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FEATURES
§ Unique 1-Wire® interface requires only one
port pin for communication
§ Each device has a unique 64-bit serial code
stored in an onboard ROM
§ Multidrop capability simplifies distributed
temperature sensing applications
§ Requires no external components
§ Can be powered from data line. Power supply
range is 3.0V to 5.5V
§ Measures temperatures from –55°C to
+125°C (–67°F to +257°F)
§ ±0.5°C accuracy from –10°C to +85°C
§ Thermometer resolution is user-selectable
from 9 to 12 bits
§ Converts temperature to 12-bit digital word in
750ms (max.)
§ User-definable nonvolatile (NV) alarm
settings
§ Alarm search command identifies and
addresses devices whose temperature is
outside of programmed limits (temperature
alarm condition)
§ Available in 8-pin SO (150mil), 8-pin mSOP,
and 3-pin TO-92 packages
§ Software compatible with the DS1822
§ Applications include thermostatic controls,
industrial systems, consumer products,
thermometers, or any thermally sensitive
system
PIN ASSIGNMENT
PIN DESCRIPTION
GND - Ground
DQ - Data In/Out
VDD - Power Supply Voltage
NC - No Connect
DESCRIPTION
The DS18B20 Digital Thermometer provides 9 to 12–bit centigrade temperature measurements and has
an alarm function with nonvolatile user-programmable upper and lower trigger points. The DS18B20
communicates over a 1-Wire bus that by definition requires only one data line (and ground) for
communication with a central microprocessor. It has an operating temperature range of –55°C to +125°C
and is accurate to ±0.5°C over the range of –10°C to +85°C. In addition, the DS18B20 can derive power
directly from the data line (“parasite power”), eliminating the need for an external power supply.
Each DS18B20 has a unique 64-bit serial code, which allows multiple DS18B20s to function on the same
1–wire bus; thus, it is simple to use one microprocessor to control many DS18B20s distributed over a
large area. Applications that can benefit from this feature include HVAC environmental controls,
temperature monitoring systems inside buildings, equipment or machinery, and process monitoring and
control systems.
DS18B20
Programmable Resolution
1-Wire Digital Thermometer
www.
maxim
-
ic
.com
8-Pin 150mil SO
(DS18B20Z)
TO-92
(
DS18B20
)
1
(
BOTTOM VIEW
)
23
DALLAS
18B20
1
GND
DQ
VDD
23
N
C
NC
NC
NC
GND
DQ
VDD
N
C
6
8
7
5
3
1
2
4
DALLAS
18B20
N
C
VDD
NC
NC
NC
GND
NC
D
Q
6
8
7
5
3
1
2
4
18B20
8-Pin
SOP
(
DS18B20U
)
1-Wire is a registered trademark of Dallas Semiconductor.
DS18B20
2 of 20
DETAILED PIN DESCRIPTIONS Table 1
SO* mSOP* TO-92 SYMBOL DESCRIPTION
5 4 1 GND Ground.
412DQData Input/Output pin. Open-drain 1-Wire interface pin.
Also provides power to the device when used in parasite
power mode (see “Parasite Power” section.)
383V
DD Optional VDD pin. VDD must be grounded for operation in
parasite power mode.
*All pins not specified in this table are “No Connect” pins.
OVERVIEW
Figure 1 shows a block diagram of the DS18B20, and pin descriptions are given in Table 1. The 64-bit
ROM stores the device’s unique serial code. The scratchpad memory contains the 2-byte temperature
register that stores the digital output from the temperature sensor. In addition, the scratchpad provides
access to the 1-byte upper and lower alarm trigger registers (TH and TL), and the 1-byte configuration
register. The configuration register allows the user to set the resolution of the temperature-to-digital
conversion to 9, 10, 11, or 12 bits. The TH, TL and configuration registers are nonvolatile (EEPROM), so
they will retain data when the device is powered down.
The DS18B20 uses Dallas’ exclusive 1-Wire bus protocol that implements bus communication using one
control signal. The control line requires a weak pullup resistor since all devices are linked to the bus via a
3-state or open-drain port (the DQ pin in the case of the DS18B20). In this bus system, the
microprocessor (the master device) identifies and addresses devices on the bus using each device’s unique
64-bit code. Because each device has a unique code, the number of devices that can be addressed on one
bus is virtually unlimited. The 1-Wire bus protocol, including detailed explanations of the commands and
“time slots,” is covered in the 1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM section of this datasheet.
Another feature of the DS18B20 is the ability to operate without an external power supply. Power is
instead supplied through the 1-Wire pullup resistor via the DQ pin when the bus is high. The high bus
signal also charges an internal capacitor (CPP), which then supplies power to the device when the bus is
low. This method of deriving power from the 1-Wire bus is referred to as “parasite power.” As an
alternative, the DS18B20 may also be powered by an external supply on VDD.
DS18B20 BLOCK DIAGRAM Figure 1
VPU
4.7k
POWER
SUPPLY
SENSE
64-BIT ROM
AND
1-wire PORT
D
Q
V
DD
INTERNAL VDD
CPP
PARASITE POWER
CIRCUIT MEMORY CONTROL
LOGIC
SCRATCHPAD
8-BIT CRC GENERATOR
TEMPERATURE SENSOR
ALARM HIGH TRIGGER (TH)
REGISTER (EEPROM)
ALARM LOW TRIGGER (TL)
REGISTER (EEPROM)
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
(EEPROM)
GND
DS18B20
DS18B20
3 of 20
OPERATION — MEASURING TEMPERATURE
The core functionality of the DS18B20 is its direct-to-digital temperature sensor. The resolution of the
temperature sensor is user-configurable to 9, 10, 11, or 12 bits, corresponding to increments of 0.5°C,
0.25°C, 0.125°C, and 0.0625°C, respectively. The default resolution at power-up is 12-bit. The DS18B20
powers-up in a low-power idle state; to initiate a temperature measurement and A-to-D conversion, the
master must issue a Convert T [44h] command. Following the conversion, the resulting thermal data is
stored in the 2-byte temperature register in the scratchpad memory and the DS18B20 returns to its idle
state. If the DS18B20 is powered by an external supply, the master can issue “read time slots” (see the 1-
WIRE BUS SYSTEM section) after the Convert T command and the DS18B20 will respond by
transmitting 0 while the temperature conversion is in progress and 1 when the conversion is done. If the
DS18B20 is powered with parasite power, this notification technique cannot be used since the bus must
be pulled high by a strong pullup during the entire temperature conversion. The bus requirements for
parasite power are explained in detail in the POWERING THE DS18B20 section of this datasheet.
The DS18B20 output temperature data is calibrated in degrees centigrade; for Fahrenheit applications, a
lookup table or conversion routine must be used. The temperature data is stored as a 16-bit sign-extended
two’s complement number in the temperature register (see Figure 2). The sign bits (S) indicate if the
temperature is positive or negative: for positive numbers S = 0 and for negative numbers S = 1. If the
DS18B20 is configured for 12-bit resolution, all bits in the temperature register will contain valid data.
For 11-bit resolution, bit 0 is undefined. For 10-bit resolution, bits 1 and 0 are undefined, and for 9-bit
resolution bits 2, 1 and 0 are undefined. Table 2 gives examples of digital output data and the
corresponding temperature reading for 12-bit resolution conversions.
TEMPERATURE REGISTER FORMAT Figure 2
bit 7 bit 6 bit 5 bit 4 bit 3 bit 2 bit 1 bit 0
LS Byte 232221202-1 2-2 2-3 2-4
bit 15 bit 14 bit 13 bit 12 bit 11 bit 10 bit 9 bit 8
MS Byte SSSSS2
62524
TEMPERATURE/DATA RELATIONSHIP Table 2
TEMPERATURE DIGITAL OUTPUT
(Binary)
DIGITAL OUTPUT
(Hex)
+125°C 0000 0111 1101 0000 07D0h
+85°C* 0000 0101 0101 0000 0550h
+25.0625°C 0000 0001 1001 0001 0191h
+10.125°C 0000 0000 1010 0010 00A2h
+0.5°C 0000 0000 0000 1000 0008h
0°C 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000h
-0.5°C 1111 1111 1111 1000 FFF8h
-10.125°C 1111 1111 0101 1110 FF5Eh
-25.0625°C 1111 1110 0110 1111 FE6Fh
-55°C 1111 1100 1001 0000 FC90h
*The power-on reset value of the temperature register is +85°C
DS18B20
4 of 20
OPERATION ALARM SIGNALING
After the DS18B20 performs a temperature conversion, the temperature value is compared to the user-
defined two’s complement alarm trigger values stored in the 1-byte TH and TL registers (see Figure 3).
The sign bit (S) indicates if the value is positive or negative: for positive numbers S = 0 and for negative
numbers S = 1. The TH and TL registers are nonvolatile (EEPROM) so they will retain data when the
device is powered down. TH and TL can be accessed through bytes 2 and 3 of the scratchpad as explained
in the MEMORY section of this datasheet.
TH AND TL REGISTER FORMAT Figure 3
bit 7 bit 6 bit 5 bit 4 bit 3 bit 2 bit 1 bit 0
S2
6252525222120
Only bits 11 through 4 of the temperature register are used in the TH and TL comparison since TH and TL
are 8-bit registers. If the measured temperature is lower than or equal to TL or higher than TH, an alarm
condition exists and an alarm flag is set inside the DS18B20. This flag is updated after every temperature
measurement; therefore, if the alarm condition goes away, the flag will be turned off after the next
temperature conversion.
The master device can check the alarm flag status of all DS18B20s on the bus by issuing an Alarm Search
[ECh] command. Any DS18B20s with a set alarm flag will respond to the command, so the master can
determine exactly which DS18B20s have experienced an alarm condition. If an alarm condition exists
and the TH or TL settings have changed, another temperature conversion should be done to validate the
alarm condition.
POWERING THE DS18B20
The DS18B20 can be powered by an external supply on the VDD pin, or it can operate in “parasite power”
mode, which allows the DS18B20 to function without a local external supply. Parasite power is very
useful for applications that require remote temperature sensing or that are very space constrained. Figure
1 shows the DS18B20’s parasite-power control circuitry, which “steals” power from the 1-Wire bus via
the DQ pin when the bus is high. The stolen charge powers the DS18B20 while the bus is high, and some
of the charge is stored on the parasite power capacitor (CPP) to provide power when the bus is low. When
the DS18B20 is used in parasite power mode, the VDD pin must be connected to ground.
In parasite power mode, the 1-Wire bus and CPP can provide sufficient current to the DS18B20 for most
operations as long as the specified timing and voltage requirements are met (refer to the DC
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS and the AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS sections of this data
sheet). However, when the DS18B20 is performing temperature conversions or copying data from the
scratchpad memory to EEPROM, the operating current can be as high as 1.5mA. This current can cause
an unacceptable voltage drop across the weak 1-Wire pullup resistor and is more current than can be
supplied by CPP. To assure that the DS18B20 has sufficient supply current, it is necessary to provide a
strong pullup on the 1-Wire bus whenever temperature conversions are taking place or data is being
copied from the scratchpad to EEPROM. This can be accomplished by using a MOSFET to pull the bus
directly to the rail as shown in Figure 4. The 1-Wire bus must be switched to the strong pullup within
10ms (max) after a Convert T [44h] or Copy Scratchpad [48h] command is issued, and the bus must be
held high by the pullup for the duration of the conversion (tconv) or data transfer (twr = 10ms). No other
activity can take place on the 1-Wire bus while the pullup is enabled.
The DS18B20 can also be powered by the conventional method of connecting an external power supply
to the VDD pin, as shown in Figure 5. The advantage of this method is that the MOSFET pullup is not
required, and the 1-Wire bus is free to carry other traffic during the temperature conversion time.
DS18B20
5 of 20
The use of parasite power is not recommended for temperatures above +100°C since the DS18B20 may
not be able to sustain communications due to the higher leakage currents that can exist at these
temperatures. For applications in which such temperatures are likely, it is strongly recommended that the
DS18B20 be powered by an external power supply.
In some situations the bus master may not know whether the DS18B20s on the bus are parasite powered
or powered by external supplies. The master needs this information to determine if the strong bus pullup
should be used during temperature conversions. To get this information, the master can issue a Skip ROM
[CCh] command followed by a Read Power Supply [B4h] command followed by a “read time slot”.
During the read time slot, parasite powered DS18B20s will pull the bus low, and externally powered
DS18B20s will let the bus remain high. If the bus is pulled low, the master knows that it must supply the
strong pullup on the 1-Wire bus during temperature conversions.
SUPPLYING THE PARASITE-POWERED DS18B20 DURING TEMPERATURE
CONVERSIONS Figure 4
POWERING THE DS18B20 WITH AN EXTERNAL SUPPLY Figure 5
64-BIT LASERED ROM CODE
Each DS18B20 contains a unique 64–bit code (see Figure 6) stored in ROM. The least significant 8 bits
of the ROM code contain the DS18B20’s 1-Wire family code: 28h. The next 48 bits contain a unique
serial number. The most significant 8 bits contain a cyclic redundancy check (CRC) byte that is
calculated from the first 56 bits of the ROM code. A detailed explanation of the CRC bits is provided in
the CRC GENERATION section. The 64-bit ROM code and associated ROM function control logic allow
the DS18B20 to operate as a 1-Wire device using the protocol detailed in the 1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM
section of this datasheet.
64-BIT LASERED ROM CODE Figure 6
8-BIT CRC 48-BIT SERIAL NUMBER 8-BIT FAMILY CODE (28h)
MSB MSBLSB LSB LSBMSB
VDD (External Supply)
DS18B20
GND VDD
DQ
VPU
4.7k
To Other
1-Wire Devices
1-Wire Bus
Micro-
processor
VPU
VPU
4.7k
1-Wire Bus
Micro-
processor
DS18B20
GND VDD
DQ
To Other
1-Wire Devices
DS18B20
6 of 20
MEMORY
The DS18B20’s memory is organized as shown in Figure 7. The memory consists of an SRAM
scratchpad with nonvolatile EEPROM storage for the high and low alarm trigger registers (TH and TL)
and configuration register. Note that if the DS18B20 alarm function is not used, the TH and TL registers
can serve as general-purpose memory. All memory commands are described in detail in the DS18B20
FUNCTION COMMANDS section.
Byte 0 and byte 1 of the scratchpad contain the LSB and the MSB of the temperature register,
respectively. These bytes are read-only. Bytes 2 and 3 provide access to TH and TL registers. Byte 4
contains the configuration register data, which is explained in detail in the CONFIGURATION
REGISTER section of this datasheet. Bytes 5, 6, and 7 are reserved for internal use by the device and
cannot be overwritten; these bytes will return all 1s when read.
Byte 8 of the scratchpad is read-only and contains the cyclic redundancy check (CRC) code for bytes 0
through 7 of the scratchpad. The DS18B20 generates this CRC using the method described in the CRC
GENERATION section.
Data is written to bytes 2, 3, and 4 of the scratchpad using the Write Scratchpad [4Eh] command; the data
must be transmitted to the DS18B20 starting with the least significant bit of byte 2. To verify data
integrity, the scratchpad can be read (using the Read Scratchpad [BEh] command) after the data is
written. When reading the scratchpad, data is transferred over the 1-Wire bus starting with the least
significant bit of byte 0. To transfer the TH, TL and configuration data from the scratchpad to EEPROM,
the master must issue the Copy Scratchpad [48h] command.
Data in the EEPROM registers is retained when the device is powered down; at power-up the EEPROM
data is reloaded into the corresponding scratchpad locations. Data can also be reloaded from EEPROM to
the scratchpad at any time using the Recall E2 [B8h] command. The master can issue read time slots
following the Recall E2 command and the DS18B20 will indicate the status of the recall by transmitting 0
while the recall is in progress and 1 when the recall is done.
DS18B20 MEMORY MAP Figure 7
SCRATCHPAD (Power-up State)
byte 0 Temperature LSB (50h)
byte 1 Temperature MSB (05h) EEPROM
byte 2 TH Register or User Byte 1* TH Register or User Byte 1
byte 3 TL Register or User Byte 2* TL Register or User Byte 2
byte 4 Configuration Register* Configuration Register
byte 5 Reserved (FFh)
byte 6 Reserved (0Ch)
byte 7 Reserved (10h)
byte 8 CRC*
*Power-up state depends on value(s) stored
in EEPROM
(85°C)
DS18B20
7 of 20
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
Byte 4 of the scratchpad memory contains the configuration register, which is organized as illustrated in
Figure 8. The user can set the conversion resolution of the DS18B20 using the R0 and R1 bits in this
register as shown in Table 3. The power-up default of these bits is R0 = 1 and R1 = 1 (12-bit resolution).
Note that there is a direct tradeoff between resolution and conversion time. Bit 7 and bits 0 to 4 in the
configuration register are reserved for internal use by the device and cannot be overwritten; these bits will
return 1s when read.
CONFIGURATION REGISTER Figure 8
bit 7 bit 6 bit 5 bit 4 bit 3 bit 2 bit 1 bit 0
0R1R011111
THERMOMETER RESOLUTION CONFIGURATION Table 3
R1 R0 Resolution Max Conversion Time
0 0 9-bit 93.75 ms (tCONV/8)
0 1 10-bit 187.5 ms (tCONV/4)
1 0 11-bit 375 ms (tCONV/2)
1 1 12-bit 750 ms (tCONV)
CRC GENERATION
CRC bytes are provided as part of the DS18B20’s 64-bit ROM code and in the 9th byte of the scratchpad
memory. The ROM code CRC is calculated from the first 56 bits of the ROM code and is contained in the
most significant byte of the ROM. The scratchpad CRC is calculated from the data stored in the
scratchpad, and therefore it changes when the data in the scratchpad changes. The CRCs provide the bus
master with a method of data validation when data is read from the DS18B20. To verify that data has
been read correctly, the bus master must re-calculate the CRC from the received data and then compare
this value to either the ROM code CRC (for ROM reads) or to the scratchpad CRC (for scratchpad reads).
If the calculated CRC matches the read CRC, the data has been received error free. The comparison of
CRC values and the decision to continue with an operation are determined entirely by the bus master.
There is no circuitry inside the DS18B20 that prevents a command sequence from proceeding if the
DS18B20 CRC (ROM or scratchpad) does not match the value generated by the bus master.
The equivalent polynomial function of the CRC (ROM or scratchpad) is:
CRC = X8 + X5 + X4 + 1
The bus master can re-calculate the CRC and compare it to the CRC values from the DS18B20 using the
polynomial generator shown in Figure 9. This circuit consists of a shift register and XOR gates, and the
shift register bits are initialized to 0. Starting with the least significant bit of the ROM code or the least
significant bit of byte 0 in the scratchpad, one bit at a time should shifted into the shift register. After
shifting in the 56th bit from the ROM or the most significant bit of byte 7 from the scratchpad, the
polynomial generator will contain the re-calculated CRC. Next, the 8-bit ROM code or scratchpad CRC
from the DS18B20 must be shifted into the circuit. At this point, if the re-calculated CRC was correct, the
shift register will contain all 0s. Additional information about the Dallas 1-Wire cyclic redundancy check
DS18B20
8 of 20
is available in Application Note 27: Understanding and Using Cyclic Redundancy Checks with Dallas
Semiconductor Touch Memory Products.
CRC GENERATOR Figure 9
1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM
The 1-Wire bus system uses a single bus master to control one or more slave devices. The DS18B20 is
always a slave. When there is only one slave on the bus, the system is referred to as a “single-drop”
system; the system is “multidrop” if there are multiple slaves on the bus.
All data and commands are transmitted least significant bit first over the 1-Wire bus.
The following discussion of the 1-Wire bus system is broken down into three topics: hardware
configuration, transaction sequence, and 1-Wire signaling (signal types and timing).
HARDWARE CONFIGURATION
The 1-Wire bus has by definition only a single data line. Each device (master or slave) interfaces to the
data line via an open-drain or 3-state port. This allows each device to “release” the data line when the
device is not transmitting data so the bus is available for use by another device. The 1-Wire port of the
DS18B20 (the DQ pin) is open drain with an internal circuit equivalent to that shown in Figure 10.
The 1-Wire bus requires an external pullup resistor of approximately 5kW; thus, the idle state for the 1-
Wire bus is high. If for any reason a transaction needs to be suspended, the bus MUST be left in the idle
state if the transaction is to resume. Infinite recovery time can occur between bits so long as the 1-Wire
bus is in the inactive (high) state during the recovery period. If the bus is held low for more than 480ms,
all components on the bus will be reset.
HARDWARE CONFIGURATION Figure 10
(MSB) (LSB)
XOR XOR XOR
INPUT
VPU
4.7k
5µA
Typ.
RX
TX
DS18B20 1-WIRE PORT
100W
M
OS
FET
TX
RX
RX = RECEIVE
TX = TRANSMIT
1-Wire Bus
DQ
Pin
DS18B20
9 of 20
TRANSACTION SEQUENCE
The transaction sequence for accessing the DS18B20 is as follows:
Step 1. Initialization
Step 2. ROM Command (followed by any required data exchange)
Step 3. DS18B20 Function Command (followed by any required data exchange)
It is very important to follow this sequence every time the DS18B20 is accessed, as the DS18B20 will not
respond if any steps in the sequence are missing or out of order. Exceptions to this rule are the Search
ROM [F0h] and Alarm Search [ECh] commands. After issuing either of these ROM commands, the
master must return to Step 1 in the sequence.
INITIALIZATION
All transactions on the 1-Wire bus begin with an initialization sequence. The initialization sequence
consists of a reset pulse transmitted by the bus master followed by presence pulse(s) transmitted by the
slave(s). The presence pulse lets the bus master know that slave devices (such as the DS18B20) are on the
bus and are ready to operate. Timing for the reset and presence pulses is detailed in the
1-WIRE SIGNALING section.
ROM COMMANDS
After the bus master has detected a presence pulse, it can issue a ROM command. These commands
operate on the unique 64-bit ROM codes of each slave device and allow the master to single out a specific
device if many are present on the 1-Wire bus. These commands also allow the master to determine how
many and what types of devices are present on the bus or if any device has experienced an alarm
condition. There are five ROM commands, and each command is 8 bits long. The master device must
issue an appropriate ROM command before issuing a DS18B20 function command. A flowchart for
operation of the ROM commands is shown in Figure 11.
SEARCH ROM [F0h]
When a system is initially powered up, the master must identify the ROM codes of all slave devices on
the bus, which allows the master to determine the number of slaves and their device types. The master
learns the ROM codes through a process of elimination that requires the master to perform a Search ROM
cycle (i.e., Search ROM command followed by data exchange) as many times as necessary to identify all
of the slave devices. If there is only one slave on the bus, the simpler Read ROM command (see below)
can be used in place of the Search ROM process. For a detailed explanation of the Search ROM
procedure, refer to the iButton® Book of Standards at www.ibutton.com/ibuttons/standard.pdf. After
every Search ROM cycle, the bus master must return to Step 1 (Initialization) in the transaction sequence.
READ ROM [33h]
This command can only be used when there is one slave on the bus. It allows the bus master to read the
slave’s 64-bit ROM code without using the Search ROM procedure. If this command is used when there
is more than one slave present on the bus, a data collision will occur when all the slaves attempt to
respond at the same time.
MATCH ROM [55h]
The match ROM command followed by a 64-bit ROM code sequence allows the bus master to address a
specific slave device on a multidrop or single-drop bus. Only the slave that exactly matches the 64-bit
ROM code sequence will respond to the function command issued by the master; all other slaves on the
bus will wait for a reset pulse.
iButton is a registered trademark of Dallas Semiconductor.
DS18B20
10 of 20
SKIP ROM [CCh]
The master can use this command to address all devices on the bus simultaneously without sending out
any ROM code information. For example, the master can make all DS18B20s on the bus perform
simultaneous temperature conversions by issuing a Skip ROM command followed by a Convert T [44h]
command.
Note that the Read Scratchpad [BEh] command can follow the Skip ROM command only if there is a
single slave device on the bus. In this case time is saved by allowing the master to read from the slave
without sending the device’s 64-bit ROM code. A Skip ROM command followed by a Read Scratchpad
command will cause a data collision on the bus if there is more than one slave since multiple devices will
attempt to transmit data simultaneously.
ALARM SEARCH [ECh]
The operation of this command is identical to the operation of the Search ROM command except that
only slaves with a set alarm flag will respond. This command allows the master device to determine if
any DS18B20s experienced an alarm condition during the most recent temperature conversion. After
every Alarm Search cycle (i.e., Alarm Search command followed by data exchange), the bus master must
return to Step 1 (Initialization) in the transaction sequence. Refer to the OPERATION — ALARM
SIGNALING section for an explanation of alarm flag operation.
DS18B20 FUNCTION COMMANDS
After the bus master has used a ROM command to address the DS18B20 with which it wishes to
communicate, the master can issue one of the DS18B20 function commands. These commands allow the
master to write to and read from the DS18B20’s scratchpad memory, initiate temperature conversions and
determine the power supply mode. The DS18B20 function commands, which are described below, are
summarized in Table 4 and illustrated by the flowchart in Figure 12.
CONVERT T [44h]
This command initiates a single temperature conversion. Following the conversion, the resulting thermal
data is stored in the 2-byte temperature register in the scratchpad memory and the DS18B20 returns to its
low-power idle state. If the device is being used in parasite power mode, within 10ms (max) after this
command is issued the master must enable a strong pullup on the 1-Wire bus for the duration of the
conversion (tconv) as described in the POWERING THE DS18B20 section. If the DS18B20 is powered by
an external supply, the master can issue read time slots after the Convert T command and the DS18B20
will respond by transmitting a 0 while the temperature conversion is in progress and a 1 when the
conversion is done. In parasite power mode this notification technique cannot be used since the bus is
pulled high by the strong pullup during the conversion.
WRITE SCRATCHPAD [4Eh]
This command allows the master to write 3 bytes of data to the DS18B20’s scratchpad. The first data byte
is written into the TH register (byte 2 of the scratchpad), the second byte is written into the TL register
(byte 3), and the third byte is written into the configuration register (byte 4). Data must be transmitted
least significant bit first. All three bytes MUST be written before the master issues a reset, or the data
may be corrupted.
READ SCRATCHPAD [BEh]
This command allows the master to read the contents of the scratchpad. The data transfer starts with the
least significant bit of byte 0 and continues through the scratchpad until the 9th byte (byte 8 – CRC) is
read. The master may issue a reset to terminate reading at any time if only part of the scratchpad data is
needed.
DS18B20
11 of 20
COPY SCRATCHPAD [48h]
This command copies the contents of the scratchpad TH, TL and configuration registers (bytes 2, 3 and 4)
to EEPROM. If the device is being used in parasite power mode, within 10ms (max) after this command is
issued the master must enable a strong pullup on the 1-Wire bus for at least 10ms as described in the
POWERING THE DS18B20 section.
RECALL E2 [B8h]
This command recalls the alarm trigger values (TH and TL) and configuration data from EEPROM and
places the data in bytes 2, 3, and 4, respectively, in the scratchpad memory. The master device can issue
read time slots following the Recall E2 command and the DS18B20 will indicate the status of the recall by
transmitting 0 while the recall is in progress and 1 when the recall is done. The recall operation happens
automatically at power-up, so valid data is available in the scratchpad as soon as power is applied to the
device.
READ POWER SUPPLY [B4h]
The master device issues this command followed by a read time slot to determine if any DS18B20s on the
bus are using parasite power. During the read time slot, parasite powered DS18B20s will pull the bus
low, and externally powered DS18B20s will let the bus remain high. Refer to the POWERING THE
DS18B20 section for usage information for this command.
DS18B20 FUNCTION COMMAND SET Table 4
Command Description Protocol
1-Wire Bus Activity
After Command is Issued Notes
TEMPERATURE CONVERSION COMMANDS
Convert T Initiates temperature
conversion.
44h DS18B20 transmits conversion
status to master (not applicable
for parasite-powered
DS18B20s).
1
MEMORY COMMANDS
Read Scratchpad Reads the entire scratchpad
including the CRC byte.
BEh DS18B20 transmits up to 9 data
bytes to master.
2
Write Scratchpad Writes data into scratchpad
bytes 2, 3, and 4 (TH, TL,
and configuration registers).
4Eh Master transmits 3 data bytes to
DS18B20.
3
Copy Scratchpad Copies TH, TL, and
configuration register data
from the scratchpad to
EEPROM.
48h None 1
Recall E2Recalls TH, TL, and
configuration register data
from EEPROM to the
scratchpad.
B8h DS18B20 transmits recall status
to master.
Read Power
Supply
Signals DS18B20 power
supply mode to the master.
B4h DS18B20 transmits supply status
to master.
NOTES:
1) For parasite-powered DS18B20s, the master must enable a strong pullup on the 1-Wire bus during
temperature conversions and copies from the scratchpad to EEPROM. No other bus activity may take
place during this time.
2) The master can interrupt the transmission of data at any time by issuing a reset.
3) All three bytes must be written before a reset is issued.
DS18B20
12 of 20
ROM COMMANDS FLOW CHART Figure 11
CCh
SKIP ROM
COMMAND
MASTER TX
RESET PULSE
DS18B20 TX
PRESENCE
PULSE
MASTER TX ROM
COMMAND
33h
READ ROM
COMMAND
55h
MATCH ROM
COMMAND
F0h
SEARCH ROM
COMMAND
ECh
ALARM SEARCH
COMMAND
MASTER TX
BIT 0
DS18B20 T
X
BIT 0
DS18B20 T
X
BIT 0
MASTER TX BIT 0
BIT 0
MAT
C
H?
MASTER TX
BIT 1
BIT 1
MATCH?
BIT 63
MAT
C
H?
MASTER TX
BIT 63
N
YYYY
Y
NN
NN
N
N
N
Y
Y
Y
DS18B20 T
X
BIT 1
DS18B20 T
X
BIT 1
MASTER TX BIT 1
DS18B20 TX BIT 63
DS18B20 T
X
BIT 63
MASTER T
X
BIT 63
BIT 0
MAT
C
H?
BIT 1
MATCH?
BIT 63
MATCH?
N
N
N
Y
Y
Y
DS18B20 TX
FAMILY CODE
1 BYTE
DS18B20 TX
SERIAL NUMBER
6 BYTES
DS18B20 TX
CRC BYTE
DS18B20 T
X
BIT 0
DS18B20 T
X
BIT 0
MASTER TX BIT 0
N
Y
DEVICE(S)
WITH ALARM
FLAG SET?
Initialization
Sequence
MASTER TX
FUNCTION
COMMAND
(FIGURE 12)
DS18B20
13 of 20
DS18B20 FUNCTION COMMANDS FLOW CHART Figure 12
MASTER TX
FUNCTION
COMMAND
Y
N
44h
CONVERT
TEMPERATURE
?
PARASITE
POWER
?
NY
DS18B20 BEGINS
CONVERSION
DEVICE
CONVERTING
TEMPERATURE
?
N
Y
MASTER
RX “0s”
MASTER
RX “1s”
MASTER ENABLES
STRONG PULLUP ON DQ
DS18B20 CONVERTS
TEMPERATURE
MASTER DISABLES
STRONG PULLUP
Y
N
48h
COPY
SCRATCHPAD
?
PARASITE
POWER
?
NY
MASTER ENABLES
STRONG PULL-UP ON DQ
DATA COPIED FROM
SCRATCHPAD TO EEPROM
MASTER DISABLES
STRONG PULLUP
MASTER
R
X
“0s”
COPY IN
PROGRESS
?
Y
MASTER
RX “1s”
N
RETURN TO INITIALIZATION
SEQUENCE (FIGURE 11) FOR
NEXT TRANSACTION
B4h
READ
POWER SUPPLY
?
Y
N
PARASITE
POWERED
?
N
MASTER
RX “1s”
MASTER
RX “0s”
Y
MASTER TX TH BYTE
TO SCRATCHPAD
Y
N
4Eh
WRITE
SCRATCHPAD
?
MASTER TX TL BYTE
TO SCRATCHPAD
MASTER TX CONFIG. BYTE
TO SCRATCHPAD
Y
N
Y
BEh
READ
SCRATCHPAD
?
HAVE 8 BYTES
BEEN READ
?
N
MASTER
TX RESET
?
MASTER RX DATA BYTE
FROM SCRATCHPAD
N
Y
MASTER RX SCRATCHPAD
CRC BYTE
MASTER
RX “1s”
Y
NB8h
RECALL E2
?
MASTER BEGINS DATA
RECALL FROM E2 PROM
DEVICE
BUSY RECALLING
DATA
?
N
Y
MASTER
RX “0s”
DS18B20
14 of 20
1-WIRE SIGNALING
The DS18B20 uses a strict 1-Wire communication protocol to insure data integrity. Several signal types
are defined by this protocol: reset pulse, presence pulse, write 0, write 1, read 0, and read 1. The bus
master initiates all of these signals, with the exception of the presence pulse.
INITIALIZATION PROCEDURE: RESET AND PRESENCE PULSES
All communication with the DS18B20 begins with an initialization sequence that consists of a reset pulse
from the master followed by a presence pulse from the DS18B20. This is illustrated in Figure 13. When
the DS18B20 sends the presence pulse in response to the reset, it is indicating to the master that it is on
the bus and ready to operate.
During the initialization sequence the bus master transmits (TX) the reset pulse by pulling the 1-Wire bus
low for a minimum of 480ms. The bus master then releases the bus and goes into receive mode (RX).
When the bus is released, the 5k pullup resistor pulls the 1-Wire bus high. When the DS18B20 detects
this rising edge, it waits 15ms to 60ms and then transmits a presence pulse by pulling the 1-Wire bus low
for 60ms to 240ms.
INITIALIZATION TIMING Figure 13
READ/WRITE TIME SLOTS
The bus master writes data to the DS18B20 during write time slots and reads data from the DS18B20
during read time slots. One bit of data is transmitted over the 1-Wire bus per time slot.
WRITE TIME SLOTS
There are two types of write time slots: “Write 1” time slots and “Write 0” time slots. The bus master
uses a Write 1 time slot to write a logic 1 to the DS18B20 and a Write 0 time slot to write a logic 0 to the
DS18B20. All write time slots must be a minimum of 60ms in duration with a minimum of a 1ms recovery
time between individual write slots. Both types of write time slots are initiated by the master pulling the
1-Wire bus low (see Figure 14).
To generate a Write 1 time slot, after pulling the 1-Wire bus low, the bus master must release the 1-Wire
bus within 15ms. When the bus is released, the 5k pullup resistor will pull the bus high. To generate a
Write 0 time slot, after pulling the 1-Wire bus low, the bus master must continue to hold the bus low for
the duration of the time slot (at least 60ms).
LINE TYPE LEGEND
Bus master pulling low
DS18B20 pulling low
Resistor
p
ullu
p
VPU
GND
1-WIRE BUS
480ms minimum 480ms minimum
DS18B20 TX
presence pulse
60-240ms
MASTER TX RESET PULSE MASTER
R
X
DS18B20
waits 15-60ms
DS18B20
15 of 20
The DS18B20 samples the 1-Wire bus during a window that lasts from 15ms to 60ms after the master
initiates the write time slot. If the bus is high during the sampling window, a 1 is written to the DS18B20.
If the line is low, a 0 is written to the DS18B20.
READ/WRITE TIME SLOT TIMING DIAGRAM Figure 14
READ TIME SLOTS
The DS18B20 can only transmit data to the master when the master issues read time slots. Therefore, the
master must generate read time slots immediately after issuing a Read Scratchpad [BEh] or Read Power
Supply [B4h] command, so that the DS18B20 can provide the requested data. In addition, the master can
generate read time slots after issuing Convert T [44h] or Recall E2 [B8h] commands to find out the status
of the operation as explained in the DS18B20 FUNCTION COMMAND section.
All read time slots must be a minimum of 60ms in duration with a minimum of a 1ms recovery time
between slots. A read time slot is initiated by the master device pulling the 1-Wire bus low for a
minimum of 1ms and then releasing the bus (see Figure 14). After the master initiates the read time slot,
the DS18B20 will begin transmitting a 1 or 0 on bus. The DS18B20 transmits a 1 by leaving the bus high
and transmits a 0 by pulling the bus low. When transmitting a 0, the DS18B20 will release the bus by the
end of the time slot, and the bus will be pulled back to its high idle state by the pullup resister. Output
45ms
15ms
VPU
GND
1-WIRE BUS
60ms < TX “0” < 120ms
1ms < TREC < ¥
DS18B20 Samples
MIN TYP MA
X
15ms30ms
> 1ms
MASTER WRITE “0” SLOT MASTER WRITE “1” SLOT
VPU
GND
1-WIRE BUS
15ms
MASTER READ “0” SLOT MASTER READ “1” SLOT
Master samples Master samples
START
OF SLOT
START
OF SLOT
> 1 ms
1ms < TREC < ¥
15ms15ms30ms
15ms
DS18B20 Samples
MIN TYP MA
X
LINE TYPE LEGEND
Bus master pulling low DS18B20 pulling low
Resistor pullup
> 1ms
DS18B20
16 of 20
data from the DS18B20 is valid for 15ms after the falling edge that initiated the read time slot. Therefore,
the master must release the bus and then sample the bus state within 15ms from the start of the slot.
Figure 15 illustrates that the sum of TINIT, TRC, and TSAMPLE must be less than 15ms for a read time slot.
Figure 16 shows that system timing margin is maximized by keeping TINIT and TRC as short as possible
and by locating the master sample time during read time slots towards the end of the 15ms period.
DETAILED MASTER READ 1 TIMING Figure 15
RECOMMENDED MASTER READ 1 TIMING Figure 16
RELATED APPLICATION NOTES
The following Application Notes can be applied to the DS18B20. These notes can be obtained from the
Dallas Semiconductor “Application Note Book,” via the Dallas website at http://www.dalsemi.com/, or
through our faxback service at (214) 450–0441.
Application Note 27: Understanding and Using Cyclic Redundancy Checks with Dallas Semiconductor
Touch Memory Product
Application Note 55: Extending the Contact Range of Touch Memories
Application Note 74: Reading and Writing Touch Memories via Serial Interfaces
Application Note 104: Minimalist Temperature Control Demo
Application Note 106: Complex MicroLANs
Application Note 108: MicroLAN — In the Long Run
Application Note 162: Interfacing the DS18X20/DS1822 1-Wire Temperature Sensor in a
Microcontroller Environment
Sample 1-Wire subroutines that can be used in conjunction with AN74 can be downloaded from the
Dallas website or anonymous FTP Site.
VPU
GND
1-WIRE BUS
15ms
V
IH of Master
TRC
TINT > 1msMaster samples
LINE TYPE LEGEND
Bus master pulling low
Resistor pullup
VPU
GND
1-WIRE BUS
15ms
V
IH of Master
TRC =
small
TINT =
small
Master samples
DS18B20
17 of 20
DS18B20 OPERATION EXAMPLE 1
In this example there are multiple DS18B20s on the bus and they are using parasite power. The bus
master initiates a temperature conversion in a specific DS18B20 and then reads its scratchpad and
recalculates the CRC to verify the data.
MASTER MODE DATA (LSB FIRST) COMMENTS
TX Reset Master issues reset pulse.
RX Presence DS18B20s respond with presence pulse.
TX 55h Master issues Match ROM command.
TX 64-bit ROM code Master sends DS18B20 ROM code.
TX 44h Master issues Convert T command.
TX DQ line held high by
strong pullup
Master applies strong pullup to DQ for the duration of the
conversion (tconv).
TX Reset Master issues reset pulse.
RX Presence DS18B20s respond with presence pulse.
TX 55h Master issues Match ROM command.
TX 64-bit ROM code Master sends DS18B20 ROM code.
TX BEh Master issues Read Scratchpad command.
RX 9 data bytes Master reads entire scratchpad including CRC. The master
then recalculates the CRC of the first eight data bytes from the
scratchpad and compares the calculated CRC with the read
CRC (byte 9). If they match, the master continues; if not, the
read operation is repeated.
DS18B20 OPERATION EXAMPLE 2
In this example there is only one DS18B20 on the bus and it is using parasite power. The master writes to
the TH, TL, and configuration registers in the DS18B20 scratchpad and then reads the scratchpad and
recalculates the CRC to verify the data. The master then copies the scratchpad contents to EEPROM.
MASTER MODE DATA (LSB FIRST) COMMENTS
TX Reset Master issues reset pulse.
RX Presence DS18B20 responds with presence pulse.
TX CCh Master issues Skip ROM command.
TX 4Eh Master issues Write Scratchpad command.
TX 3 data bytes Master sends three data bytes to scratchpad (TH, TL, and config).
TX Reset Master issues reset pulse.
RX Presence DS18B20 responds with presence pulse.
TX CCh Master issues Skip ROM command.
TX BEh Master issues Read Scratchpad command.
RX 9 data bytes Master reads entire scratchpad including CRC. The master then
recalculates the CRC of the first eight data bytes from the
scratchpad and compares the calculated CRC with the read CRC
(byte 9). If they match, the master continues; if not, the read
operation is repeated.
TX Reset Master issues reset pulse.
RX Presence DS18B20 responds with presence pulse.
TX CCh Master issues Skip ROM command.
TX 48h Master issues Copy Scratchpad command.
TX DQ line held high by
strong pullup
Master applies strong pullup to DQ for at least 10ms while copy
operation is in progress.
DS18B20
18 of 20
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS*
Voltage on Any Pin Relative to Ground -0.5V to +6.0V
Operating Temperature Range -55°C to +125°C
Storage Temperature Range -55°C to +125°C
Solder Temperature See IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020A
Reflow Oven Temperature +220°C
*These are stress ratings only and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions
above those indicated in the operation sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute
maximum rating conditions for extended periods of time may affect reliability.
DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (-55°C to +125°C; VDD=3.0V to 5.5V)
PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITION MIN TYP MAX UNITS NOTES
Supply Voltage VDD Local Power +3.0 +5.5 V 1
Parasite Power +3.0 +5.5Pullup Supply
Voltage
VPU
Local Power +3.0 VDD
V 1,2
-10°C to
+85°C
±0.5 °C 3Thermometer Error tERR
-55°C to
+125°C
±2
Input Logic Low VIL -0.3 +0.8 V 1,4,5
Local Power +2.2Input Logic High VIH
Parasite Power +3.0
The lower of
5.5
or
VDD + 0.3
V 1, 6
Sink Current ILVI/O=0.4V 4.0 mA 1
Standby Current IDDS 750 1000 nA 7,8
Active Current IDD VDD=5V 1 1.5 mA 9
DQ Input Current IDQ A10
Drift ±0.2 °C 11
NOTES:
1) All voltages are referenced to ground.
2) The Pullup Supply Voltage specification assumes that the pullup device is ideal, and therefore the
high level of the pullup is equal to VPU. In order to meet the VIH spec of the DS18B20, the actual
supply rail for the strong pullup transistor must include margin for the voltage drop across the
transistor when it is turned on; thus: VPU_ACTUAL = VPU_IDEAL + VTRANSISTOR.
3) See typical performance curve in Figure 17
4) Logic low voltages are specified at a sink current of 4mA.
5) To guarantee a presence pulse under low voltage parasite power conditions, VILMAX may have to be
reduced to as low as 0.5V.
6) Logic high voltages are specified at a source current of 1mA.
7) Standby current specified up to 70°C. Standby current typically is 3mA at 125°C.
8) To minimize IDDS, DQ should be within the following ranges: GND £ DQ £ GND + 0.3V or VDD
0.3V £ DQ £ VDD.
9) Active current refers to supply current during active temperature conversions or EEPROM writes.
10) DQ line is high (“hi-Z” state).
11) Drift data is based on a 1000 hour stress test at 125°C with VDD = 5.5V.
DS18B20
19 of 20
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS: NV MEMORY
(-55°C to +100°C; VDD = 3.0V to 5.5V)
PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITION MIN TYP MAX UNITS
NV Write Cycle Time twr 210 ms
EEPROM Writes NEEWR -55°C to +55°C 50k writes
EEPROM Data Retention tEEDR -55°C to +55°C 10 years
AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS (-55°C to +125°C; VDD = 3.0V to 5.5V)
PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITION MIN TYP MAX UNITS NOTES
Temperature Conversion tCONV 9-bit resolution 93.75 ms 1
Time 10-bit resolution 187.5 ms 1
11-bit resolution 375 ms 1
12-bit resolution 750 ms 1
Time to Strong Pullup On tSPON Start Convert T
Command Issued
10 µs
Time Slot tSLOT 60 120 µs 1
Recovery Time tREC s1
Write 0 Low Time rLOW0 60 120 µs 1
Write 1 Low Time tLOW1 115µs1
Read Data Valid tRDV 15 µs 1
Reset Time High tRSTH 480 µs 1
Reset Time Low tRSTL 480 µs 1,2
Presence Detect High tPDHIGH 15 60 µs 1
Presence Detect Low tPDLOW 60 240 µs 1
Capacitance CIN/OUT 25 pF
NOTES:
1) Refer to timing diagrams in Figure 18.
2) Under parasite power, if tRSTL > 960ms, a power on reset may occur.
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CURVE Figure 17
DS18B20 Typical Error Curve
-0.5
-0.4
-0.3
-0.2
-0.1
0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0 10203040506070
Temperature (°C)
Thermometer Error (°C)
Mean Error
+3s Error
-3s Error
20 of 20
TIMING DIAGRAMS Figure 18