19-5328; Rev 0; 7/10 TION KIT EVALUA BLE AVAILA 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers The MAX5978 hot-swap controller provides complete protection for systems with a supply voltage from 0 to 16V. The device includes four programmable LED outputs. The IC provides two programmable levels of overcurrent circuit-breaker protection: a fast-trip threshold for a fast turn-off, and a lower slow-trip threshold for a delayed turn-off. The maximum overcurrent circuitbreaker threshold range is set with a trilevel logic input (IRNG), or by programming through the I2C interface. The IC is an advanced hot-swap controller that monitors voltage and current with an internal 10-bit ADC, which is continuously multiplexed to convert the output voltage and current at 10ksps. Each 10-bit sample is stored in an internal circular buffer so that 50 past samples of each signal can be read back through the I2C interface at any time or after a fault condition. The device includes five user-programmable digital comparators to implement overcurrent warning and two levels of overvoltage/undervoltage detection. When measured values violate the programmable limits, an external ALERT output is asserted. In addition to the ALERT signal, the IC can be programmed to deassert the powergood signal and/or turn off the external MOSFET. The IC features four I/Os that can be independently configured as general-purpose input/outputs (GPIOs) or as open-drain LED drivers with programmable blinking. These four I/Os can be configured for any mix of LED driver or GPIO function. The device is available in a 32-pin thin QFN-EP package and operates over the -40NC to +85NC extended temperature range. Ordering Information PART MAX5978ETJ+ TEMP RANGE PIN-PACKAGE -40NC to +85NC 32 TQFN-EP* Features S Hot-Swap Controller Operates from 0 to 16V S 10-Bit ADC Monitors Load Voltage and Current S Circular Buffers Store 5ms of Current and Voltage Measurements S Internal Charge Pump Generates n-Channel MOSFET Gate Drive S Internal 500mA Gate Pulldown Current for Fast Shutdown S VariableSpeed/Bilevel™ Circuit-Breaker Protection S Precision-Voltage Enable Input S Alert Output Indicates Fault and Warning Conditions S Open-Drain Power-Good Output with Programmable Polarity S Open-Drain Fault Output S Four Open-Drain General-Purpose Outputs Sink 25mA to Directly Drive LEDs S Programmable LED Flashing Function S Latched-Off Fault Management S 400kHz I2C Interface S Small, 5mm x 5mm, 32-Pin TQFN-EP Package Applications Blade Servers DC Power Metering Disk Drives/DASD/Storage Systems Soft-Switch for ASICs, FPGAs, and Microcontrollers Network Switches/Routers +Denotes a lead(Pb)-free/RoHS-compliant package. *EP = Exposed pad. VariableSpeed/Bilevel is a trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. ________________________________________________________________ Maxim Integrated Products 1 For pricing, delivery, and ordering information, please contact Maxim Direct at 1-888-629-4642, or visit Maxim’s website at www.maxim-ic.com. MAX5978 General Description MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS IN, SENSE, MON, GATE to AGND . ..................... -0.3V to +30V LED_ to AGND ......................................................-0.3V to +16V PG, ON, ALERT, FAULT, SDA, SCL to AGND ........-0.3V to +6V REG, DREG, IRNG, MODE, PROT, A_ to AGND ....-0.3V to +4V REG to DREG . .....................................................-0.3V to +0.3V HWEN, POL to AGND .............................-0.3V to (VREG + 0.3V) GATE to MON .........................................................-0.3V to +6V GND, DGND to AGND .........................................-0.3V to +0.3V SDA, ALERT Current ....................................... -20mA to +50mA LED_ Current . ............................................... -20mA to +100mA GATE, MON, GND Current ..............................................750mA All Other Pins Input/Output Current ...................................20mA Continuous Power Dissipation (TA = +70NC)* 32-Pin TQFN (derate 34.5mW/NC above +70NC)...... 2759mW* Junction-to-Ambient Thermal Resistance (BJA) (Note 1)......+29NC/W Operating Temperature Range . ....................... -40NC to +85NC Junction Temperature ................................................... +150NC Storage Temperature Range .......................... -65NC to +150NC Lead Temperature (soldering, 10s) ................................+300NC Soldering Temperature (reflow) ......................................+260NC *As per JEDEC51 Standard (Multilayer Board). Note 1: P ackage thermal resistances were obtained using the method described in JEDEC specification JESD51-7, using a fourlayer board. For detailed information on package thermal considerations, refer to www.maxim-ic.com/thermal-tutorial. Stresses beyond those listed under “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (VIN = 2.7V to 16V, TA = -40NC to +85NC, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VIN = 3.3V and TA = +25NC.) (Note 2) PARAMETER Supply Input Voltage Range SYMBOL CONDITIONS VIN Hot-Swap Voltage Range Supply Current Internal LDO Output Voltage MIN MAX UNITS 2.7 16 V 0 16 V 2.5 4 mA 2.53 2.6 V 2.6 V IIN REG Undervoltage Lockout UVLO Undervoltage-Lockout Hysteresis UVLOHYS IREG = 0 to 5mA, VIN = 2.7V to 16V 2.49 TYP VIN rising 100 mV CURRENT-MONITORING FUNCTION MON, SENSE Input Voltage Range 0 16 V SENSE Input Current VSENSE, VMON = 16V 32 75 FA MON Input Current VSENSE, VMON = 16V 180 280 FA Current Measurement LSB Voltage Current Measurement Error (25mV Range) Current Measurement Error (50mV Range) 2 25mV range 24.34 50mV range 48.39 100mV range 96.77 FV VSENSE - VMON = 5mV VSENSE - VMON = 20mV -6.57 +6.22 -6.71 +6.82 VSENSE - VMON = 5mV VMON = 2.5V to 16V VSENSE - VMON = 20mV -9.71 +8.92 VMON = 0V -10.24 +9.36 VSENSE - VMON = 10mV VMON = 0V VSENSE - VMON = 40mV -4.24 +3.78 -4.53 +5.36 VSENSE - VMON = 10mV VMON = 2.5V to 16V VSENSE - VMON = 40mV -4.50 +4.00 -4.20 +4.50 %FS %FS 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers MAX5978 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) (VIN = 2.7V to 16V, TA = -40NC to +85NC, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VIN = 3.3V and TA = +25NC.) (Note 2) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS VSENSE - VMON = 80mV -3.63 +4.56 VSENSE - VMON = 20mV VMON = 2.5V to 16V VSENSE - VMON = 80mV -3.14 +3.19 -3.80 +3.93 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 -2.106 +0.888 Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -2.986 +0.641 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 VMON = 2.5V to 16V Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -3.000 +1.000 -3.500 +1.500 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 -3.1188 +0.926 Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -4.873 +0.3421 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 VMON = 2.5V to 16V Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -3.2668 +0.9228 -4.7 +1.0212 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 -4.7987 +1.1812 Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -8.9236 +0.202 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 VMON = 2.5V to 16V Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -4.9991 +0.6374 -8.262 +1 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 -1.7965 +1.5496 Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -1.86 +1.5916 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 VMON = 2.5V to 16V Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -2.149 +1.9868 -2.2285 +1.9982 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 -2.3992 +1.8723 Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -2.5146 +2.1711 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 VMON = 2.5V to 16V Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -2.4716 +2.181 -2.7421 +2.1152 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 -3.3412 +2.989 Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -3.8762 +3.6789 Circuit breaker, DAC = 102 VMON = 2.5V to 16V Circuit breaker, DAC = 255 -3.2084 +2.7798 -3.8424 +2.6483 VMON = 0V Fast Current-Limit Threshold Error (50mV Range) VMON = 0V Fast Current-Limit Threshold Error (100mV Range) VMON = 0V Slow Current-Limit Threshold Error (25mV Range) VMON = 0V Slow Current-Limit Threshold Error (50mV Range) VMON = 0V Slow Current-Limit Threshold Error (100mV Range) Fast Circuit-Breaker Response Time tFCB Slow Current-Limit Response Time tSCB MAX +2.43 VMON = 0V Fast Current-Limit Threshold Error (25mV Range) TYP -2.70 VMON = 0V Current Measurement Error (100mV Range) MIN VSENSE - VMON = 20mV Overdrive = 10% of current-sense range 2 Overdrive = 4% of current-sense range 2.4 Overdrive = 8% of current-sense range 1.2 Overdrive = 16% of current-sense range 0.8 UNITS %FS mV mV mV mV mV mV Fs ms THREE-STATE INPUTS A1, A0, IRNG, MODE, PROT Low Current IIN_LOW Input voltage = 0.4V A1, A0, IRNG, MODE, PROT High Current IIN_HIGH Input voltage = VREG - 0.2V A1, A0, IRNG, MODE, PROT Open Current IFLOAT A1, A0, IRNG, MODE, PROT Low Voltage Maximum source/sink current for open state Relative to AGND -40 -4 FA 40 FA +4 FA 0.4 V 3 MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) (VIN = 2.7V to 16V, TA = -40NC to +85NC, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VIN = 3.3V and TA = +25NC.) (Note 2) PARAMETER SYMBOL A1, A0, IRNG, MODE, PROT High Voltage CONDITIONS Relative to VREG MIN TYP MAX -0.24 UNITS V TWO-STATE INPUTS HWEN, POL Input Logic Low Voltage 0.4 HWEN, POL Input Logic High Voltage VREG - 0.4 HWEN, POL Input Current ON Input Voltage ON Input Hysteresis V -1 VON 0.582 VONHYS +1 0.592 0.602 4 ON Input Current V -100 FA V % +100 nA TIMING 50 100 Register configurable (see Tables 30a and 30b) MON-to-PG Delay ms 200 400 CHARGE PUMP (GATE) Charge-Pump Output Voltage Relative to VMON, IGATE = 0V Charge-Pump Output Source Current GATE Discharge Current VGATE - VMON = 2V OUTPUT (FAULT, PG, ALERT) Output-Voltage Low ISINK = 3.2mA 4.5 5.3 5.5 V 4 5 6 FA 500 Output Leakage Current mA 0.2 V 1 FA 0.4 V LED INPUT/OUTPUT LED_ Input Threshold Low Level VIL LED_ Input Threshold High Level VIH LED_ Output Low VOH ILED_ = 25mA IGPIO_IX VLED_ = 16V -1 VLED_ = VIN - 0.65V 2 LED_ Input Leakage Current (Open Drain) LED_ Weak Pullup Current IPU_WEAK 1.4 V 0.7 V +1 FA FA ADC PERFORMANCE Resolution Maximum Integral Nonlinearity ADC Total Monitoring Cycle Time 4 INL 95 10 Bits 1 LSB 100 110 Fs 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers MAX5978 ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (continued) (VIN = 2.7V to 16V, TA = -40NC to +85NC, unless otherwise noted. Typical values are at VIN = 3.3V and TA = +25NC.) (Note 2) PARAMETER SYMBOL MON LSB Voltage MON Code 000H to 001H Transition Voltage MIN TYP MAX 16V range CONDITIONS 15.23 15.49 15.69 8V range 7.655 7.743 7.811 4V range 3.811 3.875 3.933 2V range 1.899 1.934 1.966 16V range 10 25 41 8V range 4.7 12 21 4V range 2 6 12 2V range 0.5 3 5.5 UNITS mV mV I2C INTERFACE Serial-Clock Frequency fSCL 400 kHz Bus Free Time Between STOP and START Conditions tBUF 1.3 Fs START Condition Setup Time tSU:STA 0.6 Fs START Condition Hold Time tHD:STA 0.6 Fs STOP Condition Setup Time tSU:STO 0.6 Fs Clock High Period tHIGH 0.6 Fs Clock Low Period tLOW 1.3 Fs Data Setup Time tSU:DAT 100 ns Data Hold Time tHD:DAT Output Fall Time tOF Pulse Width of Spike Suppressed tSP SDA, SCL Input High Voltage VIH SDA, SCL Input Low Voltage VIL SDA, SCL Input Hysteresis Transmit 100 Receive 300 CBUS = 10pF to 400pF 250 50 VHYST V -1 V +1 FA V 15 VOL ISINK = 4mA ns 0.8 0.22 SDA, SCL Input Capacitance ns ns 1.8 SDA, SCL Input Current SDA Output Voltage 900 pF 0.4 V Note 2: All devices 100% production tested at TA = +25NC. Limits over the temperature range are guaranteed by design. 5 Typical Operating Characteristics (VIN = 3.3V, TA = +25NC, unless otherwise noted.) SUPPLY CURRENT vs. TEMPERATURE HOT-SWAP CHANNEL ON 2.40 2.8 HOT-SWAP CHANNEL OFF 2.7 2.6 2.5 2.4 2.3 2.2 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 4.90 -40 -15 10 35 60 4.80 85 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 GATE-DRIVE VOLTAGE vs. VIN GATE-DRIVE CURRENT vs. (VGATE - VMON) GATE-DRIVE DISCHARGE CURRENT vs. (VGATE - VMON) VMON = 12V 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 1.0 0 4.85 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 0 16 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 4.5 5.0 (VGATE - VMON) (V) (VGATE - VMON) (V) SLOW-COMPARATOR TURN-OFF TIME vs. VOLTAGE OVERDRIVE SLOW-COMPARATOR THRESHOLD VOLTAGE ERROR vs. TEMPERATURE ON THRESHOLD VOLTAGE vs. TEMPERATURE 1.50 1.00 0.50 8 6 4 2 0 100mV SENSE RANGE -4 -6 25mV SENSE RANGE -8 0 1 2 3 4 (VSENSE - VMON) - VTH,ST (mV) 5 50mV SENSE RANGE -2 0.60 0.59 ON THRESHOLD VOLTAGE (V) 2.00 MAX5978 toc08 2.50 10 THRESHOLD VOLTAGE ERROR (%) 25mV SENSE RANGE, DAC = 191, VTH,ST = 9.36mV MAX5978 toc07 VIN (V) 3.00 16 MAX5978 toc06 9 GATE-DRIVE DISCHARGE CURRENT (A) 4.95 10 MAX5978 toc05 MAX5978 toc04 5.00 4.90 6 4.95 VMON (V) VMON = 3.3V 0 5.00 TEMPERATURE (°C) 5.05 0 5.05 SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V) 5.10 (VGATE - VMON) (V) 2.0 16 GATE-DRIVE CURRENT (µA) 0 5.10 4.85 2.1 2.30 VGATE REFERRED TO VMON 5.15 MAX5978 toc09 2.35 2.9 GATE-DRIVE VOLTAGE (V) 2.45 GATE-DRIVE VOLTAGE vs. VMON 5.20 MAX5978 toc02 MAX5978 toc01 3.0 SUPPLY CURRENT (mA) SUPPLY CURRENT (mA) 2.50 MAX5978 toc03 SUPPLY CURRENT vs. SUPPLY VOLTAGE TURN-OFF TIME (ms) MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers RISING 0.58 0.57 FALLING 0.56 0.55 0.54 0.53 0.52 0.51 0.50 -10 -40 -15 10 35 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 85 -40 -15 10 35 TEMPERATURE (°C) 60 85 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers TURN-OFF WAVEFORM (SLOW-COMPARATOR FAULT) STARTUP WAVEFORM MAX5978 toc11 MAX5978 toc10 VON 2V/div VGATE 5V/div VMON 5V/div ILOAD 2A/div VGATE 10V/div VPG 5V/div VMON_ 10V/div ILOAD 2A/div VFAULT 5V/div 400µs/div 10ms/div TURN-OFF WAVEFORM (FAST-COMPARATOR FAULT/SHORT-CIRCUIT RESPONSE) 16 CIRCULAR BUFFER CONTENT AT SLOW-TRIP FAULT MON = 16V, CURRENT SENSE = 50mV 14 VOLTAGE BUFFER (V) ILOAD 5A/div VGATE 10V/div VMON 10V/div MAX5978 toc13 VOLTAGE BUFFER vs. TIME MAX5978 toc12 12 10 8 6 4 2 VFAULT 5V/div 0 -2.5 -2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0 100µs/div 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 TIME (ms) VOLTAGE ADC ACCURACY vs. MON VOLTAGE SLOW-COMPARATOR FAULT EVENT MAX5978 toc14 1.0 MON_ VOLTAGE RANGE = 4V VOLTAGE ADC ACCURACY (%FS) 0.8 VGATE 10V/div VMON 10V/div VFAULT 5V/div MAX5978 toc15 ILOAD 2A/div 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 -0.2 -0.4 -0.6 -0.8 -1.0 400µs/div 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0 VMON (V) 7 MAX5978 Typical Operating Characteristics (continued) (VIN = 3.3V, TA = +25NC, unless otherwise noted.) Typical Operating Characteristics (continued) (VIN = 3.3V, TA = +25NC, unless otherwise noted.) CURRENT BUFFER vs. TIME 2 1 0 -1 -2 7 6 5 4 3 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 -0.1 -0.2 -3 2 -0.3 -4 1 -0.4 -5 0 0 2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 15.0 17.5 20.0 22.5 25.0 (VSENSE - VMON) (mV) VOLTAGE DATA AT SHORT CIRCUIT ON POWER-UP DEFAULT SETTING VMON = 16V 0.4 VOLTAGE BUFFER (V) 8 CURRENT BUFFER (A) 3 DEFAULT SETTING 9 0.5 MAX5978 toc17 4 VOLTAGE BUFFER vs. TIME 10 MAX5978 toc16 5 -0.5 -2.5 -2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 -2.5 -2.0 -1.5 -1.0 -0.5 0 TIME (ms) INPUT LEAKAGE CURRENT vs. MON VOLTAGE MAX5978 toc19 MAX5978 toc20 200 180 INPUT-LEAKAGE CURRENT (µA) ILOAD 5A/div VGATE 2V/div VMON 1V/div 160 140 IMON 120 100 80 ISENSE 60 40 20 VFAULT 5V/div 0 4ms/div 0 2 4 6 8 VMON (V) 8 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 TIME (ms) STARTUP INTO SHORT LOAD VON 5V/div MAX5978 toc18 CURRENT ADC ACCURACY vs. (VSENSE - VMON) CURRENT ADC ACCURACY (%FS) MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers 10 12 14 16 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers HWEN I.C. PG ALERT SCL SDA FAULT ON TOP VIEW 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 DGND 25 16 DREG I.C. 26 15 POL I.C. 27 14 LED2 13 LED1 12 GND 11 GATE 10 MON 9 SENSE LED4 28 MAX5978 LED3 29 GND 30 I.C. 31 EP + 6 7 8 A0 AGND 5 PROT IN 4 A1 3 BIAS 2 REG 1 IRNG I.C. 32 TQFN Pin Description PIN NAME FUNCTION 1 IRNG Three-State Current-Sense Range Selection Input. Set the circuit-breaker threshold range by connecting to DGND, DREG, or leave unconnected. 2 IN Power-Supply Input. Connect to a voltage from 2.7V to 16V. Bypass IN to AGND with a 1FF ceramic capacitor. 3 AGND 4 REG Internal Regulator Output. Bypass REG to ground with a 1FF ceramic capacitor. Connect only to DREG and logic-input pullup resistors. Do not use to power external circuitry. 5 BIAS BIAS Input. Connect BIAS to REG. 6 A1 Three-State I2C Address Input 1 7 A0 Three-State I2C Address Input 0 8 PROT Protection Behavior Input. Three-state input sets one of three different response options for undervoltage and overvoltage events. 9 SENSE Current-Sense Input. Connect SENSE to the source of an external MOSFET and to one end of RSENSE. Analog Ground. Connect all GND and DGND to AGND externally using a star connection. 10 MON Voltage-Monitoring Input 11 GATE Gate-Drive Output. Connect to the gate of an external n-channel MOSFET. 12 GND Gate-Discharge Current Ground Return. Connect all GND and DGND to AGND externally using a star connection. 13 LED1 LED1 Driver 14 LED2 LED2 Driver 9 MAX5978 Pin Configuration 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers MAX5978 Pin Description (continued) PIN NAME 15 POL 16 DREG 17 ON 18 19 FAULT SDA 20 SCL 21 ALERT FUNCTION Polarity Select Input. Connect POL to DREG for an active-high power-good (PG) output, or connect POL to GND for active-low PG output. Logic Power-Supply Input. Connect to REG externally through a 10I resistor and bypass to DGND with a 1FF ceramic capacitor. Precision Turn-On Input Active-Low Open-Drain Fault Output. FAULT asserts low if an overcurrent event occurs. I2C Serial Data Input/Output I2C Serial Clock Input Open-Drain Alert Output. ALERT goes low during a fault to notify the system of an impending failure. 22 PG Open-Drain Power-Good Output 23, 26, 27, 31, 32 I.C. Internally Connected. Connect to ground. 24 HWEN Hardware Enable Input. Connect to REG or DGND. State is read upon power-up as VIN crosses the UVLO threshold and sets enable register bits with this value. After UVLO, this input becomes inactive until power is cycled. 25 DGND Digital Ground. Connect all GND and DGND to AGND externally using a star connection. 28 LED4 LED Driver 4 29 LED3 LED Driver 3 30 GND Ground — EP 10 Exposed Pad. EP is internally grounded. Connect EP to the ground plane using a star connection. 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers VCC VIN = 2.7V TO 16V SCLK SDA INT I/O VS I/O µP VCC 4.7kI R1 ID SETTING VCC R2 4.7kI R3 SCL SDA A1 PG A0 FAULT IN ON ALERT R1ON V+ R2ON RLED3 V+ Q1 RLED4 GATE LED3 SENSE LED4 RSENSE MON LED1 10I 1µF PROT POL HWEN AGND DREG GND DGND LED2 REG TO LOAD BIAS RLED1 IRNG RLED2 MAX5978 1µF CONFIGURATION SETTINGS 11 MAX5978 Typical Operating Circuit MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Functional Diagram DREG FAULT MAX5978 SCOMP FROM CONFIGURATION REGISTERS PG ATTENUATOR LED_ FCOMP IRNG DAC SELECT REF 1V SENSE CS AMP MON LOGIC BLOCK CHARGE PUMP HWEN ON VOLTAGE SCALING POL PROT 2MHz BIAS MUX 5µA SDA OSCILLATOR SCL I2C GATE A1 GATE PULLDOWN ALERT GND UVLO IN REG LDO IREF 10-BIT ADC (SAR) AGND 12 A0 CIRCULAR BUFF DGND 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers The MAX5978 includes a set of registers that are accessed through the I2C interface. Some of the registers are read only and some of the registers are read and write registers that can be updated to configure the device for a specific operation. See Tables 1a and 1b for the register maps. Hot-Swap Channel On-Off Control Depending on the configuration of the EN1 and EN2 bits, when VIN is above the VUVLO threshold and the ON input reaches its internal threshold, the device turns on the external n-channel MOSFET for the hot-swap channel, allowing power to flow to the load. The channel is enabled depending on the output of a majority function. EN1, EN2, and ON are the inputs to the majority function and the channel is enabled when two or more of these inputs are 1: (Channel enabled) = (EN1 x EN2) + (EN1 x ON) + (EN2 x ON) Inputs ON and EN2 can be set externally; the initial state of the EN2 bit in register chxen is set by the state of the HWEN input when VIN rises above VUVLO. The ON input connects to an internal precision analog comparators with a 0.6V threshold. Whenever VON is above 0.6V, the ON bit in register status1[0] is set to 1. Inputs EN1 and EN2 can be set using the I2C interface; the EN1 bit has a default value of 0. This makes it possible to enable or disable the hot-swap channel with or without using the I2C interface (see Tables 2, 3a, and 3b). Table 1a. Register Address Map (Channel Specific) REGISTER NAME DESCRIPTION REGISTER NUMBER RESET VALUE READ/ WRITE adc_cs_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of latest current-signal ADC result 0x00 0x00 R adc_cs_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of latest current-signal ADC result 0x01 0x00 R adc_mon_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of latest voltage-signal ADC result 0x02 0x00 R adc_mon_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of latest voltage-signal ADC result 0x03 0x00 R min_cs_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of current-signal minimum value 0x08 0xFF R min_cs_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of current-signal minimum value 0x09 0x03 R max_cs_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of current-signal maximum value 0x0A 0x00 R max_cs_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of current-signal maximum value 0x0B 0x00 R min_mon_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of voltage-signal minimum value 0x0C 0xFF R min_mon_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of voltage-signal minimum value 0x0D 0x03 R max_mon_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of voltage-signal maximum value 0x0E 0x00 R max_mon_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of voltage-signal maximum value 0x0F 0x00 R uv1th_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of undervoltage warning (UV1) threshold 0x1A 0x00 R/W uv1th_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of undervoltage warning (UV1) threshold 0x1B 0x00 R/W uv2th_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of undervoltage critical (UV2) threshold 0x1C 0x00 R/W uv2th_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of undervoltage critical (UV2) threshold 0x1D 0x00 R/W ov1thr_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of overvoltage warning (OV1) threshold 0x1E 0xFF R/W ov1thr_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of overvoltage warning (OV1) threshold 0x1F 0x03 R/W ov2thr_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of overvoltage critical (OV2) threshold 0x20 0xFF R/W ov2thr_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of overvoltage critical (OV2) threshold 0x21 0x03 R/W oithr_msb High 8 bits ([9:2]) of overcurrent warning threshold 0x22 0xFF R/W oithr_lsb Low 2 bits ([1:0]) of overcurrent warning threshold 0x23 0x03 R/W dac_fast Fast-comparator threshold DAC setting 0x2E 0xBF R/W cbuf_ba_v Base address for block read of 50-sample voltage-signal data buffer 0x46 — R cbuf_ba_i Base address for block read of 50-sample current-signal data buffer 0x47 — R 13 MAX5978 Detailed Description MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Table 1b. Register Address Map (General) REGISTER NAME mon_range cbuf_chx_store ifast2slow ADDRESS (HEX CODE) RESET VALUE READ/ WRITE MON input range setting 0x18 0x00 R/W Selective enabling of circular buffer 0x19 0x0F R/W DESCRIPTION Current threshold fast-to-slow ratio setting 0x30 0x0F R/W status0 Slow-trip and fast-trip comparators status register 0x31 0x00 R status1 PROT, MODE, and ON inputs status register 0x32 — R status2 Fast-trip threshold maximum range setting bits, from IRNG threestate input 0x33 — R/W status3 LATCH, POL, ALERT, and PG status register Status register for undervoltage detection (warning or critical) 0x34 — R fault0 0x35 0x00 R/C fault1 Status register for overvoltage detection (warning or critical) 0x36 0x00 R/C fault2 Status register for overcurrent detection (warning) 0x37 0x00 R/C pgdly Delay setting between MON measurement and PG assertion 0x38 0x00 R/W fokey Load register with 0xA5 to enable force-on function 0x39 0x00 R/W foset Register that enables force-on function 0x3A 0x00 R/W chxen Channel enable bits 0x3B — R/W dgl_i OC deglitch enable bits 0x3C 0x00 R/W dgl_uv UV deglitch enable bits 0x3D 0x00 R/W dgl_ov OV deglitch enable bits 0x3E 0x00 R/W Circular buffers readout mode: 8 bit or 10 bit 0x3F 0x0F R/W cbuf_dly_stop Circular buffer stop delay; number of samples recorded to the circular buffer after channel shutdown 0x40 0x19 R/W peak_log_rst Reset control bits for peak-detection registers 0x41 0x00 R/W peak_log_hold Hold control bits for peak-detection registers 0x42 0x00 R/W LED flash/GPIO enable register 0x43 0x0F R/W LED phase/weak pullup enable register 0x44 0x00 R/W LED pins voltage state register (LED pins set open) 0x45 — R cbufrd_hibyonly LED_flash LED_ph_pu LED_state Table 2. chxen Register Format Description: Channel enable bits Resister Title: chxen Register Address: 0x3B R 14 R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused EN2 EN1 — Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers REGISTER ADDRESS BIT RANGE MAX5978 Table 3a. Register Function DESCRIPTION ON input state 1 = ON above 600mV channel enable threshold [1:0] 0 = ON below 600mV channel enable threshold Bit 0: ON input state Bit 1: unused 0x32 [4] Unused Voltage critical behavior (PROT input) 00 = Assert ALERT upon UV/OV critical (same as UV/OV warning behavior) [7:6] 01 = Assert ALERT and deassert PG upon UV/OV critical 10 = Assert ALERT, deassert PG, and shut down channel upon UV/OV critical 11 = (Not possible) Table 3b. status1 Register Format Description: Fault-detection behavior (three-state PROT input) and ON input status register Resister Title: status1 Register Address: 0x32 R R R R prot[1] Bit 7 R prot[0] — Unused Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 R RESET VALUE Unused ON — Bit 1 Bit 0 — R R — — Bit 3 Bit 2 Figure 1 shows the detailed logic operation of the hotswap enable signals EN1, EN2, and ON, as well as the effect of various fault conditions. An input undervoltage threshold control for enabling the hot-swap channel can be implemented by placing a resistive divider between the drain of the hot-swap MOSFET and ground, with the midpoint connected to ON. The turn-on threshold voltage for the channel is then: VEN = 0.6V x (R1 + R2)/R2 The maximum rating for the ON input is 6V; do not exceed this value. Startup When all conditions for channel turn-on are met, the external n-channel MOSFET switch is fully enhanced with a typical gate-to-source voltage of 5V to ensure a low drain-to-source resistance. The charge pump at the GATE driver sources 5FA to control the output voltage turn-on voltage slew rate. An external capacitor can be added from GATE to GND to further reduce the voltage slew rate. Placing a 1kI resistor in series with this capacitance prevents the added capacitance from increasing the gate turn-off time. Total inrush current is the load current summed with the product of the gatevoltage slew rate dV/dt and the load capacitance. To determine the output dV/dt during startup, divide the GATE pullup current IG(UP) by the gate-to-ground capacitance. The voltage at the source of the external MOSFET follows the gate voltage, so the load dV/dt is the same as the gate dV/dt. Inrush current is the product of the dV/dt and the load capacitance. The time to start up tSU is the hot-swap voltage VS divided by the output dV/dt. Be sure to choose an external MOSFET that can handle the power dissipated during startup. The inrush current is roughly constant during startup and the voltage drop across the MOSFET (drain to source) decreases linearly as the load capacitance charges. The resulting power dissipation is, therefore, roughly equivalent to a single pulse of magnitude (VS x inrush current)/2 and 15 MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers ON FORCE-ON BIT EN1 BIT CHANNEL ENABLED EN2 BIT ANALOG SLOW TRIP S Q R Q ANALOG FAST TRIP 200ms DELAY, THEN PULSE UV/OV CRITICAL PROT S Q R Q Figure 1. Channel On-Off Control Logic Functional Schematic duration tSU. Refer to the thermal resistance charts in the MOSFET data sheet to determine the junction temperature rise during startup, and ensure that this does not exceed the maximum junction temperature for worstcase ambient conditions. Circuit-Breaker Protection As the channel is turned on and during normal operation, two analog comparators are used to detect an overcurrent condition by sensing the voltage across an external resistor connected between SENSE and MON. If the voltage across the sense resistor is less than the slow-trip and fast-trip circuit-breaker thresholds, the GATE output remains high. If either of the thresholds is exceeded due to an overcurrent condition, the gate of the MOSFET is pulled down to MON by an internal 500mA current source. The higher of the two comparator thresholds, the fast trip, is set by an internal 8-bit DAC (see Table 7), within one of three configurable full-scale current-sense 16 ranges: 25mV, 50mV, or 100mV (see Tables 6a and 6b). The 8-bit fast-trip threshold DAC can be programmed from 40% to 100% of the selected full-scale currentsense range. The slow-trip threshold follows the fast-trip threshold as one of four programmable ratios, set by the ifast2slow register (see Tables 4a and 4b). The fast-trip threshold is always higher than the slow-trip threshold, and the fast-trip comparator responds very quickly to protect the system against sudden, severe overcurrent events. The slower response of the slowtrip comparator varies depending upon the amount of overdrive beyond the slow-trip threshold. If the overdrive is small and short lived, the comparator will not shut down the affected channel. As the overcurrent event increases in magnitude, the response time of the slowtrip comparator decreases. This scheme provides good noise rejection and spurious overcurrent transients near the slow-trip threshold, while aggressively protecting the system against larger overcurrent events that occur as a result of a load fault. 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Description: Current threshold fast-to-slow setting bits Resister Title: ifast2slow Register Address: 0x30 R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused FS1 FS0 0x0F Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — MAX5978 Table 4a. ifast2slow Register Format Table 4b. Setting Fast-Trip to Slow-Trip Threshold Ratio FS1 FS0 FAST-TRIP TO SLOW-TRIP RATIO (%) 0 0 125 0 1 150 1 0 175 1 1 200 Setting Circuit-Breaker Thresholds range is initially set upon power-up by the state of the IRNG input, but can be altered at any time by writing to the status2 register. For maximum accuracy and best measurement resolution, select the lowest current-sense range that is larger than the VTH,FT value calculated in step 3. To select and set the device slow-trip and fast-trip comparator thresholds, use the following procedure: 1) Select one of four ratios between the fast-trip threshold and the slow-trip threshold: 200%, 175%, 150%, or 125%. A system that experiences brief but large transient load currents should use a higher ratio, whereas a system that operates continuously at higher average load currents might benefit from a smaller ratio to ensure adequate protection. The ratio is set by writing to the ifast2slow register. (The default setting on power-up is 200%.) 2) Determine the slow-trip threshold VTH,ST based on the anticipated maximum continuous load current during normal operation, and the value of the current-sense resistor. The slow-trip threshold should include some margin (possibly 20%) above the maximum load current to prevent spurious circuit-breaker shutdown and to accommodate passive component tolerances: VTH,ST = RSENSE x ILOAD,MAX x 120% 3) Calculate the necessary fast-trip threshold VTH,FT based on the ratio set in step 1: VTH,FT = VTH,ST x (ifast2slow ratio) 4) Select one of the three maximum current-sense ranges: 25mV, 50mV, or 100mV. The current-sense 5) Program the fast-trip and slow-trip thresholds by writing an 8-bit value to the dac_fast register. This 8-bit value is determined from the desired VTH,ST value that was calculated in step 2, the threshold ratio from step 1, and the current-sense range from step 4: DAC = VTH,ST x 255 x (ifast2slow ratio)/ (IRNG current-sense range) The device provides a great deal of system flexibility because the current-sense range, DAC setting, and threshold ratio can be changed “on the fly” for systems that must protect a wide range of interchangeable load devices, or for systems that control the allocation of power to smart loads. Table 5 shows the specified ranges for the fast-trip and slow-trip thresholds for all combinations of current-sense range and threshold ratio. When an overcurrent event causes the device to shut down the power channel, the open-drain FAULT output alerts the system. Figure 2 shows the operation and faultmanagement flowchart. 17 MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Table 5. Specified Current-Sense and Circuit-Breaker Threshold Ranges DAC OUTPUT RANGE (DEFAULT = FULL SCALE) (mV) IRNG INPUT Low FAST-TRIP THRESHOLD RANGE (mV) 10 to 25 High SLOW-TRIP THRESHOLD RANGE (mV) 00 (125%) 8.00 to 20.00 01 (150%) 6.67 to 16.67 10 (175%) 5.71 to 14.29 11 (200%) 5.00 to 12.50 00 (125%) 16.00 to 40.00 01 (150%) 13.33 to 33.33 10 (175%) 11.48 to 28.57 11 (200%) 10.00 to 25.00 00 (125%) 32.00 to 80.00 01 (150%) 26.67 to 66.67 10 (175%) 22.86 to 57.14 11 (200%) 20.00 to 50.00 10 to 25 20 to 50 Unconnected GAIN (2 BIT) (VFAST/ VSLOW) ifast2slow (DEFAULT = 11) 20 to 50 40 to 100 40 to 100 Table 6a. IRNG Input Status Register Format Description: Fast-trip threshold maximum range-setting bits, from IRNG three-state input Resister Title: status2 Register Address: 0x33 R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused IRNG1 IRNG0 — Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 6b. Setting Current-Sense Range IRNG PIN STATE IRNG1 IRNG0 MAXIMUM CURRENT-SENSE SIGNAL (mV) Low 1 0 25 High 0 1 50 Open 0 0 100 Table 7. dac_ch_ Register Format Description: Fast-comparator threshold DAC setting Register Title: dac_fast Register Addresses: 0x2E 18 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE DAC[7] DAC[6] DAC[5] DAC[4] DAC[3] DAC[2] DAC[1] DAC[0] 0xBF Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers READ, PROT, A0, A1, HWEN, IRNG INPUTS, CLEAR FLAGS YES ARE 2 OR MORE OF 3 ENABLE SET? MAX5978 VIN > 2.7V YES CHANNEL ENABLED NO NO START CIRCULAR BUFFER ENABLE GATE PULLUP CONTINUOUSLY SAMPLE VOLTAGE AND CURRENT, UPDATE MIN-MAX VALUES, HANDLE I2C COMMUNICATIONS, STORE SAMPLES TO CIRCULAR BUFFERS... ASSERT PG AFTER ADJUSTABLE DELAY NORMAL OPERATION YES MON > UV1 AND UV2? NO CIRCUIT-BREAKER TRIP? YES ARE 2 OR MORE OF 3 ENABLE SET? UV, OV, OR OC WARNING OR CRITICAL YES NO BUFFER STOP-DELAY EXPIRED CLEAR PG AND SHUT DOWN THE CHANNEL YES SET ALERT, PG PER PROT INPUT NO NO SET FAULT, CLEAR PG, AND SHUT DOWN THE CHANNEL YES YES PROT INPUT = GND STOP CIRCULAR BUFFER NO READ IRNG INPUT, CLEAR FLAGS, CLEAR ALERT, CLEAR FAULT NO NO ARE 2 OR MORE OF 3 ENABLE SET? NORMAL OPERATION YES CHANNEL ENABLED YES ARE 2 OR MORE OF 3 ENABLE SET? NO Figure 2. Operation and Fault-Management Flowchart for Hot-Swap Channel 19 MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Digital Current Monitoring throughout the device for ADC conversion results and digital comparator thresholds. The current-sense signal is sampled by the internal 10-bit, 10ksps ADC, and the most recent results are stored in registers for retrieval through the I2C interface. The current conversion values are 10 bits wide, with the 8 high-order bits written to one 8-bit register and the 2 low-order bits written to the next-higher 8-bit register address (Tables 8 and 9). This allows use of just the high-order byte in applications where 10-bit precision is not required. This split 8-bit/2-bit storage scheme is used Once the PG output is asserted, the current-sense samples are continuously compared to the programmable overcurrent warning register value. If the measured current value exceeds the warning level, the ALERT output is asserted. The device response to this digital comparator is not altered by the setting of the PROT input (Tables 10 and 11). Table 8. ADC Current-Conversion Results Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Most recent current-conversion result, high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: adc_cs_msb Register Addresses: 0x00 R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE inew_9 inew_8 inew_7 inew_6 inew_5 inew_4 inew_3 inew_2 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 9. ADC Current-Conversion Results Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Most recent current-conversion result, low-order bits [0:1] Register Title: adc_cs_ lsb Register Addresses: 0x01 R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE — — — — — — inew_1 inew_0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 10. Overcurrent Warning Threshold Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Overcurrent warning threshold high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: oithr_msb Register Addresses: 0x22 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE oi_9 oi_8 oi_7 oi_6 oi_5 oi_4 oi_3 oi_2 0xFF Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 11. Overcurrent Warning Threshold Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Overcurrent warning threshold low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: oithr_lsb Register Addresses: 0x23 R/W 20 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — — — oi_1 oi_0 0x03 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers is updated with the new value. These “peak-detection” registers are read/write accessible through the I2C interface (Tables 12–15). The minimum-value registers are reset to 0xFF and the maximum-value registers are reset to 0x00. These reset values are loaded upon startup of the channel or at any time as commanded by register peak_log_rst (Table 35). Current-sense measurement values from the ADC are continuously compared with the contents of minimumand maximum-value registers, and if the most recent measurement exceeds the stored maximum, or is less than the stored minimum, the corresponding register Table 12. ADC Minimum Current-Conversion Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Minimum current-conversion result high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: min_cs_msb Register Addresses: 0x08 R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE imin_9 imin_8 imin_7 imin_6 imin_5 imin_4 imin_3 imin_2 0xFF Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 13. ADC Minimum Current-Conversion Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Minimum current-conversion result low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: min_cs_ lsb Register Addresses: 0x09 R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE — — — — — — imin_1 imin_0 0x03 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 14. ADC Maximum Current-Conversion Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Maximum current-conversion result high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: max_cs_msb Register Addresses: 0x0A R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE imax_9 imax_8 imax_7 imax_6 imax_5 imax_4 imax_3 imax_2 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 15. ADC Maximum Current-Conversion Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Maximum current-conversion result low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: max_cs_lsb Register Addresses: 0x0B R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE — — — — — — imax_1 imax_0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 21 MAX5978 Minimum and Maximum Value Detection for Current-Measurement Values MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Digital Voltage Monitoring and Power-Good Output Digital Undervoltage- and OvervoltageDetection Thresholds The voltage at the load (MON input) is sampled by the internal ADC. The MON full-scale voltage can be set to 16V, 8V, 4V, or 2V by writing to register mon_range. The default range is 16V (Tables 16 and 17). The most recent voltage values are continuously compared to four programmable limits, comprising two undervoltage (UV) levels (see Tables 20 to 23) and two overvoltage (OV) levels (see Tables 24 to 27). The most recent voltage-conversion results can be read from the adc_mon_msb and adc_mon_lsb registers (see Tables 18 and 19). If PG is asserted and the voltage is outside the warning limits, the ALERT output is asserted low. Depending on the status of the prot[] bits in register status1[7:6], the Table 16. ADC Voltage Monitor Settings Register Format Description: ADC voltage monitor full-scale range settings (for MON input) Register Title: mon_range Register Addresses: 0x18 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused MON_rng1 MON_rng0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 17. ADC Full-Scale Voltage Setting MON_rng1 MON_rng0 ADC FULL-SCALE VOLTAGE (V) 0 0 16 0 1 8 1 0 4 1 1 2 Table 18. ADC Voltage-Conversion Result Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Most recent voltage-conversion result, high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: adc_mon_msb Register Addresses: 0x02 R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE vnew_9 vnew_8 vnew_7 vnew_6 vnew_5 vnew_4 vnew_3 vnew_2 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 19. ADC Voltage-Conversion Result Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Most recent voltage-conversion result, low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: adc_mon_lsb Register Addresses: 0x03 22 R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE — — — — — — vnew_1 vnew_0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers In a typical application, the UV1 and OV1 thresholds would be set closer to the nominal output voltage, and the UV2 and OV2 thresholds would be set further from nominal. This provides a “progressive” response to a voltage excursion. However, the thresholds can be configured in any arrangement or combination as desired to suit a given application. OV2 CRITICAL THRESHOLD OV1 WARNING THRESHOLD VMON NORMAL RANGE UV1 WARNING THRESHOLD UV2 CRITICAL THRESHOLD Figure 3. Graphical Representation of Typical UV and OV Thresholds Configuration Table 20. Undervoltage Warning Threshold Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Undervoltage warning threshold high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: uv1th_msb Register Addresses: 0x1A R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE uv1_9 uv1_8 uv1_7 uv1_6 uv1_5 uv1_4 uv1_3 uv1_2 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 21. Undervoltage Warning Threshold Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Undervoltage warning threshold low-order bits [1:0] Register Titles: uv1th_Isb Register Addresses: 0x1B R R R R R R R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — — — uv1_1 uv1_0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 23 MAX5978 device can also deassert the PG output or turn off the external MOSFET when the voltage is outside the critical limits (see Figure 3). Table 28 shows the behavior for the three possible states of the PROT input. Note that the PROT input does not affect the device response to the UV or OV warning digital comparators; it only determines the system response to the critical digital comparators (see Tables 3a, 3b, and 28). MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Table 22. Undervoltage Critical Threshold Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Undervoltage critical threshold high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: uv2th_msb Register Addresses: 0x1C R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE uv2_9 uv2_8 uv2_7 uv2_6 uv2_5 uv2_4 uv2_3 uv2_2 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 23. Undervoltage Critical Threshold Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Undervoltage critical threshold low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: uv2th_lsb Register Addresses: 0x1D R R R R R R R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — — — uv2_1 uv2_0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 24. Overvoltage Warning Threshold Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Overvoltage warning threshold high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: ov1thr_msb Register Addresses: 0x1E R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE ov1_9 ov1_8 ov1_7 ov1_6 ov1_5 ov1_4 ov1_3 ov1_2 0xFF Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 25. Overvoltage Warning Threshold Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Overvoltage warning threshold low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: ov1thr_lsb Register Addresses: 0x1F R R R R R R R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — — — ov1_1 ov1_0 0x03 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 26. Overvoltage Critical Threshold Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Overvoltage critical threshold high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: ov2thr_msb Register Addresses: 0x20 24 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE ov2_9 ov2_8 ov2_7 ov2_6 ov2_5 ov2_4 ov2_3 ov2_2 0xFF Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Description: Overvoltage critical threshold low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: ov2thr_lsb Register Addresses: 0x21 R R R R R R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — — — ov2_1 ov2_0 0x03 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — MAX5978 Table 27. Overvoltage Critical Threshold Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Table 28. PROT Input and prot[] Bits PROT INPUT STATE prot[1] prot[0] UV/OV WARNING ACTION Low 0 0 Assert ALERT Assert ALERT, clear PG, shut down channel High 0 1 Assert ALERT Assert ALERT, clear PG Unconnected 1 0 Assert ALERT Assert ALERT UV/OV CRITICAL ACTION Table 29. status3 Register Format Description: Power-good status register: POL, ALERT, and power-good bits Register Title: status3 Register Address: 0x34 R R R R/W R R R R RESET VALUE — — POL ALERT — — Unused pg[0] — Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 30a. Power-Good Assertion Delay-Time Register Format Description: Power-good assertion delay-time register Register Title: pgdly Register Address: 0x38 R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused pgdly1 pgdly0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 30b. Power-Good Assertion Delay pgdly1 pgdly0 PG ASSERTION DELAY (ms) 0 0 50 0 1 100 1 0 200 1 1 400 Power-Good Detection and PG Output The PG output is asserted when the voltage at MON is between the undervoltage and overvoltage critical limits. The status of the power-good signal is maintained in register status3[0]. A value of 1 in the pg[] bit indicates a power-good condition, regardless of the POL setting, which only affects the PG output pin polarity. The opendrain PG output can be configured for active-high or active-low status indication by the state of the POL input (see Table 29). The POL input sets the value of status3[5], which is a read-only bit; the state of the POL input can be changed at any time during operation and the polarity of the PG output changes accordingly. The assertion of the PG output is delayed by a userselectable time delay of 50ms, 100ms, 200ms, or 400ms (see Tables 30a and 30b). 25 MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Minimum and Maximum Value Detection for Voltage-Measurement Values peak-detection registers are read accessible through the I2C interface (see Tables 31 to 34). The minimum-value registers are reset to 0xFF, and the maximum-value registers are reset to 0x00. These reset values are loaded upon startup or at any time as commanded by register peak_log_rst (see Table 35). All voltage-measurement values are compared with the contents of minimum- and maximum-value registers, and if the most recent measurement exceeds the stored maximum or is less than the stored minimum, the corresponding register is updated with the new value. These Table 31. ADC Minimum Voltage Conversion Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Minimum voltage conversion result, high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: min_mon_msb Register Addresses: 0x0C R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE vmin_9 vmin_8 vmin_7 vmin_6 vmin_5 vmin_4 vmin_3 vmin_2 0xFF Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 32. ADC Minimum Voltage-Conversion Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Minimum voltage-conversion result, low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: min_mon_lsb Register Addresses: 0x0D R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE — — — — — — vmin_1 vmin_0 0x03 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 33. ADC Maximum Voltage-Conversion Register Format (High-Order Bits) Description: Maximum voltage-conversion result, high-order bits [9:2] Register Title: max_mon_msb Register Addresses: 0x0E R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE vmax_9 vmax_8 vmax_7 vmax_6 vmax_5 vmax_4 vmax_3 vmax_2 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 34. ADC Maximum Voltage-Conversion Register Format (Low-Order Bits) Description: Maximum voltage-conversion result, low-order bits [1:0] Register Title: max_mon_lsb Register Addresses: 0x0F 26 R R R R R R R R RESET VALUE — — — — — — vmax_1 vmax_0 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers minimum- and maximum-detection register contents can be “held” by setting bits in register peak_log_hold (see Table 36). Writing a 1 to a location in peak_log_hold locks the register contents for the corresponding signal and stops the min/max detection and logging; writing a 0 enables the detection and logging. Note that the peakdetection registers cannot be cleared while they are held by register peak_log_hold. As long as a bit in peak_log_rst is 1, the corresponding peak-detection registers are disabled and are “cleared” to their power-up reset values. The voltage and current The combination of these two control registers allows the user to monitor voltage and current peak-to-peak values during a particular time period. Table 35. Peak-Detection Reset-Control Register Format Description: Reset control bits for peak-detection registers Register Title: peak_log_rst Register Address: 0x41 R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused v_rst i_rst 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 36. Peak-Detection Hold-Control Register Format Description: Hold control bits for peak-detection registers Register Title: peak_log_hold Register Address: 0x42 R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused Ch0_v_hld Ch0_i_hld 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 27 MAX5978 Using the Voltage and Current PeakDetection Registers The voltage and current minimum- and maximum-value records in register locations 0x08 through 0x17 can be reset by writing a 1 to the appropriate location in register peak_log_rst (see Table 35). The minimum-value registers are reset to 0xFF, and the maximum-value registers are reset to 0x000. MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Table 37. OI Warning Comparators Deglitch Enable Register Format Description: Deglitch enable register for overcurrent warning digital comparators Register Title: dgl_i Register Address: 0x3C R R R R R R R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — — — Unused dgl_i 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 38. UV Warning and Critical Comparators Deglitch Enable Register Format Description: Deglitch enable register for undervoltage warning and critical digital comparators Register Title: dgl_uv Register Address: 0x3D R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused dgl_uv2 dgl_uv1 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 39. OV Warning and Critical Comparators Deglitch Enable Register Format Description: Deglitch enable register for overvoltage warning and critical digital comparators Register Title: dgl_ov Register Address: 0x3E R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused dgl_ov2 dgl_ov1 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Deglitching of Digital Comparators The five digital comparators (undervoltage/overvoltage warning and critical, overcurrent warning) all have a user-selectable deglitching feature that requires two consecutive positive compares before the device takes action as determined by the particular compare and the setting of the PROT input. The deglitching functions are enabled or disabled by registers dgl_i, dgl_uv, and dgl_ov (Tables 37, 38, and 39). Writing a 1 to the appropriate bit location in these registers enables the deglitch function for the corresponding digital comparator. Circular Buffer The device features two 10-bit “circular buffers” (in volatile memory) that contain a history of the 50 most-recent voltage and current digital-conversion results. These circular buffers can be read back through the I2C interface. 28 The recording of new data to the buffer for a given signal is stopped under any of the following conditions: • The hot-swap channel is shut down because of a fault condition. • A read of the circular buffer base address is performed through the I2C interface. • The hot-swap channel is turned off by a combination of the EN1, EN2, or ON signals. The buffers allow the user to recall the voltage and current waveforms for analysis and troubleshooting. The buffer contents are accessed through the I2C interface at two fixed addresses in the device register address space (see Table 40). Each buffer can also be stopped under user control by register cbuf_chx_store (see Table 41). 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers The default (reset) value of the buffer stop delay is 25 samples, which means that an equal number of samples are stored in the buffer preceding and following the moment of the shutdown event. The buffer stop delay is analogous to an oscilloscope trigger delay because it allows the device to record what happened both immediately before and after a shutdown. In other words, when the contents of a circular buffer are read out of the device, the shutdown event is by default located in the middle of the recorded data. The balance of data before and after an event can be altered by writing a different value (between 0 and 50) to the buffer stop-delay register. If the circular buffer contents are retrieved as 10-bit data, the first byte read-out is the high-order 8 bits of the 10-bit sample, and the second byte read-out contains the 2 least-significant bits (LSBs) of the sample. This is repeated for each of the 50 samples in the buffer. Thus, 2 bytes must be read for each 10-bit sample retrieved. Conversely, if the buffer contents are retrieved as 8-bit data, then each byte read-out contains the 8 MSBs of each successive sample. It is important to remember that in 10-bit mode, 100 bytes must be read to extract the entire buffer contents, but in 8-bit mode, only 50 bytes must be read. Latched-Off Fault Management In the event of an overcurrent, undervoltage, or overvoltage condition that results in the shutdown of the hotswap channel, the device remains latched off. The circular buffer system has a user-programmable “stop delay” that specifies a certain number of sample cycles to continue recording to the buffer after a shutdown occurs. This delay value is stored in register cbuf_dly_stop[5:0] (see Table 43). To restart the latched-off channel, the user must either cycle power to the IN input, or toggle the ON pin, EN1 bit, or the EN2 bit. Table 40. Circular Buffer Read Addresses ADDRESS NAME 0x46 cbuf_ba_v Base address for voltage buffer block read DESCRIPTION 0x47 cbuf_ba_i Base address for current buffer block read Table 41. Circular Buffer Control Register Format Description: Circular buffer run-stop control register (per-buffer control: 1 = run, 0 = stop) Register Title: cbuf_chx_store Register Address: 0x19 R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused Ch0_i_run Ch0_v_run 0x0F Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 42. Circular Buffer Resolution Register Format Description: Circular buffer read-out resolution: high-order byte only, or 8-2 split 10-bit data (per-buffer control: 1 = high-order byte output, 0 = full-resolution 10-bit output) Register Title: cbufrd_hibyonly Register Address: 0x3F R R R R R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE — — — — Unused Unused i_res v_res 0x0F Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 29 MAX5978 The contents of a buffer can be retrieved as a block read of either fifty 10-bit values (spanning 2 bytes each) or of 50 high-order bytes, depending on the per-signal bit settings of register cbufrd_hibyonly (see Table 42). MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Table 43. Circular Buffer Stop-Delay Register Format Description: Circular buffer stop delay: any integer number between 0 and 50 samples that are to be recorded to a buffer after a shutdown event, before the buffer stops storing new data Register Title: cbuf_dly_stop Register Address: 0x40 R R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE 0 0 Stop_dly[5] Stop_dly[4] Stop_dly[3] Stop_dly[2] Stop_dly[1] Stop_dly[0] 0x19 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — R R/W R/W RESET VALUE R Table 44. Force-On Control Register Format Description: Force-on control register Register Title: foset Register Address: 0x3A R R R R R 0 0 0 0 0 0 Unused fo 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 45. Force-On Key Register Format Description: Force-on key register (must contain 0xA5 to unlock force-on feature) Register Title: fokey Register Address: 0x39 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE fokey[7] fokey[6] fokey[5] fokey[4] fokey[3] fokey[2] fokey[1] fokey[0] 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Force-On Function When the force-on bit is set to 1 in register foset[0] (see Table 44), the channel is enabled regardless of the ON pin voltage or the EN1 and EN2 bits in register chxen. In forced-on operation, all functions operate normally with the notable exception that the channel does not shut down due to any fault conditions that may arise. There is a force-on key register fokey that must be set to 0xA5 in order for the force-on function to become active (see Table 45). If this register contains any value other 30 than 0xA5, writing 1 to the force-on bits in register foset has no effect. This provides protection against accidental force-on operation that might otherwise be caused by an erroneous I2C write. Fault Logging and Indications The device provides detailed information about any fault conditions that have occurred. The FAULT output specifically indicates a circuit-breaker shutdown event, while the ALERT output is asserted whenever a problem has occurred that requires attention or interaction. 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers IFAULTS indicates the overcurrent status from slow comparator. IFAULTF indicates overcurrent status from fast comparator. The status of FAULT reflects the OR operation of IFAULTS and IFAULTF. These fault register bits latch upon a fault condition, and must be reset manually by restarting as described in the Latched-Off Fault Management section. Likewise, circuit-breaker shutdown events are logged in register status0[7:0] (see Table 49). Table 46. Undervoltage Status Register Format Description: Undervoltage digital-compare status register (warning [0] and critical [4] undervoltage eventdetection status) Register Title: fault0 Register Address: 0x35 R R R/C R/C — — Unused uv1 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 R R/C RESET VALUE Unused uv1 0x00 Bit 1 Bit 0 — R R/C — — Bit 3 Bit 2 Table 47. Overvoltage Status Register Format Description: Overvoltage digital-compare status register (warning [0] and critical [4] overvoltage event-detection status) Register Title: fault1 Register Address: 0x36 R R R/C R/C — — Unused ov2 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 R R/C RESET VALUE Unused ov1 0x00 Bit 1 Bit 0 — R R/C — — Bit 3 Bit 2 Table 48. Overcurrent Warning Status Register Format Description: Overcurrent digital-compare status register (overcurrent warning event-detection status) Register Title: fault2 Register Address: 0x37 R R R R R R R/C R/C RESET VALUE — — — — — — Unused oi 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 49. Circuit-Breaker Event Logging Register Format Description: Circuit-breaker slow- and fast-trip event logging Register Title: status0 Register Address: 0x31 R R R R — — Unused IFAULTS Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 R R R RESET VALUE — — Unused IFAULTF 0x00 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — R 31 MAX5978 Fault Dependency If a fault event occurs (digital UV warning/critical, digital OV warning/critical, or digital overcurrent warning), the fault is logged by setting a corresponding bit in registers fault0, fault1, or fault2 (see Tables 46, 47, and 48). MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers FAULT Output LED Set Registers When an overcurrent event (fast trip or slow trip) causes the device to shut down the hot-swap channel, an opendrain FAULT output is asserted low. Note that the FAULT output is not asserted for shutdowns caused by critical undervoltage or overvoltage events. The device has four open-drain LED drivers/user-programmable GPIOs. When programmed as LED drivers, each driver can sink up to 25mA of current. Table 50 shows the register that enables the drivers as either LED drivers or GPIOs. The FAULT output is cleared when the channel is disabled by pulling ON low or by clearing the bits in register chxen. When any of the LED_ Set bit in the register is set to 1, the corresponding open-drain LED driver is turned off. The LED_Flash bits enable each corresponding LED driver to flash on and off at 1Hz frequency regardless of the condition of the corresponding LED_ Set bit. ALERT Output ALERT is an open-drain output that is asserted low any time that a fault or other condition requiring attention has occurred. The state of the ALERT output is also indicated by status3[4]. The ALERT output is the logical NOR of registers 0x31, 0x35, 0x36, and 0x37, so when the ALERT output goes low, the system microcontroller should query these registers through the I2C interface to determine the cause of the ALERT assertion. Bits 7–4 in Table 51 set the LED flashing drivers to be either in-phase or out-of-phase with the internal 1Hz clock. Bits 3–0 enable the 4FA pullup current to the corresponding output. Table 52 shows the LED state register. The LED state register is a read-only register. When the LEDs are disabled, the pins are configured as GPIOs. Applying an external voltage below 0.4V sets the GPIOs low and, applying an external voltage above 1.4V, sets the GPIOs high. Table 50. LED_Flash/GPIO Enable Register Description: LED_ flash/GPIO enable register Register Title: LED_flash Register Address: 0x43 R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W RESET VALUE LED4 Flash LED3 Flash LED2 Flash LED1 Flash LED4 Set LED3 Set LED2 Set LED1 Set 0x0F Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — Table 51. LED Phase/Weak Pullup Enable Register Description: LED phase/weak pullup enable Register Title: LED_ph_pu Register Address: 0x44 32 RESET VALUE R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W R/W LED4 Phase LED3 Phase LED2 Phase LED1 Phase LED4 Weak PU LED3 Weak PU LED2 Weak PU LED1 Weak PU 0x00 Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Description: LED state register Register Title: LED_state Register Address: 0x45 MAX5978 Table 52. LED State Register RESET VALUE R R R R R R R R — — — — LED4 Voltage LED3 Voltage LED2 Voltage LED1 Voltage — Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 — SDA tSU:DAT tHD:DAT tLOW tBUF tSU:STA tHD:STA tSU:STO SCL tHIGH tHD:STA tR tF START CONDITION REPEATED START CONDITION STOP CONDITION START CONDITION Figure 4. Serial-Interface Timing Details I2C Serial Interface The device features an I2C-compatible serial interface consisting of a serial data line (SDA) and a serial clock line (SCL). SDA and SCL allow bidirectional communication between the device and the master device at clock rates from 100kHz to 400kHz. The I2C bus can have several devices (e.g., more than one device, or other I2C devices in addition to the device) attached simultaneously. The A0 and A1 inputs set one of nine possible I2C addresses (see Table 53). The 2-wire communication is fully compatible with existing 2-wire serial interface systems; Figure 4 shows the interface timing diagram. The device is a transmit/ receive slave-only device, relying upon a master device to generate a clock signal. The master device (typically a microcontroller) initiates data transfer on the bus and generates SCL to permit that transfer. A master device communicates to the device by transmitting the proper address followed by command and/ or data words. Each transmit sequence is framed by a START (S) or Repeated START (SR) condition and a STOP (P) condition. Each word transmitted over the bus is 8 bits long and is always followed by an acknowledge pulse. SCL is a logic input, while SDA is a logic input/opendrain output. SCL and SDA both require external pullup resistors to generate the logic-high voltage. Use 4.7kI for most applications. 33 MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Table 53. Device Slave Address Settings ADDRESS INPUT STATE I2C ADDRESS BITS A1 A0 ADDR 7 ADDR 6 ADDR 5 ADDR 4 ADDR 3 ADDR 2 ADDR 1 ADDR 0 Low Low 0 1 1 1 0 1 0 R/W Low High 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 R/W Low Open 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 R/W High Low 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 R/W High High 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 R/W High Open 0 1 1 0 1 0 0 R/W Open Low 0 1 1 0 0 1 0 R/W Open High 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 R/W Open Open 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 R/W SDA SDA SCL SCL DATA LINE STABLE, CHANGE OF DATA ALLOWED DATA VALID S P START CONDITION STOP CONDITION Figure 5. Bit Transfer Figure 6. START and STOP Conditions Bit Transfer Each clock pulse transfers 1 data bit. The data on SDA must remain stable while SCL is high (see Figure 5); otherwise, the device registers a START or STOP condition (see Figure 6) from the master. SDA and SCL idle high when the bus is not busy. Early STOP Conditions The device recognizes a STOP condition at any point during transmission except if a STOP condition occurs in the same high pulse as a START condition. This condition is not a legal I2C format. At least one clock pulse must separate any START and STOP condition. START and STOP Conditions Both SCL and SDA idle high when the bus is not busy. A master device signals the beginning of a transmission with a START condition (see Figure 3) by transitioning SDA from high to low while SCL is high. The master device issues a STOP condition (see Figure 6) by transitioning SDA from low to high while SCL is high. A STOP condition frees the bus for another transmission. The bus remains active if a Repeated START condition is generated, such as in the block read protocol (see Figure 7). Repeated START Conditions A Repeated START (SR) condition may indicate a change of data direction on the bus. Such a change occurs when a command word is required to initiate a read operation (see Figure 4). SR may also be used when the bus master is writing to several I2C devices and does not want to relinquish control of the bus. The device serial interface supports continuous write operations with or without an SR condition separating them. Continuous read operations require SR conditions because of the change in direction of data flow. 34 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers S ADDRESS WR 7 BITS 0 ACK DATA ACK P S 8 BITS SLAVE ADDRESS– EQUIVALENT TO CHIPSELECT LINE OF A 3-WIRE INTERFACE. DATA BYTE–PRESETS THE INTERNAL ADDRESS POINTER. ADDRESS WR 7 BITS 1 ADDRESS WR 7 BITS 0 ACK COMMAND ACK 8 BITS SLAVE ADDRESS– EQUIVALENT TO CHIPSELECT LINE OF A 3-WIRE INTERFACE. RECEIVE BYTE FORMAT S DATA ACK 8 BITS COMMAND BYTE– MSB OF THE EEPROM REGISTER BEING WRITTEN. DATA ACK P 8 BITS DATA BYTE–FIRST BYTE IS THE LSB OF THE EEPROM ADDRESS. SECOND BYTE IS THE ACTUAL DATA. WRITE BYTE FORMAT ACK DATA ACK P S 8 BITS SLAVE ADDRESS– EQUIVALENT TO CHIPSELECT LINE OF A 3-WIRE INTERFACE. DATA BYTE–READS DATA FROM THE REGISTER COMMANDED BY THE LAST READ BYTE OR WRITE BYTE TRANSMISSION. ALSO DEPENDENT ON A SEND BYTE. ADDRESS WR 7 BITS 0 ACK COMMAND ACK ADDRESS WR 7 BITS 0 ACK COMMAND ACK SLAVE ADDRESS– EQUIVALENT TO CHIPSELECT LINE OF A 3-WIRE INTERFACE. ACK DATA BYTE 1 8 BITS 8 BITS SLAVE ADDRESS– EQUIVALENT TO CHIPSELECT LINE OF A 3-WIRE INTERFACE. BYTE COUNT = N ACK DATA BYTE ... ACK 8 BITS ACK P 8 BITS COMMAND BYTE– SELECTS REGISTER BEING WRITTEN. 8 BITS COMMAND BYTE– PREPARES DEVICE FOR BLOCK OPERATION. DATA 8 BITS BLOCK WRITE FORMAT S MAX5978 WRITE WORD FORMAT SEND BYTE FORMAT DATA BYTE–DATA GOES INTO THE REGISTER SET BY THE COMMAND BYTE IF THE COMMAND IS BELOW 50h. IF THE COMMAND IS 80h, 81h, or 82h, THE DATA BYTE PRESETS THE LSB OF AN EEPROM ADDRESS. DATA BYTE N ACK P 8 BITS DATA BYTE–DATA GOES INTO THE REGISTER SET BY THE COMMAND BYTE. BLOCK READ FORMAT S ADDRESS WR 7 BITS 0 ACK COMMAND ACK 8 BITS SLAVE ADDRESS– COMMAND BYTE– EQUIVALENT TO CHIP- PREPARES DEVICE SELECT LINE OF A FOR BLOCK 3-WIRE INTERFACE. OPERATION. S = START CONDITION P = STOP CONDITION SR ADDRESS WR 7 BITS 1 SLAVE ADDRESS– EQUIVALENT TO CHIPSELECT LINE OF A 3-WIRE INTERFACE. ACK BYTE COUNT = 16 10h ACK DATA BYTE ACK 1 8 BITS DATA BYTE ACK ... 8 BITS DATA BYTE ACK N P 8 BITS DATA BYTE–DATA GOES INTO THE REGISTER SET BY THE COMMAND BYTE. SHADED = SLAVE TRANSMISSION Sr = REPEATED START CONDITION Figure 7. SMBus/I2C Protocols 35 MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers 3) The addressed slave asserts an ACK on SDA. Acknowledge The acknowledge bit (ACK) is the 9th bit attached to any 8-bit data word. The receiving device always generates an ACK. The device generates an ACK when receiving an address or data by pulling SDA low during the 9th clock period (see Figure 8). When transmitting data, such as when the master device reads data back from the device, the device waits for the master device to generate an ACK. Monitoring ACK allows for detection of unsuccessful data transfers. An unsuccessful data transfer occurs if the receiving device is busy or if a system fault has occurred. In the event of an unsuccessful data transfer, the bus master should reattempt communication at a later time. The device generates a NACK after the slave address during a software reboot or when receiving an illegal memory address. 4) The master sends an 8-bit data byte. 5) The addressed slave asserts an ACK on SDA. 6) The master sends a STOP condition. Write Byte The write byte/word protocol allows the master device to write a single byte in the register bank or to write to a series of sequential register addresses. The write byte procedure follows: 1) The master sends a START condition. 2) The master sends the 7-bit slave address and a write bit (low). 3) The addressed slave asserts an ACK on SDA. 4) The master sends an 8-bit command code. Send Byte The send byte protocol allows the master device to send 1 byte of data to the slave device (see Figure 7). The send byte presets a register pointer address for a subsequent read or write. The slave sends a NACK instead of an ACK if the master tries to send an address that is not allowed. If the master sends a STOP condition, the internal address pointer does not change. The send byte procedure follows: 5) The addressed slave asserts an ACK on SDA. 6) The master sends an 8-bit data byte. 7) The addressed slave asserts an ACK on SDA. 8) The addressed slave increments its internal address pointer. 9) The master sends a STOP condition or repeats steps 6, 7, and 8. To write a single byte to the register bank, only the 8-bit command code and a single 8-bit data byte are sent. The data byte is written to the register bank if the command code is valid. 1) The master sends a START condition. 2) The master sends the 7-bit slave address and a write bit (low). START CONDITION 1 SCL SDA BY TRANSMITTER S SDA BY RECEIVER Figure 8. Acknowledge 36 CLOCK PULSE FOR ACKNOWLEDGE 2 8 9 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers READ-OUT ORDER 1ST OUT 2ND OUT … 48TH OUT 49TH OUT 50TH OUT 1 2 … 48 49 0 Chronological Number The slave generates a NACK at step 5 if the command code is invalid. The command code must be in the 0x00 to 0x45 range. The internal address pointer returns to 0x00 after incrementing from the highest register address. Receive Byte The receive-byte protocol allows the master device to read the register content of the device (see Figure 7). The EEPROM or register address must be preset with a send-byte protocol first. Once the read is complete, the internal pointer increases by one. Repeating the receive byte protocol reads the contents of the next address. The receive-byte procedure follows: 1) The master sends a START condition. 2) The master sends the 7-bit slave address and a read bit (high). 3) The addressed slave asserts an ACK on SDA. 4) The slave sends 8 data bits. 5) The slave increments its internal address pointer. 6) The master asserts an ACK on SDA and repeats steps 4, 5 or asserts a NACK and generates a STOP condition. The internal address pointer returns to 0x00 after incrementing from the highest register address. Address Pointers Use the send-byte protocol to set the register address pointers before read and write operations. For the configuration registers, valid address pointers range from 0x00 to 0x45, and the circular buffer addresses are 0x46 to 0x49. Register addresses outside this range result in a NACK being issued from the device. Circular Buffer Read The circular buffer read operation is similar to the receive-byte operation. The read operation is triggered after any one of the circular buffer base addresses is loaded. During a circular buffer read, although all is transparent from the external world, internally the autoincrement function in the I2C controller is disabled. Thus, it is possible to read one of the circular buffer blocks with a burst read without changing the virtual internal address corresponding to the base address. Once the master issues a NACK, the circular reading stops, and the default functions of the I2C slave bus controller are restored. In 8-bit read mode, every I2C read operation shifts out a single sample from the circular buffer. In 10-bit mode, two subsequent I2C read operations shift out a single 10-bit sample from the circular buffer, with the high-order byte read first, followed by a byte containing the rightshifted 2 least-significant bits. Once the master issues a NACK, the read circular buffer operation terminates and normal I2C operation returns. The data in the circular buffers is read back with the next-to-oldest sample first, followed by progressively more recent samples until the most recent sample is retrieved, followed finally by the oldest sample (see Table 54). Chip Information PROCESS: BiCMOS Package Information For the latest package outline information and land patterns, go to www.maxim-ic.com/packages. Note that a “+”, “#”, or “-” in the package code indicates RoHS status only. Package drawings may show a different suffix character, but the drawing pertains to the package regardless of RoHS status. PACKAGE TYPE PACKAGE CODE OUTLINE NO. LAND PATTERN NO. 32 TQFN-EP T3255+4 21-0140 90-0012 37 MAX5978 Table 54. Circular Buffer Readout Sequence MAX5978 0 to 16V, Hot-Swap Controller with 10-Bit Current, Voltage Monitor, and 4 LED Drivers Revision History REVISION NUMBER REVISION DATE 0 7/10 DESCRIPTION Initial release PAGES CHANGED — Maxim cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim product. No circuit patent licenses are implied. Maxim reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time. 38 © 2010 Maxim Integrated Products, 120 San Gabriel Drive, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 408-737-7600 Maxim Integrated Products Maxim is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc.