ATMEGA640-16CU Atmel, ATMEGA640-16CU Datasheet - Page 30

IC MCU AVR 64K FLASH 100-CBGA

ATMEGA640-16CU

Manufacturer Part Number
ATMEGA640-16CU
Description
IC MCU AVR 64K FLASH 100-CBGA
Manufacturer
Atmel
Series
AVR® ATmegar
Datasheets

Specifications of ATMEGA640-16CU

Core Processor
AVR
Core Size
8-Bit
Speed
16MHz
Connectivity
EBI/EMI, I²C, SPI, UART/USART
Peripherals
Brown-out Detect/Reset, POR, PWM, WDT
Number Of I /o
86
Program Memory Size
64KB (32K x 16)
Program Memory Type
FLASH
Eeprom Size
4K x 8
Ram Size
8K x 8
Voltage - Supply (vcc/vdd)
2.7 V ~ 5.5 V
Data Converters
A/D 16x10b
Oscillator Type
Internal
Operating Temperature
-40°C ~ 85°C
Package / Case
100-TFBGA
Processor Series
ATMEGA64x
Core
AVR8
Data Bus Width
8 bit
Data Ram Size
8 KB
Interface Type
2-Wire, SPI, USART
Maximum Clock Frequency
16 MHz
Number Of Programmable I/os
86
Number Of Timers
6
Maximum Operating Temperature
+ 85 C
Mounting Style
SMD/SMT
3rd Party Development Tools
EWAVR, EWAVR-BL
Development Tools By Supplier
ATAVRDRAGON, ATSTK500, ATSTK600, ATAVRISP2, ATAVRONEKIT
Minimum Operating Temperature
- 40 C
On-chip Adc
10 bit, 16 Channel
For Use With
ATSTK600-TQFP100 - STK600 SOCKET/ADAPTER 100-TQFP770-1007 - ISP 4PORT ATMEL AVR MCU SPI/JTAGATAVRISP2 - PROGRAMMER AVR IN SYSTEMATSTK503 - STARTER KIT AVR EXP MODULE 100P
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant

Available stocks

Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
ATMEGA640-16CU
Manufacturer:
Atmel
Quantity:
10 000
Part Number:
ATMEGA640-16CUR
Manufacturer:
Atmel
Quantity:
10 000
8.1.3
8.1.4
2549M–AVR–09/10
Pull-up and Bus-keeper
Timing
Figure 8-2.
The pull-ups on the AD7:0 ports may be activated if the corresponding Port register is written to
one. To reduce power consumption in sleep mode, it is recommended to disable the pull-ups by
writing the Port register to zero before entering sleep.
The XMEM interface also provides a bus-keeper on the AD7:0 lines. The bus-keeper can be dis-
abled and enabled in software as described in
on page
these lines are tri-stated by the XMEM interface.
External Memory devices have different timing requirements. To meet these requirements, the
XMEM interface provides four different wait-states as shown in
tant to consider the timing specification of the External Memory device before selecting the wait-
state. The most important parameters are the access time for the external memory compared to
the set-up requirement. The access time for the External Memory is defined to be the time from
receiving the chip select/address until the data of this address actually is driven on the bus. The
access time cannot exceed the time from the ALE pulse must be asserted low until data is stable
during a read sequence (See t
378 - 381). The different wait-states are set up in software. As an additional feature, it is possible
to divide the external memory space in two sectors with individual wait-state settings. This
makes it possible to connect two different memory devices with different timing requirements to
the same XMEM interface. For XMEM interface timing details, please refer to
page 378
in the
Note that the XMEM interface is asynchronous and that the waveforms in the following figures
are related to the internal system clock. The skew between the internal and external clock
(XTAL1) is not guarantied (varies between devices temperature, and supply voltage). Conse-
quently, the XMEM interface is not suited for synchronous operation.
“External Data Memory Timing” on page
38. When enabled, the bus-keeper will keep the previous value on the AD7:0 bus while
to
Table 30-16 on page 381
External SRAM Connected to the AVR
AVR
AD7:0
A15:8
ALE
WR
RD
LLRL
ATmega640/1280/1281/2560/2561
+ t
RLRH
and
- t
Figure 30-9 on page 381
DVRH
D
G
“XMCRB – External Memory Control Register B”
378.
in Tables 30-9 through Tables 30-16 on pages
Q
Table 8-3 on page
D[7:0]
A[15:8]
A[7:0]
RD
WR
SRAM
to
Figure 30-12 on page 383
Table 30-9 on
38. It is impor-
30

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