ATmega16HVB Atmel Corporation, ATmega16HVB Datasheet - Page 156

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ATmega16HVB

Manufacturer Part Number
ATmega16HVB
Description
Manufacturer
Atmel Corporation
Datasheets

Specifications of ATmega16HVB

Flash (kbytes)
16 Kbytes
Pin Count
44
Max. Operating Frequency
8 MHz
Cpu
8-bit AVR
# Of Touch Channels
8
Hardware Qtouch Acquisition
No
Max I/o Pins
17
Ext Interrupts
15
Usb Speed
No
Usb Interface
No
Spi
1
Twi (i2c)
1
Graphic Lcd
No
Video Decoder
No
Camera Interface
No
Adc Channels
8
Adc Resolution (bits)
12
Adc Speed (ksps)
1.9
Resistive Touch Screen
No
Temp. Sensor
Yes
Crypto Engine
No
Sram (kbytes)
1
Eeprom (bytes)
512
Self Program Memory
YES
Dram Memory
No
Nand Interface
No
Picopower
No
Temp. Range (deg C)
-40 to 85
I/o Supply Class
4.0 to 25
Operating Voltage (vcc)
4.0 to 25
Fpu
No
Mpu / Mmu
no / no
Timers
2
Output Compare Channels
4
Input Capture Channels
2
32khz Rtc
No
Calibrated Rc Oscillator
Yes

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Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
ATmega16HVB-8X3
Manufacturer:
LT
Quantity:
51
Part Number:
ATmega16HVB-8X3
Manufacturer:
ATMEL/爱特梅尔
Quantity:
20 000
27.3.4
27.3.5
156
ATmega16HVB/32HVB
Data packet format
Combining address and data packets into a transmission
Figure 27-4. Address packet format.
All data packets transmitted on the TWI bus are nine bits long, consisting of one data byte and
an acknowledge bit. During a data transfer, the Master generates the clock and the START and
STOP conditions, while the Receiver is responsible for acknowledging the reception. An
Acknowledge (ACK) is signalled by the Receiver pulling the SDA line low during the ninth SCL
cycle. If the Receiver leaves the SDA line high, a NACK is signalled. When the Receiver has
received the last byte, or for some reason cannot receive any more bytes, it should inform the
Transmitter by sending a NACK after the final byte. The MSB of the data byte is transmitted first.
Figure 27-5. Data packet format.
A transmission basically consists of a START condition, a SLA+R/W, one or more data packets
and a STOP condition. An empty message, consisting of a START followed by a STOP condi-
tion, is illegal. Note that the wired-ANDing of the SCL line can be used to implement
handshaking between the Master and the Slave. The Slave can extend the SCL low period by
pulling the SCL line low. This is useful if the clock speed set up by the Master is too fast for the
Slave, or the Slave needs extra time for processing between the data transmissions. The Slave
extending the SCL low period will not affect the SCL high period, which is determined by the
Master. As a consequence, the Slave can reduce the TWI data transfer speed by prolonging the
SCL duty cycle.
Figure 27-6 on page 157
transmitted between the SLA+R/W and the STOP condition, depending on the software protocol
implemented by the application software.
Transmitter
Aggregate
SDA from
SDA from
SCL from
Receiver
Master
SDA
SCL
SDA
SLA+R/W
START
Data MSB
shows a typical data transmission. Note that several data bytes can be
Addr MSB
1
1
2
2
Data Byte
7
Addr LSB
Data LSB
8
7
ACK
9
R/W
8
ACK
9
STOP, REPEATED
START, or Next
Data Byte
8042D–AVR–10/11

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