WM8351GEB/V Wolfson Microelectronics, WM8351GEB/V Datasheet - Page 198

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WM8351GEB/V

Manufacturer Part Number
WM8351GEB/V
Description
Audio CODECs Audio CODEC plus pwr management
Manufacturer
Wolfson Microelectronics
Datasheet

Specifications of WM8351GEB/V

Number Of Adc Inputs
2
Number Of Dac Outputs
2
Conversion Rate
48 KSPS
Interface Type
Serial (2-Wire, 3-Wire, 4-Wire)
Resolution
12 bit
Operating Supply Voltage
3.7 V
Maximum Operating Temperature
+ 85 C
Mounting Style
SMD/SMT
Package / Case
BGA
Minimum Operating Temperature
- 25 C
Number Of Channels
2 ADC/2 DAC
Supply Current
260 uA
Thd Plus Noise
- 83 dB
Audio Codec Type
Stereo
No. Of Adcs
2
No. Of Dacs
2
No. Of Input Channels
8
No. Of Output Channels
6
Adc / Dac Resolution
24bit
Adcs / Dacs Signal To Noise Ratio
95dB
Rohs Compliant
Yes
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant
WM8351
24 INTERRUPT CONTROLLER
Figure 80 Interrupt Equivalent Logic
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The WM8351 can send an interrupt signal to the host processor though the IRQ pin. Interrupts can
alert the host to a wide range of events and fault conditions. Each of these can be individually
enabled or masked. After receiving an interrupt, the host processor can read the interrupt registers in
order to determine what caused the interrupt, and take appropriate action if required.
The WM8351 interrupt controller has two levels:
Second-level interrupts indicate a single event in one of the circuit blocks. This is indicated by setting
a register bit. This bit is a “sticky” bit - once it is set, it remains at logic 1 until the host processor
reads the register. When the processor reads the register, the interrupt bits in that register are
cleared. First-level interrupts are the logical OR of several second-level interrupts (usually all the
interrupts associated with one particular circuit block). The default polarity of IRQ is active low,
meaning that the IRQ signal is the logical NOR of all first-level interrupts.
Individual second-level interrupt bits can be masked, which prevents them from setting the First-level
interrupt. (Note that the “sticky” bit will be set as normal, even if that interrupt is masked.)
Individual first-level interrupts can also be masked, preventing them from asserting the IRQ output.
To find the cause of an interrupt signal, the host processor should first read the first-level interrupt
register R24 to locate the circuit blocks(s) where the interrupt originated; after that, the precise
cause(s) of the interrupt can be determined by reading the second-level interrupt register(s) as
appropriate to the indicated first-level interrupt event.
PD, March 2010, Rev 4.2
Production Data
198

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