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 DS1305 Serial Alarm Real-Time Clock
www.maxim-ic.com
FEATURES
Real-Time Clock (RTC) Counts Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Date of the Month, Month, Day of the Week, and Year with Leap-Year Compensation Valid Up to 2100 96-Byte, Battery-Backed NV RAM for Data Storage Two Time-Of-Day Alarms, Programmable on Combination of Seconds, Minutes, Hours, and Day of the Week Supports Motorola SPITM (Serial Peripheral Interface) Modes 1 and 3 or Standard 3-Wire Interface Burst Mode for Reading/Writing Successive Addresses in Clock/RAM Dual-Power Supply Pins for Primary and Backup Power Supplies Optional Trickle Charge Output to Backup Supply 2.0V to 5.5V Operation Optional Industrial Temperature Range: -40C to +85C Available in Space-Efficient, 20-Pin TSSOP Package Underwriters Laboratory (UL) Recognized
PIN CONFIGURATIONS
TOP VIEW VCC2 VBAT X1 N.C. X2 N.C. INT0 N.C. INT1 GND 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 20 VCC1 N.C. PF VCCIF SD0 SDI SCLK N.C. CE SERMODE

DS1305
19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11
TSSOP (4.4mm)
VCC2 VBAT X1 X2 N.C. INT0 INT1 GND 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 16 15 VCC1 PF VCCIF SDO SDI SCLK CE SERMODE
DS1305
14 13 12 11 10 9
DIP (300 mils)
SPI is a trademark of Motorola, Inc.
TYPICAL OPERATING CIRCUIT
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ORDERING INFORMATION
PART DS1305 DS1305E+ DS1305EN+ DS1305EN+T&R DS1305E+T&R DS1305E DS1305EN DS1305EN/T&R DS1305E/T&R DS1305N TEMP RANGE 0C to +70C 0C to +70C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C 0C to +70C 0C to +70C -40C to +85C -40C to +85C 0C to +70C -40C to +85C PIN-PACKAGE 16 DIP (300 mils) 20 TSSOP (173 mils) 20 TSSOP (173 mils) 20 TSSOP (173), Tape/Reel 20 TSSOP (173 mils), Tape/Reel 20 TSSOP (173) 20 TSSOP (173 mils) 20 TSSOP (173 mils), Tape/Reel 20 TSSOP (173 mils), Tape/Reel 16 DIP (300 mils) TOP MARK* DS1305 DS1305 DS1305N DS1305 DS1305 DS1305 DS1305 DS1305 DS1305 DS1305N
+ Denotes a lead-free/RoHS-compliant device. * An "N" on the top mark denotes an industrial device.
DESCRIPTION
The DS1305 serial alarm real-time clock provides a full binary coded decimal (BCD) clock calendar that is accessed by a simple serial interface. The clock/calendar provides seconds, minutes, hours, day, date, month, and year information. The end of the month date 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. In addition, 96 bytes of NV RAM are provided for data storage. The DS1305 will maintain the time and date, provided the oscillator is enabled, as long as at least one supply is at a valid level. An interface logic power-supply input pin (VCCIF) allows the DS1305 to drive SDO and PF pins to a level that is compatible with the interface logic. This allows an easy interface to 3V logic in mixed supply systems. The DS1305 offers dual-power supplies as well as a battery input pin. The dual power supplies support a programmable trickle charge circuit that allows a rechargeable energy source (such as a super cap or rechargeable battery) to be used for a backup supply. The VBAT pin allows the device to be backed up by a non-rechargeable battery. The DS1305 is fully operational from 2.0V to 5.5V. Two programmable time-of-day alarms are provided by the DS1305. Each alarm can generate an interrupt on a programmable combination of seconds, minutes, hours, and day. "Don't care" states can be inserted into one or more fields if it is desired for them to be ignored for the alarm condition. The time-ofday alarms can be programmed to assert two different interrupt outputs or to assert one common interrupt output. Both interrupt outputs operate when the device is powered by VCC1, VCC2, or VBAT. The DS1305 supports a direct interface to SPI serial data ports or standard 3-wire interface. A straightforward address and data format is implemented in which data transfers can occur 1 byte at a time or in multiple-byte-burst mode.
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PIN DESCRIPTION
PIN DIP TSSOP 1 1 NAME VCC2
FUNCTION
2
2
VBAT
3
3
X1
4 5
5 4, 6, 8, 13, 19
X2 N.C.
Backup Power Supply. This is the secondary power supply pin. In systems using the trickle charger, the rechargeable energy source is connected to this pin. Battery Input for Standard +3V Lithium Cell or Other Energy Source. If not used, VBAT must be connect to ground. Diodes must not be placed in series between VBAT and the battery, or improper operation will result. UL recognized to ensure against reverse charging current when used in conjunction with a lithium battery. See "Conditions of Acceptability" at www.maxim-ic.com/TechSupport/QA/ntrl.htm. Connections for Standard 32.768kHz Quartz Crystal. The internal oscillator is designed for operation with a crystal having a specified load capacitance of 6pF. For more information on crystal selection and crystal layout considerations, refer to Application Note 58: Crystal Considerations with Dallas Real-Time Clocks. The DS1305 can also be driven by an external 32.768kHz oscillator. In this configuration, the X1 pin is connected to the external oscillator signal and the X2 pin is floated. No Connection Active-Low Interrupt 0 Output. The INT0 pin is an active low output of the DS1305 that can be used as an interrupt input to a processor. The INT0 pin can be programmed to be asserted by only Alarm 0 or can be programmed to be asserted by either Alarm 0 or Alarm 1. The INT0 pin remains low as long as the status bit causing the interrupt is present and the corresponding interrupt enable bit is set. The INT0 pin operates when the DS1305 is powered by VCC1, VCC2, or VBAT. The INT0 pin is an open-drain output and requires an external pullup resistor. Active-Low Interrupt 1 Output. The INT1 pin is an active-low output of the DS1305 that can be used as an interrupt input to a processor. The INT1 pin can be programmed to be asserted by Alarm 1 only. The INT1 pin remains low as long as the status bit causing the interrupt is present and the corresponding interrupt enable bit is set. The INT1 pin operates when the DS1305 is powered by VCC1, VCC2, or VBAT. The INT1 pin is an open-drain output and requires an external pullup resistor. Both INT0 and INT1 are opendrain outputs. The two interrupts and the internal clock continue to run regardless of the level of VCC (as long as a power source is present). Ground Serial Interface Mode. The SERMODE pin offers the flexibility to choose between two serial interface modes. When connected to GND, standard 3-wire communication is selected. When connected to VCC, SPI communication is selected. Chip Enable. The chip-enable signal must be asserted high during a read or a write for both 3-wire and SPI communication. This pin has an internal 55kW pulldown resistor (typical). Serial Clock Input. SCLK is used to synchronize data movement on the serial interface for either the SPI or 3-wire interface.
6
7
INT0
7
9
INT1
8 9
10 11
GND SERMODE
10 11
12 14
CE SCLK
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PIN DESCRIPTIONS (continued)
PIN DIP TSSOP 12 15 NAME
FUNCTION
SDI
13
16
SDO
14
17
VCCIF
15 16
18 20
PF VCC1
Serial Data Input. When SPI communication is selected, the SDI pin is the serial data input for the SPI bus. When 3-wire communication is selected, this pin must be tied to the SDO pin (the SDI and SDO pins function as a single I/O pin when tied together). Serial Data Output. When SPI communication is selected, the SDO pin is the serial data output for the SPI bus. When 3-wire communication is selected, this pin must be tied to the SDI pin (the SDI and SDO pins function as a single I/O pin when tied together). Interface Logic Power-Supply Input. The VCCIF pin allows the DS1305 to drive SDO and PF output pins to a level that is compatible with the interface logic, thus allowing an easy interface to 3V logic in mixed supply systems. This pin is physically connected to the source connection of the p-channel transistors in the output buffers of the SDO and PF pins. Active-Low Power-Fail Output. The PF pin is used to indicate loss of the primary power supply (VCC1). When VCC1 is less than VCC2 or is less than VBAT, the PF pin is driven low. Primary Power Supply. DC power is provided to the device on this pin.
OPERATION
The block diagram in Figure 1 shows the main elements of the serial alarm RTC. The following paragraphs describe the function of each pin.
Figure 1. BLOCK DIAGRAM
OSCILLATOR AND COUNTDOWN CHAIN
1Hz
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RECOMMENDED LAYOUT FOR CRYSTAL
Local ground plane (Layer 2)
X1 crystal X2
GND
CLOCK ACCURACY
The accuracy of the clock is dependent upon the accuracy of the crystal and the accuracy of the match between the capacitive load of the oscillator circuit and the capacitive load for which the crystal was trimmed. Additional error is added by crystal frequency drift caused by temperature shifts. External circuit noise coupled into the oscillator circuit can result in the clock running fast. Refer to Application Note 58, "Crystal Considerations with Dallas Real-Time Clocks" for detailed information.
CLOCK, CALENDAR, AND ALARM
The time and calendar information is obtained by reading the appropriate register bytes. The RTC registers and user RAM are illustrated in Figure 2. The time, calendar, and alarm are set or initialized by writing the appropriate register bytes. Note that some bits are set to 0. These bits always read 0 regardless of how they are written. Also note that registers 12h to 1Fh (read) and registers 92h to 9Fh are reserved. These registers always read 0 regardless of how they are written. The contents of the time, calendar, and alarm registers are in the BCD format. The day register increments at midnight. Values that correspond to the day of week are user-defined but must be sequential (e.g., if 1 equals Sunday, 2 equals Monday and so on). Illogical time and date entries result in undefined operation. Except where otherwise noted, the initial power on state of all registers is not defined. Therefore, it is important to enable the oscillator (EOSC = 0) and disable write protect (WP = 0) during initial configuration.
WRITING TO THE CLOCK REGISTERS
The internal time and date registers continue to increment during write operations. However, the countdown chain is reset when the seconds register is written. Writing the time and date registers within one second after writing the seconds register ensures consistent data. Terminating a write before the last bit is sent aborts the write for that byte.
READING FROM THE CLOCK REGISTERS
Buffers are used to copy the time and date register at the beginning of a read. When reading in burst mode, the user copy is static while the internal registers continue to increment.
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Figure 2. RTC REGISTERS AND ADDRESS MAP
HEX ADDRESS READ WRITE 00H 80H 01H 81H 02H 03H 04H 05H 06H
--
Bit7 0 0 0 0 0 0 M M M M M M M M
Bit6
Bit5
Bit4
Bit3
Bit2
Bit1
Bit0
RANGE 00-59 00-59 01-12 + P/A 00-23 1-7 1-31 01-12 00-99
--
82H 83H 84H 85H 86H
--
07H 08H 09H 0AH
--
87H 88H 89H 8AH
--
0BH 0CH 0DH 0EH 0FH 10H 11H 12-1FH 20-7FH
8BH 8CH 8DH 8EH 8FH 90H 91H 92-9FH A0-FFH
10 Seconds Seconds 10 Minutes Minutes P 12 10 Hour Hours A 24 10 0 0 0 Day 0 10 Date Date 0 10 Month Month 10 Year Year Alarm 0 10 Seconds Alarm Seconds Alarm 10 Minutes Alarm Minutes Alarm P 12 10 Hour Hour Alarm A 24 10 0 0 0 Day Alarm Alarm 1 10 Seconds Alarm Seconds Alarm 10 Minutes Alarm Minutes Alarm P 12 10 Hour Hour Alarm A 24 10 0 0 0 Day Alarm Control Register Status Register Trickle Charger Register Reserved 96 Bytes User RAM
00-59 00-59 01-12 + P/A 00-23 01-07
--
00-59 00-59 01-12 + P/A 00-23 01-07 -- -- -- -- 00-FF
Note: Range for alarm registers does not include mask'm' bits.
The DS1305 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 to 23 hours). The DS1305 contains two time-of-day alarms. Time-of-day Alarm 0 can be set by writing to registers 87h to 8Ah. Time-of-day Alarm 1 can be set by writing to registers 8Bh to 8Eh. The alarms can be programmed (by the INTCN bit 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 alarm registers are mask bits (Table 1). When all of the mask bits are logic 0, a timeof-day alarm only occurs once per week when the values stored in timekeeping registers 00h to 03h match the values stored in the time-of-day alarm registers. An alarm is generated every day when bit 7 of the day alarm register is set to a logic 1. An alarm is generated every hour when bit 7 of the day and hour alarm registers is set to a logic 1. Similarly, an alarm is generated every minute when bit 7 of the day, hour, and minute alarm registers is set to a logic 1. When bit 7 of the day, hour, minute, and seconds alarm registers is set to a logic 1, alarm occurs every second.
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During each clock update, the RTC compares the Alarm 0 and Alarm 1 registers with the corresponding clock registers. When a match occurs, the corresponding alarm flag bit in the status register is set to a 1. If the corresponding alarm interrupt enable bit is enabled, an interrupt output is activated.
Table 1. TIME-OF-DAY ALARM MASK BITS
ALARM REGISTER MASK BITS (BIT 7) SECONDS MINUTES HOURS DAYS 1 1 1 1 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 FUNCTION
Alarm once per second Alarm when seconds match Alarm when minutes and seconds match Alarm hours, minutes, and seconds match Alarm day, hours, minutes and seconds match
SPECIAL PURPOSE REGISTERS
The DS1305 has three additional registers (control register, status register, and trickle charger register) that control the RTC, interrupts, and trickle charger.
CONTROL REGISTER (READ 0FH, WRITE 8FH)
BIT7 BIT6 BIT5 BIT4 BIT3 BIT2 BIT1 BIT0
EOSC
WP
0
0
0
INTCN
AIE1
AIEO
EOSC (Enable Oscillator) - This bit when set to logic 0 starts the oscillator. When this bit is set to a logic 1, the oscillator is stopped and the DS1305 is placed into a low-power standby mode with a current drain of less than 100nA when power is supplied by VBAT or VCC2. On initial application of power, this bit will be set to a logic 1.
WP (Write Protect) - Before any write operation to the clock or RAM, this bit must be logic 0. When high, the write protect bit prevents a write operation to any register, including bits 0, 1, 2, and 7 of the control register. Upon initial power-up, the state of the WP bit is undefined. Therefore, the WP bit should be cleared before attempting to write to the device. INTCN (Interrupt Control) - This bit controls the relationship between the two time-of-day alarms and the interrupt output pins. When the INTCN bit is set to a logic 1, a match between the timekeeping registers and the Alarm 0 registers activates the INT0 pin (provided that the alarm is enabled) and a match between the timekeeping registers and the Alarm 1 registers activate the INT1 pin (provided that the alarm is enabled). When the INTCN bit is set to a logic 0, a match between the timekeeping registers and either Alarm 0 or Alarm 1 activate the INT0 pin (provided that the alarms are enabled). INT1 has no function when INTCN is set to a logic 0. AIE0 (Alarm Interrupt Enable 0) - When set to a logic 1, this bit permits the interrupt 0 request flag (IRQF0) bit in the status register to assert INT0 . When the AIE0 bit is set to logic 0, the IRQF0 bit does not initiate the INT0 signal. AIE1 (Alarm Interrupt Enable 1) - When set to a logic 1, this bit permits the interrupt 1 request flag (IRQF1) bit in the status register to assert INT1 (when INTCN = 1) or to assert INT0 (when INTCN = 0). When the AIE1 bit is set to logic 0, the IRQF1 bit does not initiate an interrupt signal.
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STATUS REGISTER (READ 10H)
BIT7 0 BIT6 0 BIT5 0 BIT4 0 BIT3 0 BIT2 0 BIT1 IRQF1 BIT0 IRQF0
IRQF0 (Interrupt 0 Request Flag) - A logic 1 in the interrupt request flag bit indicates that the current time has matched the Alarm 0 registers. If the AIE0 bit is also a logic 1, the INT0 pin goes low. IRQF0 is cleared when the address pointer goes to any of the Alarm 0 registers during a read or write. IRQF1 (Interrupt 1 Request Flag) - A logic 1 in the interrupt request flag bit indicates that the current time has matched the Alarm 1 registers. This flag can be used to generate an interrupt on either INT0 or INT1 depending on the status of the INTCN bit in the control register. If the INTCN bit is set to a logic 1 and IRQF1 is at a logic 1 (and AIE1 bit is also a logic 1), the INT1 pin goes low. If the INTCN bit is set to a logic 0 and IRQF1 is at a logic 1 (and AIE1 bit is also a logic 1), the INT0 pin goes low. IRQF1 is cleared when the address pointer goes to any of the Alarm 1 registers during a read or write.
TRICKLE CHARGE REGISTER (READ 11H, WRITE 91H)
This register controls the trickle charge characteristics of the DS1305. The simplified schematic of Figure 3 shows the basic components of the trickle charger. The trickle-charge select (TCS) bits (bits 4-7) control the selection of the trickle charger. To prevent accidental enabling, only a pattern of 1010 enables the trickle charger. All other patterns disable the trickle charger. On the initial application of power, the DS1305 powers up with the trickle charger disabled. The diode select (DS) bits (bits 2-3) select whether one diode or two diodes are connected between VCC1 and VCC2. The resistor select (RS) bits select the resistor that is connected between VCC1 and VCC2. The resistor and diodes are selected by the RS and DS bits, as shown in Table 2.
Figure 3. PROGRAMMABLE TRICKLE CHARGER
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Table 2. TRICKLE CHARGER RESISTOR AND DIODE SELECT
TCS Bit 7
X X X 1 1 1 1 1 1 0
TCS Bit 6
X X X 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
TCS Bit 5
X X X 1 1 1 1 1 1 0
TCS Bit 4
X X X 0 0 0 0 0 0 1
DS Bit 3
X 0 1 0 0 0 1 1 1 1
DS Bit 2
X 0 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 1
RS Bit 1
0 X X 0 1 1 0 1 1 0
RS Bit 0
0 X X 1 0 1 1 0 1 0
FUNCTION
Disabled Disabled Disabled 1 Diode, 2k 1 Diode, 4k 1 Diode, 8k 2 Diodes, 2k 2 Diodes, 4k 2 Diodes, 8k Initial power-on state
The user determines diode and resistor selection according to the maximum current desired for battery or super cap charging. The maximum charging current can be calculated as illustrated in the following example. Assume that a system power supply of 5V is applied to VCC1 and a super cap is connected to VCC2. Also assume that the trickle charger has been enabled with 1 diode and resister R1 between VCC1 and VCC2. The maximum current IMAX would, therefore, be calculated as follows: IMAX = (5.0V - diode drop) / R1 (5.0V - 0.7V) / 2kW 2.2mA As the super cap charges, the voltage drop between VCC1 and VCC2 decreases and, therefore, the charge current decreases.
POWER CONTROL
Power is provided through the VCC1, VCC2, and VBAT pins. Three different power-supply configurations are illustrated in Figure 4. Configuration 1 shows the DS1305 being backed up by a nonrechargeable energy source such as a lithium battery. In this configuration, the system power supply is connected to VCC1 and VCC2 is grounded. The DS1305 is write-protected if VCC1 is less than VBAT. The DS1305 is fully accessible when VCC1 is greater than VBAT + 0.2V. Configuration 2 illustrates the DS1305 being backed up by a rechargeable energy source. In this case, the VBAT pin is grounded, VCC1 is connected to the primary power supply, and VCC2 is connected to the secondary supply (the rechargeable energy source). The DS1305 operates from the larger of VCC1 or VCC2. When VCC1 is greater than VCC2 + 0.2V (typical), VCC1 powers the DS1305. When VCC1 is less than VCC2, VCC2 powers the DS1305. The DS1305 does not write-protect itself in this configuration. Configuration 3 shows the DS1305 in battery operate mode where the device is powered only by a single battery. In this case, the VCC1 and VBAT pins are grounded and the battery is connected to the VCC2 pin. Only these three configurations are allowed. Unused supply pins must be grounded.
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Figure 4. POWER SUPPLY CONFIGURATIONS
CONFIGURATION 1: BACKUP SUPPLY IS NONRECHARGEABLE LITHIUM BATTERY
NOTE: DEVICE IS WRITE-PROTECTED IF VCC < VCCTP.
CONFIGURATION 2: BACKUP SUPPLY IS A RECHARGEABLE BATTERY OR SUPER CAPACITOR
NOTE: DEVICE DOES NOT PROVIDE AUTOMATIC WRITE PROTECTION.
CONFIGURATION 3: BATTERY OPERATE MODE
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SERIAL INTERFACE
The DS1305 offers the flexibility to choose between two serial interface modes. The DS1305 can communicate with the SPI interface or with a standard 3-wire interface. The interface method used is determined by the SERMODE pin. When this pin is connected to VCC, SPI communication is selected. When this pin is connected to ground, standard 3-wire communication is selected.
SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE (SPI)
The serial peripheral interface (SPI) is a synchronous bus for address and data transfer, and is used when interfacing with the SPI bus on specific Motorola microcontrollers such as the 68HC05C4 and the 68HC11A8. The SPI mode of serial communication is selected by tying the SERMODE pin to VCC. Four pins are used for the SPI. The four pins are the SDO (serial data out), SDI (serial data in), CE (chip enable), and SCLK (serial clock). The DS1305 is the slave device in an SPI application, with the microcontroller being the master. The SDI and SDO pins are the serial data input and output pins for the DS1305, respectively. The CE input is used to initiate and terminate a data transfer. The SCLK pin is used to synchronize data movement between the master (microcontroller) and the slave (DS1305) devices. The shift clock (SCLK), which is generated by the microcontroller, is active only during address and data transfer to any device on the SPI bus. The inactive clock polarity is programmable in some microcontrollers. The DS1305 determines the clock polarity by sampling SCLK when CE becomes active. Therefore, either SCLK polarity can be accommodated. Input data (SDI) is latched on the internal strobe edge and output data (SDO) is shifted out on the shift edge (Figure 5). There is one clock for each bit transferred. Address and data bits are transferred in groups of eight.
Figure 5. SERIAL CLOCK AS A FUNCTION OF MICROCONTROLLER CLOCK POLARITY (CPOL)
CE CPOL = 1 SCLK
SHIFT DATA OUT (READ) DATA LATCH (WRITE)
CPOL = 0 SCLK
SHIFT DATA OUT (READ) DATA LATCH (WRITE)
NOTE 1: CPHA BIT POLARITY (IF APPLICABLE) MAY NEED TO BE SET ACCORDINGLY. NOTE 2: CPOL IS A BIT THAT IS SET IN THE MICROCONTROLLER'S CONTROL REGISTER. NOTE 3: SDO REMAINS AT HIGH-Z UNTIL 8 BITS OF DATA ARE READY TO BE SHIFTED OUT DURING A READ.
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ADDRESS AND DATA BYTES
Address and data bytes are shifted MSB first into the serial data input (SDI) and out of the serial data output (SDO). Any transfer requires the address of the byte to specify a write or read to either a RTC or RAM location, followed by one or more bytes of data. Data is transferred out of the SDO for a read operation and into the SDI for a write operation (Figures 6 and 7).
Figure 6. SPI SINGLE-BYTE WRITE
* SCLK CAN BE EITHER POLARITY.
Figure 7. SPI SINGLE-BYTE READ
* SCLK CAN BE EITHER POLARITY.
The address byte is always the first byte entered after CE is driven high. The most significant bit (A7) of this byte determines if a read or write takes place. If A7 is 0, one or more read cycles occur. If A7 is 1, one or more write cycles occur. Data transfers can occur one byte at a time or in multiple-byte burst mode. After CE is driven high an address is written to the DS1305. After the address, one or more data bytes can be written or read. For a single-byte transfer, one byte is read or written and then CE is driven low. For a multiple-byte transfer, however, multiple bytes can be read or written to the DS1305 after the address has been written. Each read or write cycle causes the RTC register or RAM address to automatically increment. Incrementing continues until the device is disabled. When the RTC is selected, the address wraps to 00h after incrementing to 1Fh (during a read) and wraps to 80h after incrementing to 9Fh (during a write). When the RAM is selected, the address wraps to 20h after incrementing to 7Fh (during a read) and wraps to A0h after incrementing to FFh (during a write).
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Figure 8. SPI MULTIPLE-BYTE BURST TRANSFER
READING AND WRITING IN BURST MODE
Burst mode is similar to a single-byte read or write, except that CE is kept high and additional SCLK cycles are sent until the end of the burst. The clock registers and the user RAM can be read or written in burst mode. When accessing the clock registers in burst mode, the address pointer wraps around after reaching 1Fh (9Fh for writes). When accessing the user RAM in burst mode, the address pointer wraps around after reaching 7Fh (FFh for writes).
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3-WIRE INTERFACE
The 3-wire interface mode operates similarly to the SPI mode. However, in 3-wire mode there is one I/O instead of separate data in and data out signals. The 3-wire interface consists of the I/O (SDI and SDO pins tied together), CE, and SCLK pins. In 3-wire mode, each byte is shifted in LSB first unlike SPI mode where each byte is shifted in MSB first. As is the case with the SPI mode, an address byte is written to the device followed by a single data byte or multiple data bytes. Figure 9 illustrates a read and write cycle. In 3-wire mode, data is input on the rising edge of SCLK and output on the falling edge of SCLK.
Figure 9. 3-WIRE SINGLE-BYTE TRANSFER
SINGLE-BYTE READ
CE SCLK I/O*
A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 0
D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7
SINGLE-BYTE WRITE
CE SCLK I/O*
A0 A1 A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 1 D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7
NOTE: IN BURST MODE, CE IS KEPT HIGH AND ADDITIONAL SCLK CYCLES ARE SENT UNTIL THE END OF THE BURST.
*I/O IS SDI AND SDO TIED TOGETHER.
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ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS
Voltage Range on Any Pin Relative to Ground.....................................................-0.5V to +7.0V Storage Temperature Range.........................................................................-55C to +125C Soldering Temperature.................................................See IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020 Specification
This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at these or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operation sections of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods of time can affect reliability.
OPERATING RANGE
RANGE Commercial Industrial TEMP RANGE 0C to +70C -40C to +85C VCC (V) 2.0 to 5.5 VCC1 or VCC2 2.0 to 5.5 VCC1 or VCC2
RECOMMENDED DC OPERATING CONDITIONS
(Over the operating range, unless otherwise specified.)
PARAMETER Supply Voltage VCC1, VCC2 Logic 1 Input Logic 0 Input VBAT Battery Voltage VCCIF Supply Voltage SYMBOL VCC1, VCC2 VIH VIL VBAT VCCIF VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V MIN 2.0 2.0 -0.3 2.0 2.0 TYP MAX 5.5 VCC + 0.3 +0.3 +0.8 5.5 5.5 UNITS V V V V V 11 NOTES 7
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DC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(Over the operating range, unless otherwise specified.)
PARAMETER Input Leakage Output Leakage IOL= 1.5mA Logic 0 Output IOL = 4.0mA IOH = -0.4mA Logic 1 Output IOH = -1.0mA VCC1 Active Supply Current VCC1 Timekeeping Current (Osc on) VCC1 Standby Current (Osc off) VCC2 Active Supply Current VCC2 Timekeeping Current (Osc on) VCC2 Standby Current (Osc off) Battery Timekeeping Current Battery Standby Current VCC Trip Point Trickle Charge Resistors Trickle Charge Diode Voltage Drop SYMBOL ILI ILO VOL VOH ICC1A ICC1T ICC1S ICC2A ICC2T ICC2S IBAT IBATS VCCTP R1 R2 R3 VTD VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCCIF = 2.0V VCCIF = 5V VCC1 = 2.0V VCC1 = 5V VCC1 = 2.0V VCC1 = 5V VCC1 = 2.0V VCC1 = 5V VCC2 = 2.0V VCC2 = 5V VCC2 = 2.0V VCC2 = 5V VCC2 = 2.0V VCC2 = 5V VBAT = 3V VBAT = 3V MIN -100 -1 TYP MAX +500 1 0.4 0.4 UNITS A A V V 0.425 1.28 25.3 81 25 80 0.4 1.2 0.3 1 200 200 400 200 VBAT + 200 2 4 8 0.7 mA A A mA A nA nA nA mV kW V 2, 8 1, 8, 12 6, 8, 12 2, 9 1, 9, 12 6, 9, 12 10, 12 10, 12 NOTES
1.6 2.4
VBAT - 50
CAPACITANCE
(TA = +25C)
PARAMETER Input Capacitance Output Capacitance Crystal Capacitance SYMBOL CI CO CX MIN TYP 10 15 6 MAX UNITS pF pF pF NOTES
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DS1305
3-WIRE AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(Over the operating range, unless otherwise specified.) (Figure 10 and Figure 11)
PARAMETER Data to CLK Setup CLK to Data Hold CLK to Data Delay CLK Low Time CLK High Time CLK Frequency CLK Rise and Fall CE to CLK Setup CLK to CE Hold CE Inactive Time CE to Output High-Z SCLK to Output High-Z tDC tCDH tCDD tCL tCH tCLK tR, tF tCC tCCH tCWH tCDZ tCCZ SYMBOL VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V MIN 200 50 280 70 800 200 1000 250 1000 250 DC 0.6 2.0 2000 500 TYP MAX UNITS ns ns ns ns ns MHz ns s ns s 280 70 280 70 ns ns 4 4 4 3,4 3,4 NOTES 3,4 3,4 3,4,5 4 4 4
4 1 240 60 4 1
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DS1305
Figure 10. TIMING DIAGRAM: 3-WIRE READ DATA TRANSFER
* I/O IS SDI AND SDO TIED TOGETHER.
Figure 11. TIMING DIAGRAM: 3-WIRE WRITE DATA TRANSFER
* I/O IS SDI AND SDO TIED TOGETHER.
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DS1305
SPI AC ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
(Over the operating range, unless otherwise specified.) (Figure 12 and Figure 13) PARAMETER SYMBOL MIN TYP MAX UNITS
Data to CLK Setup CLK to Data Hold CLK to Data Delay CLK Low Time CLK High Time CLK Frequency CLK Rise and Fall CE to CLK Setup CLK to CE Hold CE Inactive Time CE to Output High-Z tDC tCDH tCDD tCL tCH tCLK tR, tF tCC tCCH tCWH tCDZ VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V VCC = 2.0V VCC = 5V 200 50 280 70 800 200 1000 250 1000 250 DC 0.6 2.0 2000 500 ns ns ns ns ns MHz ns s ns s 280 70 ns 6 6 6 5,6
NOTES
5,6 5,6 5,6,7 6 6 6
4 1 240 60 4 1
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DS1305
Figure 12. TIMING DIAGRAM: SPI READ DATA TRANSFER
* SCLK CAN BE EITHER POLARITY, TIMING SHOWN FOR CPOL = 1.
Figure 13. TIMING DIAGRAM: SPI WRITE DATA TRANSFER
* SCLK CAN BE EITHER POLARITY, TIMING SHOWN FOR CPOL = 1.
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DS1305
NOTES:
1) ICC1T and ICC2T are specified with CE set to a logic 0 and EOSC bit = 0 (oscillator enabled). 2) ICC1A and ICC2A are specified with CE = VCC, SCLK=2MHz at VCC = 5V; SCLK = 500kHz at VCC = 2.0V, VIL = 0V, VIH = VCC, and EOSC bit = 0 (oscillator enabled). 3) Measured at VIH = 2.0V or VIL = 0.8V and 10ms maximum rise and fall time. 4) Measured with 50pF load. 5) Measured at VOH = 2.4V or VOL = 0.4V. 6) ICC1S and ICC2S are specified with CE set to a logic 0. The EOSC bit must be set to logic 1 (oscillator disabled). 7) VCC = VCC1, when VCC1 > VCC2 + 0.2V (typical); VCC = VCC2, when VCC2 > VCC1. 8) VCC2 = 0V. 9) VCC1 = 0V. 10) VCC1 < VBAT. 11) VCCIF must be less than or equal to the largest of VCC1, VCC2, and VBAT. 12) Using a crystal on X1 and X2, rated for 6pF load.
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Maxim/Dallas Semiconductor cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim/Dallas Semiconductor product. No circuit patent licenses are implied. Maxim/Dallas Semiconductor reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time.
Maxim Integrated Products, 120 San Gabriel Drive, Sunnyvale, CA 94086 408-737-7600
(c) 2005 Maxim Integrated Products * Printed USA
The Maxim logo is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. The Dallas logo is a registered trademark of Dallas Semiconductor Corporation.


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