DATASHEET IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE General Description Features The IDT1337 device is a low power serial real-time clock (RTC) device with two programmable time-of-day alarms and a programmable square-wave output. Address and data are transferred serially through an I2C bus. The device provides seconds, minutes, hours, day, date, month, and year information. The date at the end of the month is automatically adjusted for months with fewer than 31 days, including corrections for leap year. The clock operates in either the 24-hour or 12-hour format with AM/PM indicator. * Real-Time Clock (RTC) counts seconds, minutes, hours, day, date, month, and year with leap-year compensation valid up to 2100 * Packaged in 8-pin MSOP, 8-pin SOIC, or 16-pin SOIC (surface-mount package with an integrated crystal) * * * * Applications * * * * * * Telecommunication (Routers, Switches, Servers) I2C Serial interface (Normal and Fast modes) Two time-of-day alarms Oscillator Stop Flag Programmable square-wave output defaults to 32 kHz on power-up * Operating voltage of 1.8 to 5.5 V * Industrial temperature range (-40 to +85C) Handhelds (GPS, POS terminals, MP3 players) Set-Top Box, Digital Recording, Office (Fax/Printers, Copiers) Medical (Glucometer, Medicine Dispensers) Other (Thermostats, Vending Machines, Modems, Utility Meters, Digital Photo Frame devices) Block Diagram VCC Crystal inside package for 16-pin SOIC ONLY X1 1 Hz/4.096 kHz/ 8.192 kHz/32.768 kHz 32.768 kHz Oscillator and Divider MUX/ Buffer SQW/INTB INTA X2 Clock, Calendar Counter Control Logic SCL SDA I2 C Interface 1 Byte Control 7 Bytes Buffer Alarm Registers GND IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 1 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Pin Assignment (8-pin MSOP/SOIC) X1 1 8 VCC X2 2 7 SQW/INTB INTA 3 6 SCL GND 4 5 SDA IDT1337 Pin Assignment (16-pin SOIC) SCL 1 16 SDA SQW/INTB 2 15 GND VCC 3 14 INTA NC 4 13 NC NC 5 12 NC NC 6 11 NC NC 7 10 NC NC 8 9 NC IDT1337C Pin Descriptions Pin Number MSOP SOIC Pin Name Pin Description/Function 1 -- X1 2 -- X2 Connections for standard 32.768 kHz quartz crystal. The internal oscillator circuitry is designed for operation with a crystal having a specified load capacitance (CL) of 7 pF. An external 32.768 kHz oscillator can also drive the IDT1337. In this configuration, the X1 pin is connected to the external oscillator signal and the X2 pin is left floating. 3 14 INTA Interrupt output. When enabled, INTA is asserted low when the time/day/date matches the values set in the alarm registers. This pin is an open-drain output and requires an external pull-up resistor (10 k typical). 4 15 GND Connect to ground. DC power is provided to the device on these pins. 5 16 SDA Serial data input/output. SDA is the input/output pin for the I2C serial interface. The SDA pin is an open-drain output and requires an external pull-up resistor (2 k typical). 6 1 SCL Serial clock input. SCL is used to synchronize data movement on the serial interface. The SCL pin is an open-drain output and requires an external pull-up resistor (2 k typical). Square-Wave/Interrupt output. Programmable square-wave or interrupt output signal. The SQW/INT pin is an open-drain output and requires an external pull-up resistor (10 k SQW/INTB typical). This pin can also function as an additional interrupt pin under certain conditions (see page 6 for details). 7 2 8 3 VCC -- 4 - 13 NC Primary power supply. DC power is applied to this pin. No connect. These pins are unused and must be connected to ground. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 2 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Typical Operating Circuit VCC VCC 2k 2k CRYSTAL VCC X1 VCC X2 SCL CPU SDA 10k 10k SQW/INTB IDT1337 INTA GND Detailed Description Effective Load Capacitance Communications to and from the IDT1337 occur serially over an I2C bus. The IDT1337 operates as a slave device on the serial bus. Access is obtained by implementing a START condition and providing a device identification code, followed by data. Subsequent registers can be accessed sequentially until a STOP condition is executed. The device is fully accessible through the I2C interface whenever VCC is between 5.5 V and 1.8 V. I2C operation is not guaranteed when VCC is below 1.8 V. The IDT1337 maintains the time and date when VCC is as low as 1.3 V. Please see diagram below for effective load capacitance calculation. The effective load capacitance (CL) should match the recommended load capacitance of the crystal in order for the crystal to oscillate at its specified parallel resonant frequency with 0ppm frequency error. The following sections discuss in detail the Oscillator block, Clock/Calendar Register Block and Serial I2C block. Oscillator Block Selection of the right crystal, correct load capacitance and careful PCB layout are important for a stable crystal oscillator. Due to the optimization for the lowest possible current in the design for these oscillators, losses caused by parasitic currents can have a significant impact on the overall oscillator performance. Extra care needs to be taken to maintain a certain quality and cleanliness of the PCB. Crystal Selection In the above figure, X1 and X2 are the crystal pins of our device. Cin1 and Cin2 are the internal capacitors which include the X1 and X2 pin capacitance. Cex1 and Cex2 are the external capacitors that are needed to tune the crystal frequency. Ct1 and Ct2 are the PCB trace capacitances between the crystal and the device pins. CS is the shunt capacitance of the crystal (as specified in the crystal manufacturer's datasheet or measured using a network analyzer). The key parameters when selecting a 32 kHz crystal to work with IDT1337 RTC are: * Recommended Load Capacitance * Crystal Effective Series Resistance (ESR) * Frequency Tolerance IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 3 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC to the GND layer. This helps to keep noise generated by the oscillator circuit locally on this separated island. The ground connections for the load capacitors and the oscillator should be connected to this island. Note: IDT1337CSRI integrates a standard 32.768 kHz crystal in the package and contributes an additional frequency error of 10ppm at nominal VCC (+3.3 V) and TA=+25C. ESR (Effective Series Resistance) PCB Layout Choose the crystal with lower ESR. A low ESR helps the crystal to start up and stabilize to the correct output frequency faster compared to high ESR crystals. Frequency Tolerance The frequency tolerance for 32 KHz crystals should be specified at nominal temperature (+25C) on the crystal manufacturer datasheet. The crystals used with IDT1337 typically have a frequency tolerance of +/-20ppm at +25C. 1337 Specifications for a typical 32 kHz crystal used with our device are shown in the table below. Parameter Symbol Nominal Freq. fO Series Resistance ESR Load Capacitance CL Min Typ PCB Assembly, Soldering and Cleaning Max Units 32.768 Board-assembly production process and assembly quality can affect the performance of the 32 KHz oscillator. Depending on the flux material used, the soldering process can leave critical residues on the PCB surface. High humidity and fast temperature cycles that cause humidity condensation on the printed circuit board can create process residuals. These process residuals cause the insulation of the sensitive oscillator signal lines towards each other and neighboring signals on the PCB to decrease. High humidity can lead to moisture condensation on the surface of the PCB and, together with process residuals, reduce the surface resistivity of the board. Flux residuals on the board can cause leakage current paths, especially in humid environments. Thorough PCB cleaning is therefore highly recommended in order to achieve maximum performance by removing flux residuals from the board after assembly. In general, reduction of losses in the oscillator circuit leads to better safety margin and reliability. kHz 50 7 k pF PCB Design Consideration * Signal traces between IDT device pins and the crystal must be kept as short as possible. This minimizes parasitic capacitance and sensitivity to crosstalk and EMI. Note that the trace capacitances play a role in the effective crystal load capacitance calculation. * Data lines and frequently switching signal lines should be routed as far away from the crystal connections as possible. Crosstalk from these signals may disturb the oscillator signal. * Reduce the parasitic capacitance between X1 and X2 signals by routing them as far apart as possible. * The oscillation loop current flows between the crystal and the load capacitors. This signal path (crystal to CL1 to CL2 to crystal) should be kept as short as possible and ideally be symmetric. The ground connections for both capacitors should be as close together as possible. Never route the ground connection between the capacitors all around the crystal, because this long ground trace is sensitive to crosstalk and EMI. * To reduce the radiation / coupling from oscillator circuit, an isolated ground island on the GND layer could be made. This ground island can be connected at one point IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 4 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Address Map Table 2 (Timekeeper Registers) shows the address map for the IDT1337 registers. During a multibyte access, when the address pointer reaches the end of the register space (0Fh), it wraps around to location 00h. On an I2C START, STOP, or address pointer incrementing to location 00h, the current time is transferred to a second set of registers. The time information is read from these secondary registers, while the clock may continue to run. This eliminates the need to re-read the registers in case of an update of the main registers during a read. Table 1. Timekeeper Registers Address Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 00h 0 10 seconds 01h 0 10 minutes 02h 0 12/24 03h 0 0 04h 0 0 05h Century 0 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 Function Range Seconds Seconds 00 - 59 Minutes Minutes 00 - 59 Hour Hours 1 - 12 + AM/PM 00 - 23 Day 1-7 Date Date 01 - 31 Month Month/Century 01 - 12 + Century Year Year 00 - 99 AM/PM 06h 10 hour 10 hour 0 0 0 Day 10 date 0 10 month 10 year 07h A1M1 10 seconds Seconds Alarm 1 Seconds 00 - 59 08h A1M2 10 minutes Minutes Alarm 1 Minutes 00 - 59 09h A1M3 12/24 Hour Alarm 1 Hours 1 - 12 + AM/PM 00 - 23 0Ah A1M4 DY/DT Day, Alarm 1 Day 1-7 Date Alarm 1 Date 1 - 31 0Bh A2M2 Minutes Alarm 2 Minutes 00 - 59 0Ch A2M3 12/24 Hour Alarm 2 Hours 1 - 12 + AM/PM 00 - 23 0Dh A2M4 DY/DT Day, Alarm 2 Day 1-7 Date Alarm 2 Date 1 - 31 0Eh EOSC 0 0 RS2 RS1 INTCN A2IE A1IE Control 0Fh OSF 0 0 0 0 0 A2F A1F Status AM/PM 10 hour 10 hour 10 date 10 minutes AM/PM 10 hour 10 hour 10 date Note: Unless otherwise specified, the state of the registers are not defined when power is first applied or when VCC falls below the VCCT min IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 5 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Clock and Calendar Alarms The time and calendar information is obtained by reading the appropriate register bytes. The RTC registers are illustrated in Table 1. The time and calendar are set or initialized by writing the appropriate register bytes. The contents of the time and calendar registers are in the binary-coded decimal (BCD) format. The IDT1337 contains two time of day/date alarms. Alarm 1 can be set by writing to registers 07h to 0Ah. Alarm 2 can be set by writing to registers 0Bh to 0Dh. The alarms can be programmed (by the INTCN bits of the Control Register) to operate in two different modes--each alarm can drive its own separate interrupt output or both alarms can drive a common interrupt output. Bit 7 of each of the time-of-day/date alarm registers are mask bits (Table 1). When all of the mask bits for each alarm are logic 0, an alarm only occurs when the values in the timekeeping registers 00h-06h match the values stored in the time-of-day/date alarm registers. The alarms can also be programmed to repeat every second, minute, hour, day, or date. Table 2 (Alarm Mask Bits table) shows the possible settings. Configurations not listed in the table result in illogical operation The day-of-week register increments at midnight. Values that correspond to the day of week are user-defined but must be sequential (i.e., if 1 equals Sunday, then 2 equals Monday, and so on). Illogical time and date entries result in undefined operation. When reading or writing the time and date registers, secondary (user) buffers are used to prevent errors when the internal registers update. When reading the time and date registers, the user buffers are synchronized to the internal registers on any start or stop and when the register pointer rolls over to zero. The DY/DT bits (bit 6 of the alarm day/date registers) control whether the alarm value stored in bits 0 to 5 of that register reflects the day of the week or the date of the month. If DY/DT is written to a logic 0, the alarm is the result of a match with date of the month. If DY/DT is written to a logic 1, the alarm is the result of a match with day of the week. The countdown chain is reset whenever the seconds register is written. Write transfers occur on the acknowledge pulse from the device. To avoid rollover issues, once the countdown chain is reset, the remaining time and date registers must be written within 1 second. The 1Hz square-wave output, if enable, transitions high 500ms after the seconds data transfer, provided the oscillator is already running. When the RTC register values match alarm register settings, the corresponding Alarm Flag (`A1F' or `A2F') bit is set to logic 1. If the corresponding Alarm Interrupt Enable (`A1IE' or `A2IE') is also set to logic 1, the alarm condition activates one of the interrupt output (INTA or SQW/INTB) signals. The match is tested on the once-per-second update of the time and date registers. The IDT1337 can be run in either 12-hour or 24-hour mode. Bit 6 of the hours register is defined as the 12- or 24-hour mode-select bit. When high, the 12-hour mode is selected. In the 12-hour mode, bit 5 is the AM/PM bit with logic high being PM. In the 24-hour mode, bit 5 is the second 10-hour bit (20-23 hours). All hours values, including the alarms, must be reinitialized whenever the 12/24-hour mode bit is changed. The century bit (bit 7 of the month register) is toggled when the years register overflows from 99-00. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 6 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Table 2. Alarm Mask Bits DY/DT Alarm 1 Register Mask Bits (Bit 7) Alarm Rate A1M4 A1M3 A1M2 A1M1 X 1 1 1 1 Alarm once per second. X 1 1 1 0 Alarm when seconds match. X 1 1 0 0 Alarm when minutes and seconds match. X 1 0 0 0 Alarm when hours, minutes, and seconds match. 0 0 0 0 0 Alarm when date, hours, minutes, and seconds match. 1 0 0 0 0 Alarm when day, hours, minutes, and seconds match. DY/DT Alarm 2 Register Mask Bits (Bit 7) Alarm Rate A2M4 A2M3 A2M2 X 1 1 1 Alarm once per minute (00 seconds of every minute). X 1 1 0 Alarm when minutes match. X 1 0 0 Alarm when hours and minutes match. 0 0 0 0 Alarm when date, hours, and minutes match. 1 0 0 0 Alarm when day, hours, and minutes match. Special-Purpose Registers The IDT1337 has two additional registers (control and status) that control the RTC, alarms, and square-wave output. Control Register (0Eh) Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 EOSC 0 0 RS2 RS1 INTCN A2IE A1IE Bit 7: Enable Oscillator (EOSC). This active-low bit when set to logic 0 starts the oscillator. When this bit is set to a logic 1, the oscillator is stopped. This bit is enabled (logic 0) when power is first applied. Bits 4 and 3: Rate Select (RS2 and RS1). These bits control the frequency of the square-wave output when the square wave has been enabled. Table 3 shows the square-wave frequencies that can be selected with the RS bits. These bits are both set to logic 1 (32 kHz) when power is first applied. Table 3. SQW/INT Output INTCN RS2 RS1 SQW/INTB Output A2IE 0 0 0 1 Hz X 0 0 1 4.096 kHz X 0 1 0 8.192 kHz X 0 1 1 32.768 kHz X 1 X X A2F 1 IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 7 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Bit 2: Interrupt Control (INTCN). This bit controls the relationship between the two alarms and the interrupt output pins. When the INTCN bit is set to logic 1, a match between the timekeeping registers and the alarm 1 registers activate the INTA pin (provided that the alarm is enabled) and a match between the timekeeping registers and the alarm 2 registers activates the SQW/INTB pin (provided that the alarm is enabled). When the INTCN bit is set to logic 0, a square wave is output on the SQW/INTB pin. This bit is set to logic 0 when power is first applied. Bit 1: Alarm 2 Interrupt Enable (A2IE). When set to a logic 1, this bit permits the Alarm 2 Flag (A2F) bit in the status register to assert INTA (when INTCN = 0) or to assert SQW/INTB (when INTCN = 1). When the A2IE bit is set to logic 0, the A2F bit does not initiate an interrupt signal. The A2IE bit is disabled (logic 0) when power is first applied. Bit 0: Alarm 1 Interrupt Enable (A1IE). When set to logic 1, this bit permits the Alarm 1 Flag (A1F) bit in the status register to assert INTA. When the A1IE bit is set to logic 0, the A1F bit does not initiate the INTA signal. The A1IE bit is disabled (logic 0) when power is first applied. Status Register (0Fh) Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0 OSF 0 0 0 0 0 A2F A1F Bit 7: Oscillator Stop Flag (OSF). A logic 1 in this bit indicates that the oscillator either is stopped or was stopped for some period of time and may be used to judge the validity of the clock and calendar data. This bit is is set to logic 1 anytime the oscillator stops. The following are examples of conditions that can cause the OSF bit to be set: 1) The first time power is applied. 2) The voltage present on VCC is insufficient to support oscillation. 3) The EOSC bit is turned off. 4) External influences on the crystal (e.g., noise, leakage, etc.). This bit remains at logic 1 until written to logic 0. This bit can only be written to a logic 0. Bit 1: Alarm 2 Flag (A2F). A logic 1 in the alarm 2 flag bit indicates that the time matched the alarm 2 registers. This flag can be used to generate an interrupt on either INTA or SQW/INTB depending on the status of the INTCN bit in the control register. If the INTCN bit is set to logic 0 and A2F is at logic 1 (and A2IE bit is also logic 1), the INTA pin goes low. If the INTCN bit is set to logic 1 and A2F is logic 1 (and A2IE bit is also logic 1), the SQW/INTB pin goes low. A2F is cleared when written to logic 0. This bit can only be written to logic 0. Attempting to write to logic 1 leaves the value unchanged. Bit 0: Alarm 1 Flag (A1F). A logic 1 in the Alarm 1 Flag bit indicates that the time matched the alarm 1 registers. If the A1IE bit is also a logic 1, the INTA pin goes low. A1F is cleared when written to logic 0. This bit can only be written to logic 0. Attempting to write to logic 1 leaves the value unchanged. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 8 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC I2C Serial Data Bus Acknowledge: Each receiving device, when addressed, is obliged to generate an acknowledge after the reception of each byte. The master device must generate an extra clock pulse that is associated with this acknowledge bit. The IDT1337 supports the I2C bus protocol. A device that sends data onto the bus is defined as a transmitter and a device receiving data as a receiver. The device that controls the message is called a master. The devices that are controlled by the master are referred to as slaves. A master device that generates the serial clock (SCL), controls the bus access, and generates the START and STOP conditions must control the bus. The IDT1337 operates as a slave on the I2C bus. Within the bus specifications, a standard mode (100 kHz maximum clock rate) and a fast mode (400 kHz maximum clock rate) are defined. The IDT1337 works in both modes. Connections to the bus are made via the open-drain I/O lines SDA and SCL. A device that acknowledges must pull down the SDA line during the acknowledge clock pulse in such a way that the SDA line is stable LOW during the HIGH period of the acknowledge related clock pulse. Of course, setup and hold times must be taken into account. A master must signal an end of data to the slave by not generating an acknowledge bit on the last byte that has been clocked out of the slave. In this case, the slave must leave the data line HIGH to enable the master to generate the STOP condition. The following bus protocol has been defined (see the "Data Transfer on I2C Serial Bus" figure): * Data transfer may be initiated only when the bus is not busy. * During data transfer, the data line must remain stable whenever the clock line is HIGH. Changes in the data line while the clock line is HIGH are interpreted as control signals. Accordingly, the following bus conditions have been defined: Bus not busy: Both data and clock lines remain HIGH. Start data transfer: A change in the state of the data line, from HIGH to LOW, while the clock is HIGH, defines a START condition. Stop data transfer: A change in the state of the data line, from LOW to HIGH, while the clock line is HIGH, defines the STOP condition. Data valid: The state of the data line represents valid data when, after a START condition, the data line is stable for the duration of the HIGH period of the clock signal. The data on the line must be changed during the LOW period of the clock signal. There is one clock pulse per bit of data. Each data transfer is initiated with a START condition and terminated with a STOP condition. The number of data bytes transferred between START and STOP conditions are not limited, and are determined by the master device. The information is transferred byte-wise and each receiver acknowledges with a ninth bit. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 9 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Data Transfer on I2C Serial Bus bit (see the "Data Write-Slave Receiver Mode" figure). The slave address byte is the first byte received after the START condition is generated by the master. The slave address byte contains the 7-bit IDT1337 address, which is 1101000, followed by the direction bit (R/W), which is 0 for a write. After receiving and decoding the slave address byte the device outputs an acknowledge on the SDA line. After the IDT1337 acknowledges the slave address + write bit, the master transmits a register address to the IDT1337. This sets the register pointer on the IDT1337. The master may then transmit zero or more bytes of data, with the IDT1337 acknowledging each byte received. The address pointer increments after each data byte is transferred. The master generates a STOP condition to terminate the data write. Depending upon the state of the R/W bit, two types of data transfer are possible: 1) Data transfer from a master transmitter to a slave receiver. The first byte transmitted by the master is the slave address. Next follows a number of data bytes. The slave returns an acknowledge bit after each received byte. Data is transferred with the most significant bit (MSB) first. 2) Data transfer from a slave transmitter to a master receiver. The first byte (the slave address) is transmitted by the master. The slave then returns an acknowledge bit, followed by the slave transmitting a number of data bytes. The master returns an acknowledge bit after all received bytes other than the last byte. At the end of the last received byte, a "not acknowledge" is returned. The master device generates all of the serial clock pulses and the START and STOP conditions. A transfer is ended with a STOP condition or with a repeated START condition. Since a repeated START condition is also the beginning of the next serial transfer, the bus is not released. Data is transferred with the most significant bit (MSB) first. 2) Slave Transmitter Mode (Read Mode): The first byte is received and handled as in the slave receiver mode. However, in this mode, the direction bit indicates that the transfer direction is reversed. Serial data is transmitted on SDA by the IDT1337 while the serial clock is input on SCL. START and STOP conditions are recognized as the beginning and end of a serial transfer (see the "Data Read-Slave Transmitter Mode" figure). The slave address byte is the first byte received after the START condition is generated by the master. The slave address byte contains the 7-bit IDT1337 address, which is 1101000, followed by the direction bit (R/W), which is 1 for a read. After receiving and decoding the slave address byte the slave outputs an acknowledge on the SDA line. The IDT1337 then begins to transmit data starting with the register address pointed to by the register pointer. If the register pointer is not written to The IDT1337 can operate in the following two modes: 1) Slave Receiver Mode (Write Mode): Serial data and clock are received through SDA and SCL. After each byte is received an acknowledge bit is transmitted. START and STOP conditions are recognized as the beginning and end of a serial transfer. Address recognition is performed by hardware after reception of the slave address and direction IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 10 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC before the initiation of a read mode the first address that is read is the last one stored in the register pointer. The IDT1337 must receive a "not acknowledge" to end a read. Data Write - Slave Receiver Mode Data Read (from current Pointer location) - Slave Transmitter Mode Data Read (Write Pointer, then Read) - Slave Receive and Transmit IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 11 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Absolute Maximum Ratings Stresses above the ratings listed below can cause permanent damage to the IDT1337. These ratings, which are standard values for IDT commercially rated parts, are stress ratings only. Functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions above those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods can affect product reliability. Electrical parameters are guaranteed only over the recommended operating temperature range. Item Rating Voltage Range (on any pin relative to ground) -0.3 V to +6.0 V Storage Temperature -55 to +125 C Soldering Temperature 260 C Ambient Operating Temperature -40 to +85C Recommended DC Operating Conditions Parameter Symbol Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Units VCC Full operation 1.8 3.3 5.5 V VCCT Timekeeping 1.3 1.8 V -40 +85 C 0.7VCC VCC + 0.3 V VCC Supply Voltage Ambient Operating Temperature TA Logic 1 VIH SCL, SDA INTA, SQW/INTB Logic 0 VIL 5.5 -0.3 +0.3VCC V DC Electrical Characteristics Unless stated otherwise, VCC = 1.8 V to 5.5 V, Ambient Temperature -40 to +85 C, Note 1 Parameter Symbol Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Units Input Leakage ILI Note 2 -1 +1 A I/O Leakage ILO Note 3 -1 +1 A Logic 0 Output VOL = 0.4 V IOL Note 3 3 mA Active Supply Current ICCA Note 4 150 A Standby Current ICCS Notes 5, 6 1.5 A IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 12 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC DC Electrical Characteristics Unless stated otherwise, VCC = 1.3 V to 1.8 V, Ambient Temperature -40 to +85 C, Note 1 Parameter Symbol Conditions Timekeeper Current (Oscillator Enabled) ICCTOSC Notes 5, 7, 8, 9 Data-Retention Current (Oscillator Disabled) ICCTDDR Notes 5, 9 Min. Typ. Max. Units 425 600 nA 100 nA AC Electrical Characteristics Unless stated otherwise, VCC = 1.8 V to 5.5 V, Ambient Temperature -40 to +85 C, Note 1 Parameter SCL Clock Frequency Symbol fSCL Conditions Fast Mode Standard Mode Bus Free Time Between a STOP and START Condition Hold Time (Repeated) START Condition, Note 10 Low Period of SCL Clock High Period of SCL Clock tBUF tHD:STA tLOW tHIGH Setup Time for a Repeated START Condition tSU:STA Data Hold Time, Notes 11, 12 tHD:DAT Data Setup Time, Note 13 tSU:DAT Rise Time of Both SDA and SCL Signals, Note 14 tR Fall Time of Both SDA and SCL Signals, Note 14 tF Setup Time for STOP Condition tSU:STO Capacitive Load for Each Bus Line, Note 14 CB I/O Capacitance (SDA, SCL) CI/O 32.768 kHz Clock Accuracy with External Crystal IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE Min. Typ. Max. Units 100 400 0 100 Fast Mode 1.3 Standard Mode 4.7 Fast Mode 0.6 Standard Mode 4.0 Fast Mode 1.3 Standard Mode 4.7 Fast Mode 0.6 Standard Mode 4.0 Fast Mode 0.6 Standard Mode 4.7 Fast Mode 0 Standard Mode 0 Fast Mode 100 Standard Mode 250 kHz s s s s s 0.9 s ns Fast Mode 20 + 0.1CB 300 Standard Mode 20 + 0.1CB 1000 Fast Mode 20 + 0.1CB 300 Standard Mode 20 + 0.1CB 300 Fast Mode 0.6 Standard Mode 4.0 ns ns s 400 pF Note 15 10 pF TA=25C VCC=3.3 V 10 ppm 13 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE Parameter RTC Symbol 32.768 kHz Clock Accuracy with Internal Crystal Conditions Min. Typ. TA=25C VCC=3.3 V (crystal accuracy 20ppm) Max. Units 30 ppm Note 1: Limits at -40C are guaranteed by design and are not production tested. Note 2: SCL only. Note 3: SDA, INTA, and SQW/INTB. Note 4: ICCA--SCL clocking at maximum frequency = 400 kHz, VIL = 0.0V, VIH = VCC. Note 5: Specified with the I2C bus inactive, VIL = 0.0V, VIH = VCC. Note 6: SQW enabled. Note 7: Specified with the SQW function disabled by setting INTCN = 1. Note 8: Using recommended crystal on X1 and X2. Note 9: The device is fully accessible when 1.8 < VCC < 5.5 V. Time and date are maintained when 1.3 V < VCC < 1.8 V. Note 10: After this period, the first clock pulse is generated. Note 11: A device must internally provide a hold time of at least 300 ns for the SDA signal (referred to the VIHMIN of the SCL signal) to bridge the undefined region of the falling edge of SCL. Note 12: The maximum tHD:DAT need only be met if the device does not stretch the LOW period (tLOW) of the SCL signal. Note 13: A fast-mode device can be used in a standard-mode system, but the requirement tSU:DAT > to 250 ns must then be met. This is automatically the case if the device does not stretch the LOW period of the SCL signal. If such a device does stretch the LOW period of the SCL signal, it must output the next data bit to the SDA line tR(MAX) + tSU:DAT = 1000 + 250 = 1250 ns before the SCL line is released. Note 14: CB--total capacitance of one bus line in pF. Note 15: Guaranteed by design. Not production tested. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 14 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Timing Diagram IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 15 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Typical Operating Characteristics Icc vs Vcc IccA vs Vcc 900 10 800 8 600 Icc (uA) Icc (nA) 700 INTCN=1 INTCN=0 500 6 ICCA 4 400 2 300 200 0 1.3 2.3 3.3 4.3 5.3 1.3 2.3 3.3 Vcc (V) 5.3 Oscillator Frequency vs Vcc (as measured on one IDT1337C sample) Icc vs Temperature 32768.4 800 700 Frequency (Hz) 32768.38 600 Icc (nA) 4.3 Vcc (V) INTCN=1 500 INTCN=0 400 32768.36 32768.34 Freq 32768.32 300 32768.3 200 -40 -20 0 20 40 60 1.3 80 IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 2.3 3.3 4.3 5.3 Vcc(V) Temperature (C) 16 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Thermal Characteristics for 8SOIC Parameter Symbol Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Units Thermal Resistance Junction to Ambient JA Still air 150 C/W JA 1 m/s air flow 140 C/W JA 3 m/s air flow 120 C/W Thermal Resistance Junction to Case JC 40 C/W Thermal Characteristics for 8MSOP Parameter Symbol Thermal Resistance Junction to Ambient JA Thermal Resistance Junction to Case JC Conditions Min. Still air Typ. Max. Units 95 C/W 48 C/W Thermal Characteristics for 16SOIC Parameter Thermal Resistance Junction to Ambient Thermal Resistance Junction to Case IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE Symbol Conditions Min. Typ. Max. Units JA Still air 120 C/W JA 1 m/s air flow 115 C/W JA 3 m/s air flow 105 C/W 58 C/W JC 17 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Marking Diagram (8 SOIC) Marking Diagram (8 MSOP) 8 37GI YWW$ 5 IDT1337 DCGI #YYWW$ Marking Diagram (16 SOIC) 16 1 9 4 IDT 1337CSRI #YYWW**$ 1 8 Notes: 1. # = product stepping. 2. $ = assembler code. 3. ** = sequential code number for traceability. 4. YYWW is the last two digits of the year and week that the part was assembled. 5. "G" denotes RoHS compliant package. 6. "I" denotes industrial grade. 7. Bottom marking: country of origin if not USA. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 18 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Package Outline and Package Dimensions (8-pin SOIC, 150 Mil. Body) Package dimensions are kept current with JEDEC Publication No. 95 Millimeters 8 Symbol E Min A A1 B C D E e H h L H INDEX AREA 1 2 D A Inches Max Min 1.35 1.75 0.10 0.25 0.33 0.51 0.19 0.25 4.80 5.00 3.80 4.00 1.27 BASIC 5.80 6.20 0.25 0.50 0.40 1.27 0 8 Max .0532 .0688 .0040 .0098 .013 .020 .0075 .0098 .1890 .1968 .1497 .1574 0.050 BASIC .2284 .2440 .010 .020 .016 .050 0 8 h x 45 A1 C -Ce B SEATING PLANE L .10 (.004) IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE C 19 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Package Outline and Package Dimensions (8-pin MSOP, 3.00 mm Body) Package dimensions are kept current with JEDEC Publication No. 95 Millimeters 8 Symbol E1 A A1 A2 b C D E E1 e L aaa E IN D E X AREA 1 2 D Min Max -1.10 0 0.15 0.79 0.97 0.22 0.38 0.08 0.23 3.00 BASIC 4.90 BASIC 3.00 BASIC 0.65 Basic 0.40 0.80 0 8 0.10 Inches* Min Max -0.043 0 0.006 0.031 0.038 0.008 0.015 0.003 0.009 0.118 BASIC 0.193 BASIC 0.118 BASIC 0.0256 Basic 0.016 0.032 0 8 0.004 *For reference only. Controlling dimensions in mm. A 2 A A 1 c -C e b S E A T IN G P LA N E L aaa IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE C 20 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REA LTIME CLOCK WITH SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Package Outline and Package Dimensions (16-pin SOIC, 300 mil Body) Package dimensions are kept current with JEDEC Publication No. 95 Millimeters 16 Symbol E1 A A1 A2 b c D E E1 e L aaa E INDEX AREA 1 2 D A 2 Min Inches* Max -2.65 0.10 -2.05 2.55 0.33 0.51 0.18 0.32 10.10 10.50 10.00 10.65 7.40 7.60 1.27 Basic 0.40 1.27 0 8 0.10 Min Max -0.104 0.0040 -0.081 0.100 0.013 0.020 0.007 0.013 0.397 0.413 0.394 0.419 0.291 0.299 0.050 Basic 0.016 0.050 0 8 0.004 *For reference only. Controlling dimensions in mm. A A 1 c - Ce b SEATING PLANE L aaa C Ordering Information Part / Order Number Marking Shipping Packaging Package 1337DVGI 1337DVGI8 1337CSRI 1337CSRI8 1337DCGI 1337DCGI8 see page 18 Tubes Tape and Reel Tubes Tape and Reel Tubes Tape and Reel 8-pin MSOP 8-pin MSOP 16-pin SOIC 16-pin SOIC 8-pin SOIC 8-pin SOIC Temperature -40 to +85 -40 to +85 -40 to +85 -40 to +85 -40 to +85 -40 to +85 C C C C C C The 1337C packages are RoHS compliant. Packages without the integrated crystal are Pb-free; packages that include the integrated crystal (as designated with a "C" before the two-letter package code) may include lead that is exempt under RoHS requirements. The lead finish is JESD91 category e3. While the information presented herein has been checked for both accuracy and reliability, Integrated Device Technology (IDT) assumes no responsibility for either its use or for the infringement of any patents or other rights of third parties, which would result from its use. No other circuits, patents, or licenses are implied. This product is intended for use in normal commercial applications. Any other applications such as those requiring extended temperature range, high reliability, or other extraordinary environmental requirements are not recommended without additional processing by IDT. IDT reserves the right to change any circuitry or specifications without notice. IDT does not authorize or warrant any IDT product for use in life support devices or critical medical instruments. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 21 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Revision History Rev. Originator Date Description of Change A S. Sharma 06/26/07 New device. Preliminary release. B J. Sarma 10/31/07 Added 8-pin SOIC package and ordering info. C J. Sarma 01/16/08 Updates to Pin Descriptions, load capacitance, Timekeeper Registers table, and Recommended DC Operating Conditions table. D J. Sarma 03/03/08 Added top-side device markings. E J. Sarma 03/18/08 Revised top-side markings. F J. Sarma 03/28/08 Added new note to Part Ordering information pertaining to RoHS compliance and Pb-free devices. G J. Sarma 05/19/08 Changed the part number for the RoHS compliant 16pin SOIC package with Xtals for IDT1337CSOGI to IDT1337CSRI H J. Sarma 12/02/08 Updated Block diagram, Pin descriptions, Typical Operating Circuit diagram, Detailed Description section, Typical Operating Characteristics graphs. IDTTM REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE 22 IDT1337 REV H 120208 IDT1337 REAL-TIME CLOCK WITH I2C SERIAL INTERFACE RTC Innovate with IDT and accelerate your future networks. Contact: www.IDT.com For Sales For Tech Support 800-345-7015 408-284-8200 Fax: 408-284-2775 www.idt.com/go/clockhelp Corporate Headquarters Integrated Device Technology, Inc. www.idt.com (c) 2006 Integrated Device Technology, Inc. All rights reserved. Product specifications subject to change without notice. IDT and the IDT logo are trademarks of Integrated Device Technology, Inc. Accelerated Thinking is a service mark of Integrated Device Technology, Inc. All other brands, product names and marks are or may be trademarks or registered trademarks used to identify products or services of their respective owners. Printed in USA