HT82J30R/HT82J30A 16 Channel A/D MCU with SPI Interface Technical Document · Tools Information · FAQs · Application Note Features · Operating voltage: · 6-level subroutine nesting fSYS=4MHz: 2.2V~5.5V crystal clock mode · 16 channel 8-bit resolution A/D converter · fSYS=12MHz: 2.7V~3.7V RC clock mode · 1 channel (6+2)-bit PWM output shared with an I/O · 35 bidirectional I/O lines (max.) line · 2 interrupt inputs shared with I/O lines · Bit manipulation instruction · 8-bit programmable timer/event counter with overflow · 15-bit table read instruction interrupt and 7-stage prescaler · 63 powerful instructions · On-chip crystal and RC oscillator · LVR reset voltage of 3V±0.3V · Watchdog Timer · All instructions executed in one or two machine · 4096´15 program memory ROM cycles · PB2, PB3, PD4, PD7 can be optioned as either · 216´8 data memory RAM CMOS or NMOS outputs · PFD function for sound generation · Integrated dual SPI interfaces · HALT function and wake-up feature reduces power · 28-pin SKDIP/SOP and 44-pin QFP packages consumption · Up to 0.5ms instruction cycle with 8MHz system clock at VDD=5V General Description interfaces, Power Down and wake-up functions, enhance the versatility of these devices to suit a wide range of A/D application possibilities such as sensor signal processing, motor driving, industrial control, consumer products, subsystem controllers, etc. With the provision of dual SPI interfaces the devices are especially suitable for Joystick Encoder applications. The HT82J30R/HT82J30A are 8-bit high performance, RISC architecture microcontroller devices specifically designed for A/D applications that interface directly to analog signals, such as those from sensors. The mask version HT82J30A is fully pin and functionally compatible with the OTP version HT82J30R device. The advantages of low power consumption, I/O flexibility, programmable frequency divider, timer functions, oscillator options, multi-channel A/D Converter, Pulse Width Modulation function, Watchdog timer, SPI Rev. 1.00 The HT82J30A is under development and will be available soon. 1 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Block Diagram P A 5 /IN T 0 , P A 6 /IN T 1 T M R C In te rru p t C ir c u it S T A C K P ro g ra m R O M M T M R P ro g ra m C o u n te r IN T C P A 3 /P F D U P r e s c a le r M M P U X D a ta M e m o ry M P W M P D C P O R T D , F P D M U X In s tr u c tio n D e c o d e r P C C S T A T U S A L U O S R E V D V S C 1 S D S P O R T B P B L V R A C C U fS Y S /4 W D T O S C X P D 0 P D 1 P D 2 P D 3 P D 4 P D 5 P D 7 P F 0 P F 1 P F 2 /P W /S C /S C /S D /S D ~ P /S D /S D /S C /S C M S _ A K _ A I_ A O _ A D 6 O _ B I_ B K _ B S _ B P C 0 /A N 8 ~ P C 7 /A N 1 5 1 6 -C h a n n e l A /D C o n v e rte r P A 3 , P A 5 P B C O S C 2 P O R T C P C S h ifte r T im in g G e n e ra to r Y S P A 4 W D T In s tr u c tio n R e g is te r fS P A 4 /T M R X P A C P O R T A P A P B 0 /A N 0 ~ P B 7 /A N 7 P A 0 P A 3 P A 4 P A 5 P A 6 P A 7 ~ P /P /T /IN /IN A 2 F D M R T 0 T 1 Pin Assignment P F 2 /S C S P F 1 /S C K P F 0 /S D P D 7 /S D O P B 7 /A P B 6 /A P B 5 /A P B 4 /A P C 7 /A N P C 6 /A N P A 3 /P 1 2 8 P F 1 /S C K _ B 2 2 7 P F 2 /S C S _ B P A 3 /P F D 3 2 6 P A 4 /T M R P A 2 4 2 5 P A 5 /IN T 0 P A 1 5 2 4 P A 6 /IN T 1 P A 0 6 2 3 P A 7 P B 3 7 2 2 O S C 2 P B 2 8 2 1 O S C 1 P B 1 A V D D V D D 9 2 0 & V R E F 1 0 1 9 R E S V S S 1 1 1 8 P D 1 P B 0 1 2 1 7 P D 2 P C 2 1 3 1 6 P D 3 P C 1 1 4 1 5 P D 4 _ B _ B I_ B _ B N 7 N 6 N 5 N 4 1 5 1 4 F D P F 0 /S D I_ B P D 7 /S D O _ B P B P B P B P B P C 5 P A P A P A 3 /A N 2 /A N 1 /A N V R E A V D A V S 0 /A N /A N 1 4 4 4 3 4 2 4 1 1 2 4 0 3 9 3 8 3 7 3 6 3 5 3 4 3 3 2 3 2 3 3 1 3 4 3 0 2 5 1 6 1 0 H T 8 2 J 3 0 R /H T 8 2 J 3 0 A 4 4 Q F P -A 7 F D S 2 6 2 5 2 4 1 2 1 3 1 4 1 5 1 6 1 7 1 8 1 9 2 0 2 1 2 2 2 3 4 /T M R 5 /IN T 0 6 /IN T 1 7 5 6 O S C 2 O S C 1 V D D V S S R E P D P D P D P D P D P C P C P C P C P C H T 8 2 J 3 0 R /H T 8 2 J 3 0 A 2 7 9 1 1 3 2 8 8 1 0 0 2 9 N C P A P A P A P A P D P D S 0 /P 1 /S 2 /S 3 /S 4 /S 0 /A 1 /A 2 /A 3 /A 4 /A 2 8 S K D IP -A /S O P -A W M 0 C S _ A C K _ A D I_ A D O _ A N 8 N 9 N 1 0 N 1 1 N 1 2 Rev. 1.00 2 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Pin Description Pin Name PA0~PA2 PA3/PFD PA4/TMR PA5/INT0 PA6/INT1 PA7 PB0/AN0~ PB7/AN7 I/O Options Description I/O Bidirectional 8-bit input/output port. Each individual pin on this port can be configPull-high* ured as a wake-up input by a configuration option. Software instructions deterWake-up mine if the pin is a CMOS output or Schmitt trigger input. Configuration options PA3 or PFD determine which pin on this port have pull-high resistors. The PFD, TMR and external interrupt input are pin-shared with PA3, PA4, and PA5 , PA6, respectively. I/O Pull-high* Bidirectional 8-bit input/output port. Software instructions determine if the pin is a CMOS output or Schmitt trigger input. Configuration options determine which pin on this port have pull-high resistors. PB is pin-shared with the A/D input pins. The A/D inputs are selected via software instructions Once selected as an A/D input, the I/O function and pull-high resistor functions are disable automatically. PB2, PB3 has CMOS or NMOS output option. Pull-high* Bidirectional 8-bit input/output port. Software instructions determine if the pin is a CMOS output or Schmitt trigger input. Configuration options determine which pin on this port have pull-high resistors. PB is pin-shared with the A/D input pins. The A/D inputs are selected via software instructions Once selected as an A/D input, the I/O function and pull-high resistor functions are disabled automatically. PC0/AN8~ PC7/AN15 I/O PD0/PWM0 PD1/SCS_A PD2/SCK_A PD3/SDI_A PD4/SDO_A PD5~PD6 PD7/SDO_B Bi-directional 8-bit input/output port. Software instructions determine if the pin is a CMOS output or Schmitt trigger input. Configuration options determine which pin on this port have pull-high resistors. PD0 is pin-shared with the PWM output sePull-high* I/O lected via configuration option. PD0 or PWM PD1~PD4 are pin-shared with SPI interface A. PD4, PD7 have CMOS or NMOS output options. PD7 is pin-shared with the SPI interface B. PF0/SDI_B PF1/SCK_B PF2/SCS_B I/O Pull-high* Bidirectional 3-bit input/output port. Software instructions determine if the pin is a CMOS output or Schmitt trigger input. Configuration options determine which pin on this port have pull-high resistors. PF0~PF2 is pin-shared with the SPI interface B. OSC1 OSC2 I O Crystal or RC OSC1 and OSC2 are connected to an external RC network or external crystal, determined by configuration option, for the internal system clock. If the RC system clock is selected, pin OSC2 can be used to measure the system clock at 1/4 system frequency. RES I ¾ Schmitt trigger reset input. Active low VDD ¾ ¾ Positive power supply VSS ¾ ¾ Negative power supply, ground AVDD ¾ ¾ Analog positive power supply AVSS ¾ ¾ Analog negative power supply VREF ¾ ¾ 8-bit A/D reference voltage input pin Note: * The pull-high resistors of each I/O port are controlled by options. Absolute Maximum Ratings Supply Voltage ...........................VSS-0.3V to VSS+6.0V Storage Temperature ............................-50°C to 125°C Input Voltage..............................VSS-0.3V to VDD+0.3V Operating Temperature...............................0°C to 70°C IOL Total ..............................................................150mA IOH Total............................................................-100mA Total Power Dissipation .....................................500mW Note: These are stress ratings only. Stresses exceeding the range specified under ²Absolute Maximum Ratings² may cause substantial damage to the device. Functional operation of this device at other conditions beyond those listed in the specification is not implied and prolonged exposure to extreme conditions may affect device reliability. Rev. 1.00 3 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A D.C. Characteristics Symbol VDD IDD Parameter Operating Voltage Operating Current (Crystal OSC, RC OSC) Ta=25°C Test Conditions VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit ¾ fSYS=4MHz 2.2 ¾ 5.5 V ¾ fSYS=12MHz at 56kW RC mode 2.7 ¾ 3.7 V 3V No load, fSYS=12MHz ADC disable ¾ 1 2 mA ¾ 4 6 mA ¾ ¾ 5 mA mA 5V Standby Current (WDT Enabled) 3V 5V ¾ ¾ 10 Standby Current (WDT Disabled) 3V ¾ ¾ 1 mA ¾ ¾ 2 mA VIL1 Input Low Voltage for I/O Ports, TMR and INT ¾ ¾ 0 ¾ 0.3VDD V VIH1 Input High Voltage for I/O Ports, TMR and INT ¾ ¾ 0.7VDD ¾ VDD V VIL2 Input Low Voltage (RES) ¾ ¾ 0 ¾ 0.4VDD V VIH2 Input High Voltage (RES) ¾ ¾ 0.9VDD ¾ VDD V VLVR Low Voltage Reset ¾ Configuration option: 3V ¾ ¾ 2.1 V IOL 4 8 ¾ mA I/O Port Sink Current 10 20 ¾ mA -2 -4 ¾ mA -5 -10 ¾ mA ISTB1 ISTB2 No load, system HALT No load, system HALT 5V 3V VOL=0.1VDD 5V IOH 3V I/O Port Source Current VOH=0.9VDD 5V RPH VAD A/D Input Voltage EAD A/D Conversion Error IADC 3V ¾ 20 60 100 kW 5V ¾ 10 30 50 kW ¾ ¾ 0 ¾ VDD V 3V ¾ ¾ ±0.5 ±1 LSB 5V ¾ ¾ ±0.5 ±1 LSB ¾ 0.5 1 mA ¾ 1.5 3 mA Pull-high Resistance 3V Only ADC Enable, Others Disable No load 5V Rev. 1.00 4 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A A.C. Characteristics Symbol fSYS1 fSYS2 fTIMER Parameter System Clock (Crystal OSC) System Clock (RC OSC) Timer I/P Frequency (TMR) tWDTOSC Watchdog Oscillator Period Ta=25°C Test Conditions VDD Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Unit ¾ 2.2V~5.5V 400 ¾ 4000 kHz ¾ 3.3V~5.5V 400 ¾ 8000 kHz ¾ 2.2V~2.6V 1000 ¾ 4000 kHz ¾ 2.7V~5.5V 1000 12000 14000 kHz ¾ 2.2V~5.5V 0 ¾ 4000 kHz ¾ 3.3V~5.5V 0 ¾ 8000 kHz 3V ¾ 45 90 180 ms 5V ¾ 32 65 130 ms tWDT1 Watchdog Time-out Period (WDT OSC) ¾ ¾ 215 ¾ 216 tWDTOSC tWDT2 Watchdog Time-out Period (System Clock) ¾ ¾ 217 ¾ 218 *tSYS tRES External Reset Low Pulse Width ¾ ¾ 1 ¾ ¾ ms tSST System Start-up Timer Period ¾ ¾ 1024 ¾ tSYS tINT Interrupt Pulse Width ¾ ¾ 1 ¾ ¾ ms tAD A/D Clock Period ¾ ¾ 1 ¾ ¾ ms tADC A/D Conversion Time ¾ ¾ ¾ 76 ¾ tAD tADCS A/D Sample Time ¾ ¾ ¾ 32 ¾ tAD tCS_SK SPI SCS to SCK Time ¾ ¾ 50 ¾ ¾ ns tSPICK SPI Clock Time ¾ ¾ 400 ¾ ¾ ns Wake-up from HALT Note: *tSYS= 1/fSYS1 or 1/fSYS2 Rev. 1.00 5 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Functional Description Execution Flow incremented by one. The program counter then points to the memory word containing the next instruction code. When executing a jump instruction, a conditional skip execution, loading the PCL register, a subroutine call, an initial reset, an internal interrupt, an external interrupt or a return from a subroutine, the PC manipulates the program transfer by loading the address corresponding to each instruction. The system clock for the microcontroller is derived from either a crystal or an RC oscillator. The system clock is internally divided into four non-overlapping clocks. One instruction cycle consists of four system clock cycles. Instruction fetching and execution are pipelined in such a way that a fetch takes an instruction cycle while decoding and execution takes the next instruction cycle. However, the pipelining scheme causes each instruction to effectively execute within one cycle. If an instruction changes the program counter, two cycles are required to complete the instruction. The conditional skip is activated by instructions. Once the condition is met, the next instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle replaces it to get the proper instruction. Otherwise the program proceeds with the next instruction. Program Counter - PC The lower byte of the program counter is a readable and writeable register. Moving data into the PCL performs a short jump. The destination will be within 256 locations. The program counter controls the sequence in which the instructions stored in the program memory are executed and its contents specify a full range of program memory. When a control transfer takes place, an additional dummy cycle is required. After accessing a program memory word to fetch an instruction code, the contents of the program counter are S y s te m C lo c k T 1 T 2 T 3 T 4 T 1 T 2 T 3 T 4 T 1 T 2 T 3 T 4 O S C 2 ( R C o n ly ) P C P C P C + 1 F e tc h IN S T (P C ) E x e c u te IN S T (P C -1 ) P C + 2 F e tc h IN S T (P C + 1 ) E x e c u te IN S T (P C ) F e tc h IN S T (P C + 2 ) E x e c u te IN S T (P C + 1 ) Execution Flow Mode Program Counter *11 *10 *9 *8 *7 *6 *5 *4 *3 *2 *1 *0 Initial Reset 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 INT0 External Interrupt 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 INT1 External Interrupt 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 Timer/Event Counter Overflow 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Reserved 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 SPI_A Interrupt 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 SPI_B Interrupt 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 Skip Program Counter+2 Loading PCL *11 *10 *9 *8 @7 @6 @5 @4 @3 @2 @1 @0 Jump, Call Branch #11 #10 #9 #8 #7 #6 #5 #4 #3 #2 #1 #0 Return from Subroutine S11 S10 S9 S8 S7 S6 S5 S4 S3 S2 S1 S0 Program Counter Note: *11~*0: Program counter bits S11~S0: Stack register bits #11~#0: Instruction code bits Rev. 1.00 @7~@0: PCL bits 6 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A · Location 00CH Program Memory - ROM This location is reserved for the A/D converter interrupt service program. If the interrupt is activated, when the A/D conversion is completed, if the interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full, the program begins execution at this location. The program memory is used to store the program instructions which are to be executed. It also contains data, table, and interrupt entries, and is organized into 4K´15 bits, addressed by the program counter and table pointer. · Location 010H Certain locations in the program memory are reserved for special usage: Location 010H is reserved for when 8 bits of data have been received or transmitted successfully from serial interface A. When the related interrupts are enabled, and the stack is not full, the program begins execution at location 010H. · Location 000H This area is reserved for program initialization. After chip reset, the program always begins execution at location 000H. · Location 014H · Location 004H Location 014H is reserved for when 8 bits of data have been received or transmitted successfully from serial interface B. When the related interrupts are enabled, and the stack is not full, the program begins execution at location 014H. This area is reserved for the external interrupt service program. If the INT0 input pin is activated, the interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full, the program begins execution at location 004H. · Location 008H · Location 018H This area is reserved for the timer/event counter interrupt service program. If a timer interrupt results from a timer/event counter overflow, and if the interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full, the program begins execution at location 008H. 0 0 0 H 0 0 4 H 0 0 8 H 0 0 C H · Table location D e v ic e In itia liz a tio n P r o g r a m Any location in the Program Memory space can be used as a look-up table. The instructions ²TABRDC [m]² (the current page, one page=256 words) and ²TABRDL [m]² (the last page) transfers the contents of the lower-order byte to the specified data memory, and the higher-order byte to the TBLH register. Only the destination of the lower-order byte in the table is well-defined, the other bits of the table word are transferred to the lower portion of TBLH. Any unused bits are read as ²0². The Table Higher-order byte register, TBLH, is read only. The table pointer, TBLP, is a read/write register, which indicates the table location. Before accessing the table, the location must be placed in TBLP. The TBLH register is read only and cannot be restored. If the main routine and the ISR (Interrupt Service Routine) both employ the table read instruction, the contents of TBLH in the main routine are likely to be changed by the table read instruction used in the ISR and errors can occur. In other words, using the table read instruction in the main routine and the ISR simultaneously should be avoided. However, if the table IN T 0 E x te r n a l In te r r u p t S u b r o u tin e T im e r /E v e n t C o u n te r In te r r u p t S u b r o u tin e A /D 0 1 0 H C o n v e r te r In te r r r u p t S u b r o u tin e S P I_ A In te r r u p t S u b r o u tin e 0 1 4 H 0 1 8 H This location is reserved for the external interrupt service program. If the INT1 input pin is activated, the interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full, the program begins execution at this location. P ro g ra m M e m o ry S P I_ B In te r r u p t S u b r o u tin e IN T 1 E x te r n a l In te r r u p t S u b r o u tin e n 0 0 H L o o k - u p T a b le ( 2 5 6 W o r d s ) n F F H L o o k - u p T a b le ( 2 5 6 W o r d s ) F F F H 1 5 b its N o te : n ra n g e s fro m 0 to F Program Memory Instruction Table Location *11 *10 *9 *8 *7 *6 *5 *4 *3 *2 *1 *0 TABRDC [m] P11 P10 P9 P8 @7 @6 @5 @4 @3 @2 @1 @0 TABRDL [m] 1 1 1 1 @7 @6 @5 @4 @3 @2 @1 @0 Table Location Note: *11~*0: Table location bits P11~P8: Current program counter bits @7~@0: Table pointer bits Rev. 1.00 7 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A read instruction has to be applied in both the main routine and the ISR, the interrupt is supposed to be disabled prior to the table read instruction. It should not be enabled until TBLH has been backed up. All table related instructions require two cycles to complete the operation. These areas may function as normal program memory depending upon the requirements. In d ir e c t A d d r e s s in g R e g is te r 0 1 H M P 0 2 H 0 3 H 0 4 H 0 5 H Stack Register - STACK A C C 0 6 H P C L 0 7 H T B L P 0 8 H T B L H 0 9 H This is a special part of the memory which is used to save the contents of the Program Counter only. The stack is organized into 6 levels and is neither part of the data nor part of the program space, and is neither readable nor writeable. The activated level is indexed by the stack pointer (SP) and is neither readable nor writeable. At a subroutine call or interrupt acknowledge signal, the contents of the program counter are pushed onto the stack. At the end of a subroutine or an interrupt routine, signaled by a return instruction, RET or RETI, the program counter is restored to its previous value from the stack. After a chip reset, the SP will point to the top of the stack. 0 A H S T A T U S 0 B H IN T C 0 C H 0 D H T M R 0 E H T M R C 0 F H 1 0 H 1 1 H If the stack is full and a non-masked interrupt takes place, the interrupt request flag will be recorded but the acknowledge signal will be inhibited. When the stack pointer is decremented, by RET or RETI, the interrupt will be serviced. This feature prevents stack overflow allowing the programmer to use the structure more easily. In a similar case, if the stack is full and a ²CALL² is subsequently executed, stack overflow occurs and the first entry will be lost as only the most recent 6 return addresses are stored. 1 2 H P A 1 3 H P A C 1 4 H P B 1 5 H P B C 1 6 H P C 1 7 H P C C 1 8 H P D 1 9 H P D C 1 A H P W M S p e c ia l P u r p o s e D a ta M e m o ry 1 B H 1 C H P F 1 D H P F C 1 E H IN T C 1 1 F H 2 0 H Data Memory - RAM The data memory is designed with 226´8 bits. The data memory is divided into 2 functional groups: special function registers and general purpose data memory. Most of them are read/write, but some are read only. 2 1 H A D R 2 2 H A D C R 2 3 H A C S R 2 4 H S B C R _ A 2 5 H S B D R _ A 2 6 H S B C R _ B 2 7 H 2 8 H Reading any unused locations will return the result ²00H². The general purpose data memory, addressed from 28H to FFH, is used for data and control information under instruction commands. F F H S B D R _ B G e n e ra l P u rp o s e D a ta M e m o ry (2 1 6 B y te s ) : U n u s e d R e a d a s "0 0 " RAM Mapping All of the data memory areas can handle arithmetic, logic, increment, decrement and rotate operations directly. Except for some dedicated bits, each bit in the data memory can be set and reset by ²SET [m].i² and ²CLR [m].i². They are also indirectly accessible through the memory pointer registers MP. Accumulator The accumulator is closely related to ALU operations. It is also mapped to location 05H of the data memory and can carry out immediate data operations. The data movement between two data memory locations must pass through the accumulator. Indirect Addressing Register Location 00H is an indirect addressing register that is not physically implemented. Any read/write operation of [00H] accesses data memory pointed to by MP. Reading location 00H itself indirectly will return the result 00H. Writing indirectly results in no operation. Rev. 1.00 0 0 H Arithmetic and Logic Unit - ALU This circuit performs 8-bit arithmetic and logic operations. The ALU provides the following functions: · Arithmetic operations (ADD, ADC, SUB, SBC, DAA) 8 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A · Logic operations (AND, OR, XOR, CPL) converter end-of-conversion interrupt and two SPI interrupts. The interrupt control registers INTC and INTC1 both contains the interrupt control bits to set the enable/disable and the interrupt request flags. · Rotation (RL, RR, RLC, RRC) · Increment and Decrement (INC, DEC) · Branch decision (SZ, SNZ, SIZ, SDZ ....) Once an interrupt subroutine is serviced, all the other interrupts will be blocked by clearing the EMI bit. This scheme may prevent any further interrupt nesting. Other interrupt requests may happen during this interval but only the interrupt request flags are recorded. If a certain interrupt requires servicing within the service routine, the programmer may set the EMI bit and the corresponding bit of INTC or INTC1 to allow interrupt nesting. If the stack is full, the interrupt request will not be acknowledged, even if the related interrupt is enabled, until the SP is decreased. If immediate service is desired, the stack has to be prevented from becoming full. The ALU not only saves the results of a data operation but also changes the status register. Status Register - STATUS This 8-bit register contains the zero flag (Z), carry flag (C), auxiliary carry flag (AC), overflow flag (OV), power down flag (PDF), and watchdog time-out flag (TO). It also records the status information and controls the operation sequence. With the exception of the TO and PDF flags, bits in the status register can be altered by instructions like most other registers. Any data written into the status register will not change the TO or PDF flags. In addition, operations related to the status register may give different results from those intended. The TO flag can be affected only by system power-up, a WDT time-out or executing the ²CLR WDT² or ²HALT² instruction. The PDF flag can be affected only by executing the ²HALT² or ²CLR WDT² instruction or during a system power-up. All interrupts have a wake-up capability. As an interrupt is serviced, a control transfer occurs by pushing the program counter onto the stack and then branching to subroutines at a specified location in the program memory. Only the program counter is pushed onto the stack. If the contents of the register or status register are altered by the interrupt service program, which corrupts the desired control sequence, the programmer should save these contents first. The Z, OV, AC and C flags generally reflect the status of the latest operations. External interrupts are triggered by a high to low transition on pins INT0 or INT1 which will in turn set the related interrupt request flag, which is bit 4 of INTC or bit 6 of INTC1. When the respective interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and the external interrupt is active, a subroutine call to location 004H or 018H will occur. The external interrupt request flag and EMI bits will cleared to disable other interrupts. In addition, on entering the interrupt sequence or executing the subroutine call, the status register will not be pushed onto the stack automatically. If the contents of the status are important and if the subroutine can corrupt the status register, precautions must be taken to save it properly. The internal timer/event counter interrupt is initialized by setting the timer/event counter interrupt request flag (bit 5 of INTC), caused by a timer overflow. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and the timer/event Interrupt The microcontroller provides two external interrupts, an internal timer/event counter overflow interrupt, an A/D Bit No. Label Function 0 C C is set if the operation results in a carry during an addition operation or if a borrow does not take place during a subtraction operation; otherwise C is cleared. C is also affected by a rotate through carry instruction. 1 AC AC is set if the operation results in a carry out of the low nibbles in addition or no borrow from the high nibble into the low nibble in subtraction; otherwise AC is cleared. 2 Z 3 OV OV is set if the operation results in a carry into the highest-order bit but not a carry out of the highest-order bit, or vice versa; otherwise OV is cleared. 4 PDF PDF is cleared by system power-up or executing the ²CLR WDT² instruction. PDF is set by executing the ²HALT² instruction. 5 TO TO is cleared by system power-up or executing the ²CLR WDT² or ²HALT² instruction. TO is set by a WDT time-out. 6~7 ¾ Unused bit, read as ²0² Z is set if the result of an arithmetic or logic operation is zero; otherwise Z is cleared. Status (0AH) Register Rev. 1.00 9 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Bit No. Label 0 EMI 1 EEI_A 2 ETI Function Controls the master (global) interrupt (1= enabled; 0= disabled) Controls the external interrupt (1= enabled; 0= disabled) Controls the Timer/Event Counter interrupt (1= enabled; 0= disabled) 3 EADI Controls the A/D converter interrupt (1= enabled; 0= disabled) 4 EIF_A External interrupt request flag (1= active; 0= inactive) 5 TF 6 ADF 7 ¾ Internal Timer/Event Counter request flag (1= active; 0= inactive) End of A/D conversion interrupt request flag (1= active; 0= inactive) Unused bit, read as ²0² INTC (0BH) Register Bit No. Label Function 0 ESII_A Controls the serial interface interrupt (1= enabled; 0= disabled) 1 ESII_B Controls the serial interface interrupt (1= enabled; 0= disabled) 2 EEI_B Controls the INT1 external interrupt (1= enabled; 0= disabled) 3, 7 ¾ 4 SIF_A Serial interface interrupt request flag (1= active; 0= inactive) 5 SIF_B Serial interface interrupt request flag (1= active; 0= inactive) 6 EIF_B INT1 External interrupt request flag (1= active; 0= inactive) Unused bits, read as ²0² INTC1 (1EH) Register counter interrupt request flag is set, a subroutine call to location 00CH will occur. The related interrupt request flag will be reset and the EMI bit cleared to disable further interrupts. interrupt control bits are set to ²1² (if the stack is not full). To return from the interrupt subroutine, a ²RET² or ²RETI² instruction may be executed. RETI will set the EMI bit to enable further interrupts, but RET will not. The A/D converter end-of-conversion interrupt is initialized by setting the A/D end-of-conversion interrupt request flag (bit 6 of INTC), caused by an end of A/D conversion. When the interrupt is enabled, the stack is not full and the end of A/D conversion interrupt request flag is set, a subroutine call to location 0CH will occur. The related interrupt request flag will be reset and the EMI bit cleared to disable further interrupts. Interrupts, occurring in the interval between rising edge of two consecutive T2 pulses, will be serviced on the later of the two T2 pulses, if the corresponding interrupts are enabled. In the case of simultaneous requests the priorities in the follow table apply. These can be masked by clearing the EMI bit. Interrupt Source There are two serial interface interrupts, which will be generated when the interface receives or transmits 8-bits of data. These interrupts are indicated by the interrupt flags, SIF_A; bit 4 of INTC1, and SIF_B; bit 5 of INTC1. The serial interface interrupts are enabled by setting the serial interface interrupt control bits, ESII_A; bit 0 of INTC1 and ESII_B; bit 1 of INTC1. After the res p e c t iv e i n t e r f ac e i s e n a b l ed by s et t i n g t h e corresponding SBEN bit, which is bit 4 of either SBCR_A or SBCR_B, if the stack is not full and the corresponding SIF_A or SIF_B bit is set, a subroutine call to location 10H or 14H occurs. Vector INT0 External Interrupt 1 04H Timer/Event Counter Overflow 2 08H End of A/D Conversion Interrupt 3 0CH SPI_A Interrupt 4 10H SPI_B Interrupt 5 14H INT1 External Interrupt 6 18H The timer/event counter interrupt request flag (TF), external interrupt request flag (EIF), A/D converter request flag (ADF), enable timer/event counter bit (ETI), enable external interrupt bit (EEI), enable A/D converter interrupt bit (EADI) and enable master interrupt bit (EMI) constitute an interrupt control register (INTC) which is located at 0BH in the data memory. EMI, EEI, ETI, EADI are used to control the enabling/disabling of interrupts. These bits During the execution of an interrupt subroutine, other interrupt acknowledgments are held until the RETI instruction is executed or the EMI bit and the related Rev. 1.00 Priority 10 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A and no external components are required. Even if the system enters the power down mode, the system clock is stopped, but the WDT oscillator still works within a period of 65ms at 5V. The WDT oscillator can be disabled by options to conserve power. prevent the requested interrupt from being serviced. Once the interrupt request flags (TF, EIF, ADF) are set, they will remain in the INTC register until the interrupts are serviced or cleared by a software instruction. It is recommended that a program does not use the CALL subroutine within the interrupt subroutine. Interrupts often occur in an unpredictable manner or need to be serviced immediately in some applications. If only one stack is left and enabling the interrupt is not well controlled, the original control sequence will be damaged if a ²CALL² instruction is executed in the interrupt subroutine. Watchdog Timer - WDT The clock source of WDT is implemented by a dedicated RC oscillator (WDT oscillator) or instruction clock (system clock divided by 4), chosen via a configuration option. This timer is designed to prevent software malfunctions or the program jumping to unknown locations. The Watchdog Timer can be disabled by a configuration option. If the Watchdog Timer is disabled, all the executions related to the WDT result in no operation. Oscillator configuration There are 2 oscillator circuits in the microcontroller. V R C 1 D D If the internal oscillator, which is an RC oscillator with a nominal period of 65ms at 5V, is selected, it is first divided by 32768~65536 to get a time-out period of approximately 2.1s~4.3s. This time-out period may vary with temperature, VDD and process variations. If the WDT oscillator is disabled, the WDT clock may still come from the instruction clock and operate in the same manner except that in the HALT state the WDT may stop counting and lose its protecting purpose. In this situation the logic can only be restarted by external logic. O S C O S C 1 O S C 1 C 2 R 1 O S C 2 C r y s ta l O s c illa to r fS Y S /4 N M O S o p e n d r a in O S C 2 R C O s c illa to r System Oscillator Both of them are designed for system clocks, namely the external RC oscillator, the external Crystal oscillator and the internal RC oscillator, the choice of which is determined by configuration options. The Power Down mode stops the system oscillator to conserve power. If the device operates in a noisy environment, using the on-chip RC oscillator (WDT OSC) is strongly recommended, since the HALT instruction will stop the system clock. If an RC oscillator is used, an external resistor between OSC1 and VDD is required and the resistance must range from 47kW to 750kW. The system clock, divided by 4, is available on OSC2, which can be used to synchronize external logic. The RC oscillator provides the most cost effective solution. However, the oscillation frequency may vary with VDD, temperature and process variations. It is, therefore, not suitable for timing sensitive operations where an accurate oscillator frequency is desired. The WDT overflow under normal operation will initialize a ²chip reset² and set the status bit ²TO². But in the Power-down mode, the overflow will initialize a ²warm reset², and only the program counter and the SP are reset to zero. To clear the contents of the WDT, three methods are adopted; an external reset (a low level on the RES pin), a software instruction or a HALT instruction. The software instructions include ²CLR WDT² and the other set - ²CLR WDT1² and ²CLR WDT2². Of these two types of instruction, only one can be active depending on the configuration option - ²CLR WDT times selection option². If the ²CLR WDT² is selected (i.e. CLR WDT times equal one), any execution of the ²CLR WDT² instruction will clear the WDT. In the case that ²CLR WDT1² and ²CLR WDT2² are chosen (i.e. CLR WDT times equal two), these two instructions must be executed to clear the WDT; otherwise, the WDT may reset the chip as a result of a time-out. If the Crystal oscillator is used, a crystal across OSC1 and OSC2 is needed to provide the feedback and phase shift required for the oscillator. No other external components are required. Instead of a crystal, a resonator can also be connected between OSC1 and OSC2 to obtain a frequency reference, but two external capacitors connected between OSC1 and OSC2 and ground are required. The WDT oscillator is a free running on-chip RC oscillator, S y s te m C lo c k /4 O p tio n S e le c t fS 8 - b it C o u n te r 7 - b it C o u n te r W D T O S C T T W D T T im e - o u t fS /2 15~ fS /2 16 C L R W D T Watchdog Timer Rev. 1.00 11 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Power Down Operation - HALT To minimize power consumption, all the I/O pins should be carefully managed before entering the Power-down mode. The HALT mode is initialized by the ²HALT² instruction and results in the following... · The system oscillator will be turned off but the WDT Reset oscillator remains running (if the WDT oscillator is selected). There are three ways in which a reset can occur: · RES reset during normal operation · The contents of the on chip RAM and registers remain · RES reset during HALT unchanged. · WDT time-out reset during normal operation · The WDT and WDT prescaler will be cleared and re- sume counting again (if the WDT clock comes from the WDT oscillator). The WDT time-out during Power-down is different from other chip reset conditions, since it can perform a ²warm reset² that resets only the Program Counter and SP, leaving the other circuits in their original state. Some registers remain unchanged during other reset conditions. Most registers are reset to their ²initial condition² when the reset conditions are met. By examining the PDF and TO flags, the program can distinguish between different ²chip resets². · All of the I/O ports maintain their original status. · The PDF flag is set and the TO flag is cleared. The system can leave the Power-down mode by means of an external reset, an interrupt, an external falling edge signal on port A or a WDT overflow. An external reset causes a device initialization and the WDT overflow performs a ²warm reset². After the TO and PDF flags are examined, the reason for chip reset can be determined. The PDF flag is cleared by a system power-up or executing the ²CLR WDT² instruction and is set when executing the ²HALT² instruction. The TO flag is set if the WDT time-out occurs, and causes a wake-up that only resets the Program Counter and SP; the others remain in their original status. The port A wake-up and interrupt methods of wake-up can be considered as a continuation of normal execution. Each bit in port A can be independently selected to wake-up the device using configuration options. Awakening from an I/O port stimulus, the program will resume execution of the next instruction. If it awakens from an interrupt, two sequences may occur. If the related interrupt is disabled or the interrupt is enabled but the stack is full, the program will resume execution at the next instruction. If the interrupt is enabled and the stack is not full, the regular interrupt response takes place. If an interrupt request flag is set to ²1² before entering the Power-down mode, the wake-up function of the related interrupt will be disabled. Once a wake-up event occurs, it takes 1024 tSYS (system clock period) to resume normal operation. In other words, a dummy period will be inserted after a wake-up. If the wake-up results from an interrupt acknowledge signal, the actual interrupt subroutine execution will be delayed by one or more cycles. If the wake-up results in the next instruction execution, this will be executed immediately after the dummy period has finished. Rev. 1.00 TO PDF RESET Conditions 0 0 RES reset during power-up u u RES reset during normal operation 0 1 RES wake-up HALT 1 u WDT time-out during normal operation 1 1 WDT wake-up HALT Note: ²u² stands for ²unchanged² To guarantee that the system oscillator is started and stabilized, the SST (System Start-up Timer) provides an extra-delay of 1024 system clock pulses when the system reset (power-up, WDT time-out or RES reset) or the system awakes from the Power-down mode. When a system reset occurs, the SST delay is added during the reset period. Any wake-up from Power-down will enable the SST delay. An extra option load time delay is added during a system reset (power-up, WDT time-out at normal mode or RES reset). 12 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A V D D The functional unit chip reset status is shown below. R E S Program Counter 000H Interrupt Disable Prescaler Clear WDT Clear. After a master reset, WDT begins counting Timer/Event Counter Off Input/Output Ports Input mode Stack Pointer C h ip S T R e s e t Reset Timing Chart H A L T W a rm R e s e t W D T Points to the top of the stack V tS S S T T im e - o u t R E S D D C o ld R e s e t 0 .0 1 m F * 1 0 0 k W S S T 1 0 - b it R ip p le C o u n te r O S C 1 R E S 1 0 k W S y s te m 0 .1 m F * R e s e t Reset Configuration Reset Circuit Note: ²*² Make the length of the wiring, which is connected to the RES pin as short as possible, to avoid noise interference. The register states is summarized in the table. Register Reset (Power-on) WDT Time-out RES Reset (Normal Operation) (Normal Operation) RES Reset (HALT) WDT Time-out (HALT)* MP xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu ACC xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu 000H 000H 000H 000H 000H TBLP xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu uuuu TBLH -xxx xxxx -uuu uuuu -uuu uuuu -uuu uuuu -uuu uuuu STATUS --00 xxxx --1u uuuu --uu uuuu --01 uuuu --11 uuuu INTC -000 0000 -000 0000 -000 0000 -000 0000 -uuu uuuu INTC1 -000 -000 -000 -000 -000 -000 -000 -000 -uuu -uuu WDTS 0000 0111 0000 0111 0000 0111 0000 0111 uuuu uuuu PA 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PAC 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PB 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PBC 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PC 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PCC 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PD 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu PDC 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 1111 uuuu uuuu ---- -111 ---- -111 ---- -111 ---- -111 --- -uuu Program Counter PF Rev. 1.00 13 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Register PFC Reset (Power-on) WDT Time-out RES Reset (Normal Operation) (Normal Operation) RES Reset (HALT) WDT Time-out (HALT)* ---- -111 ---- -111 ---- -111 ---- -111 --- -uuu INTC1 -000 0000 -000 0000 -000 0000 -000 0000 -uuu uuuu PWM xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu ADR xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu ADCR 0100 0000 0100 0000 0100 0000 0100 0000 uuuu uuuu ACSR 1--- --00 1--- --00 1--- --00 1--- --00 u--- --uu SBCR_A 0110 0000 0110 0000 0110 0000 0110 0000 uuuu uuuu SBDR_A xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu SBCR_B 0110 0000 0110 0000 0110 0000 0110 0000 uuuu uuuu SBDR_B xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx uuuu uuuu Note: ²*² stands for ²warm reset² ²u² stands for ²unchanged² ²x² stands for ²unknown² In the pulse width measurement mode with the TON and TE bits equal to one, once the TMR pin has received a transient from low to high (or high to low if the TE bit is ²0²) it will start counting until the TMR pin returns to its original level and resets the TON bit. The measured result will remain in the timer/event counter even if the activated transient occurs again. In other words, only a one cycle measurement can be implemented. Until the TON bit is again set, the cycle measurement will not function even if it receives further transient pulses. Note that, in this operating mode, the timer/event counter starts counting not according to the logic level but according to the transient edges. In the case of a counter overflow, the counter is reloaded from the timer/event counter preload register and issues an interrupt request just like the other two modes. To enable the counting operation, the timer ON bit (TON; bit 4 of TMRC) should be set to 1. In the pulse width measurement mode, the TON bit will be cleared automatically after the measurement cycle is completed. But in the other two modes the TON bit can only be reset by instructions. The overflow of the timer/event counter is one of the wake-up sources. No matter what the operation mode is, writing a 0 to ETI can disable the interrupt service. Timer/Event Counter A timer/event counter (TMR) is implemented in the microcontroller. The timer/event counter contains an 8-bit programmable count-up counter whose clock may come from an external source or the system clock. Using an external clock input allows the user to count external events, measure time internals or pulse widths, or generate an accurate time base. While using the internal clock allows the user to generate an accurate time base. The timer/event counter can generate PFD signal by using an external or internal clock. The PFD frequency is determined by the equation fINT/[2´(256-N)]. There are 2 registers related to the timer/event counter; TMR and TMRC. Two physical registers are mapped to the TMR location; writing to TMR places the start value into the timer/event counter preload register. Reading TMR retrieves the contents of the timer/event counter. The TMRC register is a timer/event counter control register, which defines some options. The TM0, TM1 bits define the operating mode. The event count mode is used to count external events, which means the clock source comes from the external TMR pin. The timer mode functions as a normal timer with the clock source coming from the fINT clock. The pulse width measurement mode can be used to measure a high or low level duration of the external TMR pin. The counting is based on fINT. In the case of a timer/event counter OFF condition, writing data to the timer/event counter preload register will also reload that data to the timer/event counter. But if the timer/event counter is turned on, data written to it will only be kept in the timer/event counter preload register. The timer/event counter will still operate until an overflow occurs. When the timer/event counter is read, the clock will be blocked to avoid errors. As clock blocking may results in a counting error, this must be taken into consideration by the programmer. In the event count or timer mode, once the timer/event counter starts counting, it will count from the current contents in the timer/event counter to FFH. Once an overflow occurs, the counter is reloaded from the timer/event counter preload register and generates an interrupt request flag (TF; bit 5 of INTC) at the same time. Rev. 1.00 14 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A The bit0~bit2 of the TMRC can be used to define the pre-scaling stages of the internal clock sources of timer/event counter. The overflow signal of the timer/event counter can be used to generate the PFD signal. operation, these ports are non-latching, that is, the inputs must be ready at the T2 rising edge of instruction ²MOV A,[m]² (m=12H, 14H, 16H, 18H or 22H). For output operation, all the data is latched and remains unchanged until the output latch is rewritten. Each I/O line has its own control register (PAC, PBC, PCC, PDC, PFC) to control the input/output configuration. With this control register, a CMOS output or Schmitt trigger input with or without pull-high resistor structures can be reconfigured dynamically (i.e. on-the-fly) under software control. To function as an input, the corresponding latch of the control register must Input/Output Ports There are 35 bidirectional input/output lines in the microcontroller, labeled as PA, PB, PC, PD and PF, which are mapped to the data memory of [12H], [14H], [16H], [18H] and [22H] respectively. All of these I/O ports can be used for input and output operations. For input Bit No. Label Function Defines the prescaler stages, PSC2, PSC1, PSC0= 000: fINT=fSYS 001: fINT=fSYS/2 010: fINT=fSYS/4 011: fINT=fSYS/8 100: fINT=fSYS/16 101: fINT=fSYS/32 110: fINT=fSYS/64 111: fINT=fSYS/128 PSC0 PSC1 PSC2 0 1 2 3 TE 4 TON 5 ¾ 6 7 Defines the TMR active edge of the timer/event counter: In Event Counter Mode (TM1,TM0)=(0,1): 1:count on falling edge; 0:count on rising edge In Pulse Width measurement mode (TM1,TM0)=(1,1): 1: start counting on the rising edge, stop on the falling edge; 0: start counting on the falling edge, stop on the rising edge Enable or disable the timer counting (0=disable; 1=enable) Unused bits, read as ²0² Defines the operating mode (TM1, TM0)= 01=Event count mode (external clock) 10=Timer mode (internal clock) 11=Pulse width measurement mode 00=Unused TM0 TM1 TMRC (0EH) Register P W M (6 + 2 ) C o m p a re fS Y S T o P D 0 C ir c u it 8 - s ta g e P r e s c a le r f IN 8 -1 M U X P S C 2 ~ P S C 0 D a ta B u s T T M 1 T M 0 T M R 8 - B it T im e r /E v e n t C o u n te r P r e lo a d R e g is te r R e lo a d T E T M 1 T M 0 T O N P u ls e W id th M e a s u re m e n t M o d e C o n tro l 8 - B it T im e r /E v e n t C o u n te r O v e r flo w to In te rru p t 1 /2 P F D Timer/Event Counter Rev. 1.00 15 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A write ²1². The input source also depends on the control register. If the control register bit is ²1², the input will read the pad state. If the control register bit is ²0², the contents of the latches will move to the internal bus. The latter is possible in the ²read-modify-write² instruction. ated by the timer/event counter overflow signal. If setup as an input then the pin will retain its input function. Once the PFD configuration option is selected, the PFD output signal is controlled by the PA3 data register. Writing a ²1² to the PA3 data register will enable the PFD output function and writing ²0² will force pin PA3 to remain at ²0². The I/O functions of PA3 are shown below. For output function, all I/Os except PB2, PB3, PD2, PD7 are CMOS types. There are options to define PB2, PB3, PD2, PD7 as either CMOS or NMOS types. These control registers are mapped to locations 13H, 15H, 17H,19H and 23H. I/O Mode Logical Input PA3 After a device reset, these input/output lines remain at high levels or a floating state, depending upon the pull-high configuration options. Each bit of these input/output latches can be set or cleared using the ²SET [m].i² and ²CLR [m].i² instructions. Note: I/P O/P (Normal) (Normal) Each I/O line has a pull-high option. Once a pull-high option is selected, the I/O line has a pull-high resistor connected, otherwise, there are none. Take note that a non-pull-high I/O line operating as an input will be in a floating state. PD0 I/P O/P (Normal) (Normal) Logical Input Q Q D a ta B it Q D W r ite D a ta R e g is te r C K S Q M P A 3 (P D 0 o r P W M ) P F D M R e a d D a ta R e g is te r S y s te m W a k e -u p ( P A o n ly ) Logical Input PWM D D P A P A P A P A P A P A P B P C P D C h ip R e s e t R e a d C o n tr o l R e g is te r O/P (PWM) It is recommended that unused or not bonded out I/O V S Logical Output I/P (PWM) P u ll- H ig h O p tio n C o n tr o l B it C K PFD (Timer on) The PFD frequency is the timer/event counter overflow frequency divided by 2. I/O Mode Pin PA3 is pin-shared with the PFD signal. If the PFD configuration option is selected, the output signal on PA3, if setup as an output, will be the PFD signal gener- D Logical Input PB and PC can also be used as A/D converter inputs. The A/D function will be described later. There are two SPI interfaces which are shared with pins PD1~PD4, PD7 and PF0~PF2. The SPI function will be described later. There is a PWM function shared with pin PD0. If the PWM function is enabled, the PWM signal will appear on pin PD0 (if PD0 is setup as an output). Writing a ²1² to the PD0 data register will enable the PWM output function and writing a ²0² will force the PD0 to remain at ²0². The I/O functions of PD0 are shown in the table. Each line of port A has the capability of waking-up the device. D a ta B u s O/P (PFD) PA6, PA5 and PA4 are pin-shared with the INT0, INT1 and TMR pins respectively. Some instructions first input data and then follow the output operations. For example, ²SET [m].i², ²CLR [m].i², ²CPL [m]², ²CPLA [m]² read the entire port states into the CPU, execute the defined operations (bit-operation), and then write the results back to the latches or the accumulator. W r ite C o n tr o l R e g is te r Logical Output I/P (PFD) U U 7 0 ~ P 3 /P 4 /T 5 /IN 6 /IN A 2 F D M R T 0 T 1 0 /A N 0 ~ P B 7 /A N 7 0 /A N 8 ~ P C 7 /A N 1 5 0 /P W M X P F D E N (P A 3 ) X W a k e - u p o p tio n IN T fo r P A 5 O n ly T M R fo r P A 4 O n ly Input/Output Ports Rev. 1.00 16 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A lines should be set as output pins using software instructions to minimise power consumption should they be inadvertently setup as floating inputs. Group 2 is denoted by AC which has the value of PWM.1~PWM.0. In a PWM cycle, the duty cycle of each modulation cycle is shown in the table. Pulse Width Modulator - PWM Parameter The microcontroller provides a single channel (6+2) bit Pulse Width Modulator output shared with pin PD0. Its data register is known as PWM. The frequency source for the PWM counter comes from fSYS. The PWM register is an eight bit register. If the configuration option selects pin PD0 to be a PWM output, and if the pin is setup as an output by setting bit PDC.0 to ²0², then writing 1 to the PD0 data register will enable the PWM output function. Writing a ²0² will force the PD0 to stay at ²0². Y S Duty Cycle i<AC DC + 1 64 i³AC DC 64 Modulation cycle i (i=0~3) The modulation frequency, cycle frequency and cycle duty of the PWM output signal are summarized in the following table. A PWM cycle is divided into four modulation cycles (modulation cycle 0~modulation cycle 3). Each modulation cycle has 64 PWM input clock periods. In a (6+2) bit PWM function, the contents of the PWM register is divided into two groups. Group 1 of the PWM register is denoted by DC which has the value of PWM.7~PWM.2. fS AC (0~3) PWM Modulation Frequency PWM Cycle Frequency PWM Cycle Duty fSYS/64 fSYS/256 [PWM]/256 /2 [P W M ] = 1 0 0 P W M 2 5 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 2 5 /6 4 2 6 /6 4 [P W M ] = 1 0 1 P W M [P W M ] = 1 0 2 P W M [P W M ] = 1 0 3 P W M 2 6 /6 4 P W M m o d u la tio n p e r io d : 6 4 /fS M o d u la tio n c y c le 0 Y S M o d u la tio n c y c le 1 P W M M o d u la tio n c y c le 2 c y c le : 2 5 6 /fS M o d u la tio n c y c le 3 M o d u la tio n c y c le 0 Y S PWM Rev. 1.00 17 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A A/D Converter only and should not be used. Bits 1 and bit 0 are used to select the A/D converter clock source. A 16 channel 8-bit resolution A/D converter is integrated within the microcontroller. The A/D reference voltage is VDD. The A/D converter contains several special registers, which are ADR, ADCR and ACSR. The ADR register is the A/D result register and is read-only. After an A/D conversion has completed, the ADR register is read to obtain the conversion result data. The EOCB flag will also be automatically cleared to indicate the end of conversion. The ADCR register is the A/D converter control register, which selects the analog channel, contains the start A/D conversion control bit and the end of A/D conversion flag. To initiate an A/D conversion, the analog channel is first selected and then the START bit is given a falling edge. When the conversion is complete, the EOCB bit will be cleared and an A/D converter interrupt is generated. The ACSR register selects the A/D clock source as well as selecting which pins are to be used as A/D inputs. Bits 0~3 of ADCR are used to select an analog input channel. There are a total of 16 channels to select. Bits 3~6 of ADSR are used to select which pins on Port B and Port C are setup as normal I/Os or A/D inputs. The EOCB bit in the ADCR registers, is end of A/D conversion flag. This bit can be monitored to check when the A/D conversion has completed. The START bit in the ADCR register is used to initiate A/D conversion process. Providing the START bit with a rising edge will reset and start the A/D conversion. When checking for the end of an A/D conversion, the START bit should remain at ²0² and the EOCB bit monitored until it is cleared to ²0² which indicates the end of conversion. When the A/D conversion has completed, the A/D interrupt request flag is set. The EOCB bit is set to ²1² automatically when the START bit is set to ²1². Bit7 Bit6 Bit5 Bit4 Bit3 Bit2 Bit1 Bit0 D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 ADR (21H) Register ACS3 ACS2 ACS1 ACS0 Analog Channel 0 0 0 0 AN0 0 0 0 1 AN1 0 0 1 0 AN2 0 0 1 1 AN3 0 1 0 0 AN4 0 1 0 1 AN5 0 1 1 0 AN6 0 1 1 1 AN7 1 0 0 0 AN8 1 0 0 1 AN9 1 0 1 0 AN10 1 0 1 1 AN11 1 1 0 0 AN12 1 1 0 1 AN13 1 1 1 0 AN14 1 1 1 1 AN15 Bit 7 of the ACSR register is used for testing purposes Bit No. Label 0~3 ACS0~ ACS3 4~5 ¾ Function Analog channel selection Reserved bit 6 EOCB Indicates end of A/D conversion (read only). (0 = end of A/D conversion) 7 START Starts the A/D conversion. (0®1®0= start; 0®1= Reset A/D converter and set EOCB to ²1²) ADCR (22H) Register Bit No. Label 0 1 ADCS0 ADCS1 2 ¾ 3~6 PCR0~ PCR3 7 TEST Function ADCS1,ADCS0 : Selects the A/D converter clock source 0, 0: fSYS/2 0, 1: fSYS/8 1, 0: Undefined 1, 1: Undefined (fWDT for test only) Unused bit, read as ²0². Port B & Port C configuration selection. If PCR0, PCR1 and PCR2, PCR3 are all zero, the ADC circuit is power off to reduce power consumption For internal test only, read as ²1². ACSR (23H) Register Rev. 1.00 18 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A PCR3 PCR2 PCR1 PCR0 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 PB3 PB2 PB1 PB0 0 0 0 1 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 PB3 PB2 PB1 AN0 0 0 1 0 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 PB3 PB2 AN1 AN0 0 0 1 1 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 PB3 AN2 AN1 AN0 0 1 0 0 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 PB6 PB5 PB4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 0 1 0 1 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 PB6 PB5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 0 1 1 0 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 PB6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 0 1 1 1 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 PB7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 0 0 0 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 PC0 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 0 0 1 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 PC1 AN8 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 0 1 0 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 PC2 AN9 AN8 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 0 1 1 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 PC3 AN10 AN9 AN8 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 1 0 0 PC7 PC6 PC5 PC4 AN11 AN10 AN9 AN8 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 1 0 1 PC7 PC6 PC5 AN12 AN11 AN10 AN9 AN8 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 1 1 0 PC7 PC6 AN13 AN12 AN11 AN10 AN9 AN8 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 1 1 1 1 AN15 AN14 AN13 AN12 AN11 AN10 AN9 AN8 AN7 AN6 AN5 AN4 AN3 AN2 AN1 AN0 M in im u m o n e in s tr u c tio n c y c le n e e d e d S T A R T E O C B A /D s a m p lin g tim e 3 2 tA D P C R 3 ~ P C R 0 0 0 0 B A /D s a m p lin g tim e 3 2 tA D 1 0 0 B 1 0 0 B 0 0 0 B 1 . P B a n d P C s e tu p a s I/O s 2 . A /D c o n v e r te r is p o w e r e d o ff to r e d u c e p o w e r c o n s u m p tio n A C S 3 ~ A C S 0 0 0 0 B d o n 't c a r e 0 0 0 B 0 1 0 B P o w e r-o n R e s e t R e s e t a n d S ta rt o f A /D c o n v e rte r R e s e t a n d S ta rt o f A /D c o n v e rte r E n d o f A /D c o n v e r s io n 1 : D e fin e P B , P C c o n fig u r a tio n 2 : S e le c t a n a lo g c h a n n e l A /D N o te : A /D c lo c k m u s t b e fS Y S 7 6 tA D c o n v e r s io n tim e /2 o r fS Y S E n d o f A /D c o n v e r s io n 7 6 tA D A /D c o n v e r s io n tim e /8 A/D Conversion Timing Rev. 1.00 19 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Example: using EOC Polling Method to detect end of conversion. clr INTC mov a, 0010B mov ADCR,a mov a, 00000001B mov ACSR,a Start_conversion: clr .7 set ADCR.7 clr ADCR.7 Polling_EOC: sz ADCR.6 jmp polling_EOC mov a, ADR mov adr_buffer,a : : jmp start_conversion ; disable A/D interrupt in interrupt control register ; setup ADCR register to configure Port PB0~PB3 as A/D inputs and select ; AN0 to be connected to the A/D converter ; setup the ACSR register to select fSYS/8 as the A/D clock ; reset A/D ; start A/D ; poll the ADCR register EOC bit to detect end of A/D conversion ; continue polling ; read conversion result from the high byte ADRH register ; save result to user defined register ; start next A/D conversion Example: using Interrupt method to detect end of conversion. set INTC mov a, 0010B mov ADCR,a mov a, 00000001B mov ACSR,a : Start_conversion: clr ADCR.7 set ADCR.7 clr ADCR.7 : : ; enable A/D interrupt in interrupt control register ; setup ADCR register to configure Port PB0~PB3 as A/D inputs and select ; AN0 to be connected to the A/D converter ; setup the ACSR register to select fSYS/8 as the A/D clock ; reset A/D ; start A/D ; interrupt service routine EOC_service routine: mov a_buffer,a mov a,ADR mov adr_buffer,a clr .7 set ADCR.7 clr ADCR.7 mov a,a_buffer reti Rev. 1.00 ; save ACC to user defined register ; read conversion result from the high byte ADRH register ; save result to user defined register ; reset A/D ; start A/D ; restore ACC from temporary storage 20 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A SPI Serial Interface There are two SPI interfaces, with each interface containing four basic signals and pins. These are SDI (serial data input), SDO (serial data output), SCK (serial clock) and SCS (slave select pin). Note that each of these pin names will be suffixed with either an A or B to denote which SCI interface is being used, however to minimise repetition, this will not be S C S _ A , S C S _ B tC tS S _ S K tC P IC K S _ S K S C K _ A , S C K _ B S D I_ A , S D I_ B D 7 /D 0 D 6 /D 1 D 5 /D 2 D 4 /D 3 D 3 /D 4 D 2 /D 5 D 1 /D 6 D 0 /D 7 S D O _ A , S D O _ B D 7 /D 0 D 6 /D 1 D 5 /D 2 D 4 /D 3 D 3 /D 4 D 2 /D 5 D 1 /D 6 D 0 /D 7 S B C R _ A , S B C R _ B D 7 D 6 D 5 D 4 D 3 D 2 D 1 D 0 C K S M 1 M 0 S B E N M L S C S E N W C O L T R F 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 D 7 D 6 D 5 D 4 D 3 D 2 D 1 D 0 S B D R U U U U U U U U D A T A R E G IS T E R D E F A U L T S B D R _ A , S B D R _ B D E F A U L T S B C R : S E R IA L B U S C O N T R O L R E G IS T E R : S E R IA L B U S N o te : "U " m e a n s u n c h a n g e d . ¨ mentioned in the description. Two corresponding registers, SBCR and SBDR are unique to the serial interface and provide control, status, and data storage. Bit2 (CSEN) ® serial bus selection signal enable/disable (SCS), when CSEN=0, SCSB is floating. Bit1 (WCOL) ® this bit is set to 1 if data is written to the SBDR register (TXRX buffer) when data is transferred, writing will be ignored if data is written to SBDR (TXRX buffer) when data is transferred. · SBCR_A, SBCR_B: Serial bus control register Bit7 (CKS) clock source selection: fSIO=fSYS/4, select as 0 Bit6 (M1), Bit5 (M0) master/slave mode and baud rate selection M1, M0: 00 ® MASTER MODE, BAUD RATE= fSIO 01 ® MASTER MODE, BAUD RATE= fSIO/4 10 ® MASTER MODE, BAUD RATE= fSIO/16 11 ® SLAVE MODE Bit0 (TRF) ® data transferred or data received used to generate an interrupt. Note: data reception is still in operation when the MCU enters the Power-down mode. · SBDR_A, SBDR_B: Serial bus data register Data written to SBDR ® write data to the TXRX buffer only Data read from SBDR ® read from SBDR only Operating Mode description: Master transmitter: clock transmission and data I/O started by writing to SBDR Master clock transmission initiated by writing to SBDR Slave transmitter: data I/O started by clock reception Slave receiver: data I/O started by clock reception · Bit4 (SBEN) ® serial bus enable/disable (1/0) ¨ Disable: SCK (SCK), SDI, SDO, SCS floating Bit3 (MLS) ® MSB or LSB (1/0) shift first control bit Enable: (SCS dependent on CSEN bit) Disable ® enable: SCK, SDI, SDO, SCS= 0 (SCKB= ²0²) and waiting for writing data to SBDR (TXRX buffer) Master mode: write data to SBDR (TXRX buffer) start transmission/reception automatically Master mode: when the data has been transferred, set TRF Slave mode: when an SCK (and SCS dependent on CSEN) is received, data in the TXRX buffer is shifted-out and data on SDI is shifted-in. Rev. 1.00 21 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Clock polarity= rising (SCK) or falling (SCK): 1 or 0 (mask option). Modes Operations 1. 2. 3. 4. Master 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 1. 2. 3. 4. Slave 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. Select CKS and select M1, M0 = 00,01,10 Select CSEN, MLS (the same as the slave) Set SBEN Writing data to SBDR ® data is stored in TXRX buffer ® output SCK (and SCS) signals ® go to step 5 ® (SIO internal operation ® data stored in TXRX buffer, and SDI data is shifted into TXRX buffer ® data transferred, data in TXRX buffer is latched into SBDR) Check WCOL; WCOL= 1 ® clear WCOL and go to step 4; WCOL= 0 ® go to step 6 Check TRF or waiting for SBI (serial bus interrupt) Read data from SBDR Clear TRF Go to step 4 CKS don¢t care and select M1, M0= 11 Select CSEN, MLS (the same as the master) Set SBEN Writing data to SBDR ® data is stored in TXRX buffer ® waiting for master clock signal (and SCS): SCK ® go to step 5 ® (SIO internal operations ® SCK (SCS) received ® output data in TXRX buffer and SDI data is shifted into TXRX buffer ® data transferred, data in TXRX buffer is latched into SBDR) Check WCOL; WCOL= 1 ® clear WCOL, go to step 4; WCOL= 0 ® go to step 6 Check TRF or wait for SBI (serial bus interrupt) Read data from SBDR Clear TRF Go to step 4 Operation of Serial Interface WCOL: master/slave mode, set while writing to SBDR when data is transferring (transmitting or receiving) and this writing will then be ignored. WCOL function can be enabled/disabled by mask option. WCOL is set by SIO and cleared by users. has 2 options: CSEN mask option is used to enable/disable software CSEN function. If CSEN mask option is disabled, the software CSEN is always disabled. If CSEN mask option is enabled, software CSEN function can be used. Data transmission and reception are still working when the MCU enters the HALT mode. SBEN= 1 ® serial bus standby; SCS (CSEN= 1) = 1; SCS= floating (CSEN= 0); SDI= floating; SDO= 1; master SCK= output 1/0 (dependent on CPOL mask option), slave SCK= floating. CPOL is used to select the clock polarity of SCK. It is a mask option. SBEN= 0 ® serial bus disabled; SCS=SDO=1, SDI=SCK= floating in master mode, SDI=SDO=SCK= floating, SCS=1 in slave mode. MLS: MSB or LSB first selection. CSEN: chip select function enable/disable, CSEN=1 ® SCS signal function is active. Master should output SCS signal before SCL signal is set and slave data transferring should be disabled (or enabled) before (after) SCS signal is received. CSEN= 0, SCS signal is not needed, SCS pin (master and slave) should be floating. CSEN Rev. 1.00 TRF is set by SIO and cleared by users. When data transfer (transmission and reception) is completed, TRF is set to generate SBI (serial bus interrupt). 22 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A S B E N = 1 , C S E N = 0 a n d w r ite d a ta to S B D R ( if p u ll- h ig h e d ) S B E N = C S E N = 1 a n d w r ite d a ta to S B D R S C S S C K D 7 /D 0 D 6 /D 1 D 5 /D 2 D 4 /D 3 D 3 /D 4 D 2 /D 5 D 1 /D 6 D 0 /D 7 S D I D 7 /D 0 D 6 /D 1 D 5 /D 2 D 4 /D 3 D 3 /D 4 D 2 /D 5 D 1 /D 6 D 0 /D 7 S D O S C K S B C R D e fa u lt S B D R D e fa u lt D 7 C K S 0 D 7 u D 6 M 1 1 D 6 u D 5 M 0 1 D 5 u D 4 S B E N 0 D 4 u D 3 M L S 0 D 3 u D 2 C S E N 0 D 2 u D 1 W C O L 0 D 1 u D 0 T R F 0 D 0 u N o te : "u " m e a n s u n c h a n g e d . D a ta B u s S B D R ( R e c e iv e d D a ta R e g is te r ) D 7 D 6 D 5 D 4 D 3 D 2 D 1 D 0 M S D O U X M a n d , s ta rt E N S C K a n d , s ta rt C lo c k P o la r ity S D I U X M S D O S B E N M L S In te r n a l B a u d R a te C lo c k B u ffe r U X T R F C 0 C 1 C 2 M a s te r o r S la v e A N D In te r n a l B u s y F la g S B E N a n d , s ta rt E N W C O L F la g W r ite S B D R W r ite S B D R E n a b le /D is a b le S B E N W r ite S B D R S C S M a s te r o r S la v e S B E N C S E N W C O L : s e t b C S E N : e n a b 1 . m a s te r 2 . s la v e m S B E N : e n a b 1 . W h e n S 2 . W h e n S T R F 1 : d a ta C P O L 1 /0 : c Rev. 1.00 y S IO c le a r e d b y u s e r s le /d is a b le c h ip s e le c tio n fu n c tio m o d e 1 /0 : w ith /w ith o u t S C S o u o d e 1 /0 : w ith /w ith o u t S C S in p u le /d is a b le s e r ia l b u s ( 0 : in itia liz B E N = 0 , a ll s ta tu s fla g s s h o u ld B E N = 0 , a ll S IO r e la te d fu n c tio tr a n s m itte d o r r e c e iv e d , 0 : d a ta lo c k p o la r ity r is in g /fa llin g e d g e 23 n tp t e p in u t fu n c tio n c o n tr o l fu n c tio a ll s ta tu s fla g b e in itia liz e d n p in s s h o u ld s is tr a n s m ittin g : m a s k o p tio n n s ) ta y a t flo a tin g s ta te o r s till n o t r e c e iv e d December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Low Voltage Reset - LVR The relationship between VDD and VLVR is shown below. The microcontroller provides low voltage reset circuit in order to monitor the supply voltage of the device. If the supply voltage of the device is within the range 0.9V~VLVR, such as when changing a battery, the LVR will automatically reset the device internally. V D D 5 .5 V V O P R 5 .5 V V L V R 3 .0 V The LVR includes the following specifications: 2 .2 V · The low voltage (0.9V~VLVR) has to remain in its origi- nal state for longer than 1ms. If the low voltage state does not exceed 1ms, the LVR will ignore it and will not perform a reset function. 0 .9 V Note: · The LVR uses an ²OR² function with the external RES VOPR is the voltage range for proper chip operation at 4MHz system clock. signal to perform a chip reset. V D D 5 .5 V V L V R L V R D e te c t V o lta g e 0 .9 V 0 V R e s e t S ig n a l N o r m a l O p e r a tio n R e s e t R e s e t *1 *2 Low Voltage Reset Note: *1: To make sure that the system oscillator has stabilized, the SST provides an extra delay of 1024 system clock pulses before starting normal operation. *2: Since a low voltage has to be maintained in its original state for longer than 1ms, therefore a 1ms delay enters the reset mode. Rev. 1.00 24 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Options The following table shows all kinds of options in the microcontroller. All of the options must be defined to ensure proper system functioning. Items Options 1 Lock or unlock (1/0) 2 PA0~PA7 wake-up enable or disable (1/0) options 3 WDT clock source (fS) : WDTOSC/ fTID (0/1) 4 CLR WDT instruction(s): one or two clear WDT instruction(s) (1/0) 5 WDT enable or disable (0/1) 6 PA pull-high enable or disable (1/0) 7 PB pull-high enable or disable (1/0) by nibble 8 PC pull-high enable or disable (1/0) by nibble 9 PD pull-high enable or disable (1/0) by nibble 10 PF pull-high enable or disable (1/0) by nibble 11 PWM enable or disable 12 PFD enable or disable 13 System oscillators 0/1: RC/crystal 14 Low voltage reset: Enable or disable 15 LVR voltage: 3.0V/3.8V (0/1) 16 SIO_A (Serial Interface) enable or disable (default disable) 17 SIO_A_ CPOL: Clock polarity 1/0 : clock polarity rising or falling edge (default falling edge) 18 SIO_A_WCOL: Enable or disable (default disable) 19 SIO_A_CSEN: Enable or disable, CSEN mask option is used to enable or disable software CSEN function (default disable) 20 PD4, PB2, PB3, PD7 CMOS or NMOS output (default CMOS) 21 SIO_B (Serial Interface) enable or disable (default disable) 22 SIO_ B_CPOL: Clock polarity 1/0: clock polarity rising/falling edge (default falling edge) 23 SIO_B_WCOL: Enable or disable (default disable) 24 SIO_B_CSEN: Enable or disable, CSEN mask option is used to enable or disable software CSEN function (default disable) Rev. 1.00 25 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Application Circuits V D D 0 .0 1 m F * V D D 1 0 0 k W 0 .1 m F R E S 1 0 k W P A 0 ~ P A 2 P A 3 /P F D P A 4 /T M R P A 5 /IN T 0 V P A 6 /IN T 1 0 .1 m F * R P A 7 V S S O S C 2 S e e R ig h t S id e O S C 1 4 7 0 p F P B 0 /A N 0 P B 7 /A N 7 P C 0 /A N 8 P C 7 /A N 1 5 C 1 P D 0 /P W M C 2 O S C 1 P F 0 ~ P F 2 O S C 2 R 1 H T 8 2 J 3 0 R /H T 8 2 J 3 0 A Note: R C S y s te m O s c illa to r 3 0 k W < R O S C < 7 5 0 k W O S C 2 N M O S o p e n d r a in ~ O S C 1 O S C ~ O S C C ir c u it D D O S C C ry s ta l S y s te m F o r th e v a lu e s , s e e ta b le b e lo w O s c illa to r C ir c u it The resistance and capacitance for the reset circuit should be designed to ensure that VDD is stable and remains within a valid range of the operating voltage before bringing RES high. ²*² Make the length of the wiring, which is connected to the RES pin as short as possible, to avoid noise interference. The following table shows the C1, C2 and R1 values corresponding to the different crystal values. (For reference only) Crystal or Resonator C1, C2 R1 4MHz Crystal 0pF 10kW 4MHz Resonator (3 pins) 0pF 12kW 4MHz Resonator (2 pins) 10pF 12kW 3.58MHz Crystal 0pF 10kW 3.58MHz Resonator (2 pins) 25pF 10kW 2MHz Crystal & Resonator (2 pins) 25pF 10kW 1MHz Crystal 35pF 27kW 480kHz Resonator 300pF 9.1kW 455kHz Resonator 300pF 10kW 429kHz Resonator 300pF 10kW The function of the resistor R1 is to ensure that the oscillator will switch off should low voltage conditions occur. Such a low voltage, as mentioned here, is one which is less than the lowest value of the MCU operating voltage. Note however that if the LVR is enabled then R1 can be removed. Rev. 1.00 26 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Instruction Set Summary Description Instruction Cycle Flag Affected Add data memory to ACC Add ACC to data memory Add immediate data to ACC Add data memory to ACC with carry Add ACC to data memory with carry Subtract immediate data from ACC Subtract data memory from ACC Subtract data memory from ACC with result in data memory Subtract data memory from ACC with carry Subtract data memory from ACC with carry and result in data memory Decimal adjust ACC for addition with result in data memory 1 1(1) 1 1 1(1) 1 1 1(1) 1 1(1) 1(1) Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV Z,C,AC,OV C 1 1 1 1(1) 1(1) 1(1) 1 1 1 1(1) 1 Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Z Increment data memory with result in ACC Increment data memory Decrement data memory with result in ACC Decrement data memory 1 1(1) 1 1(1) Z Z Z Z Rotate data memory right with result in ACC Rotate data memory right Rotate data memory right through carry with result in ACC Rotate data memory right through carry Rotate data memory left with result in ACC Rotate data memory left Rotate data memory left through carry with result in ACC Rotate data memory left through carry 1 1(1) 1 1(1) 1 1(1) 1 1(1) None None C C None None C C Move data memory to ACC Move ACC to data memory Move immediate data to ACC 1 1(1) 1 None None None Clear bit of data memory Set bit of data memory 1(1) 1(1) None None Mnemonic Arithmetic ADD A,[m] ADDM A,[m] ADD A,x ADC A,[m] ADCM A,[m] SUB A,x SUB A,[m] SUBM A,[m] SBC A,[m] SBCM A,[m] DAA [m] Logic Operation AND A,[m] OR A,[m] XOR A,[m] ANDM A,[m] ORM A,[m] XORM A,[m] AND A,x OR A,x XOR A,x CPL [m] CPLA [m] AND data memory to ACC OR data memory to ACC Exclusive-OR data memory to ACC AND ACC to data memory OR ACC to data memory Exclusive-OR ACC to data memory AND immediate data to ACC OR immediate data to ACC Exclusive-OR immediate data to ACC Complement data memory Complement data memory with result in ACC Increment & Decrement INCA [m] INC [m] DECA [m] DEC [m] Rotate RRA [m] RR [m] RRCA [m] RRC [m] RLA [m] RL [m] RLCA [m] RLC [m] Data Move MOV A,[m] MOV [m],A MOV A,x Bit Operation CLR [m].i SET [m].i Rev. 1.00 27 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Instruction Cycle Flag Affected Jump unconditionally Skip if data memory is zero Skip if data memory is zero with data movement to ACC Skip if bit i of data memory is zero Skip if bit i of data memory is not zero Skip if increment data memory is zero Skip if decrement data memory is zero Skip if increment data memory is zero with result in ACC Skip if decrement data memory is zero with result in ACC Subroutine call Return from subroutine Return from subroutine and load immediate data to ACC Return from interrupt 2 1(2) 1(2) 1(2) 1(2) 1(3) 1(3) 1(2) 1(2) 2 2 2 2 None None None None None None None None None None None None None Read ROM code (current page) to data memory and TBLH Read ROM code (last page) to data memory and TBLH 2(1) 2(1) None None No operation Clear data memory Set data memory Clear Watchdog Timer Pre-clear Watchdog Timer Pre-clear Watchdog Timer Swap nibbles of data memory Swap nibbles of data memory with result in ACC Enter power down mode 1 1(1) 1(1) 1 1 1 1(1) 1 1 None None None TO,PDF TO(4),PDF(4) TO(4),PDF(4) None None TO,PDF Mnemonic Description Branch JMP addr SZ [m] SZA [m] SZ [m].i SNZ [m].i SIZ [m] SDZ [m] SIZA [m] SDZA [m] CALL addr RET RET A,x RETI Table Read TABRDC [m] TABRDL [m] Miscellaneous NOP CLR [m] SET [m] CLR WDT CLR WDT1 CLR WDT2 SWAP [m] SWAPA [m] HALT Note: x: Immediate data m: Data memory address A: Accumulator i: 0~7 number of bits addr: Program memory address Ö: Flag is affected -: Flag is not affected (1) : If a loading to the PCL register occurs, the execution cycle of instructions will be delayed for one more cycle (four system clocks). (2) : If a skipping to the next instruction occurs, the execution cycle of instructions will be delayed for one more cycle (four system clocks). Otherwise the original instruction cycle is unchanged. (3) (1) : (4) Rev. 1.00 and (2) : The flags may be affected by the execution status. If the Watchdog Timer is cleared by executing the ²CLR WDT1² or ²CLR WDT2² instruction, the TO and PDF are cleared. Otherwise the TO and PDF flags remain unchanged. 28 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Instruction Definition ADC A,[m] Add data memory and carry to the accumulator Description The contents of the specified data memory, accumulator and the carry flag are added simultaneously, leaving the result in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC+[m]+C Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö ADCM A,[m] Add the accumulator and carry to data memory Description The contents of the specified data memory, accumulator and the carry flag are added simultaneously, leaving the result in the specified data memory. Operation [m] ¬ ACC+[m]+C Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö ADD A,[m] Add data memory to the accumulator Description The contents of the specified data memory and the accumulator are added. The result is stored in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC+[m] Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö ADD A,x Add immediate data to the accumulator Description The contents of the accumulator and the specified data are added, leaving the result in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC+x Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö ADDM A,[m] Add the accumulator to the data memory Description The contents of the specified data memory and the accumulator are added. The result is stored in the data memory. Operation [m] ¬ ACC+[m] Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö 29 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A AND A,[m] Logical AND accumulator with data memory Description Data in the accumulator and the specified data memory perform a bitwise logical_AND operation. The result is stored in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC ²AND² [m] Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ AND A,x Logical AND immediate data to the accumulator Description Data in the accumulator and the specified data perform a bitwise logical_AND operation. The result is stored in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC ²AND² x Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ ANDM A,[m] Logical AND data memory with the accumulator Description Data in the specified data memory and the accumulator perform a bitwise logical_AND operation. The result is stored in the data memory. Operation [m] ¬ ACC ²AND² [m] Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ CALL addr Subroutine call Description The instruction unconditionally calls a subroutine located at the indicated address. The program counter increments once to obtain the address of the next instruction, and pushes this onto the stack. The indicated address is then loaded. Program execution continues with the instruction at this address. Operation Stack ¬ Program Counter+1 Program Counter ¬ addr Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ CLR [m] Clear data memory Description The contents of the specified data memory are cleared to 0. Operation [m] ¬ 00H Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 30 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A CLR [m].i Clear bit of data memory Description The bit i of the specified data memory is cleared to 0. Operation [m].i ¬ 0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ CLR WDT Clear Watchdog Timer Description The WDT is cleared (clears the WDT). The power down bit (PDF) and time-out bit (TO) are cleared. Operation WDT ¬ 00H PDF and TO ¬ 0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C 0 0 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ CLR WDT1 Preclear Watchdog Timer Description Together with CLR WDT2, clears the WDT. PDF and TO are also cleared. Only execution of this instruction without the other preclear instruction just sets the indicated flag which implies this instruction has been executed and the TO and PDF flags remain unchanged. Operation WDT ¬ 00H* PDF and TO ¬ 0* Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C 0* 0* ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ CLR WDT2 Preclear Watchdog Timer Description Together with CLR WDT1, clears the WDT. PDF and TO are also cleared. Only execution of this instruction without the other preclear instruction, sets the indicated flag which implies this instruction has been executed and the TO and PDF flags remain unchanged. Operation WDT ¬ 00H* PDF and TO ¬ 0* Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C 0* 0* ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ CPL [m] Complement data memory Description Each bit of the specified data memory is logically complemented (1¢s complement). Bits which previously contained a 1 are changed to 0 and vice-versa. Operation [m] ¬ [m] Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ 31 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A CPLA [m] Complement data memory and place result in the accumulator Description Each bit of the specified data memory is logically complemented (1¢s complement). Bits which previously contained a 1 are changed to 0 and vice-versa. The complemented result is stored in the accumulator and the contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC ¬ [m] Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ DAA [m] Decimal-Adjust accumulator for addition Description The accumulator value is adjusted to the BCD (Binary Coded Decimal) code. The accumulator is divided into two nibbles. Each nibble is adjusted to the BCD code and an internal carry (AC1) will be done if the low nibble of the accumulator is greater than 9. The BCD adjustment is done by adding 6 to the original value if the original value is greater than 9 or a carry (AC or C) is set; otherwise the original value remains unchanged. The result is stored in the data memory and only the carry flag (C) may be affected. Operation If ACC.3~ACC.0 >9 or AC=1 then [m].3~[m].0 ¬ (ACC.3~ACC.0)+6, AC1=AC else [m].3~[m].0 ¬ (ACC.3~ACC.0), AC1=0 and If ACC.7~ACC.4+AC1 >9 or C=1 then [m].7~[m].4 ¬ ACC.7~ACC.4+6+AC1,C=1 else [m].7~[m].4 ¬ ACC.7~ACC.4+AC1,C=C Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö DEC [m] Decrement data memory Description Data in the specified data memory is decremented by 1. Operation [m] ¬ [m]-1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ DECA [m] Decrement data memory and place result in the accumulator Description Data in the specified data memory is decremented by 1, leaving the result in the accumulator. The contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC ¬ [m]-1 Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ 32 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A HALT Enter power down mode Description This instruction stops program execution and turns off the system clock. The contents of the RAM and registers are retained. The WDT and prescaler are cleared. The power down bit (PDF) is set and the WDT time-out bit (TO) is cleared. Operation Program Counter ¬ Program Counter+1 PDF ¬ 1 TO ¬ 0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C 0 1 ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ INC [m] Increment data memory Description Data in the specified data memory is incremented by 1 Operation [m] ¬ [m]+1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ INCA [m] Increment data memory and place result in the accumulator Description Data in the specified data memory is incremented by 1, leaving the result in the accumulator. The contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC ¬ [m]+1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ JMP addr Directly jump Description The program counter are replaced with the directly-specified address unconditionally, and control is passed to this destination. Operation Program Counter ¬addr Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ MOV A,[m] Move data memory to the accumulator Description The contents of the specified data memory are copied to the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ [m] Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 33 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A MOV A,x Move immediate data to the accumulator Description The 8-bit data specified by the code is loaded into the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ x Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ MOV [m],A Move the accumulator to data memory Description The contents of the accumulator are copied to the specified data memory (one of the data memories). Operation [m] ¬ACC Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ NOP No operation Description No operation is performed. Execution continues with the next instruction. Operation Program Counter ¬ Program Counter+1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ OR A,[m] Logical OR accumulator with data memory Description Data in the accumulator and the specified data memory (one of the data memories) perform a bitwise logical_OR operation. The result is stored in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC ²OR² [m] Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ OR A,x Logical OR immediate data to the accumulator Description Data in the accumulator and the specified data perform a bitwise logical_OR operation. The result is stored in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC ²OR² x Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ ORM A,[m] Logical OR data memory with the accumulator Description Data in the data memory (one of the data memories) and the accumulator perform a bitwise logical_OR operation. The result is stored in the data memory. Operation [m] ¬ACC ²OR² [m] Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ 34 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A RET Return from subroutine Description The program counter is restored from the stack. This is a 2-cycle instruction. Operation Program Counter ¬ Stack Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ RET A,x Return and place immediate data in the accumulator Description The program counter is restored from the stack and the accumulator loaded with the specified 8-bit immediate data. Operation Program Counter ¬ Stack ACC ¬ x Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ RETI Return from interrupt Description The program counter is restored from the stack, and interrupts are enabled by setting the EMI bit. EMI is the enable master (global) interrupt bit. Operation Program Counter ¬ Stack EMI ¬ 1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ RL [m] Rotate data memory left Description The contents of the specified data memory are rotated 1 bit left with bit 7 rotated into bit 0. Operation [m].(i+1) ¬ [m].i; [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) [m].0 ¬ [m].7 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ RLA [m] Rotate data memory left and place result in the accumulator Description Data in the specified data memory is rotated 1 bit left with bit 7 rotated into bit 0, leaving the rotated result in the accumulator. The contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC.(i+1) ¬ [m].i; [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) ACC.0 ¬ [m].7 Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 35 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A RLC [m] Rotate data memory left through carry Description The contents of the specified data memory and the carry flag are rotated 1 bit left. Bit 7 replaces the carry bit; the original carry flag is rotated into the bit 0 position. Operation [m].(i+1) ¬ [m].i; [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) [m].0 ¬ C C ¬ [m].7 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö RLCA [m] Rotate left through carry and place result in the accumulator Description Data in the specified data memory and the carry flag are rotated 1 bit left. Bit 7 replaces the carry bit and the original carry flag is rotated into bit 0 position. The rotated result is stored in the accumulator but the contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC.(i+1) ¬ [m].i; [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) ACC.0 ¬ C C ¬ [m].7 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö RR [m] Rotate data memory right Description The contents of the specified data memory are rotated 1 bit right with bit 0 rotated to bit 7. Operation [m].i ¬ [m].(i+1); [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) [m].7 ¬ [m].0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ RRA [m] Rotate right and place result in the accumulator Description Data in the specified data memory is rotated 1 bit right with bit 0 rotated into bit 7, leaving the rotated result in the accumulator. The contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC.(i) ¬ [m].(i+1); [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) ACC.7 ¬ [m].0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ RRC [m] Rotate data memory right through carry Description The contents of the specified data memory and the carry flag are together rotated 1 bit right. Bit 0 replaces the carry bit; the original carry flag is rotated into the bit 7 position. Operation [m].i ¬ [m].(i+1); [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) [m].7 ¬ C C ¬ [m].0 Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö 36 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A RRCA [m] Rotate right through carry and place result in the accumulator Description Data of the specified data memory and the carry flag are rotated 1 bit right. Bit 0 replaces the carry bit and the original carry flag is rotated into the bit 7 position. The rotated result is stored in the accumulator. The contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC.i ¬ [m].(i+1); [m].i:bit i of the data memory (i=0~6) ACC.7 ¬ C C ¬ [m].0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö SBC A,[m] Subtract data memory and carry from the accumulator Description The contents of the specified data memory and the complement of the carry flag are subtracted from the accumulator, leaving the result in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC+[m]+C Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö SBCM A,[m] Subtract data memory and carry from the accumulator Description The contents of the specified data memory and the complement of the carry flag are subtracted from the accumulator, leaving the result in the data memory. Operation [m] ¬ ACC+[m]+C Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö SDZ [m] Skip if decrement data memory is 0 Description The contents of the specified data memory are decremented by 1. If the result is 0, the next instruction is skipped. If the result is 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if ([m]-1)=0, [m] ¬ ([m]-1) Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SDZA [m] Decrement data memory and place result in ACC, skip if 0 Description The contents of the specified data memory are decremented by 1. If the result is 0, the next instruction is skipped. The result is stored in the accumulator but the data memory remains unchanged. If the result is 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if ([m]-1)=0, ACC ¬ ([m]-1) Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 37 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A SET [m] Set data memory Description Each bit of the specified data memory is set to 1. Operation [m] ¬ FFH Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SET [m]. i Set bit of data memory Description Bit i of the specified data memory is set to 1. Operation [m].i ¬ 1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SIZ [m] Skip if increment data memory is 0 Description The contents of the specified data memory are incremented by 1. If the result is 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if ([m]+1)=0, [m] ¬ ([m]+1) Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SIZA [m] Increment data memory and place result in ACC, skip if 0 Description The contents of the specified data memory are incremented by 1. If the result is 0, the next instruction is skipped and the result is stored in the accumulator. The data memory remains unchanged. If the result is 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if ([m]+1)=0, ACC ¬ ([m]+1) Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SNZ [m].i Skip if bit i of the data memory is not 0 Description If bit i of the specified data memory is not 0, the next instruction is skipped. If bit i of the data memory is not 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if [m].i¹0 Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 38 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A SUB A,[m] Subtract data memory from the accumulator Description The specified data memory is subtracted from the contents of the accumulator, leaving the result in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC+[m]+1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö SUBM A,[m] Subtract data memory from the accumulator Description The specified data memory is subtracted from the contents of the accumulator, leaving the result in the data memory. Operation [m] ¬ ACC+[m]+1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö SUB A,x Subtract immediate data from the accumulator Description The immediate data specified by the code is subtracted from the contents of the accumulator, leaving the result in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC+x+1 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ Ö Ö Ö Ö SWAP [m] Swap nibbles within the data memory Description The low-order and high-order nibbles of the specified data memory (1 of the data memories) are interchanged. Operation [m].3~[m].0 « [m].7~[m].4 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SWAPA [m] Swap data memory and place result in the accumulator Description The low-order and high-order nibbles of the specified data memory are interchanged, writing the result to the accumulator. The contents of the data memory remain unchanged. Operation ACC.3~ACC.0 ¬ [m].7~[m].4 ACC.7~ACC.4 ¬ [m].3~[m].0 Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 39 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A SZ [m] Skip if data memory is 0 Description If the contents of the specified data memory are 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if [m]=0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SZA [m] Move data memory to ACC, skip if 0 Description The contents of the specified data memory are copied to the accumulator. If the contents is 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if [m]=0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ SZ [m].i Skip if bit i of the data memory is 0 Description If bit i of the specified data memory is 0, the following instruction, fetched during the current instruction execution, is discarded and a dummy cycle is replaced to get the proper instruction (2 cycles). Otherwise proceed with the next instruction (1 cycle). Operation Skip if [m].i=0 Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ TABRDC [m] Move the ROM code (current page) to TBLH and data memory Description The low byte of ROM code (current page) addressed by the table pointer (TBLP) is moved to the specified data memory and the high byte transferred to TBLH directly. Operation [m] ¬ ROM code (low byte) TBLH ¬ ROM code (high byte) Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ TABRDL [m] Move the ROM code (last page) to TBLH and data memory Description The low byte of ROM code (last page) addressed by the table pointer (TBLP) is moved to the data memory and the high byte transferred to TBLH directly. Operation [m] ¬ ROM code (low byte) TBLH ¬ ROM code (high byte) Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ ¾ 40 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A XOR A,[m] Logical XOR accumulator with data memory Description Data in the accumulator and the indicated data memory perform a bitwise logical Exclusive_OR operation and the result is stored in the accumulator. Operation ACC ¬ ACC ²XOR² [m] Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ XORM A,[m] Logical XOR data memory with the accumulator Description Data in the indicated data memory and the accumulator perform a bitwise logical Exclusive_OR operation. The result is stored in the data memory. The 0 flag is affected. Operation [m] ¬ ACC ²XOR² [m] Affected flag(s) TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ XOR A,x Logical XOR immediate data to the accumulator Description Data in the accumulator and the specified data perform a bitwise logical Exclusive_OR operation. The result is stored in the accumulator. The 0 flag is affected. Operation ACC ¬ ACC ²XOR² x Affected flag(s) Rev. 1.00 TO PDF OV Z AC C ¾ ¾ ¾ Ö ¾ ¾ 41 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Package Information 28-pin SKDIP (300mil) Outline Dimensions A B 2 8 1 5 1 1 4 H C D E Symbol Rev. 1.00 F a G I Dimensions in mil Min. Nom. Max. A 1375 ¾ 1395 B 278 ¾ 298 C 125 ¾ 135 D 125 ¾ 145 E 16 ¾ 20 70 F 50 ¾ G ¾ 100 ¾ H 295 ¾ 315 I 330 ¾ 375 a 0° ¾ 15° 42 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A 28-pin SOP (300mil) Outline Dimensions 2 8 1 5 A B 1 1 4 C C ' G H D E Symbol Rev. 1.00 a F Dimensions in mil Min. Nom. Max. A 394 ¾ 419 B 290 ¾ 300 C 14 ¾ 20 C¢ 697 ¾ 713 D 92 ¾ 104 E ¾ 50 ¾ F 4 ¾ ¾ G 32 ¾ 38 H 4 ¾ 12 a 0° ¾ 10° 43 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A 44-pin QFP (10´10) Outline Dimensions H C D G 2 3 3 3 I 3 4 2 2 L F A B E 1 2 4 4 K a J 1 Symbol Rev. 1.00 1 1 Dimensions in mm Min. Nom. Max. A 13 ¾ 13.4 B 9.9 ¾ 10.1 C 13 ¾ 13.4 D 9.9 ¾ 10.1 E ¾ 0.8 ¾ F ¾ 0.3 ¾ G 1.9 ¾ 2.2 H ¾ ¾ 2.7 I 0.25 ¾ 0.5 J 0.73 ¾ 0.93 K 0.1 ¾ 0.2 L ¾ 0.1 ¾ a 0° ¾ 7° 44 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Product Tape and Reel Specifications Reel Dimensions D T 2 A C B T 1 SOP 28W (300mil) Symbol Description Dimensions in mm A Reel Outer Diameter B Reel Inner Diameter 62±1.5 C Spindle Hole Diameter 13+0.5 -0.2 D Key Slit Width 330±1 2±0.5 T1 Space Between Flange 24.8+0.3 -0.2 T2 Reel Thickness 30.2±0.2 Rev. 1.00 45 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Carrier Tape Dimensions P 0 D P 1 t E F W C D 1 B 0 P K 0 A 0 SOP 28W (300mil) Symbol Description Dimensions in mm W Carrier Tape Width 24±0.3 P Cavity Pitch 12±0.1 E Perforation Position 1.75±0.1 F Cavity to Perforation (Width Direction) 11.5±0.1 D Perforation Diameter 1.5+0.1 D1 Cavity Hole Diameter 1.5+0.25 P0 Perforation Pitch 4±0.1 P1 Cavity to Perforation (Length Direction) 2±0.1 A0 Cavity Length 10.85±0.1 B0 Cavity Width 18.34±0.1 K0 Cavity Depth 2.97±0.1 t Carrier Tape Thickness 0.35±0.01 C Cover Tape Width Rev. 1.00 21.3 46 December 20, 2006 HT82J30R/HT82J30A Holtek Semiconductor Inc. (Headquarters) No.3, Creation Rd. II, Science Park, Hsinchu, Taiwan Tel: 886-3-563-1999 Fax: 886-3-563-1189 http://www.holtek.com.tw Holtek Semiconductor Inc. (Taipei Sales Office) 4F-2, No. 3-2, YuanQu St., Nankang Software Park, Taipei 115, Taiwan Tel: 886-2-2655-7070 Fax: 886-2-2655-7373 Fax: 886-2-2655-7383 (International sales hotline) Holtek Semiconductor Inc. (Shanghai Sales Office) 7th Floor, Building 2, No.889, Yi Shan Rd., Shanghai, China 200233 Tel: 86-21-6485-5560 Fax: 86-21-6485-0313 http://www.holtek.com.cn Holtek Semiconductor Inc. (Shenzhen Sales Office) 5/F, Unit A, Productivity Building, Cross of Science M 3rd Road and Gaoxin M 2nd Road, Science Park, Nanshan District, Shenzhen, China 518057 Tel: 86-755-8616-9908, 86-755-8616-9308 Fax: 86-755-8616-9533 Holtek Semiconductor Inc. (Beijing Sales Office) Suite 1721, Jinyu Tower, A129 West Xuan Wu Men Street, Xicheng District, Beijing, China 100031 Tel: 86-10-6641-0030, 86-10-6641-7751, 86-10-6641-7752 Fax: 86-10-6641-0125 Holtek Semiconductor Inc. (Chengdu Sales Office) 709, Building 3, Champagne Plaza, No.97 Dongda Street, Chengdu, Sichuan, China 610016 Tel: 86-28-6653-6590 Fax: 86-28-6653-6591 Holmate Semiconductor, Inc. (North America Sales Office) 46729 Fremont Blvd., Fremont, CA 94538 Tel: 1-510-252-9880 Fax: 1-510-252-9885 http://www.holmate.com Copyright Ó 2006 by HOLTEK SEMICONDUCTOR INC. The information appearing in this Data Sheet is believed to be accurate at the time of publication. However, Holtek assumes no responsibility arising from the use of the specifications described. The applications mentioned herein are used solely for the purpose of illustration and Holtek makes no warranty or representation that such applications will be suitable without further modification, nor recommends the use of its products for application that may present a risk to human life due to malfunction or otherwise. Holtek¢s products are not authorized for use as critical components in life support devices or systems. Holtek reserves the right to alter its products without prior notification. For the most up-to-date information, please visit our web site at http://www.holtek.com.tw. Rev. 1.00 47 December 20, 2006