY PIN 8: GND 7.5 ± 0.1 SECTION B-B 16.0 ± 0.3 8.30 ± 0.10 A A PIN 1: VLED B 1.50 ± 0.10 8.00 ± 0.10 0.40 ± 0.10 3.00 ± 0.10 MATERIAL OF CARRIER TAPE: CONDUCTIVE POLYSTYRENE 5°(MAX.) MATERIAL OF COVER TAPE: PVC METHOD OF COVER: HEAT ACTIVATED ADHESIVE 3.25 ± 0.10 SECTION A-A PROGRESSIVE DIRECTION EMPTY (40 mm MIN.) LEADER PARTS MOUNTED (40 mm MIN.) EMPTY (40 mm MIN.) "B" "C" 330 QUANTITY 80 2500 UNIT: mm DETAIL A DIA. 13.0 ± 0.50 R 1.0 B C 2.0 ± 0.50 LABEL 16.40 + 2.00 0 21.0 ± 0.80 DETAIL A Figure 13. Tape and reel dimensions. 10 2.0 ± 0.50 Moisture Proof Packaging Baking Conditions All HSDL-3003 options are shipped in moisture proof package. Once opened, moisture absorption begins. If the parts are not stored in dry conditions, they must be baked before reflow to prevent damage to the parts. This part is compliant to JEDEC Level 4. Package Temp. Time In reels 60°C ≥ 48 hours In bulk 100°C ≥ 4 hours 125°C ≥ 2 hours 150°C ≥ 1 hour UNITS IN A SEALED MOISTURE-PROOF PACKAGE Baking should only be done once. Recommended Storage Conditions Storage Temperature 10°C to 30°C PACKAGE IS OPENED (UNSEALED) Relative Humidity below 60% RH Time from Unsealing to Soldering ENVIRONMENT LESS THAN 25°C, AND LESS THAN 60% RH? YES NO BAKING IS NECESSARY NO PACKAGE IS OPENED MORE THAN 72 HOURS? YES PERFORM RECOMMENDED BAKING CONDITIONS Figure 15. Baking conditions chart. 11 NO After removal from the bag, the parts should be soldered within two days if stored at the recommended storage conditions. If times longer than 72 hours are needed, the parts must be stored in a dry box. Recommended Reflow Profile MAX. 260°C T – TEMPERATURE – (°C) 255 R3 230 220 200 180 R2 60 sec. MAX. ABOVE 220°C 160 R1 120 R4 R5 80 25 0 50 100 150 200 250 300 t-TIME (SECONDS) P1 HEAT UP P2 SOLDER PASTE DRY P3 SOLDER REFLOW P4 COOL DOWN Figure 16. Reflow graph. Process Symbol ∆T Maximum ∆T/∆time Heat Up P1, R1 25°C to 160°C 4°C/s Solder Paste Dry P2, R2 160°C to 200°C 0.5°C/s Solder Reflow P3, R3 200°C to 255°C (260°C at 10 seconds max.) 4°C/s P3, R4 255°C to 200°C –6°C/s P4, R5 200°C to 25°C –6°C/s Cool Down The reflow profile is a straightline representation of a nominal temperature profile for a convective reflow solder process. The temperature profile is divided into four process zones, each with different ∆T/∆time temperature change rates. The ∆T/∆time rates detailed in the above table. The temperatures are measured at the component to printed circuit board connections. In process zone P1, the PC board and I/O pins are heated to a temperature of 160°C to activate the flux in the solder paste. The temperature ramp up rate, R1, is limited to 4°C per second to allow for even heating of both the PC board and HSDL-3003 I/O pins. 12 Process zone P2 should be of sufficient time duration (60 to –120 seconds) to dry the solder paste. The temperature is raised to a level just below the liquidus point of the solder, usually 200°C (392°F). Process zone P3 is the solder reflow zone. In zone P3, the temperature is quickly raised above the liquidus point of solder to 255°C (491°F) for optimum results. The dwell time above the liquidus point of solder should be between 20 and 60 seconds. It usually takes about 20 seconds to assure proper coalescence of the solder balls into liquid solder and the formation of good solder connections. Beyond a dwell time of 60 seconds, the intermetallic growth within the solder connections becomes excessive, resulting in the formation of weak and unreliable connections. The temperature is then rapidly reduced to a point below the solidus temperature of the solder, usually 200°C (392°F), to allow the solder within the connections to freeze solid. Process zone P4 is the cool down after solder freeze. The cool down rate, R5, from the liquidus point of the solder to 25°C (77°F) should not exceed –6°C per second maximum. This limitation is necessary to allow the PC board and transceiver’s castellation I/O pins to change dimensions evenly, putting minimal stresses on the HSDL-3003. Appendix A: SMT Assembly Application Note 1.0 Solder Pad, Mask and Metal Stencil METAL STENCIL FOR SOLDER PASTE PRINTING STENCIL APERTURE LAND PATTERN SOLDER MASK PCBA Figure 17. Stencil and PCBA. 1.1 Recommended Land Pattern 1.35 MOUNTING CENTER SHIELD SOLDER PAD CL 1.25 2.05 0.10 0.775 1.75 FIDUCIAL 0.60 0.475 1.425 2.375 3.325 Figure 18. Land pattern (front view). 4.0 0.91 MOUNTING CENTER 1.275 0.575 1.6 0.6 Figure 19. Land pattern (top view). 13 0.35 0.475 1.425 2.375 1.2 Recommended Metal Solder Stencil Aperture It is recommended that only a 0.152 mm (0.006 inch) or a 0.127 mm (0.005 inch) thick stencil be used for solder paste printing. This is to ensure adequate printed solder paste volume and no shorting. See the table below the drawing for combinations of metal stencil aperture and metal stencil thickness that should be used. APERTURES AS PER LAND DIMENSIONS t w l Figure 20. Solder stencil aperture. Aperture opening for shield pad is 3.05 mm x 1.1 mm as per land pattern. Aperture size(mm) Stencil thickness, t (mm) length, l width, w 0.152 mm 2.60 ± 0.05 0.55 ± 0.05 0.127 mm 3.00 ± 0.05 0.55 ± 0.05 1.3 Adjacent Land Keepout and Solder Mask Areas Adjacent land keepout is the maximum space occupied by the unit relative to the land pattern. There should be no other SMD components within this area. The minimum solder resist strip width required to avoid solder bridging adjacent pads is 0.2 mm. 10.1 0.2 3.85 3.0 SOLDER MASK UNITS: mm It is recommended that two fiducial crosses be placed at midlength of the pads for unit alignment. Note: Wet/Liquid PhotoImageable solder resist/mask is recommended. 14 Figure 21. Adjacent land keepout and solder mask areas. Appendix B: PCB Layout Suggestion The following PCB layout guidelines should be followed to obtain a good PSRR and EM immunity resulting in good electrical performance. Things to note: 1. The ground plane should be continuous under the part, but should not extend under the shield trace. 2. The shield trace is a wide, low inductance trace back to the system ground. CX1, CX2 and CX3 are optional supply filter capacitors; they may be left out if a clean power supply is used. 3. VLED can be connected to either unfiltered or unregulated power supply. If VLED and Vcc share the same power supply, CX3 need not be used and the connections for CX1 and CX2 should be before the current limiting resistor R1. In a noisy environment, including capacitor CX2 can enhance supply rejection. CX1 is generally a ceramic capacitor of low inductance providing a wide frequency response while TOP LAYER CONNECT THE METAL SHIELD AND MODULE GROUND PIN TO BOTTOM GROUND LAYER. LAYER 2 CRITICAL GROUND PLANE ZONE. DO NOT CONNECT DIRECTLY TO THE MODULE GROUND PIN. LAYER 3 KEEP DATA BUS AWAY FROM CRITICAL GROUND PLANE ZONE. BOTTOM LAYER (GND) The area underneath the module at the second layer, and 3 cm in all directions around the module, is defined as the critical ground plane zone. The ground plane should be maximized in this zone. Refer to application note AN1114 or the Avago IrDA Data Link Design Guide for details. The layout below is based on a two-layer PCB. Top View Bottom View 15 CX2 and CX3 are tantalum capacitors of big volume and fast frequency response. The use of a tantalum capacitor is more critical on the VLED line, which carries a high current. 4. Preferably a multi-layered board should be used to provide sufficient ground plane. Use the layer underneath and near the transceiver module as Vcc, and sandwich that layer between ground connected board layers. Refer to the diagram below for an example of a four-layer board. Appendix C: General Application Guide for the HSDL-3003 Infrared IrDA® Compliant 115.2 Kb/s Transceiver Description The HSDL-3003, a wide-voltage operating range infrared transceiver is a low-cost and small form factor device that is designed to address the mobile computing market such as PDAs, as well as small embedded mobile products such as digital cameras and cellular phones. It is spectrally suited to universal remote control transmission function at 940 nm typically. It is fully compliant to IrDA 1.4 low power specification from 9.6 kb/s to 115.2 kb/s, and supports most remote control codes. The design of the HSDL3003 also includes the following unique features: • Spectrally suited to universal remote control transmission function at 940 nm typically. • Low passive component count. • Shutdown mode for low power consumption requirement. Selection of Resistor R1 Resistor R1 should be selected to provide the appropriate peak pulse LED current over different ranges of Vcc as shown on page 3 under "Recommended Application Circuit Components". Interface to Recommended I/O Chips The HSDL-3003’s TXD data input is buffered to allow for CMOS drive levels. No peaking circuit or capacitor is required. Data rate from 9.6 kb/s up to 115.2 kb/s is available at the RXD pin. The TXD_RC, (pin 7), or the TXD_IrDA, (pin 3), can be used to send remote control codes. The block diagrams below show how the IrDA port fits into a mobile phone and PDA platform. SPEAKER AUDIO INTERFACE DSP CORE MICROPHONE ASIC CONTROLLER RF INTERFACE TRANSCEIVER MOD/ DE-MODULATOR IR RC MICROCONTROLLER USER INTERFACE HSDL-3003 MOBILE PHONE PLATFORM Figure 1. IR layout in mobile phone platform. 16 LCD PANEL RC RAM IR HSDL-3003 ROM CPU FOR EMBEDDED APPLICATION PCMCIA CONTROLLER TOUCH PANEL COM PORT RS232C DRIVER PDA PLATFORM Figure 2. IR layout in PDA platform. The link distance testing was done using typical HSDL-3003 units with SMC’s FDC37C669 and FDC37N769 Super I/O controllers. An IrDA link distance of up to 70 cm was demonstrated. Remote Control Operation The HSDL-3003 is spectrally suited to universal remote control transmission function at 940 nm typically. Remote control applications are not governed by any standards, owing to which there are numerous remote control codes in the market. Each of these standards results in receiver modules with different sensitivities, depending on the carrier frequencies and responsivity to the incident light wavelength. 17 Based on a survey of some commonly used remote control receiver modules, the irradiance is found to be in the range of 0.05 ~ 0.07 mW/cm2. Based on a typical irradiance of 0.05 mW/ cm2 and 0.075 mW/cm2 and turning on the RC LED, a typical link distance of 8 m and 7 m is achieved typically. Appendix D: Window Designs for HSDL-3003 To ensure IrDA compliance, some constraints on the height and width of the window exist. The minimum dimensions ensure that the IrDA cone angles are met without vignetting. The maximum dimensions minimize the effects of stray light. The minimum size corresponds to a cone angle of 30° and the maximum size corresponds to a cone angle of 60°. ;;;;;;;; ;;;;;; ;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;; ;;;;;;;;; ;;;;;;;; ;;;;; ;; ;; OPAQUE MATERIAL IR TRANSPARENT WINDOW Y X IR TRANSPARENT WINDOW OPAQUE MATERIAL Z In the figure above, X is the width of the window, Y is the height of the window, and Z is the distance from the HSDL-3003 to the back of the window. Our simulations result in the following tables and graphs. Module Depth (Z, mm) Min Aperture Width (X, mm) Min Aperture Height (Y, mm) 0.5 1.0 11.45 11.75 4.20 4.45 1.5 2.0 12.00 12.50 5.00 5.25 3.0 4.0 13.50 15.15 6.30 8.40 5.0 15.65 9.45 18 Aperture height (Y) vs. module depth. Aperture width (X) vs. module depth. 10 16 APERTURE HEIGHT (Y) – mm APERTURE WIDTH (X) – mm 18 14 12 10 8 6 4 X MIN. 2 0 1 0 3 2 4 5 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 0 6 Y MIN. 1 MODULE DEPTH (Z) – mm 0 1 2 3 4 MODULE DEPTH (Z) – mm For module depth values that are not shown on the table above, the minimum X and Y values can be interpolated. An example of this interpolation for module depth of 0.8 mm is as follows: Xmin = Ymin = 0.8 – 0.5 1.0 – 0.5 x (11.75 – 11.45) + 11.45 = 11.63 0.8 – 0.5 x (4.45 – 4.20) + 4.20 = 4.35 1.0 – 0.5 Window Material Almost any plastic material will work as a window material. Polycarbonate is recommended. The surface finish of the plastic should be smooth, without any texture. An IR filter dye may be used in the window to make it look black to the eye, but the total optical loss of the window should be 10% or less for best optical performance. Light loss should be measured at 875 nm. The recommended plastic materials for use as a cosmetic window are available from General Electric Plastics. Recommended Plastic Materials Material # Lexan 141 Light Transmission 88% Haze 1% Refractive Index 1.586 Lexan 920A Lexan 940A 85% 85% 1% 1% 1.586 1.586 Note: 920A and 940A are more flame retardant than 141. Recommended Dye: Violet #21051 (IR transmissant above 625 nm) 19 5 6 Shape of the Window From an optics standpoint, the window should be flat. This ensures that the window will not alter either the radiation pattern of the LED, or the receive pattern of the photodiode. If the window must be curved for mechanical or industrial design reasons, place the same curve on the back side of the window that has an identical radius as the front side. While this will not completely eliminate the lens effect of the front curved surface, it will significantly reduce the effects. The amount of change in Flat Window (First choice) 20 the radiation pattern is dependent upon the material chosen for the window, the radius of the front and back curves, and the distance from the back surface to the transceiver. Once these items are known, a lens design can be made which will eliminate the effect of the front surface curve. The following drawings show the effects of a curved window on the radiation pattern. In all cases, the center thickness of the window is 1.5 mm, the window is made of polycarbonate plastic, and the distance from the transceiver to the back surface of the window is 3 mm. Curved Front and Back (Second choice) Curved Front, Flat Back (Do not use) For product information and a complete list of distributors, please go to our website: www.avagotech.com Avago, Avago Technologies, and the A logo are trademarks of Avago Technologies Limited in the United States and other countries. Data subject to change. Copyright © 2006 Avago Technologies Limited. All rights reserved. Obsoletes 5989-2298EN 5989-3133EN June 7, 2006 21