INTEGRATED CIRCUITS PCA9550 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates Product data Supersedes data of 2002 Dec 13 Philips Semiconductors 2003 May 02 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 DESCRIPTION cycle) between 0.15625 and 40 Hz (6.4 and 0.025 seconds) The PCA9550 LED Blinker blinks LEDs in I2C-bus and SMBus applications where it is necessary to limit bus traffic or free up the I2C Master’s (MCU, MPU, DSP, chipset, etc.) timer. The uniqueness of this device is the internal oscillator with two programmable blink rates. To blink LEDs using normal I/O Expanders like the PCF8574 or PCA9554, the bus master must send repeated commands to turn the LED on and off. This greatly increases the amount of traffic on the I2C-bus and uses up one of the master’s timers. The PCA9550 LED Blinker instead requires only the initial set up command to program BLINK RATE 1 and BLINK RATE 2 (i.e., the frequency and duty cycle). From then on, only one command from the bus master is required to turn each individual open drain output ON, OFF, or to cycle at BLINK RATE 1 or BLINK RATE 2. Maximum output sink current is 25 mA per bit and 50 mA per package. GPIOs Any bits not used for controlling the LEDs can be used for General Purpose Parallel Input/Output (GPIO) expansion. FEATURES • 2 LED drivers (on, off, flashing at a programmable rate) • 2 selectable, fully programmable blink rates (frequency and duty • Input/output not used as LED drivers can be used as regular • Internal oscillator requires no external components • I2C-bus interface logic compatible with SMBus • Internal power-on reset • Noise filter on SCL/SDA inputs • Active-LOW reset input • 2 open drain outputs directly drive LEDs to 25 mA • Controlled edge rates to minimize ground bounce • No glitch on power-up • Supports hot insertion • Low stand-by current • Operating power supply voltage range of 2.3 V to 5.5 V • 0 to 400 kHz clock frequency • ESD protection exceeds 2000 V HBM per JESD22-A114, The active-LOW hardware reset pin (RESET) and Power On Reset (POR) initializes the registers to their default state, all zeroes, causing the bits to be set HIGH (LED off). One hardware address pin on the PCA9550 allows two devices to operate on the same bus. PIN CONFIGURATION A0 1 8 VDD LED0 2 7 SDA LED1 3 6 SCL VSS 4 5 RESET SW00926 150 V MM per JESD22-A115 and 1000 V CDM per JESD22-C101 Figure 1. Pin configuration • Latch-up testing is done to JEDEC Standard JESD78 which exceeds 100 mA PIN DESCRIPTION • Packages offered: SO8, TSSOP8 PIN NUMBER SYMBOL FUNCTION 1 A0 2 LED0 LED driver 0 3 LED1 LED driver 1 4 VSS 5 RESET Address input 0 Supply ground Active-LOW reset input 6 SCL Serial clock line 7 SDA Serial data line 8 VDD Supply voltage ORDERING INFORMATION PACKAGES TEMPERATURE RANGE ORDER CODE TOPSIDE MARK DRAWING NUMBER 8-Pin Plastic SO -40 to +85 °C PCA9550D PCA9550 SOT96-1 8-Pin Plastic TSSOP -40 to +85 °C PCA9550DP 9550 Standard packing quantities and other packaging data is available at www.philipslogic.com/packaging. I2C is a trademark of Philips Semiconductors Corporation. 2003 May 02 2 SOT505-1 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 BLOCK DIAGRAM A0 PCA9550 INPUT REGISTER SCL INPUT FILTERS I2C-BUS CONTROL LED SELECT (LSx) REGISTER SDA 0 1 LEDx VDD POWER-ON RESET RESET OSCILLATOR PRESCALER 0 REGISTER PWM0 REGISTER BLINK0 PRESCALER 1 REGISTER PWM1 REGISTER BLINK1 VSS NOTE: ONLY ONE I/O SHOWN FOR CLARITY SW00927 Figure 2. Block diagram 2003 May 02 3 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 DEVICE ADDRESSING Unused bits must be programmed with zeroes. Following a START condition the bus master must output the address of the slave it is accessing. The address of the PCA9550 is shown in Figure 3. To conserve power, no internal pull-up resistor is incorporated on the hardware selectable address pin and it must be pulled HIGH or LOW. INPUT — INPUT REGISTER 1 0 0 0 A0 R/W HARDWARE SELECTABLE Following the successful acknowledgement of the slave address, the bus master will send a byte to the PCA9550 which will be stored in the Control Register. 0 B2 B1 B0 B0 TYPE REGISTER FUNCTION 0 0 0 INPUT READ INPUT REGISTER 0 0 1 PSC0 READ/ WRITE FREQUENCY PRESCALER 0 0 1 0 PWM0 READ/ WRITE PWM REGISTER 0 0 1 1 PSC1 READ/ WRITE FREQUENCY PRESCALER 1 1 0 0 PWM1 READ/ WRITE PWM REGISTER 1 LS0 READ/ WRITE 1 0 1 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 default 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 default 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 default 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 The PWM1 register determines the duty cycle of BLINK1. The outputs are LOW (LED off) when the count is less than the value in PWM1 and HIGH when it is greater. If PWM1 is programmed with 00h, then the PWM1 output is always LOW. The duty cycle of BLINK1 is: 256 – PWM1 256 LS0 — LED SELECTOR LED 1 LED 0 bit 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 default 1 1 1 1 0 1 0 1 The LSx LED select registers determine the source of the LED data. 00 = Output is set LOW (LED on) 01 = Output is set Hi-Z (LED off - default) 10 = Output blinks at PWM0 rate 11 = Output blinks at PWM1 rate LED SELECTOR REGISTER DESCRIPTION The lowest 3 bits are used as a pointer to determine which register will be accessed. If the auto-increment flag is set, the three low order bits of the Control Register are automatically incremented after a read or write. This allows the user to program the registers sequentially. The contents of these bits will rollover to ‘000’ after the last register is accessed. When auto-increment flag is set (AI = 1) and a read sequence is initiated, the sequence must start by reading a register different from the input register (B2 B1 B0 0 0 0 0). Only the 3 least significant bits are affected by the AI flag. 2003 May 02 bit default The period of BLINK1 + CONTROL REGISTER DEFINITION B1 X (PSC1 ) 1) 38 PWM1 — PWM REGISTER 1 SW01034 Figure 4. Control register B2 0 X PSC1 is used to program the period of PWM output. AUTO-INCREMENT FLAG REGISTER NAME 1 0 The duty cycle of BLINK0 is: 256 – PWM0 256 PSC1 — FREQUENCY PRESCALER 1 REGISTER ADDRESS RESET STATE: 00h 2 0 The PWM0 register determines the duty cycle of BLINK0. The outputs are LOW (LED off) when the count is less than the value in PWM0 and HIGH when it is greater. If PWM0 is programmed with 00h, then the PWM0 output is always LOW. CONTROL REGISTER AI 3 0 (PSC0 ) 1) 38 PWM0 — PWM REGISTER 0 The last bit of the address byte defines the operation to be performed. When set to logic 1 a read is selected while a logic 0 selects a write operation. 0 4 0 The period of BLINK0 + Figure 3. Slave address 0 5 0 PSC0 is used to program the period of the PWM output. SW00928 0 6 0 PSC0 — FREQUENCY PRESCALER 0 0 FIXED 7 The INPUT register reflects the state of the device pins. Writes to this register will be acknowledged but will have no effect. SLAVE ADDRESS 1 bit default 4 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 POWER-ON RESET When power is applied to VDD, an internal Power-On Reset holds the PCA9550 in a reset state until VDD has reached VPOR. At this point, the reset condition is released and the PCA9550 registers are initialized to their default states, all the outputs in the off state. SDA SCL EXTERNAL RESET data line stable; data valid A reset can be accomplished by holding the RESET pin LOW for a minimum of tW. The PCA9550 registers and I2C state machine will be held in their default state until the RESET input is once again HIGH. change of data allowed SW00363 Figure 5. Bit transfer This input requires a pull-up resistor to VDD. Start and stop conditions Both data and clock lines remain HIGH when the bus is not busy. A HIGH-to-LOW transition of the data line, while the clock is HIGH is defined as the start condition (S). A LOW-to-HIGH transition of the data line while the clock is HIGH is defined as the stop condition (P) (see Figure 6). CHARACTERISTICS OF THE I2C-BUS I2C-bus The is for 2-way, 2-line communication between different ICs or modules. The two lines are a serial data line (SDA) and a serial clock line (SCL). Both lines must be connected to a positive supply via a pull-up resistor when connected to the output stages of a device. Data transfer may be initiated only when the bus is not busy. System configuration A device generating a message is a transmitter: a device receiving is the receiver. The device that controls the message is the master and the devices which are controlled by the master are the slaves (see Figure 7). Bit transfer One data bit is transferred during each clock pulse. The data on the SDA line must remain stable during the HIGH period of the clock pulse as changes in the data line at this time will be interpreted as control signals (see Figure 5). SDA SDA SCL SCL S P START condition STOP condition SW00365 Figure 6. Definition of start and stop conditions SDA SCL MASTER TRANSMITTER/ RECEIVER SLAVE RECEIVER SLAVE TRANSMITTER/ RECEIVER MASTER TRANSMITTER MASTER TRANSMITTER/ RECEIVER I2C MULTIPLEXER SLAVE SW00366 Figure 7. System configuration 2003 May 02 5 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 Acknowledge The number of data bytes transferred between the start and the stop conditions from transmitter to receiver is not limited. Each byte of eight bits is followed by one acknowledge bit. The acknowledge bit is a HIGH level put on the bus by the transmitter whereas the master generates an extra acknowledge related clock pulse. A slave receiver which is addressed must generate an acknowledge after the reception of each byte. Also a master must generate an acknowledge after the reception of each byte that has been clocked out of the slave transmitter. The device that acknowledges has to pull down the SDA line during the acknowledge clock pulse, so that the SDA line is stable LOW during the HIGH period of the acknowledge related clock pulse, set-up and hold times must be taken into account. A master receiver must signal an end of data to the transmitter by not generating an acknowledge on the last byte that has been clocked out of the slave. In this event, the transmitter must leave the data line HIGH to enable the master to generate a stop condition. DATA OUTPUT BY TRANSMITTER not acknowledge DATA OUTPUT BY RECEIVER acknowledge SCL FROM MASTER 1 2 8 9 S clock pulse for acknowledgement START condition SW00368 Figure 8. Acknowledgement on the 2003 May 02 6 I2C-bus Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 Bus transactions 1 SCL 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 command byte slave address SDA S 1 1 0 0 0 0 A0 start condition 0 R/W A 0 0 0 AI 0 data to register B2 B1 B0 acknowledge from slave DATA 1 A A acknowledge from slave acknowledge from slave WRITE TO REGISTER DATA OUT FROM PORT DATA 1 VALID tpv SW01014 Figure 9. WRITE to register acknowledge from slave slave address S 1 1 0 0 0 0 A0 0 A acknowledge from slave 0 0 0 AI 0 B2 B1 B0 A S acknowledge from slave slave address 1 1 0 0 0 0 R/W A0 1 acknowledge from master data from register DATA A A first byte R/W auto-increment register address if AI = 1 at this moment master-transmitter becomes master-receiver and slave-receiver becomes slave-transmitter data from register no acknowledge from master NA DATA P last byte SW01098 Figure 10. READ from register slave address SDA S 1 1 0 0 0 start condition data from port 0 A0 1 R/W data from port DATA 1 A A acknowledge from slave DATA 4 acknowledge from master NA no acknowledge from master P stop condition READ FROM PORT DATA INTO PORT DATA 1 DATA 2 DATA 3 tph DATA 4 tps SW01095 NOTES: 1. This figure assumes the command byte has previously been programmed with 00h. Figure 11. READ input port register 2003 May 02 7 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 APPLICATION DATA 5V 5V VDD SDA SDA LED0 SCL SCL LED1 RESET I2C/SMBus MASTER A0 VSS PCA9550 SW00929 Figure 12. Typical application Minimizing IDD when the I/O is used to control LEDs When the I/Os are used to control LEDs, they are normally connected to VDD through a resistor as shown in Figure 12. Since the LED acts as a diode, when the LED is off the I/O VIN is about 1.2 V less than VDD. The supply current, IDD, increases as VIN becomes lower than VDD and is specified as ∆IDD in the DC characteristics table. Designs needing to minimize current consumption, such as battery power applications, should consider maintaining the I/O pins greater than or equal to VDD when the LED is off. Figure 13 shows a high value resistor in parallel with the LED. Figure 14 shows VDD less than the LED supply voltage by at least 1.2 V. Both of these methods maintain the I/O VIN at or above VDD and prevents additional supply current consumption when the LED is off. VDD LED 3.3 V 100 kΩ VDD VDD LEDx LED LEDx SW02087 SW02086 Figure 13. High value resistor in parallel with the LED 2003 May 02 5V Figure 14. Device supplied by a lower voltage 8 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates Programming example The following example will show how to set LED0 to blink at 1 Hz at a 50% duty cycle. LED1 will be set to blink at 4 Hz, 25% duty cycle. Table 1. I2C-bus Start S PCA9550 address with A0 = LOW COh PSC0 subaddress + auto-increment 11h Set prescaler PSC0 to achieve a period of 1 second: Blink period + 1 + PSC0 ) 1 38 PSC0 = 37 25h Set PWM0 duty cycle to 50%: 256 – PWM0 + 0.5 256 PWM0 = 128 80h Set prescaler PCS1 to achieve a period of 0.25 seconds: Blink period + 0.25 + PSC1 ) 1 38 PSC1 = 9 09h Set PWM1 output duty cycle to 25%: 256 – PWM1 + 0.25 256 C0h PWM1 = 192 Set LED0 to PWM0 and set LED1 to blink at PWM1 OEh Stop P 2003 May 02 9 PCA9550 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS In accordance with the Absolute Maximum Rating System (IEC 134) PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN MAX UNIT -0.5 6.0 V VDD Supply voltage VI/O DC voltage on an I/O VSS - 0.5 5.5 V II/O DC output current on an I/O — ±25 mA ISS Supply current — 50 mA Ptot Total power dissipation — 400 mW Tstg Storage temperature range -65 +150 °C Tamb Operating ambient temperature -40 +85 °C HANDLING Inputs and outputs are protected against electrostatic discharge in normal handling. However, to be totally safe, it is desirable to take precautions appropriate to handling MOS devices. Advice can be found in Data Handbook IC24 under ”Handling MOS devices”. DC CHARACTERISTICS VDD = 2.3 to 5.5 V; VSS = 0 V; Tamb = -40 to +85 °C; unless otherwise specified. TYP at 3.3 V and 25 °C. SYMBOL PARAMETER CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNIT 2.3 — 5.5 V Supplies VDD Supply voltage IDD Supply current Operating mode; VDD = 5.5 V; no load; VI = VDD or VSS; fSCL = 100 kHz — 350 500 µA Istb Standby current Standby mode; VDD = 5.5 V; no load; VI = VDD or VSS; fSCL = 0 kHz — 1.9 3.0 µA ∆IDD Additional standby current Standby mode; VDD = 5.5 V; Every LED I/O at VIN = 4.3 V; fSCL = 0 kHz — — 200 µA VPOR Power-on reset voltage No load; VI = VDD or VSS 1.4 1.7 2.2 V -0.5 — 0.3 VDD V Input SCL; input/output SDA VIL LOW-level input voltage VIH HIGH-level input voltage 0.7 VDD — 5.5 V IOL LOW-level output current VOL = 0.4V 3 6.5 — mA IL Leakage current VI = VDD = VSS -1 — +1 µA CI Input capacitance VI = VSS — 3.7 5 pF VIL LOW-level input voltage -0.5 — 0.8 V VIH HIGH-level input voltage 2.0 — 5.5 V 9 — — mA VOL = 0.4 V; VDD = 3.0 V; Note 1 11 — — mA VOL = 0.4 V; VDD = 5.0 V; Note 1 14 — — mA VOL = 0.7 V; VDD = 2.3 V; Note 1 14 — — mA VOL = 0.7 V; VDD = 3.0 V; Note 1 18 — — mA VOL = 0.7 V; VDD = 5.0 V; Note 1 24 — — mA VDD = 3.6 V; VI = 0 or VDD -1 — 1 µA — 2.1 5 pF V I/Os VOL = 0.4 V; VDD = 2.3 V; Note 1 IOL IL CIO LOW-level output current Input leakage current Input/output capacitance Select Inputs A0 / RESET VIL LOW-level input voltage -0.5 — 0.8 VIH HIGH-level input voltage 2.0 — 5.5 V ILI Input leakage current -1 — 1 µA CI Input capacitance — 2.3 5 pF VI = VSS NOTE: 1. Each I/O must be externally limited to a maximum of 25 mA and the device must be limited to a maximum current of 50 mA. 2003 May 02 10 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 AC SPECIFICATIONS SYMBOL STANDARD MODE I2C-BUS PARAMETER MIN MAX FAST MODE I2C-BUS UNITS MIN MAX fSCL Operating frequency 0 100 0 400 kHz tBUF Bus free time between STOP and START conditions 4.7 — 1.3 — µs tHD;STA Hold time after (repeated) START condition 4.0 — 0.6 — µs tSU;STA Repeated START condition set-up time 4.7 — 0.6 — µs tSU;STO Set-up time for STOP condition 4.0 — 0.6 — µs tHD;DAT Data in hold time 0 — 0 — ns tVD;ACK Valid time for ACK condition2 — 600 — 600 ns tVD;DAT (L) Data out valid time3 — 600 — 600 ns tVD;DAT (H) Data out valid time3 — 1500 — 600 ns tSU;DAT Data set-up time 250 — 100 — ns tLOW Clock LOW period 4.7 — 1.3 — µs tHIGH Clock HIGH period 4.0 — 0.6 — µs 1 tF Clock/Data fall time — 300 20 + 0.1 Cb 300 ns tR Clock/Data rise time — 1000 20 + 0.1 Cb1 300 ns tSP Pulse width of spikes that must be suppressed by the input filters — 50 — 50 ns tPV Output data valid — 200 — 200 ns tPS Input data set-up time 100 — 100 — ns tPH Input data hold time 1 — 1 — µs Reset pulse width 6 — 6 — ns Reset recovery time 0 — 0 — ns 400 — 400 — ns Port Timing Reset tW tREC tRESET4,5 Time to reset NOTES: 1. Cb = total capacitance of one bus line in pF. 2. tVD;ACK = time for Acknowledgement signal from SCL LOW to SDA (out) LOW. 3. tVD;DAT = minimum time for SDA data out to be valid following SCL LOW. 4. Resetting the device while actively communicating on the bus may cause glitches or errant STOP conditions. 5. Upon reset, the full delay will be the sum of tRESET and the RC time constant of the SDA bus. 2003 May 02 11 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 +20% MAX +10% 0% PERCENT VARIATION -10% AVG -20% -30% MIN -40% -40 0 +25 +70 +85 TEMPERATURE (°C) SW01085 Figure 15. Typical frequency variation over process at VDD = 2.3 V to 3.0 V +20% MAX +10% 0% PERCENT VARIATION AVG -10% -20% MIN -30% -40% -40 0 +25 +70 +85 TEMPERATURE (°C) Figure 16. Typical frequency variation over process at VDD = 3.0 V to 5.5 V 2003 May 02 12 SW01086 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates START PCA9550 ACK OR READ CYCLE SCL SDA 30% tREC RESET 50% 50% 50% tREC tW tREC 50% LEDx LED OFF SW01087 Figure 17. Definition of RESET timing SDA tBUF tLOW tR tF tHD;STA tSP SCL tHD;STA P S tSU;STA tHD;DAT tHIGH tSU;DAT Sr tSU;STO P SU00645 Figure 18. Definition of timing 2003 May 02 13 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates SO8: plastic small outline package; 8 leads; body width 3.9 mm 2003 May 02 14 PCA9550 SOT96-1 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates TSSOP8: plastic thin shrink small outline package; 8 leads; body width 3 mm 2003 May 02 15 PCA9550 SOT505-1 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates REVISION HISTORY Rev Date _2 20030502 PCA9550 Description Product data (9397 750 11461); ECN 853-2396 29859 dated 24 April 2003. Supersedes data of 2002 Dec 13 (9397 750 10857). Modifications: • Correction to voltage in typical application drawing • Update maximum current per bit and per device • Adjust maximum and minimum curves to ±15% on frequency variation graphs. _1 2003 May 02 20021213 Product data (9397 750 10857); ECN 853-2396 29264 of 09 December 2002. 16 Philips Semiconductors Product data 2-bit I2C LED driver with programmable blink rates PCA9550 Purchase of Philips I2C components conveys a license under the Philips’ I2C patent to use the components in the I2C system provided the system conforms to the I2C specifications defined by Philips. This specification can be ordered using the code 9398 393 40011. Data sheet status Level Data sheet status[1] Product status[2] [3] Definitions I Objective data Development This data sheet contains data from the objective specification for product development. Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to change the specification in any manner without notice. II Preliminary data Qualification This data sheet contains data from the preliminary specification. Supplementary data will be published at a later date. Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to change the specification without notice, in order to improve the design and supply the best possible product. III Product data Production This data sheet contains data from the product specification. Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to make changes at any time in order to improve the design, manufacturing and supply. Relevant changes will be communicated via a Customer Product/Process Change Notification (CPCN). [1] Please consult the most recently issued data sheet before initiating or completing a design. [2] The product status of the device(s) described in this data sheet may have changed since this data sheet was published. The latest information is available on the Internet at URL http://www.semiconductors.philips.com. [3] For data sheets describing multiple type numbers, the highest-level product status determines the data sheet status. Definitions Short-form specification — The data in a short-form specification is extracted from a full data sheet with the same type number and title. For detailed information see the relevant data sheet or data handbook. Limiting values definition — Limiting values given are in accordance with the Absolute Maximum Rating System (IEC 60134). Stress above one or more of the limiting values may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only and operation of the device at these or at any other conditions above those given in the Characteristics sections of the specification is not implied. Exposure to limiting values for extended periods may affect device reliability. Application information — Applications that are described herein for any of these products are for illustrative purposes only. Philips Semiconductors make no representation or warranty that such applications will be suitable for the specified use without further testing or modification. Disclaimers Life support — These products are not designed for use in life support appliances, devices, or systems where malfunction of these products can reasonably be expected to result in personal injury. Philips Semiconductors customers using or selling these products for use in such applications do so at their own risk and agree to fully indemnify Philips Semiconductors for any damages resulting from such application. Right to make changes — Philips Semiconductors reserves the right to make changes in the products—including circuits, standard cells, and/or software—described or contained herein in order to improve design and/or performance. When the product is in full production (status ‘Production’), relevant changes will be communicated via a Customer Product/Process Change Notification (CPCN). Philips Semiconductors assumes no responsibility or liability for the use of any of these products, conveys no license or title under any patent, copyright, or mask work right to these products, and makes no representations or warranties that these products are free from patent, copyright, or mask work right infringement, unless otherwise specified. Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. 2003 All rights reserved. Printed in U.S.A. Contact information For additional information please visit http://www.semiconductors.philips.com. Fax: +31 40 27 24825 Date of release: 05-03 For sales offices addresses send e-mail to: [email protected]. Document order number: Philips Semiconductors 2003 May 02 17 9397 750 11461