C8051F046-GQ Silicon Laboratories Inc, C8051F046-GQ Datasheet - Page 245

IC 8051 MCU 32K FLASH 100TQFP

C8051F046-GQ

Manufacturer Part Number
C8051F046-GQ
Description
IC 8051 MCU 32K FLASH 100TQFP
Manufacturer
Silicon Laboratories Inc
Series
C8051F04xr
Datasheets

Specifications of C8051F046-GQ

Core Processor
8051
Core Size
8-Bit
Speed
25MHz
Connectivity
CAN, EBI/EMI, SMBus (2-Wire/I²C), SPI, UART/USART
Peripherals
Brown-out Detect/Reset, POR, PWM, Temp Sensor, WDT
Number Of I /o
64
Program Memory Size
32KB (32K x 8)
Program Memory Type
FLASH
Ram Size
4.25K x 8
Voltage - Supply (vcc/vdd)
2.7 V ~ 3.6 V
Data Converters
A/D 13x10b
Oscillator Type
Internal
Operating Temperature
-40°C ~ 85°C
Package / Case
100-TQFP, 100-VQFP
Processor Series
C8051F0x
Core
8051
Data Bus Width
8 bit
Data Ram Size
4.25 KB
Interface Type
CAN, SMBus, SPI, UART
Maximum Clock Frequency
25 MHz
Number Of Programmable I/os
64
Number Of Timers
5
Operating Supply Voltage
2.7 V to 3.6 V
Maximum Operating Temperature
+ 85 C
Mounting Style
SMD/SMT
3rd Party Development Tools
PK51, CA51, A51, ULINK2
Development Tools By Supplier
C8051F040DK
Minimum Operating Temperature
- 40 C
On-chip Adc
10 bit, 13 Channel
On-chip Dac
12 bit, 2 Channel
Package
100TQFP
Device Core
8051
Family Name
C8051F04x
Maximum Speed
25 MHz
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant
Eeprom Size
-
Lead Free Status / Rohs Status
 Details
Other names
336-1211

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C8051F040/1/2/3/4/5/6/7
19.4. SMBus Special Function Registers
The SMBus0 serial interface is accessed and controlled through five SFRs: SMB0CN Control Register,
SMB0CR Clock Rate Register, SMB0ADR Address Register, SMB0DAT Data Register and SMB0STA Sta-
tus Register. The five special function registers related to the operation of the SMBus0 interface are
described in the following sections.
19.4.1. Control Register
The SMBus0 Control register SMB0CN is used to configure and control the SMBus0 interface. All of the
bits in the register can be read or written by software. Two of the control bits are also affected by the
SMBus0 hardware. The Serial Interrupt flag (SI, SMB0CN.3) is set to logic 1 by the hardware when a valid
serial interrupt condition occurs. It can only be cleared by software. The Stop flag (STO, SMB0CN.4) is set
to logic 1 by software. It is cleared to logic 0 by hardware when a STOP condition is detected on the bus.
Setting the ENSMB flag to logic 1 enables the SMBus0 interface. Clearing the ENSMB flag to logic 0 dis-
ables the SMBus0 interface and removes it from the bus. Momentarily clearing the ENSMB flag and then
resetting it to logic 1 will reset SMBus0 communication. However, ENSMB should not be used to tempo-
rarily remove a device from the bus since the bus state information will be lost. Instead, the Assert
Acknowledge (AA) flag should be used to temporarily remove the device from the bus (see description of
AA flag below).
Setting the Start flag (STA, SMB0CN.5) to logic 1 will put SMBus0 in a master mode. If the bus is free,
SMBus0 will generate a START condition. If the bus is not free, SMBus0 waits for a STOP condition to free
the bus and then generates a START condition after a 5 µs delay per the SMB0CR value (In accordance
with the SMBus protocol, the SMBus0 interface also considers the bus free if the bus is idle for 50 µs and
no STOP condition was recognized). If STA is set to logic 1 while SMBus0 is in master mode and one or
more bytes have been transferred, a repeated START condition will be generated.
When the Stop flag (STO, SMB0CN.4) is set to logic 1 while the SMBus0 interface is in master mode, the
interface generates a STOP condition. In a slave mode, the STO flag may be used to recover from an error
condition. In this case, a STOP condition is not generated on the bus, but the SMBus hardware behaves
as if a STOP condition has been received and enters the "not addressed" slave receiver mode. Note that
this simulated STOP will not cause the bus to appear free to SMBus0. The bus will remain occupied until a
STOP appears on the bus or a Bus Free Timeout occurs. Hardware automatically clears the STO flag to
logic 0 when a STOP condition is detected on the bus.
The Serial Interrupt flag (SI, SMB0CN.3) is set to logic 1 by hardware when the SMBus0 interface enters
any one of the 28 possible states except the Idle state. If interrupts are enabled for the SMBus0 interface,
an interrupt request is generated when the SI flag is set. The SI flag must be cleared by software.
Important Note: If SI is set to logic 1 while the SCL line is low, the clock-low period of the serial clock will
be stretched and the serial transfer is suspended until SI is cleared to logic 0. A high level on SCL is not
affected by the setting of the SI flag.
The Assert Acknowledge flag (AA, SMB0CN.2) is used to set the level of the SDA line during the acknowl-
edge clock cycle on the SCL line. Setting the AA flag to logic 1 will cause an ACK (low level on SDA) to be
sent during the acknowledge cycle if the device has been addressed. Setting the AA flag to logic 0 will
cause a NACK (high level on SDA) to be sent during acknowledge cycle. After the transmission of a byte in
slave mode, the slave can be temporarily removed from the bus by clearing the AA flag. The slave's own
address and general call address will be ignored. To resume operation on the bus, the AA flag must be
reset to logic 1 to allow the slave's address to be recognized.
Rev. 1.5
245

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