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X9429WS16I Datasheet(PDF) 5 Page - Intersil Corporation |
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X9429WS16I Datasheet(HTML) 5 Page - Intersil Corporation |
5 / 20 page 5 FN8248.3 October 13, 2008 bus as a transmitter and the receiving device as the receiver. The device controlling the transfer is a master and the device being controlled is the slave. The master will always initiate data transfers and provide the clock for both transmit and receive operations. Therefore, the X9429 will be considered a slave device in all applications. Clock and Data Conventions Data states on the SDA line can change only during SCL LOW periods (tLOW). SDA state changes during SCL HIGH are reserved for indicating start and stop conditions. Start Condition All commands to the X9429 are preceded by the start condition, which is a HIGH to LOW transition of SDA while SCL is HIGH (tHIGH). The X9429 continuously monitors the SDA and SCL lines for the start condition and will not respond to any command until this condition is met. Stop Condition All communications must be terminated by a stop condition, which is a LOW-to-HIGH transition of SDA while SCL is HIGH. Acknowledge Acknowledge is a software convention used to provide a positive handshake between the master and slave devices on the bus to indicate the successful receipt of data. The transmitting device, either the master or the slave, will release the SDA bus after transmitting eight bits. The master generates a ninth clock cycle and during this period, the receiver pulls the SDA line LOW to acknowledge that it successfully received the eight bits of data. The X9429 will respond with an acknowledge after recognition of a start condition and its slave address and once again after successful receipt of the command byte. If the command is followed by a data byte the X9429 will respond with a final acknowledge. Array Description The X9429 is comprised of a resistor array. The array contains 63 discrete resistive segments that are connected in series. The physical ends of the array are equivalent to the fixed terminals of a mechanical potentiometer (VH/RH and VL/RL inputs). At both ends of the array and between each resistor segment is a CMOS switch connected to the wiper (VW/RW) output. Within each individual array only one switch may be turned on at a time. These switches are controlled by the Wiper Counter Register (WCR). The six bits of the WCR are decoded to select, and enable, one of sixty-four switches. The WCR may be written directly, or it can be changed by transferring the contents of one of four associated Data Registers into the WCR. These Data Registers and the WCR can be read and written by the host system. Device Addressing Following a start condition, the master must output the address of the slave it is accessing. The most significant four bits of the slave address are the device type identifier (refer to Figure 1). For the X9429 this is fixed as 0101[B]. The next four bits of the slave address are the device address. The physical device address is defined by the state of the A0, A2, and A3 inputs. The X9429 compares the serial data stream with the address input state; a successful compare of all three address bits is required for the X9429 to respond with an acknowledge. The A0, A2, and A3 inputs can be actively driven by CMOS input signals or tied to VCC or VSS. Acknowledge Polling The disabling of the inputs, during the internal non-volatile write operation, can be used to take advantage of the typical 5ms EEPROM write cycle time. Once the stop condition is issued to indicate the end of the non-volatile write command, the X9429 initiates the internal write cycle. ACK polling can be initiated immediately. This involves issuing the start condition followed by the device slave address. If the X9429 is still busy with the write operation, no ACK will be returned. If the X9429 has completed the write operation, an ACK will be returned, and the master can then proceed with the next operation. Instruction Structure The next byte sent to the X9429 contains the instruction and register pointer information. The four most significant bits are the instruction. The next four bits point to one of four associated registers. The format is shown in Figure 2. The four high order bits define the instruction. The next two bits (R1 and R0) select one of the four registers that is to be acted upon when a register oriented instruction is issued. Bits 0 and 1 are defined to be 0. 1 00 A3 A2 0 A0 DEVICE TYPE IDENTIFIER DEVICE ADDRESS 1 FIGURE 1. SLAVE ADDRESS I1 I2 I3 I0 R1 R0 0 0 REGISTER SELECT INSTRUCTIONS FIGURE 2. INSTRUCTION BYTE FORMAT X9429 |
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