ma PRELIMINARY DS1821 Programmable Digital Thermostat and Thermometer www.dalsemi.com FEATURES DALLAS DS1821 DQ 1 GND 2 NC 3 NC 4 1 2 3 DS1821S Requires no external components Unique 1-Wire® interface requires only one port pin for communication Operates over a -55°C to +125°C (67°F to +257°F) temperature range Functions as a standalone thermostat with user-definable trip-points Provides 8-bit (1°C resolution) centigrade temperature measurements Accuracy is ±1°C over 0°C to +85°C range Converts temperature to a digital word in 1 second (max) Available in 3-pin PR35 and 8-pin SOIC packages Applications include thermostatic controls, industrial systems, consumer products, thermometers, or any thermally sensitive system 8 VDD 7 NC 6 NC 5 NC 8-pin 208-mil SOIC (DS1821S) GND DQ VDD PIN ASSIGNMENT 1 2 3 (BOTTOM VIEW) PR35 (DS1821) PIN DESCRIPTION GND DQ VDD NC - Ground - Data In/Out and Thermostat Output - Power Supply Voltage - No Connect DESCRIPTION The DS1821 can function as a standalone thermostat with user-programmable trip-points or as 8-bit temperature sensor with a 1-wire digital interface. The thermostat trip-points are stored in nonvolatile memory, so DS1821 units can be programmed prior to system insertion for true standalone operation. The DS1821 has an operating temperature range of –55°C to +125°C and is accurate to ±1°C over a range of 0°C to +85°C. Communication with the DS1821 is accomplished through the open-drain DQ pin; this pin also serves as the thermostat output. 1 of 17 040601 DS1821 DETAILED PIN DESCRIPTIONS Table 1 PR35 8-PIN SOIC* SYMBOL 1 2 2 1 GND DQ DESCRIPTION Ground pin. Open drain data input/output pin – 1-wire operation; Open drain thermostat output pin –thermostat operation. 3 8 VDD Power supply pin. *All pins not specified in this table are “No Connect” pins. OVERVIEW Figure 1 shows a block diagram of the DS1821 and pin descriptions are given in Table 1. The DS1821 can operate as a standalone thermostat with user-programmable trip-points or as 8-bit temperature sensor with a 1-wire digital interface. The open-drain DQ pin functions as the thermostat output for thermostat operation and as the data I/O pin for 1-wire communications. The 1-wire interface provides user access to the nonvolatile (EEPROM) thermostat trip-point registers (TH and TL), the status/configuration register, and the temperature register. When configured as standalone thermostat, temperature conversions start immediately at power-up. In this mode, the DQ pin becomes active when the temperature of the DS1821 exceeds the limit programmed into the TH register, and remains active until the temperature drops below the limit programmed into the TL register. The DS1821 uses Dallas’ exclusive 1-wire bus protocol that implements bus communication with one control signal. This system is explained in detail in the 1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM section of this datasheet. DS1821 BLOCK DIAGRAM Figure 1 DS1821 CONFIGURATION REGISTER AND CONTROL LOGIC VDD 4.7K TEMPERATURE SENSOR DQ VDD POWER SUPPLY SENSE 1-WIRE INTERFACE AND I/O CONTROL TH REGISTER TL REGISTER DIGITAL COMPARATOR/ LOGIC GND TEMPERATURE SENSOR FUNCTIONALITY The core functionality of the DS1821 is its proprietary direct-to-digital temperature sensor, which provides 8-bit (1°C increment) centigrade temperature readings over the range of -55°C to +125°C. A block diagram of the temperature measurement circuitry is shown in Figure 2. This circuit measures the temperature by counting the number of clock cycles generated by an oscillator with a low temperature coefficient (temp-co) during a gate period determined by a high temp-co oscillator. The low temp-co Page 2 of 17 DS1821 counter is preset with a base count that corresponds to –55°C. If the counter reaches 0 before the gate period is over, the temperature register, which is preset to –55°C, is incremented by one degree, and the counter is again preset with a starting value determined by the slope accumulator circuitry. The preset counter value is unique for every temperature increment and compensates for the parabolic behavior of the oscillators over temperature. At this time, the counter is clocked again until it reaches 0. If the gate period is not over when the counter reaches 0, the temperature register is incremented again. This process of presetting the counter, counting down to zero, and incrementing the temperature register is repeated until the counter takes less time to reach zero than the duration of the gate period of the high temp-co oscillator. When this iterative process is complete, the value in the temperature register will indicate the centigrade temperature of the device. TEMPERATURE MEASURING CIRCUITRY Figure 2 SLOPE ACCUMULATOR PRESET LOW TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT OSCILLATOR COMPARE COUNTER PRESET SET/CLEAR LSB INC TEMPERATURE REGISTER =0 HIGH TEMPERATURE COEFFICIENT OSCILLATOR COUNTER STOP =0 OPERATING MODES The DS1821 has two operating modes: 1-wire mode and thermostat mode. The power-up operating mode is determined by the user-programmable T/R ¯ bit in the status/configuration register: if T/R ¯ = 0 the device powers-up in 1-wire mode, and if T/R ¯ = 1 the device powers-up in thermostat mode. The T/R ¯ bit is stored in nonvolatile memory (EEPROM), so it will retain its value when the device is powered down. 1-WIRE MODE The DS1821 arrives from the factory in 1-wire mode (T/R ¯ = 0). In this mode, the DQ pin of the DS1821 is configured as a 1-wire port for communication with a microprocessor using the protocols described in Page 3 of 17 DS1821 the 1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM section of this datasheet. These communications can include reading and writing the high and low thermostat trip-point registers (TH and TL) and the configuration register, and reading the temperature, counter, and slope accumulator registers. Also in this mode, the microprocessor can initiate and stop temperature measurements as described in the OPERATION – MEASURING TEMPERATURE section of this datasheet. ¯ , POL and 1SHOT) in the status/configuration The TH and TL registers and certain bits (THF, TLF, T/R register are stored in nonvolatile EEPROM memory, so they will retain data when the device is powered down. This allows these registers to be pre-programmed when the DS1821 is to be used as a standalone thermostat. Writes to these nonvolatile registers can take up to 10ms. To avoid data corruption, no writes to nonvolatile memory should be initiated while a write to nonvolatile memory is in progress. Nonvolatile write status can be monitored by reading the NVB bit in the status/configuration register: NVB = 0 – a write to EEPROM memory is in progress, NVB = 0 – nonvolatile memory is idle. THERMOSTAT MODE In thermostat mode (T/R ¯ = 1), the DS1821 can operate as a standalone thermostat that triggers according to the TH and TL trip-points programmed while the device was in 1-wire mode. In thermostat mode the DS1821 powers-up performing continuous temperature conversions, and the DQ pin acts as the thermostat output. Detailed operation of the thermostat output is provided in the OPERATION – STANDALONE THERMOSTAT section of this datasheet. Communications can be re-establish with the DS1821 while it is in thermostat mode by pulling VDD to 0V while the DQ line is held high, and then toggling the DQ line low 16 times as shown in Figure 12. This temporarily places the DS1821 in 1-wire mode, allowing microprocessor communication with the DS1821 via the DQ pin. At this time any I/O function can be performed, such as reading/writing the TH, TL or configuration registers or reading the temperature register. To return to thermostat mode, the same procedure can be performed (pulling VDD to 0V while the DQ line is held high, and then clocking the DQ line 16 times) or the power can be cycled. Note that temporarily putting the DS1821 into 1-wire mode does not change the power-up mode of the device; this can only be changed by rewriting the T/R ¯ bit in the status/configuration register. Also note that holding both VDD and DQ low for more than approximately 10 seconds will cause the DS1821 to be powered down. OPERATION – MEASURING TEMPERATURE DS1821 output temperature data is calibrated in degrees centigrade and is stored in two’s complement format in the 1-byte (8-bit) temperature register (see Figure 3), which the user can access when the DS1821 is in 1-wire mode (T/R ¯ = 0 in the status/configuration register). The sign bit (S) indicates if the temperature is positive or negative; for positive numbers S = 0 and for negative numbers S = 1. Table 2 gives examples of digital output data and the corresponding temperature reading. For Fahrenheit measurements, a lookup table or conversion routine must be used. The DS1821 can be configured by the user to take continuous temperature measurements (continuous conversion mode) or single measurements (one-shot mode). The desired configuration can be achieved by setting the nonvolatile1SHOT bit in the status/configuration register: 1SHOT = 0 – continuous conversion mode, 1SHOT = 1 – one-shot mode. Note that the 1SHOT setting only controls the operation of the device in 1-wire mode; in thermostat mode, continuous temperature conversions are started automatically at power-up. In continuous conversion mode, the Start Convert T [EEh] command initiates continuous temperature conversions, which can be stopped using the Stop Convert T [22h] command. In one-shot mode the Start Convert T [EEh] command initiates a single temperature conversion after which the DS1821 returns to a low-power standby state. In this mode, the microprocessor can monitor the DONE bit in the Page 4 of 17 DS1821 configuration register to determine when the conversion status: DONE = 0 ― conversion in progress, DONE = 1 ― conversion complete. The DONE bit does not provide conversion status in continuous conversion mode since measurements are constantly in progress (i.e., DONE will always be 0). TEMPERATURE, TH and TL REGISTER FORMAT Figure 3 bit 7 S bit 6 2 6 bit 5 2 5 bit 4 2 bit 3 4 2 3 bit 2 2 2 bit 1 2 1 bit 0 20 TEMPERATURE/DATA RELATIONSHIP Table 2 TEMPERATURE +125°C* +85°C +25°C 0°C -1°C -25°C -55°C DIGITAL OUTPUT (Binary) 0111 1101 0101 0101 0001 1001 0000 0000 1111 1111 1110 0111 1100 1001 DIGITAL OUTPUT (Hex) 7Dh 55h 19h 00h FFh E7h C9h HIGH-RESOLUTION TEMPERATURE READINGS The user can calculate temperature values with higher than 8-bit resolution using the data remaining in the counter and slope accumulator when the temperature conversion is complete. To do this the user must first read the temperature from the 8-bit temperature register. This value is called TEMP_READ in the high-resolution equation (see Eq. 1). The 9-bit counter value must then be obtained by issuing the Read Counter [A0h] command. This value is the count remaining in the counter at the end of the gate period and is called COUNT_REMAIN in Eq. 1. Next the Load Counter [41h] command must be issued, which loads the 9-bit slope accumulator value into the counter register. The slope accumulator value (called COUNT_PER_C in Eq. 1) can then be read from the counter by again issuing the Read Counter [A0h] command. The slope accumulator value is called “COUNT_PER_C” because it represents the number of counts needed for an accurate measurement at a given temperature (i.e., the counts per degree C). The high-resolution temperature can then be calculated using Eq. 1: Eq. 1) TEMPERATURE = TEMP_READ − 0.5 + (COUNT _ PER _ C − COUNT _ REMAIN ) COUNT _ PER _ C Additional information about high-resolution temperature calculations can be found in Application Note 105: “High Resolution Temperature Measurement with Dallas Direct-to-Digital Temperature Sensors”. Page 5 of 17 DS1821 OPERATION – THERMOSTAT When the DS1821 is in thermostat mode (T/R ¯ = 1 in the status/configuration register), temperature conversions are performed continuously beginning at power-up (regardless of the value of the 1SHOT bit), and the DQ pin serves as the thermostat output. The DQ output will become active when the temperature of the DS1821 exceeds the user-defined limit in the TH register, and will remain active until the temperature drops below the user-defined limit in the TL register as illustrated in Figure 4. Thus, the user can select TH and TL to provide the desired amount of thermostat output hysteresis. The user-defined 8-bit centigrade trip-point values (TH and TL) must be stored in two’s complement format as shown in Figure 3. The sign bit (S) indicates if the temperature is positive or negative; for positive numbers S = 0 and for negative numbers S = 1. The non-volatile TH and TL registers must be programmed when the DS1821 is in 1-wire mode as explained in the OPERATING MODES section of this datasheet. The DS1821 can be temporarily switched from thermostat mode to 1-wire mode to change the TH and TL values as also explained in the OPERATING MODES section. The polarity (i.e., the active state) of the DQ output is user-selectable with the nonvolatile POL bit in the status/configuration register. DQ is active-high when POL = 1, and DQ is active-low when POL = 0. Two bits in the status/configuration register, THF and TLF, provide additional thermostatic information. The value of these bits is normally 0. The THF (temperature high flag) bit will be set to 1 if the measured temperature is ever greater than the value in the TH register and will remain a 1 until the user rewrites the bit with a 0. The THL (temperature low flag) bit will be set to 1 if the temperature is ever lower than the value in the TL register and will remain a 1 until the user rewrites the bit with a 0. These bits provide a record of the device temperature relative to the thermostat trip-points over a period of time. They are stored in nonvolatile memory, so the data stored in THF and TLF can be analyzed after any number of power cycles. The THF and THL bits function in both 1-wire and thermostat mode. DQ OPERATION IN THERMOSTATE MODE Figure 4 Operating Mode = Thermostat POL=1 (DQ is active high) DQ TL Temp (°C) TH STATUS/CONFIGURATION REGISTER The status/configuration register provides information to the user about conversion status, EEPROM activity and thermostat activity. It also allows the user to program various DS1821 options such as power-up operating mode, thermostat output polarity and conversion mode. The status/configuration register is arranged as shown in Figure 5 and detailed descriptions of each bit are provided in Table 3. Note that the THF, THL T/R ¯ , POL and 1SHOT bits are stored in nonvolatile memory (EEPROM). CONFIGURATION REGISTER Figure 5 bit 7 bit 6 bit 5 DONE 1 NVB bit 4 bit 3 THF* THL* *Stored in EEPROM Page 6 of 17 bit 2 T/R ¯* bit 1 bit 0 POL* 1SHOT* DS1821 CONFIGURATION REGISTER BIT DESCRIPTIONS Table 3 Bit Name (User Access) DONE — Temperature Conversion Done (Read Only) NVB — Non-volatile Memory Busy (Read Only) THF* — Temperature High Flag (Read/Write) TLF* — Temperature Low Flag (Read/Write) T/R ¯ * — Power-up Operating Mode (Read/Write) POL* — Thermostat Output (DQ) Polarity (Read/Write) 1SHOT* — Conversion Mode (Read/Write) Functional Description DONE = 0 — Temperature conversion is in progress. DONE = 1 — Temperature conversion is complete. NVB = 0 — Nonvolatile memory is not busy. NVB = 1 — A write to EEPROM memory is in progress THF = 0 — The measured temperature has not exceeded the value stored in the TH register. THF = 1 — At some point in time the measured temperature has been higher than the value stored in the TH register. THF will remain a 1 until it is over-written with a 0 by the user. TLF = 0 — The measured temperature has not been lower than the value stored in the TL register. TLF = 1 — At some point in time the measured temperature has been lower than the value stored in the TL register. TLF will remain a 1 until it is over-written with a 0 by the user. T/R ¯ = 0 — DS1821 powers up in 1- wire mode. T/R ¯ = 1 — DS1821 powers up in thermostat mode. POL = 0 — Thermostat output (DQ) is active low. POL = 1 — Thermostat output (DQ) is active high. 1SHOT = 0 — Continuous conversion mode. The Start Convert T [EEh] command initiates continuous temperature conversions, which can be stopped with the Stop Convert T [22h] command. 1SHOT = 1 — One-shot mode. The Start Convert T [EEh] command initiates a single temperature conversion after which the DS1821 returns to a low-power standby state. *Stored in EEPROM Page 7 of 17 DS1821 1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM The 1-wire bus system uses a single bus master (i.e., a microprocessor) to control slave devices. The DS1821 functions as a slave device when it is used in 1-wire mode; however, since the DS1821 is not addressable or multi-droppable, a single 1-wire-mode DS1821 must be the only slave device on the bus. All data and commands are transmitted least significant bit first over the 1-wire bus. The following discussion of the 1-wire bus system is broken down into three topics: hardware configuration, transaction sequence, and 1-wire signaling (signal types and timing). HARDWARE CONFIGURATION The 1-wire bus has by definition only a single data line. Each device (in this case, the master and one DS1821) interfaces to the data line via an open drain or 3–state port. This allows each device to “release” the data line when the device is not transmitting data so that the bus is available for use by the other device. The 1-wire port of the DS1821 (the DQ pin) is open drain with an internal circuit equivalent to that shown in Figure 6. The 1-wire bus requires an external pullup resistor of approximately 5 kΩ; thus, the idle state for the 1wire bus is high. If for any reason a transaction needs to be suspended, the bus MUST be left in the idle state if the transaction is to resume. Infinite recovery time can occur between bits so long as the 1-wire bus is in the inactive (high) state during the recovery period. If the bus is held low for more than 480 µs, the DS1821 will be reset. HARDWARE CONFIGURATION Figure 6 Microprocessor VDD DS1821 1-WIRE PORT 4.7K RX 1-wire bus DQ Pin RX 5 µA Typ. 100 Ω MOSFET TX RX = RECEIVE TX = TRANSMIT TRANSACTION SEQUENCE The transaction sequence for accessing the DS1821 via the 1-wire port is as follows: • Initialization • DS1821 Function Command • Data Transmitted/Received TX Page 8 of 17 DS1821 INITIALIZATION All transactions on the 1-wire bus begin with an initialization sequence. The initialization sequence consists of a reset pulse transmitted by the bus master followed by a presence pulse transmitted by the DS1821. The presence pulse lets the bus master know that the DS1821 is on the bus and ready to operate. Timing for the reset and presence pulses is detailed in the 1-WIRE SIGNALING section. DS1821 FUNCTION COMMANDS The DS1821 function commands in this section allow the master to communicate with and configure the DS1821. The DS1821 function commands are summarized in Table 4. READ TEMPERATURE [AAh] Provides read access to the 1-byte temperature register. START CONVERT T [EEh] Initiates temperature conversions. If the part is in one-shot mode (1SHOT = 1), only one conversion will be performed. If it is in continuous mode (1SHOT = 0), continuous conversions will be performed until a Stop Convert T command is received. STOP CONVERT T [22h] Stops temperature conversions when the device is in continuous conversion mode (1SHOT = 0). This opcode has no function if the device is in one-shot mode (1SHOT = 1). WRITE TH [01h] WRITE TL [02h] Provides write access to the 8-bit TH and TL registers, respectively. READ TH [A1h] READ TL [A2h] Provides read access to the 8-bit TH and TL registers, respectively. WRITE STATUS [0Ch] Provides write access to the 8-bit status/configuration register. READ STATUS [ACh] Provides read access to the 8-bit status/configuration register. READ COUNTER [A0h] Provides read access to data in the 9-bit counter register for use in high-resolution temperature calculations. This is explained in detail in the HIGH-RESOLUTION TEMPERATURE READINGS section. LOAD COUNTER [41h] Loads the 9-bit data from the slope accumulator register into the counter register so that it can be accessed using the Read Counter [A0h] command. Use of the Load Counter command is explained in detail in the HIGH-RESOLUTION TEMPERATURE READINGS section. Page 9 of 17 DS1821 DS1821 FUNCTION COMMAND SET Table 4 Command Read Temperature 1-Wire Bus Activity Description Protocol After Command is Issued TEMPERATURE CONVERSION COMMANDS Reads last converted temperature AAh Master receives 8-bit temperature value from temperature register. value from DS1821. Start Convert T Initiates temperature conversions. EEh None Stop Convert T Halts temperature conversions. 22h None THERMOSTAT and STATUS/CONFIGURATION COMMANDS Write TH Writes data to the TH register. 01h Master transmits 8-bit TH value to DS1821. Write TL Writes data to the TL register. 02h Master transmits 8-bit TL value to DS1821. Read TH Reads data from the TH register. A1h Master receives 8-bit TH value from DS1821. Read TL Reads data from the TL register. A2h Master receives 8-bit TL value from DS1821. Write Status Writes data to the status/configuration register. 0Ch Master transmits 8-bit status/configuration value to DS1821. Read Status Reads data from the status/configuration register. ACh Master receives 8-bit status/configuration value from DS1821. HIGH-RESOLUTION COMMANDS Read Counter Reads data from the counter register A0h Master receives 9-bit counter value from DS1821. Load Counter 41h None Loads slope accumulator data into the counter register 1-WIRE SIGNALING The DS1821 uses a strict 1-wire communication protocol to insure data integrity. Several signal types are defined by this protocol: reset pulse, presence pulse, write 0, write 1, read 0, and read 1. All of these signals, with the exception of the presence pulse, are initiated by the bus master. INITIALIZATION PROCEDURE: RESET AND PRESENCE PULSES All communication with the DS1821 begins with an initialization sequence that consists of a reset pulse from the master followed by a presence pulse from the DS1821. This is illustrated in Figure 7. When the DS1821 sends the presence pulse in response to the reset, it is indicating to the master that it is on the bus and ready to operate given an appropriate function command. During the initialization sequence the bus master transmits (TX) the reset pulse by pulling the 1-wire bus low for a minimum of 480 µs. The bus master then releases the bus and goes into receive mode (RX). When the bus is released, the 5k pullup resistor pulls the 1-wire bus high. When the DS1821 detects this rising edge, it waits 15–60 µs and then transmits a presence pulse by pulling the 1-wire bus low for 60– 240 µs. Page 10 of 17 DS1821 INITIALIZATION TIMING Figure 7 MASTER TX RESET PULSE MASTER RX 480 µs minimum DS1821 TX presence pulse 60-240 µs 480 µs minimum VDD DS1821 waits 15-60 µs 1-WIRE BUS GND LINE TYPE LEGEND Bus master pulling low DS1821 pulling low Resistor pull-up READ/WRITE TIME SLOTS The bus master writes data to the DS1821 during write time slots and reads data from the DS1821 during read time slots. One bit is data is transmitted over the 1-wire bus per time slot. WRITE TIME SLOTS There are two types of write time slots: “Write 1” time slots and “Write 0” time slots. The bus master uses a Write 1 time slot to write a logic 1 to the DS1821 and a Write 0 time slot to write a logic 0 to the DS1821. All write time slots must be a minimum of 60 µs in duration with a minimum of a 1 µs recovery time between individual write slots. Both types of write time slots are initiated by the master pulling the 1-wire bus low (see Figure 8). To generate a Write 1 time slot, after pulling the 1-wire bus low, the bus master must release the 1-wire bus within 15 µs. When the bus is released, the 5k pullup resistor will pull the bus high. To generate a Write 0 time slot, after pulling the 1-wire bus low, the bus master must continue to hold the bus low for the duration of the time slot (at least 60 µs). The DS1821 samples the 1-wire bus during a window that lasts from 15 µs to 60 µs after the master initiates the write time slot. If the bus is high during the sampling window, a 1 is written to the DS1821. If the line is low, a 0 is written to the DS1821. READ TIME SLOTS The DS1821 can only transmit data to the master when the master issues read time slots. Therefore, the master must generate read time slots immediately after issuing a read command (e.g., Read Temperature [AAh]), so that the DS1821 can provide the requested data. All read time slots must be a minimum of 60 µs in duration with a minimum of a 1 µs recovery time between slots. A read time slot is initiated by the master device pulling the 1-wire bus low for a minimum of 1 µs and then releasing the bus (see Figure 8). After the master initiates the read time slot, the DS1821 will begin transmitting a 1 or 0 on bus. The DS1821 transmits a 1 by leaving the bus high and transmits a 0 by pulling the bus low. When transmitting a 0, the DS1821 will release the bus by the end of the time slot, and the bus will be pulled back to its high idle state by the pullup resister. Output data from the DS1821 is valid for 15 µs after the falling edge that initiated the read time slot. Therefore, the master must release the bus and then sample the bus state within 15 µs from the start of the slot. Page 11 of 17 DS1821 Figure 9 illustrates that the sum of TINIT, TRC, and TSAMPLE must be less than 15 µs for a read time slot. Figure 10 shows that system timing margin is maximized by keeping TINIT and TRC as short as possible and by locating the master sample time during read time slots towards the end of the 15 µs period. READ/WRITE TIME SLOT TIMING DIAGRAM Figure 8 LINE TYPE LEGEND (Figure 8, Figure 9 and Figure 10) Bus master pulling low DS1821 pulling low Resistor pullup START OF SLOT START OF SLOT MASTER WRITE “0” SLOT MASTER WRITE “1” SLOT 1 µs < TREC < ∞ 60 µs < TX “0” < 120 > 1 µs VDD 1-WIRE BUS GND DS1821 samples MIN 15 µs DS1821 samples TYP 15 µs MAX MIN 30 µs 15 µs MASTER READ “0” SLOT TYP 15 µs 1-WIRE BUS GND > 1 µs Master samples > 1 µs 15 µs 45 µs 15 µs DETAILED MASTER READ 1 TIMING Figure 9 VDD VIH of Master 1-WIRE BUS GND TINT > 1 µs TRC Master samples 15 µs RECOMMENDED MASTER READ 1 TIMING Figure 10 VDD VIH of Master 1-WIRE BUS 30 µs MASTER READ “1” SLOT 1 µs < TREC < ∞ VDD Master samples MAX GND Master samples TINT = TRC = small small 15 µs Page 12 of 17 DS1821 RELATED APPLICATION NOTES The following Application Notes pertain to the DS1821. These notes can be obtained from the Dallas Semiconductor “Application Note Book,” via the Dallas website at http://www.dalsemi.com or through our faxback service at (214) 450–0441. Application Note 67: “Applying and Using the DS1620 in Temperature Control Applications” Application Note 74: “Reading and Writing Touch Memories via Serial Interfaces” Application Note 105: “High Resolution Temperature Measurement with Dallas Direct-to-Digital Temperature Sensors” Sample 1-wire subroutines that can be used in conjunction with AN74 can be downloaded from the Dallas website or anonymous FTP Site. DS1821 OPERATION EXAMPLE In this example, the master device programs the DS1821 with TL = +10°C and TH = +40°C and verifies that the data has been saved correctly. The master then programs the status/configuration register so that the device will power-up in thermostat mode (T/R ¯ = 1) and the thermostat output will have active high polarity (POL = 1). MASTER MODE TX RX TX TX TX RX TX TX TX RX TX RX TX RX TX RX TX RX TX TX DATA (LSB FIRST) Reset Presence 01h 28h Reset Presence 02h 0Ah Reset Presence A1h 28h Reset Presence A2h 0Ah Reset Presence 0Ch 06h COMMENTS Master issues reset pulse. DS1821 responds with presence pulse. Master issues Write TH command. Master sends data for TH = +40°C. Master issues reset pulse. DS1821 responds with presence pulse. Master issues Write TL command. Master sends data for TL = +10°C. Master issues reset pulse. DS1821 responds with presence pulse. Master issues Read TH command. Master reads stored TH value to verify data. Master issues reset pulse. DS1821 responds with presence pulse. Master issues Read TL command. Master reads stored TL value to verify data. Master issues reset pulse. DS1821 responds with presence pulse. Master issues Write Status command. Master sends status/configuration data to the DS1821 with T/R ¯= 1 (thermostat mode at power-up) and POL = 1 (active high thermostat output). Power is cycled; DS1821 powers-up in thermostat mode. Page 13 of 17 DS1821 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS* Voltage on any pin relative to ground Operating temperature Storage temperature Soldering temperature –0.5V to +7.0V –55°C to +125°C –55°C to +125°C See-JTD-020A Specification *These are stress ratings only and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operation sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods of time may affect reliability. DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS PARAMETER Supply Voltage Thermometer Error SYMBOL VDD CONDITION tERR 0°C to +85°C VDD = 3.6V to 5.5V (-55°C to +125°C; VDD=2.7V to 5.5V) MIN +2.7 VIL VIH Sink Current IL Standby Current Active Current IQ IDD DQ Input Current IDQ UNITS °C NOTES 1 2,3,4 See Typical Curve (Figure 11) -0.3 +2 VDQ = 0.4V VDD = 3.6V to 5.5V -55°C to +85°C VDD= 5V MAX +5.5 ±1 -55°C to +125°C VDD = 3.6V to 5.5V DQ Logic Low DQ Logic High TYP +0.8 The lower of +5.5 or VDD + 0.3 4 1 500 5 3 1000 V V 1,5 1,6 mA 1 µA µA 7 8 µA 9 NOTES: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. All voltages are referenced to ground. Thermometer error reflects the sensor accuracy as tested during calibration. See typical performance curve in Figure 11 for specification limits outside the 0°C to +85°C range. For T<0°C, accuracy degrades by 0.5°C/V for VDD <4.3V. Logic low voltages are specified at a sink current of 4 mA. Logic high voltages are specified at a source current of 1 mA. Standby current is typically 5 µA at 125°C. Active current refers to supply current during active temperature conversions or EEPROM writes. DQ line is high (“hi-Z” state). Page 14 of 17 DS1821 AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS: PARAMETER Temperature Conversion Time EEPROM Write Time Time Slot Recovery Time Write 0 Low Time Write 1 Low Time Read Data Valid Reset Time High Reset Time Low Presence Detect High Presence Detect Low VDD Low to Mode Toggle Clock Low Mode Toggle Clock 16 High to VDD High Mode Toggle Clock Pulse Low Time Mode Toggle Clock Pulse High Time Mode Toggle Clock High-to-Low or Low-to-High Transition Time Capacitance (-55°C to +125°C; VDD=3.6V to 5.5V) SYMBOL tCONV tWR tSLOT tREC tLOW0 tLOW1 tRDV tRSTH tRSTL tPDHIGH tPDLOW tPC tCP MIN tCL tCH tT 0.1 0.1 CIN/OUT NOTES: 1. Refer to timing diagrams in Figure 13. 2. If tRSTL > 960 µs, a power-on-reset may occur. 3. Time required for part to disable thermostat output. Page 15 of 17 60 1 60 1 480 480 15 60 100 100 TYP 0.4 10 MAX 1.0 50 120 UNITS s ms µs µs µs µs µs µs µs µs µs ns ns NOTES 100 µs µs ns 1 1 1 25 pF 120 15 15 60 240 10 1 1 1 1 1 1 1,2 1 1 1,3 1 DS1821 TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CURVE Figure 11 MODE TOGGLE TIMING WHEN T/R ¯ = 1 Figure 12 Page 16 of 17 DS1821 TIMING DIAGRAMS Figure 13 Page 17 of 17