Rev. 1.5 1/15 Copyright © 2015 by Silico n Laboratories Si3452
Not Recommended
for New Designs
QUAD HIGH-VOLTAGE PORT CONTROLLER
FOR POE AND POE+ PSES
Features
Applications
Each Si3452 high-voltage port
controller supports four PSE power
interfaces
Programmable current limits for PoE
(15.4 W), PoE+ (30 W), and
proprietary systems (up to 40 W) per
port
I2C interface requires no external
MCU for easy , low-cost management
of 4 to 48 ports by the host system
Unique mixed-signal IC high-voltage
component integration simplifies
design, lowers power dissipation,
minimizes external BOM, and
reduces PCB footprint
Internal low-RON power FETs with
current-sense circuitry
Integrated transient voltage surge
suppressors
Proprietary dV/dt disconnect
sensing methods
Industrial (–40 to 85 °C) operating
temperature
Compact, 6×6 mm2, 40-pin QFN
RoHS-compliant package
Programmable architecture supports
IEEE 802.3af (PoE) and IEEE
802.3at (PoE+) PSEs
Programma b l e cur r en t l im its for
PoE (350 mA) and PoE+
(600 mA), and custom limits to
850 mA
Per-port current and voltage
monitoring for sophisticated power
management and control
Power policing mode
Robust multi-point detecti on
Supports 1-Event and 2-Event
classification algorithms
Comprehensive, robust, fault-
protection circuitry
Supply undervoltage lockout
(UVLO)
Output current limit and short-
circuit protection
Foldback current limiting
Dual-threshold thermal overload
protection
Fault source reporting for
intelligent port management
Power over Ethernet Endpoint
switches and Midspans for IEEE Std
802.3af and 802.3at
Supports high-power PDs, such as:
Pan/Tilt/Zoom security cameras
802.11n WAPs
Multi-band, multi-radio WAPs
Security and RFID systems
Industrial automation systems
Networked audio
IP Phone Systems and iPBXs
Metropolitan area networked WAPs,
cameras, and sensors
WiMAX ASN/BTS and CPE/ODU
systems
Ordering Information:
See page 31.
Pin Assignments
40-Pin QFN
See "9. Pin Descriptions" on page 28.
VEE
VEE1
AIN
RBIAS
VREF
AGND
AOUT
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
AGND 8
DGND
VDD
AD1
AD3
AD0
AD2
AD2
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
VOUT4
NC
SDA
NC
DET4
SCL
GND34
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
DET3 18
VDD 19
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
VOUT1
INT
DET1
AD0
RST
GND12
AD1
DET2
VEE4 10
NC 9VEE3
22
RST
23
AD3
21
VOUT3 20
32 VOUT2
31 VEE2
Si3452
(Top View)
40
Si3452
Si3452
2 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Description
When connect ed directly to the host system or configured in Auto mode, each Si3452 high-voltage port controller
provides all of the critical circuitry and sophisticated power measurement functionality for the high-voltage
interfaces of four complete PSE ports. The Si3452 fully integrates robust, low-RON (0.3 typical) power MOSFET
switches, low-power dissipation current sensing circuitry, and transient voltage surge suppression devices.
The on-chip current sense circuitry and power MO SFETs provide programmable scaling of current limits to match
either PoE (350 mA, 15.4 W), PoE+ (600 mA, 30 W), and extended (800 mA, 40 W) power requirements on a per-
port basis. Designed for use in Endpoint PSE (e.g., Ethernet switches) or Midspan PSE (e.g., inline power
injectors) applicat ions, each Si3452 al so performs the IEEE-r equired powered d evice (PD) detection, classificatio n,
and disconnect functionality.
The flexible architecture enables powered device disconnect detection using Silicon Laboratories' proprieta ry dV/dt
disconnect sensing algorithm. dV/dt disconnect is an alternative to dc disconnect that requires no additional BOM
components, d oes not dissip ate e xtra device power, and fully interoperates with all powered devices. Also provided
are multi-point detection algorithms and per-port current and voltage monitoring.
Intelligent protection circuitry includes power supply undervoltage lockout (UVLO), port output current limiting and
short-circuit protection, thermal overload sensing and port shutdown, and transient voltage surge suppressors
capable of protecting the Si3452 from a variety of harsh surge events seen on the RJ-45 interface.
To maximize system design flex ibility and minimize cost, each Si3452 connec ts directly to a system host controller
through an I2C serial interface, eliminating the need for an external MCU. The Si3452 can be set to one of 12
unique addresses, allowing control of up to 48 ports on a single I2C bus.
Functional Block Diagram
PER PORT ANALOG
AD2
AD1
AD3
HV SPI
&
Port
Control
VEE1
VOUT1
AOUT
Gate Control,
Current Limit
& Foldback
Detection
&
Classification
dV/dt
Disconnect
Channel
Mode
&
Limit
Control
VREF & Central Bias
MEAS.
MUX
PGA
DET4
VOUT2
VOUT3
DET3
DET2
GND12
AGND
VDD
VEE3
Thermal
Prot.
RBIAS
AD0
VEE2
VEE4
DET1
VOUT4
Current
Sense
VREF
VEE
DGND
AMUX
10b
ADC
Temp
Sensor
AIN
LV SPI
AD1
AD0
AD2
AD3
MCU Core
& PSE FSM
256 Byte SRAM
8 kByte EPROM
I2C
RST
PLL
Voltage
Regulator
& Monitor
VDD
AGND
POR
WDT
INT
GND34
RST
SDA
SCL
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 3
Not Recommended
for New Designs
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Section Page
1. Electrical Specifications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .4
2. PSE System-Level Diagrams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
3. PSE Application Diagrams . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .11
4. Functional Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
4.1. Detection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .12
4.2. Classification . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
4.3. Port Turn-On and Power FETs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .13
4.4. Disconnect Detection . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
4.5. Transient Voltage Surge Suppression . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
4.6. Temperature Sense . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
4.7. Port Measurement and Monitoring . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .14
4.8. SMBus/I2C Interface Description . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .15
5. Register Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
5.1. Interrupt (Registers 0x00–0x01) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
5.2. Port Event (Registers 0x02–0x05) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
5.3. Port Status (Registers 0x06–0x09) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .17
5.4. Port Configuration (Registers 0x0A–0x11) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .18
5.5. Command and Return Registers (Registers 0x12–0x1C) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
5.6. Device Status Register (0x1D) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .19
6. Operational Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
6.1. Port Turn On . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
6.2. Changing the Interrupt Mask . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
6.3. Port Voltage and Current Measurements . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .25
7. PCB Layout Guidelines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .26
8. Firmware Release Notes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
8.1. I2C Address ACK . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
8.2. “Sifos” Tester Vtrans_min Issue . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
8.3. PSE-to-PSE Cross Powering Possibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .27
9. Pin Descriptions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .28
10. Package Outline: 40-Pin QFN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .31
11. Recommended PCB Footprint . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .32
12. Ordering Guide . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33
12.1. Evaluation Kits and Reference Designs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .33
13. Device Marking Diagram . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .34
Document Change List . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .35
Contact Information . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .36
Si3452
4 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
1. Electrical Specifications
Unless noted otherwise, specifications apply over the operating temperature range with VDD = +3.3 V and
VEE = 48 V relative to GND.
VDD pins should be electrically shorted. AGND pins, DGND, GND12, and GND34 should be electrically shorted
(“GND”). VEE, VEE1, VEE2, VEE3, and VEE4 should be electrically shorted (“VEE”).
VPort for any port is measured from GND to the respective VOUTn.
Table 1. Absolute Maximum Ratings1
Type Description Rating Unit
Supply Voltages
VEE to GND –62 to +0.3 V
VDD to GND –0.3 to +3.6 V
VDD1 to VDD2 –0.3 to +0.3 V
Any VEE to any other VEE –0.3 to +0.3 V
Any GND to any other GND –0.3 to +0.3 V
Voltage on Digital Pins SDA, SCL, ADn, RST, INT (GND 0.3) to (VDD + 0.3) V
Voltage on Analog Pins VREF, AIN, AOUT, RBIAS, OSC (GND 0.3) to (VDD + 0.3) V
VOUTn, DETn (VEE 0.3) to (GND + 0.3) V
DETn Peak Currents During Surge Events2±5 A
Maximum Continuous Power Dissipation31.2 W
Maximum Junction Temperature 125 °C
Ambient Storage Temperature –55 to 150 °C
Lead Temperature (Soldering, 10 seconds Maximum) 260 °C
Notes:
1. Functional operation should be restricted to those conditions specified in Table 2. Functional operation or specification
compliance is not implied at these conditions. Stresses beyond those listed in absolute maximum ratings may cause
permanent damage to the device.
2. See IEEE Std 802.3-2005, clause 33.4, for a description of surge even ts.
3. If all ports are on with 600 mA load, the power dissipation is <1.2 W. At 85 °C ambient with the expected 32 °C/W
thermal impedance, the junctio n temperature would be 123.4 °C, which is within the 125 °C maximum rating.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Table 2. Recommended Operating Conditions
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Ambient Operating
Temperature TA–40 85 °C
Thermal Impedance* θJA No airflow 32 °C/W
1 m/s airflow 28
Power Supply Voltages
VEE Supply Voltage VEE For IEEE 802.3af (15.4 W) apps. –57 –48 –45 V
For IEEE 802.3at (30 W) apps. –57 –54 –51
VDD Supply Voltag e VDD 3.0 3.3 3.6 V
Power Supply Currents
VEE Supply Current IEE All ports on, excluding load current. 3.7 6.0 mA
All ports in shutdown mode 1 2
VDD Supply Current IDD —814mA
*Note: Modeled with six parts evenly spaced on a 30 x 120 mm2, four-layer board with 25 thermal vias to a Vneg plane on the
back.
Table 3. UVLO, and Reset Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
VDD Reset Threshold VRST —1.75 V
VDD Power-On Ramp*Ramp from 0 V to 3.0 V 1 ms
RST Input High Voltage 0.7 x VDD ——V
RST Input Low Voltage 0.8 V
RST Input Leakage RST =0V 40 μA
Reset Time Delay TRSTDLY Time between end of reset and
beginning of normal operation ——100ms
Reset Assertion Time TRST RST low time to generate system
reset 15 μs
VEE Monitor Accuracy VEEMON Me asured VEE relative to actual
VEE for VEE (–44 to –57 V) –4 4 %
VEE UVLO Threshold VUVLO
Point at which VEE UVLO is
declared.
VEE going negative
VEE going positive
–38
–36
–33
–31 V
*Note: If VDD ramp time is slower than 1 ms, hold the reset pins low until VDD is above 3.0 V to insure proper reset
operation.
Si3452
6 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Table 4. Detection Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Ma x Unit
Detection Current Limit ILIM_DET Measured with DETn
shorted to GND —3 5mA
Detection Voltage,
when RDET =25k
VDET1
VDET2
VDET3
–10.0
–4.0
–8.0
–4.0
–2.8
–2.8 V
Detection Slew Rate 0.1 V/μs
Detection Probe Duration TPROBE 10 30 ms
Detection Probe Cycle Time TDET ——500ms
Minimum Valid Signature Resistance RDET_MIN 15 19 k
Maximum Valid Signature Resistance RDET_MAX 26.5 33 k
Resistance at which Open Circuit is
Declared ROPEN 100 400 k
Resistance at which Short Circuit is
Declared RSHORT 150 400 W
Valid Detec t Capacitance CDET_VALID ——150nF
Invalid Detect Capacitance CDET_INVALD 10 μF
Table 5. Classification Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Class Event Voltage VCLASS 0mA < I
Port < 45 mA –20.5 –15.5 V
Mark Event Voltage VMARK 0mA < I
Port < 5 mA –7 –10 V
Classification Current
Limit ILIM_CLASS Measur ed with DETn sh or te d to
GND 51 100 mA
Classification Current
Regions
Class 0
Class 1
Class 2
Class 3
Class 4
Overcurrent
0
8
16
25
35
51
5
13
21
31
45
mA
Classification Delay TCLASS_DLY Time from end of valid detect cycle
to classification begin —5—ms
Classification Event
Time TCLE Width of valid VCLASS probe for 1-
Event or 2-Event classification 10 30 ms
Mark Event Time TME Width of ma rk between classification
events —8—ms
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 7
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Table 6. VOUT Drive and Power-on Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Max Output Resistance
(Port On) RON IPort 720 mA 0.3 0.6
Current Limit ILIM 1x mode, Vport =V
EE + 1 V 400 425 450 mA
Change in Current Limit ILIM 1x mode, Vport =V
EE + 1V to30V
1–2 2 %
Current Limit ILIM 2x mode, Vport =V
EE + 1 V 800 860 920 mA
Change in Current Limit ILIM 2x mode, Vport =V
EE + 1V to40V
2–2 2 %
Current Limit ILIM 1x mode or 2x mo de , V port =–10V 60 mA
Overload Current
Threshold ICUT
Class 0
Class 1 (class policing enabled)3
Class 2 (class policing enabled)3
Class 3
Class 44
350
91
160
350
600
mA
Over Current Time Lim-
it5TOVLD Load current ICUT or ILIM 50 75 ms
VOUTn Turn-on Slew TRISE 10% to 90% 15 70 µs
Power Turn On Timing TPON Time from end of valid detect to
power on ——400ms
VOUTn Leakage Cur-
rent IOUT_LEAK Port in shutdown 10 µA
Notes:
1. TJ >25 °C, –35 V over the full temperature range.
2. 1x mode current limit is enforced during the 60 ms TSTART time.
3. In auto mode, class policing is automatically enabled. In manual mode, ICUT must be programmed manually.
See "5.4. Port Configuration (Registers 0x0A–0x11)" on page 18 for more information.
4. 600 mA is consistent with the IEEE 802.3at draft standard. ICUT is user-programmable in 3.2 mA increments to over
800 mA for non-standard applications.
5. For 2x mode and extreme overload or short-circuit events, TOVLD will dynamically decrease to prevent excessive FET
heating. This is consistent with the 802.3at draft.
Table 7. dV/dt Disconnect Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Load Current to Prevent
Disconnect ION 10 mA
Load Current to
Guarante e Disc on nec t IOFF dV/dt disconnect 2 mA
Disconnect Delay TDCDV_DLY Time from IOFF load current to port
turn off 300 400 ms
Si3452
8 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Table 8. Port Measurement and Monitoring Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Port Current Measurement
Offset IOFFSET 20 mA IPORT ICUT. For final
IPORT reading, add offset to% of
reading toleran ce .
–5 5 mA
Port Current Measurement
Tolerance %TOL –4 4 %
Table 9. SMBus (I2C) Electrical Specifications
VDD = 3.0 to 3.6 V
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Input Low Voltage VIL SCL, SDA pins 0.8* V
Input High Voltage VIH SCL, SDA pins 2.2 V
Output Low Voltage VOL SCL, SDA pins,
driving 8.5 mA ——0.6V
Input Leakag e Curr en t ILSCL, SDA pins 40 µA
*Note: 0.85 V for Tj >–10 °C. This ensures compatibility with Si840x isolators with 3 k pull up. For isolator compatibility over
the full temp erature range, use Si860x isolators.
Table 10. Address Pin Electrical Specifications*
VDD = 3.0 to 3.6 V
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Input Low Voltage VIL AD0, AD1, AD2, AD3 pins 0.8 V
Input High Voltage VIH AD0, AD1, AD2, AD3 pins 0.7 x VDD ——V
Input Leakag e Curr en t IH, ILAD0, AD1, AD2, AD3 pins –10 10 µA
*Note: At power-up, these pins are logic inputs. A 10 k pull up or pull down resistor is used for address selection . After
address recognition, the pins are used for internal communications.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 9
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Figure 1. I2C Timing Diagram
Table 11. SMBus (I2C) Timing Specifications (see Figure 1)
VDD = 3.0 to 3.6 V
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Serial Bus Clock
Frequency fSCL 0—400kHz
SCL High Time tSKH 600 ns
SCL Low Ti m e tSKL 1.3 μs
SCL, SDA Rise Time tR_SCL 20 300 ns
SCL, SDA Fall Time tF_SCL 20 150 ns
Bus Free Time tBUF Between START and STOP
conditions. 1.3 μs
Start Hold Time tSTH Between START and first low SCL. 600 ns
Start Setup Time tSTS Between SCL high and START
condition. 600 ns
Stop Setup Time tSPS Between SCL high and STOP
condition. 600 ns
Data Hold Time tDH 200 ns
Data Setup Time tDS 200 ns
Time from Hardware or
Software Reset until Start
of I2C Traffic tRESET Reset to start condition 100 ms
Delay from Event to INT
Pin Low or from Clear-On-
Read to INT Pin High tINT —— 5ms
Notes:
1. Not production tested (guaranteed by design).
2. All timing references measured at VIL and VIH.
3. The Si3452 will stretch (pull down on) SCK during th e ACK time period if required. The maximum SCL stretching is
10 µsec; so, SCL only needs to be bidirectional for I2C bus speeds over 50 kHz.
SCL
D7
fSC L tR_SCL tF_SCL tSKH
SDA
tSKL
tSTH tSPS
D6 D5 D4 D3 D0
tDS tDH
Start Bit Stop Bit
tBUF
Si3452
10 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Table 12. Interrupt (INT) Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Output Low Voltage VOL INT pin driving 8.5 mA 0.6 V
Table 13. Input Voltage Reference Specifications
Description Symbol Test Condition Min Typ Max Unit
Nominal VREF Input 1.1 V
Reference Tolerance 1 %
VREF Loading Input current –10 +10 µA
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 11
Not Recommended
for New Designs
2. PSE System-Level Diagrams
Figure 2. 4-Port System with Direct Host Connection
3. PSE Application Diagrams
Figure 3. 4-Port Application Diagram Using dV/dt Disconnect and I2C Host Interface
Si3452
High Voltage Interface
I2C
OTP
RAM
Mixed Signal
Resources
PSE State
Machines
and
Measurement
Subsystem
Host
Controller I2C
4 Ports of PoE+
INT
SDA
SCL
RST
Si8405 Digital
Isolator
Si3452
INT
RST
SCL
SDA
VREF
Si8405
Bidirectional
Isolator
Host / Switch
VDD DGNDAGND
DET4
DET3
DET2
DET1
VOUT1VOUT2VOUT3VOUT4
RBIAS
44.2 k
1% VEE
PORT1
PORT2
PORT3
PORT4
To Magnetics
GND12/34
VEE[4:1]
AD3
AD2
AD1
AD0
AD2
AD3
AD1
AD0
+3.3 V Tie high
or low to
select
address
–54 V
1.1 V
(e.g. TLV431)
4x10 k
Si3452
12 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
4. Functional Description
Integrating four independent, high-voltage PSE port interfaces, the Si3452 high-voltage port controller enables an
extremely flexible solution for virtually any PoE or PoE+ PSE application. The Si3452 provides all of the high-
voltage Power over Ethernet PSE functions.
Each port of the Si3452 integrates all high-voltage PSE controller functions needed for a quad-port PoE design,
including the power MOSFET, efficient current-sensing circuitry, transient voltage surge suppressor, and multiple
detect and disconnect circuits. The external BOM is typically only a single filter capacitor on each high-volt age p ort.
When a PD device has been pr operly detected and classified, the port is powered by a –54 V nominal supply with
continuous monitoring of voltage and current for feedback to the host system.
In addition to the required IEEE features, the Si3452 includes many additional features:
Per port current / voltage monitoring and measurement
Support for 1-Event and 2-Event classification algorithms
Start up in shutdown or auto mode
Alternative A (typically used for endpoint systems) or Alternative B (typically used for midspan systems)
detection timing
4.1. Detection
The Si3452 has per-port signature detection that satisfies the IEEE Std 802.3™-2005 specifications. However, by
utilizing a 3-point voltage-forced detection method, the Si3452 yields robust recognition of valid and invalid
powered device (PD) signatures, properly identifying signatures often mischaracterized by other detection
techniques.
Figure 4. PSE Sequencing (3-Point Detection Followed by 2-Event Classification and Powerup)
Vport Relative to GND
The detection circuitry performs the function of setting the output voltage on any channel to the proper value for
detection or classification and then measuring the resulting line current.
A typical detection cycle consists of applying 4 V, then 8 V, then 4 V again with the current limit set to 3 mA. The
current is measured after an appropriate settling time. For a valid PD, the detection signature must be compliant
with the detection voltage both increasing and decreasing.
3 point
detection
2 event
classification
Port powerup
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 13
Not Recommended
for New Designs
4.2. Classification
Following a successful PD detection, the classification phase will be automatically initiated in all operational
modes. During this phase, a single measurement will be made at 18 V to determine how much power the PD
device will draw under maximum loads per the IEEE 802.3af and 802.3at standards. The current limit during this
test mode is 60 mA nominal.
The Si3452 supports 1-Event and 2-Event classification. When operating in PoE (<15.4 W) mode, 1-Event
classification is used. Operation in PoE+ (>15.4 W) mode results in 2-Event classification probes. The 1-Event
classification is compliant to IEEE standard 802.3-2005. 2-Event classification is compliant to draft IEEE P802.3at.
4.3. Port Turn-On and Power FETs
The FET is turned on with a gate drive that results in a very low-noise turn-on waveform with a slew rate of less
than 1 V/µsec (See Figure 5).
The power FET switch on each port has been sized to have a typical ON resistance of approximately 0.3 . The
shunt resistor for current measurement has also been set to 0.1 . Including interconnection and process varia tion,
the total resistance to VEE for a port that is on is 0.6 (max). This limits the maximum power dissipation per
channel to < 250 mW when the operating current is 600 mA, the maximum current allowed by the IEEE 802.3at
PoE+ standard.
The FET has a programmable operating current limit. Each channel can be set to support output currents of
400 mA or 800 mA minimum.
In addition to the normal current limit, there is a short circuit current shutdown approximately 25% greater than the
nominal current limit. If there is a transient current surge where the current ramps up faster than the programmed
current limit can respond, the gate drive voltage is clamped immediately to VEE. The clamp is enabled for at least
10 µs, which allows the normal current circuitry to respond.
Another important protection feature is foldback current limiting. When VOUT is near VEE, the current limit is at
maximum. As the VDS of the driver switch increases (and VOUT is closer to ground), the current limit goes to its
lowest level. The amount of the foldback current is scaled proportionally with the programmed current limit.
Figure 5. Turn-On Waveform—Vport Relative to GND
Si3452
14 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
4.4. Disconnect Detection
The dV/dt disconnect function can be used to detect a disconnected device without using dc disconnect or ac
disconnect.
In dV/dt disconnect mo de, the FET current lim it is switched to 7.5 mA. If t he voltage across the FET increases, a
load is assumed to be present, and the FET current limit is automatically switched back to its pre-selected value. If,
after 350 ms, the FET voltage has not increased, there is no load present, and the FET is turned off.
In addition to operating in a manner functionally distinct from DC disconnect, dV/dt disconnect requires no
additional external comp one nts and fully interoperates with all powered de vice DC Ma intain Power Signatures. For
more information, see “AN399: dV/dt Disconnect and the IEEE 802.3 PoE Standard”.
4.5. Transient Voltage Surge Suppression
The Si3452 features robust on-chip surge protectors on each port; this is an industry first. This unique protection
circuitry acts as an active device that can withstand lightning-induced transients as well as large ESD transient
events. When the port voltage exceeds its protection limit and the current reaches a triggering thresh old, current is
shunted from the port to the ground pins.
Internal circuitry is provided to protect the line outputs from externally-coupled fault currents. These are transient
currents of up to 5 A peak.
The operation of the protec tion circuits depends on the operating mode of the channel switch and the direction of
the fault current. The clamping operation is performed on the detect pin.
The switch itself will also be protected by the current limit. If the transient lasts long enough to heat up the die, then
the temperature sense circuit will shut off the switch, and all the fault current will flow through the clamp diode.
4.6. Temperature Sense
A temperature sense signal is used in conjunction with the current limit status signals from the gate drive blocks.
Any channel th at is generating e xcess heat is assumed to be ope rating in cur rent limit mode, with both hi gh volt age
drop and high curr en t.
If the port is in PoE mode, an overload will generally not result in thermal shut down before the 60 ms ICUT period. If
the port is in PoE+ mode, an overload may cause the port to shut down prior to the 60 ms ICUT period. In either
case, the even t is reported as I CUT. The faster shutdown in PoE+ mode is consistent with and specifically allowed
by the 802.3at draft and provides much more robust overload protection than is possible with external FETs.
In addition, there is a thermal shut do wn if the package temperature exceeds 120 °C. If this threshold is reached, all
output drivers are turned off and detection modes are disabled. This secondary threshold limit guards against the
possibility that the overheating is not caused by a driver operating in current limit.
4.7. Port Measurement and Monitoring
VEE monitoring in conjunction with port current monitoring allows measurement of port power. Port power
monitoring, dyn am ic po we r allo ca tion via LL DP*, an d port power policing allow efficient power supply sizing.
The Si3452 is factory-calibrated and temperature-compensated for the following measurements:
Port current measure ment. These me asurements are auto-ranged and sca led to a 16 bit numb er at 1 00 µA per
bit. Port current accuracy is ±4% ± 2 mA.
VEE is measured with a scale of 64 V. The measur ement is reported as a 16 -bit nu mbe r scal ed at 1 mV per bit.
VEE measurement accuracy is ±4% over the valid VEE range.
*Note: LLDP = Link Layer Discovery Protocol. Refer to IEEE 802.3at (draft) and IEEE 802.1AB for more information.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 15
Not Recommended
for New Designs
4.8. SMBus/I2C Interface Description
The I2C interface is a two-wire, bidirectional serial bus. The I2C is compliant with the System Management Bus
Specification (SMBus), version 1.1 and compatible with the I2C serial bus. Reads and wr ites to the interface by the
system controller are byte-orie nted with the I2C interface autonomously controlling the serial transfer of the data. A
method of extending the clock-low duration is available to accommodate devices with different speed capabilities
on the same bus. The I2C pr ovides control o f SDA (serial data), SCL (serial clock) generation and synchronization,
arbitration logic, and START/STOP control and generation.
A typical I2C transaction consists of a START condition followed by an address byte (Bits7–1: 7-bit slave address;
Bit0: R/W direc tion bit) , one or more bytes o f data, and a STOP condition. Each byte that is received (by a master
or slave) must be acknowledged (ACK) with a low SDA during a high SCL (see Figure 6). If the receiving device
does not ACK, the transmitting device will read a NACK (not acknowledge), which is a high SDA during a high
SCL.
The direction bit (R/W) occupies the least-significant bit position of the address byte. The dir ection bit is set to lo gic
1 to indicate a “READ” operation and cleared to logic 0 to indicate a “WRITE” operation. All transactions are
initiated by a master, with one or more addressed slave devices as the target. The master generates the START
condition and th en transmits the slave address a nd direction bit. If the transaction is a WRITE operation from the
master to th e slave, the m as te r tra n sm i ts the d a ta one by te at a time, waiting for an ACK from the slave at the end
of each byte.
For READ operations, the slave transmits the data waiting for an ACK from the master at the end of each byte. At
the end of the data transfer, the master generates a STOP condition to terminate the transaction and free the bus.
Figure 6 illustrates a typical SMBus/I2C transaction.
Silicon Laboratories recommends the use of bidirectional digital isolators, such as the Si840x, to isolate the I2C
communicat ion s inte rf ac e be twe e n th e Si 34 52 hig h-v o ltage port con tro lle rs an d th e sys tem ho st co nt ro ller.
Figure 6. Typical I2C Bus Transactions
The Si3452 does not support the alert response address (ARA) protocol. Polling is used to determine which
controller is interrupting in an interrupt-driven system.
0 1 0 A3A2A1A0R/W#
ACK by IC A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0
ACK by IC D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
ACK by IC STOP by MasterSTART
Fixed IC
Address Pi n Set IC
Address
Slave Address Register Address Write Data
010A3A2A1A0R/W#
ACK by IC
A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0
ACK by ICSTART
Fixed IC
Addr ess Pi n Se t IC
Addr ess
Sl av e A ddress Reg iste r Ad dres s
Setup Register Address
START
0 1 0 A3A2A1A0R/W#
ACK by IC
D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0
Not ACK by Master
STOP by Master
Fixed IC
Address Pin Set IC
Addr ess
S lave Ad dres s Register Data
Transfer Data to Setup Ad dress
Wr i te Sequenc e
R ea d Se quen ce
Si3452
16 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
4.8.1. Address Pins
Pins with the same name must be externally connected and then tied high or low via a weak (10 k) pull up or pull
down to establish the device address at power up. The Si3452 powers up in either Auto mode or Shutdown mode
depending on the ordering part number. For more information, see "12. Ordering Guide" on page 33.
4.8.2. Address Format
The address byte of the I2C communication protocol has the following format:
AD3, AD2, AD1, and AD0 are the pin-selected address bits (pull up = 1; pull down = 0). For the R/W bit, see
Figure 6. The device will also respond to the global address, 0x30. The Si3452 does not support bus arbitration;
so, a global read command will generally give an invalid result. Global writes can be useful for initialization as well
as for shutting down low-priority ports. Table 16 lists the valid device addresses:
Table 14. Address Pin Assignments
Pin # Pin Name
21 AD3
24 AD3
25 AD2
26 AD2
27 AD1
28 AD0
34 AD0
36 AD1
Table 15. I2C Address Byte Protocol
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0
0 1 0 AD3 AD2 AD1 AD0 R/W
Table 16. Address Selection
AD3 AD2 AD1 AD0 Address Valid
00000x20Y
00010x21Y
0010 N
0011 N
01000x24Y
01010x25Y
0110 N
0111 N
10000x28Y
10010x29Y
10100x2AY
10110x2BY
11000x2CY
11010x2DY
11100x2EY
11110x2FY
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 17
Not Recommended
for New Designs
5. Register Interface
The register types are described in the following sections. Refer to Table 19 on page 20 for a complete map of the
registers.
5.1. Interrupt (Registers 0x00–0x01)
An interrupt (INT pin low) is ge nerated if any bi t of the Interrupt regi ster (register 0x00) is true . The Interrupt reg ister
contains the information about which port is generating the interrupt or if the interrupt is due to a global event.
The port interrupt is generated by the port event register masked by the interrupt mask register.
Port event = (tSTART Event AND tSTART mask) OR (tICUT Event AND tICUT mask) OR (Rgood_CLS_event AND
Rgood_CLS_mask) OR (DET_COMPL_EVENT AND DET_COMPL_MASK) OR (PwrGood_change AND
Pwrgood_change_MASK) OR (Penable_event AND Penable_mask)
The device event bit of the interrupt register is set if there is a change in the VEE or temperature status in register
0x1D. Reading 0x1D clears the event.
5.2. Port Event (Registers 0x02–0x05)
This register contains bits that become true if the event has occurred. The registers are Clear On Read (COR) so
that reading these registers will clear the INT pin if the INT pin is being held low due to a port event.
tSTART is an event bit indicating an overload occurred for all but 5 ms of the initial 60 ms start up time.
tICUT is an event bit indicating tha t an overload conditio n has existed for greater than 6 0 ms after the first 60 ms.
tICUT has a 16:1 up/down counter so that, if the overload is present at less than a 6.66% cycle, the port will not
shut down. Overload is defined as I>ICUT or port voltage not within 2 V of VEE. The port is turned off on this
event. A tICUT event is also generated if the port is shutdo wn due to an overload or due to th e prote ctio n cla mp
turning on. If the port is set to auto mode, it will attempt to re-power after >750 ms if there is a good detection
signature.
Rgood CLS indicates classification has been completed. Cla ssification is only attempted after an Rgood; so, if
this bit is set, it indicates that detection gave an Rgood an d classification is complete.
DET compl indicates the completion of a detection cycle. Normally, this bit will be masked. The DET complete
bit is used for legacy detection via modified link pulses. If the link pulse is returned indicating a PD is present,
then, normally, a detection is done, and the port is powered only if the result is not a short. In some cases, it
may be desirable to deny power to a port where an overload has been detected until the port is unplugged. In
this case, the Ropen result will be used to indicate the port has been unplugged and detection and classification
can resume.
Disconnect event indicates a discon nect has occurred. DC power was removed due to the dV/dt disconnect.
Overload conditions or loss of VEE turns off ports but does not generate a disconnect event.
Pgood indicates the port has been turned on and did not shut down during the Tstart time.
Penable indicates a port has been turned on.
5.3. Port Status (Registers 0x06–0x09)
These registers specify the port status. They are read-only registers.
Pwr good indicates that the port has been turned on and the port voltage is within 2 V of VEE.
Pwr Enable indicates the port has been turned on.
The three class status bits indicate the last classification result for that port. If a classification has not been done or
if the port is shut down with no new classification result, the class status is reported as un kn own.
The three detect status bits indicate the last detection result for that port. If a detection has not been done or if the
port is shut down with no new detection result, the detection status is reported as unknown.
Si3452
18 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
5.4. Port Configuration (Registers 0x0A–0x11)
These registers indicate the port configuration an d ar e re ad /w rite reg ist er s.
The port priority bit is set if the port is not high priority. Low-priority ports are shut down when the shutdown low-
priority ports command is issued.
The “PoE+” bit specifies the dc current limit at either 425 mA or 850 mA nominal*.
*Note: The PoE+ mode should be set correctly according to the electrical design of the PSE circuit (t ransfo rmer and conducto r
current carrying capacity). The PoE+ port mode can safely be changed prior to port turn-on, but changes after port turn-
on do not have an immediate effect and are not recommended.
“Disconnect e nable” mus t be set for pow er to be remo ved if there is a disconnect . “Port mode ” is set according to
Table 17.
ICUT is the nominal current level at which the port will automatically power down if ICUT is exceeded for 60 ms. It
can be set with 3.2 mA resolution. The accuracy of current measur eme nt is appr oxima tel y 5%; so, ICUT is normally
set 7% higher than the supported current level. ICUT is automatically set based on the classification result and
PoE+ mode. The automatically-set ICUT level is appropriate for a 45 V mini mum system power supply for classes
0–3 and for a 51 V minimum power supply for PoE+ mode. This feature is classification policing.
If the Si3452 is in the semi-auto mode, ICUT will not be updated according to the classification result. This means
that if it is desired to set ICUT at port turn-on, this should be done before the port is turned on.
Once a port is turned on, ICUT can be changed dynamically. It is often undesirable to use a low valu e of ICUT during
port turn-o n be cause inrush can t rig ge r th e ICUT event. For this reason, it is normal to allow the port to turn on with
the automatic ICUT setting and then later change this value after port current has stabilized and also if the PD and
PSE have negotiated for a different ICUT value based on the PoE L2 power negotiation protocol (LLDP).
The Si3452 supports 2-Event classification as defined in the IEEE 802.3at draft. 2-event classification is an
alternative to L2 power management where the PSE advertises it is capable of PoE powering by generating two
classification pulses. 2-Event classification is only supported for auto mode. If the Si3452 is in auto mode and the
first event classification result is Class 4, the mark, second event, and second mark are performed. Power is
applied only if the second event is also Class 4. If the second event is not Class 4, the classification error is
reported, and the port will not power. If the port is in manual mode, classification is done prior to turning on the port.
Table 17. Port Mode Selection
Port Mode Setting
B1, B0 Mode Description
00b Shutdown The power is shut down with no detection pulses.
A command to manually power the port is ignored.
01b Manual The port can be powered by the manual power command.
10b Semiauto Detection is done a nd classification is done for Rgo od, but the port does
not power.
11b Auto Detection classification and port powering are all automatic with no host
intervention required. ICUT and ILIM are automatically set according to
the PoE+ mode and classification result.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 19
Not Recommended
for New Designs
5.5. Command and Return Registers (Registers 0x12–0x1C)
The global command register enables manual port turn-on or turn-off, chip reset, port reset, and measurem ent of
port current and VEE. Register 0x12 is a Write only register. See Table 24 on page 24 for a list of all available
commands.
Consecutive writes to the global comman d register require delay to be insert ed between some comma nds. Refer to
Table 24 on page 24 for the delay requirements.
If the command results in a numerical return value, that value is stored in the measurement registers, which are
read-only. Each of the five possible measurements results in a 2 byte return value, and that value is stored in a
unique register. VEE is encoded in mV units; so, the full scale is 65.535 V. Iport is encoded in 100 µA units; so, the
full scale is 6.5535 A.
The output data is updated by the proper command register write operation (see Table 23). This means that the
numerical value of the port current or VEE voltage in the measurement register will be the value at the time the
command was issued. If the port turns off due to an overload or disconnect, the port current register contents will
not be set to zero. If a command to read port current is issued and the port is off, the return value will be zero.
5.6. Device Status Register (0x1D)
The device event bits are listed in Table 18.
The Device status register is RO. The VEE, UVLO, and overtemp bits reflect the device status. They are set if VEE
or temperature is out of range and reset if the VEE or temperature is in range. Bit 6 of the Interrupt register is set if
there is a change in the overtemp status (bit 6 of 0x1D), and bit 5 of the Interrupt register is set if there is a change
in the VEE UVLO status (bit 5 of 0x1D). Reading register 0x1D clears these bits of the Interrupt register but does
not clear the device status reg i ste r.
In addition, bit B0 indicates whether or not detection back-off is used. For PSEs that are wired as Alternative B
(power on the spare pair–typically used for midspans), the time between detection pulses is increased to slightly
over two seconds to avoid interference with Alternative A (power on the data pair–typically used for endpoints). Bit
B0 can be toggled using the 0x10 command code.
Table 18. Device Status Bits
Bit Description
B6—OverTemp The Si3452 has per-port thermal shutdown sensors as well a global thermal shutdown
at a slightly higher temperature. The global thermal shutdown bit of the device event
register is set if this occurs.
B5—VEE UVLO VEE UVLO. The part is put in its reset state if VEE is not in a valid range.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 23
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Table 20. Si3452 Detect Encoding
Value Condition
000b Unknown
001b Short
010b Reserved
011b Rlow
100b Good
101b Rhigh
110b Ropen
111b Reserved
Table 21. Si3452 Class Encoding
Value Condition
000b Unknown
001b Class 1
010b Class 2
011b Class 3
100b Class 4
101b Probes Not Equal
110b Class 0
111b Class Overload
Table 22. Si3452 Port Mode Encoding
Value Condition
00b Shutdown
01b Manual
10b Semiauto
11b Auto
Si3452
24 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
Table 23. Si3452 Port Configuration
PoE+ bit Class Auto Mode Setting of
ICUT Register ICUT Nominal Ilim Nominal*
0 or 1 don’t care 1 0x1E 97 mA 425 mA
0 or 1 don’t care 2 0x35 170 mA 425 mA
0 or 1 don’t care 0/3 0x75 375 mA 425 mA
0 4 0x75 375 mA 425 mA
1 4 0xC9 640 mA 850 mA
*Note: During initial port turn-on (TSTART time of 60 ms), the current limit is set to 425 mA, even in PoE+ mode.
Table 24. Si3452 Command Codes
Command CMD Register [B5..B2] [B1..B0] Command
Parameter 2 Byte Return
Value Command
Delay1
Power on port 0x04 | port no 0001b 2 bit port number2—15ms
Power off port 0x08 | port no 0010b 2 bit port number 15 ms
Reset port 0x0C | port no 0011b 2 bit port number 15 ms
Toggle detection
back-off timing30x10 0100b NA 15 ms
Reset chip 0x14 0101b NA 100 ms
Get VEE 0x18 0110b NA VEE in mV units 0 ms
Read port current 0x1C | port no 0111b 2 bit port number Port current in
100 µA units 0ms
Shut down
low-priority ports 0x20 1000b NA 15 ms
Notes:
1. The host should delay for at least these specified ti mes before writing to the command register aga in.
2. Port 1 has 2 bit port number 0x00; port 2 is 0x01, etc.
3. This command toggles bit 0 of Register 0x1D. When bit zero is set, the detection back-off of 2 seconds is implemented
(alternative B or “midspan” mode).
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 25
Not Recommended
for New Designs
6. Operational Notes
6.1. Port Turn On
If the port is turned on by putting it in auto mode, the Si3452 will take care of all specified timing, and it will take
care of the two-event classification if the first event result is Class 4 and PoE+ mode is enabled. However, if
automatic mode operation is not desired after port turn-on, the port should be set to semi-auto or manual mode
once it has powered. In automatic mode, ICUT is set according to the classification result.
The port turn-on command is used to turn on a port in semi-auto or manual mode. If the port is turned on in semi-
auto mode, turn-on is delayed until the next detection and classification. If the detection or classification result is
not valid, the port will not power. If the classification is Clas s 4 and PoE+ mode is enabled, a 2-event classification
is given. ICUT setting is not automatic for port turn-on in semi-auto or manual mode.
If the port is tu rned on b y putting it in manual mod e, the normal sequ ence is to start wi th the port in semi-auto mode
and interrupt on a classification comple te, which indicates that there is a valid PD signature and that a classification
result is available. Based on the classification result, the host can make a decision to app ly powe r or not. The IEEE
standard requires that a port be powered within 400 ms of a valid detect complete. It is also desirable to power the
port prior to the start of the next detection pulse, which can occur in as little as 300 ms. Therefore, it is
recommended that ports be powered in under 250 ms from the class complete interrupt when using the manual
mode turn-on co mm a nd .
Using manual mode turn-on, detection is not done prior to port turn on, but classification is always performed just
prior to port turn on. Ports are turned on in manual mode regardless of the classification result. 2-event
classification is performed if the first event result is Class 4 and the port is enabled for PoE+ mode. The manual
mode classification step does not generate a classification complete flag because it is assumed that the
classification was already done in semi-auto mode and the host has already made the decision to grant power.
During the initial 60 ms (Tstart) time of port turn-on, 1x current limit and ICUT = 375 mA (nominal) is enforced. After
Tstart, if the port is not overloaded, Pgood is set to true, and ICUT and 1x or 2x current limit will follow the I2C
register settings. In auto mode, the I2C registers are set according to the classification result, but, if desired, they
can be overwritten after Pgood becomes true. After Tstart, 2x current limit is always allowed if PoE+ mode is
enabled.
6.2. Changing the Interrupt Mask
The INT register and INT pin are always synchronized. However, there can be up to a 5 ms delay between an
event that caus es or clea rs an interr up t an d th e up d ate of th e regist er and pin .
Thus, if the INT mask register is changed to clear an interrupt or to block an interru pt source , there c an be up to a
5 ms delay between the change of the INT mask register and the resultant change in the INT register and INT pin.
Generally, use of the mask register to clear interrupts is not recommended; it is better to clear an interrupt by
reading the appropriate COR register.
6.3. Port Voltage and Current Measurements
Port current voltage and current are reported as of the time the measurement command is written to register 0x12.
Spikes of current or other momentary current changes are not filtered. It may be desirable to add a ~1 second
averaging filter to reported current when using port current information for power management decisions.
Si3452
26 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
7. PCB Layout Guidelines
Following are some PCB layout considerations. See also "12.1. Evaluation Kits and Reference Design s" on page
33 for reference design information. Please visit the Silicon Labs technical support web page at
www.silabs.com/support/pages/contacttechnicalsupport.aspx and register to request support for your design,
particularly if you are not closely following the recommended reference design.
Due to the high current of up to 800 mA per port, the following board layout guidelines apply. In addition, contact
Silicon Laboratories for access to complete PSE reference design databases including recommended layouts.
The VEE1, VEE2, VEE3, and VEE4 pins can carry up to 800 mA and are connected to a VEE bus. The VEE bus for
a 24 port PCB layout can thus carry as much as 20 A current. With 2 oz. copper on an outer layer, a bus of 0.4
inches is needed. For an inner la yer, this increases to a 1 inch wide bus. Use of large or multiple vias is required for
properly supporting the 800 mA per channel operating current. The VEE pin does not carry high current and can be
connected dir ec tly to the bus as we ll. Th e be st pr actice is to devote an entire inner layer for VEE power ro ut ing .
Similarly, GND1/2 and GND3/4 pins can carry up to 1.6 A per pin, and the GND return bus should be at least as
wide as the VEE bus described above. The best pr actice is to devote an entire inn er laye r fo r gr ound power routin g.
The ground power plane does not generally have a high frequency content (other than external faults); so, it is
generally acceptable to use the ground power plane as a ground signal plane and tie AGND and GND12, GND34
to this plane as well.
The VOUTn pins carry up to 800 mA dc and up to 5 A in faults; so, a 20 mil trace with wide or multiple vias is also
recommended. The VDETn pins also carry fault current; so, this pin connection to VOUTn needs to use 20 mil
traces and wide or mult iple vi as wher e ne e de d.
The VDD currents are not large; so, it is acceptable to route the VDD nodes on one of the outer layers.
If care is t aken to avoid d isruption of the high current p ath s, VDD can be globally rout ed on one of the power plan es
and then locally routed on an inner or outer layer.
To avoid coupling between surge events and logic signals, it is recommended that VOUTn traces be routed on the
side opposite the I 2C interface pins.
The thermal pad of the Si3452 is connected to VEE. At full IEEE 802.3at current of 600 mA on each port, the
dissipation of the Si3452 is up to 1.2 W; so, multiple vias are required to conduct the heat from the thermal pad to
the VEE plane. As many as 36 small vias provide the best thermal conduction.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 27
Not Recommended
for New Designs
8. Firmware Release Notes
Devices marked with Revision 02 (see "13. Device Marking Diagram" on page 34) have the firmware revision
registers set as 0x61 = 0x00; 0x62 = 0x02, and 0x63 = 0x51 (0.2.81).
The following are known issues:
8.1. I2C Address ACK
Issue: Very rarely, the Si3452 may not ACK the I2C address byte.
Impact: This is allowed in the I2C specification.
Workaround: Retransmit the address byte if there is an ACK failure.
8.2. “Sifos” Tester Vtrans_min Issue
Issue: The Si3452 may occasionally fail the “Vtrans_min” test as applied by Sifos PoE test equipment.
Impact: A small transient excursion beyond the minimum voltage specified in this test is a function of filter
capacitance on the port output. Normally, this small remaining voltage transient is completely filtered by the
minimum input capacitance of an attached powered device.
Mitigation/Workaround: The voltage transient may be filtered by adding capacitance to the output port within the
PoE specification maximum of 0.5 µF.
8.3. PSE-to-PSE Cross Powering Possibility
Issue: If ports on two Si3452 PSE devices operating in Auto mode are directly connected PSE-to-PSE, their
relative detect cycles may, on rare occasions, coincide so that one PSE port detects the other PSE port as having
a valid PD signature and then applies PoE power to the other.
Impact: If there is a voltage difference between the PSE power supplies and there are other PD loads connected to
the PSEs, there is a possibility for significant power to flow from one PSE port to the other, up to the class current
level of the supplying port. Power is coupled into the receiving device through the body diode of its port MOSFET.
The energy dissipated in the forward bias of this diode causes heating in the receiving device, possibly leading to
damage. The re ce iving de vice is not awa r e of the po we r fl ow into it from its port and has no means to control it.
Mitigation/Workaround: Prevention of damage is not guaranteed. Therefore, it is strongly advised not to connect
Si3452 PSE ports together in this manner.
Si3452
28 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
9. Pin Descriptions
Table 25. Si3452 Pin Descriptions
Pin # Name Type Description
1 VEE1 Supply Driver 1 VEE supply. Short to VEE, VEE2/3/4.
2 VEE Supply Global PoE (–48 V nom.) or PoE+ (–54 V nom.) supply. Short to VEE1/2/3/4.
3 VREF Analog input 1.1 V nom. voltage reference from reference generator (for example, TLV431 or
power management unit).
4 AIN Analog input Measurement data converter input. Short to AOUT.
5 AOUT Analog output Measurement multiplexer subsystem output. Short to AIN.
6 AGND Ground Analog ground reference. Short to AGND pin 8, GND12/34, DGND.
7 RBIAS Analog input External 44.2 k (±1%) resistor to ground sets internal bias currents.
8 AGND Ground Analog ground reference. Short to AGND pin 6, GND12/34, DGND.
9 NC No connect Do not connect (float).
10 VEE4 Supply Driver 4 VEE supply. Short to VEE, VEE1/2/3.
11 NC No connect Do not connect (float).
12 VOUT4 Analog I/O Port 4 power FET switch output. When on, provides a low impedance path to
VEE4.
VEE
VEE1
AIN
RBIAS
VREF
AGND
AOUT
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
AGND 8
DGND
VDD
AD1
AD3
AD0
AD2
AD2
30
29
28
27
26
25
24
VOUT4
NC
SDA
NC
DET4
SCL
GND34
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
DET3 18
VDD 19
39
38
37
36
35
34
33
VOUT1
INT
DET1
AD0
RST
GND12
AD1
DET2
VEE4 10
NC 9VEE3
22
RST
23
AD3
21
VOUT3 20
32 VOUT2
31 VEE2
Si3452
(Top View)
40
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 29
Not Recommended
for New Designs
13 DET4 Analog I/O Connection for port 4 detection, classification, and transient surge protection. This
pin is tied to VOUT4.
14 SDA Digital I/O I2C data pin
15 GND34 Ground Ground supply for protection clamps. Short to AGND, GND12, DGND.
16 SCL Digital I/O I2C clock pin
17 NC No conn ect Do not connect (float).
18 DET3 Analog I/O Connection for port 3 detection and classification. See DET4 for detailed descrip-
tion.
19 VDD Supply +3.3 V (±10%) isolated supply. Short to VDD pin 30.
20 VOUT3 Analog I/O Port 3 power FET switch output. When on, provides a low impedance path to
VEE3.
21 AD3 Digital I/O Chip address bit 3 pin, read af ter r eset. Add ress s et with defin ed resist or di viders.
Pin also used for internal communications. Short to AD3 pin 24.
22 VEE3 Supply Driver 3 VEE supply. Short to VEE, VEE1/2/4.
23 RST Digital input Active low digital reset. Short to RST pin 38.
24 AD3 Digital I/O Chip address bit 3 pin, read after reset. Address set with a 10 kpull-up or pull-
down resistor. Also used for internal communications. Short to AD3 pi n 21.
25 AD2 Digital I/O Chip address bit 2 pin, read after reset. Address set with a 10 kpull-up or pull-
down resistor. Also used for internal communications. Short to AD2 pi n 26.
26 AD2 Digital I/O Chip address bit 2 pin, read after reset. Address set with a 10 kpull-up or pull-
down resistor. Also used for internal communications. Short to AD2 pi n 25.
27 AD1 Digital I/O Chip address bit 1 pin, read after reset. Address set with a 10 kpull-up or pull-
down resistor. Also used for internal communications. Short to AD1 pi n 36.
28 AD0 Digital I/O Chip address bit 0 pin, read after reset. Address set with a 10 kpull-up or pull-
down resistor. Also used for internal communications. Short to AD0 pi n 34.
29 DGND Ground Digital ground reference. Short to AGND, GND12/34
30 VDD Supply +3.3 V isolated supply. Short to VDD pin 19.
31 VEE2 Supply Driver 2 VEE supply. Short to VEE, VEE1/3/4.
32 VOUT2 Analog I/O Port 2 power FET switch output. When on, provides a low impedance path to
VEE2.
33 DET2 Analog I/O Connection for port 2 detection and classification. See DET4 for detailed descrip-
tion.
34 AD0 Digital I/O Chip address bit 0 pin. See description for- and short to AD0 pin 28.
35 GND12 Ground Ground supply for protection clamps. Short to AGND, GND34, DGND.
36 AD1 Digital I/O Chip address bit 1 pin. See description for- and short to AD1 pin 27.
Table 25. Si3452 Pin Descriptions (Continued)
Pin # Name Type Description
Si3452
30 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
37 DET1 Analog I/O Connection for port 1 detection and classification. See DET4 for detailed descrip-
tion.
38 RST Digital input Active low digital reset. Short to RST pin 23.
39 VOUT1 Analog I/O Port 1 power FET switch output. When on, provides a low impedance path to
VEE1.
40 INT Digital output Active low interrupt output pin.
ePAD V ee Supply Connect the thermal pad to a plane which connects to V ee. For best results, use a
5 x 5 or larger via array for best thermal conductivity with 1 square inch or larger
of plane area per device.
Table 25. Si3452 Pin Descriptions (Continued)
Pin # Name Type Description
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 31
Not Recommended
for New Designs
10. Package Outline: 40-Pin QFN
The Si3452 is packaged in an industry-standard, RoHS compliant 6 x 6 mm2, 40-pin QFN package.
Figure 7. 40-Pin QFN Mechanical Diagram
Table 26. Package Diagram Dimensions
Dimension Min Nom Max
A 0.80 0.85 0.90
A1 0.00 0.02 0.05
b 0.18 0.25 0.30
D 6.00 BSC.
D2 3.95 4.10 4.25
e 0.50 BSC.
E 6.00 BSC.
E2 3.95 4.10 4.25
L 0.30 0.40 0.50
aaa 0.10
bbb 0.10
ccc 0.08
ddd 0.10
eee 0.05
Notes:
1. All dimensions shown are in millimeters (mm) unless otherwise noted.
2. Dimensioning and Tolerancing per ANSI Y14.5M-1994.
3. This drawing conforms to JEDEC outline MO-220, Variation VJJD-2
4. Recommended card reflow profile is per the JEDEC/IPC J-STD-020 specification for
Small Body Components.
Si3452
32 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
11. Recommended PCB Footprint
Figure 8. PCB Land Pattern
Table 27. PCB Land Pattern Dimensions
Dimension Min Max Dimension Min Max
C1 5.80 5.90 X2 4.10 4.20
C2 5.80 5.90 Y1 0.75 0.85
e0.50 BSC Y2 4.10 4.20
X1 0.15 0.25
Notes:
General
1. All dimensions shown are in millimeters (mm) unless otherwise noted.
2. Dimension and Tolerancing is per the ANSI Y14.5M-1994 specification.
3. This La nd Pattern Design is based on the IPC-SM-7351 guidelines.
4. All dimensions shown are at Maximum Material Condition (MMC). Least Material Condition (LMC) is
calculated based on a Fabrication Allowance of 0.05 mm.
Solder Mask Design
5. All metal pads are to be non-solder mask defined (NSMD). Clearance between the solder mask and the
metal pad is to be 60 m minimum, all the way around the pad.
Stencil Design
6. A stainless steel, laser-cut and electro-polished stencil with trapezoidal walls should be used to assure
good solder paste release.
7. The stencil thickness should be 0.125 mm (5 mils).
8. The ratio of sten cil aperture to land pad size should be 1:1 for all perimeter pads.
9. A 4x4 array of 0.80 mm square open ings on a 1.05 mm pitch should be used for the center ground pad.
Card Assembly
10. A No-Clean, Type-3 solder paste is recommended.
11. Recommended card reflow profile is per the JEDEC/IPC J-STD-020 specification for Small Body
Components.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 33
Not Recommended
for New Designs
12. Ordering Guide
12.1. Evaluation Kits and Reference Designs
Ordering Part Number1Detect
Timing2,5 Powerup Mode2,3,4,5 Firmware
Revision Package6
Temp. Range
Si3452-B02-GM Alt A PoE7Shutdown
0.2.81 –40 to 85 °C
ambient
Si3452A-B02-GM Alt A PoE (15.4 W)
Auto
Si3452B-B02-GM Alt B
Si3452C-B02-GM Alt A PoE+ (30 W)
Si3452D-B02-GM Alt B
Notes:
1. Add “R” to the end of the ordering part number to denote tape-and-reel option. E.g., Si34 52-B02-GMR.
2. For alternative A, power is applied to wire pairs 1,2 and 3,6. For alternative B, power is applied to wire pairs 4,5 and 7,8
(the spare pairs in the case of 10/100 Ethernet). Conventionally, alternative B is used for midspan power injectors. For
alternative B, detection is done with over 2 seconds between detection pulses so as to avoid interfering with end-point
equipment trying to provide power using alternative A.
3. Devices powering up into shutdown mode are intended for use with a system host that provides run- time configuration
or power-management.
4. The maximum PoE or PoE+ power applies to all ports on Auto mode devices.
5. Detect Timing and Powerup Modes (PoE vs. PoE+, Shutdown vs. Auto) are pre-configured in firmware but can be
reconfigured at any time via a host connection.
6. All devices are packaged in RoHS-compliant, 40-pin, 6x6 mm QFN.
7. The Si3452-B02-GM is PoE+ capable. The part defaults to PoE mode at powerup but can be reconfigured to PoE+ via
register settings.
Part Number Description Related Ethernet Chipset Type
Si3452MS8-KIT PoE+ 8-port Midspan PSE evaluation kit.
Includes PC-control interface, PD loads,
and cables.
None Evaluation Kit
Si3452V1-RD* PoE/PoE+ 24-port daughtercard Vitesse E-S taX (VSC7407) Reference Design
Si3452V2-RD* PoE+ 8-port Gb-Ethernet switch Vitesse SparX-G8e (VSC7398) Reference Design
Si3452M1-RD* PoE/PoE+ 24-port da ughtercard Marvell Prestera-DX, xCAT Reference Design
*Note: Due to unique high-voltage and high-power design considerations, Silicon Laboratories recommends that the
reference designs be followed very closely for both bill of materials and layout. Please visit the Silicon Labs technical
support web page at www.silabs.com/support/pages/contacttechnicalsupport.aspx and register to request supp ort for
your design, particularly if you are not closely following the recommended reference desig n.
Si3452
34 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
13. Device Marking Diagram
Figure 9. Device Marking Diagram
Table 28. Device Marking Table
Line # Text Value Description
1 Si3452 Base part number. This is no t the “Order ing Part Nu mber” since it does not cont a in a
specific revision. Refer to "12. Ordering Guide" on page 33 for complete ordering
information.
2XZZ
X = Device revision.
ZZ = Firmware revision.
2GM
G = Industrial temperature range.
M = QFN package.
3 TTTTTT Trace code (assigned by the assembly subcontractor).
4
OPin 1 identifier.
YY Assembly year.
WW Assembly week.
Si3452
Rev. 1.5 35
Not Recommended
for New Designs
DOCUMENT CHANGE LIST
Revision 1.0 to Revision 1.1
Updated “GM” parts temperature range to –40 to
+85 °C, eliminating the need for the -IM orde ring part
numbers. Contact Silicon Labs for date code
information if needed.
Revision 1.1 to Revision 1.2
Removed references to Si3453 throughout.
Updated Figure 9, “Device Marking Diagram,” on
page 34.
Updated typica l VDD reset threshold in Table 3 on
page 5.
Clarified notes in Table 19, “Si3452 Register Map,”
on page 20.
Updated Table 28, “Device Marking Table,” on
page 34.
Clarified notes in "12. Ordering Guide" on page 3 3.
Revision 1.2 to Revision 1.3
Updated "8. Firmware Release Notes" on page 27.
Updated "11. Recommended PCB Footprint" on
page 32.
Updated Table 27, “PCB Land Pattern Dimensions,”
on page 32.
Updated "12. Orde r i ng Guide " on page 33.
Updated "12.1. Evaluation Kits and Reference
Designs" on page 33.
Revision 1.3 to Revision 1.4
Added “Not Recomm e nd ed for New Des ign s”
watermark.
Added guidance on I2C register command write
delays.
Updated "8. Firmware Release Notes" on page 27
regarding Sifos "Vtrans_min" test.
Revision 1.4 to Revision 1.5
Updated "8. Firmware Release Notes" on page 27
regarding PSE-to-PSE Cross Powering Possibility.
Si3452
36 Rev. 1.5
Not Recommended
for New Designs
CONTACT INFORMATION
Silicon Laboratories Inc.
400 West Cesar Chavez
Austin, TX 78701
Tel: 1+(512) 416-8500
Fax: 1+(512) 416-9669
Toll Free: 1+(877) 444-3032
Please visit the Silicon Labs Technical Supp ort web page:
https://www.siliconlabs.com/support/pages/contacttechnicalsupport.aspx
and register to submit a technical support reques t.
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