ZHCSFZ8B April 2013 – December 2016
PRODUCTION DATA.
The bq24292i is an I2C controlled power path management device and a single cell Li-Ion battery charger. It integrates the input reverse-blocking FET (RBFET, Q1), high-side switching FET (HSFET, Q2), low-side switching FET (LSFET, Q3), and BATFET (Q4) between system and battery. The device also integrates the bootstrap diode for the high-side gate drive.
The internal bias circuits are powered from the higher voltage of VBUS and BAT. When VBUS or VBAT rises above UVLOZ, the sleep comparator, battery depletion comparator and BATFET driver are active. I2C interface is ready for communication and all the registers are reset to default value. The host can access all the registers after POR.
If only battery is present and the voltage is above depletion threshold (VBAT_DEPL), the BATFET turns on and connects battery to system. The REGN LDO stays off to minimize the quiescent current. The low RDSON in BATFET and the low quiescent current on BAT minimize the conduction loss and maximize the battery run time. The device always monitors the discharge current through BATFET. When the system is overloaded or shorted, the device will immediately turn off BATFET and keep BATFET off until the input source plugs in again.
The BATFET can be forced off by the host through I2C REG07[5]. This bit allows the user to independently turn off the BATFET when the battery condition becomes abnormal during charging. When BATFET is off, there is no path to charge or discharge the battery.
When battery is not attached, the BATFET should be turned off by setting REG07[5] to 1 to disable charging and supplement mode.
When end equipment is assembled, the system is connected to battery through BATFET. There will be a small leakage current to discharge the battery even when the system is powered off. To extend the battery life during shipping and storage, the device can turn off BATFET so that the system voltage is zero to minimize the leakage.
To keep BATFET off during shipping mode, the host has to disable the watchdog timer (REG05[5:4]=00) and disable BATFET (REG07[5]=1) at the same time.
Once the BATFET is disabled, the BATFET can be turned on by plugging in adapter.
When the DC source plugs in, the device checks the input source voltage to turn on REGN LDO and all the bias circuits. It also checks the input current limit before starts the buck converter.
The REGN LDO supplies internal bias circuits as well as the HSFET and LSFET gate drive. The LDO also provides bias rail to TS1/TS2 external resistors. The pullup rail of STAT and PG can be connected to REGN as well.
The REGN is enabled when all of the following conditions are valid:
If one of the above conditions is not valid, the device is in high impedance mode (HIZ) with REGN LDO off. The device draws less than 50µA from VBUS during HIZ state. The battery powers up the system when the device is in HIZ.
After REGN LDO powers up, the device checks the current capability of the input source. The input source has to meet the following requirements to start the buck converter.
Once the input source passes all the conditions above, the status register REG08[2] goes high and the PG pin goes low. An INT is asserted to the host.
If the device fails the poor source detection, it will repeat the detection every 2 seconds.
The USB ports on personal computers are convenient charging source for portable devices (PDs). If the portable device is attached to a USB host, the USB specification requires the portable device to draw limited current (100mA/500mA in USB 2.0, and 150mA/900mA in USB 3.0). If the portable device is attached to a charging port, it is allowed to draw up to 1.5A.
After the PG is LOW or REG08[2] goes HIGH, the charger device always runs input current limit detection when a DC source plugs in unless the charger is in HIZ during host mode.
The device sets input current limit through PSEL and OTG pins.
After the input current limit detection is done, the host can write to REG00[2:0] to change the input current limit.
The device has PSEL which directly takes the USB PHY device output to decide whether the input is USB host or charging port.
PSEL | OTG | INPUT CURRENT LIMIT | REG08[7:6] |
---|---|---|---|
HIGH | LOW | 100 mA | 01 |
HIGH | HIGH | 500 mA | 01 |
LOW | — | 1.5A | 10 |
In battery charging spec, the good battery threshold is the minimum charge level of a battery to power up the portable device successfully. When the input source is 100mA USB host, and the battery is above bat-good threshold (VBATGD), the device follows battery charging spec and enters high impedance state (HIZ). In HIZ state, the device is in the lowest quiescent state with REGN LDO and the bias circuits off. The charger device sets REG00[7] to 1, and the VBUS current during HIZ state will be less than 30µA. The system is supplied by the battery.
Once the charger device enters HIZ state in host mode, it stays in HIZ until the host writes REG00[7]=0. When the processor host wakes up, it is recommended to first check if the charger is in HIZ state.
In default mode, the charger IC will reset REG00[7] back to 0 when input source is removed. When another source plugs in, the charger IC will run detection again, and update the input current limit.
The host can force the charger device to run input current limit detection by setting REG07[7]=1. After the detection is complete, REG07[7] will return to 0 by itself.
After the input current limit is set, the converter is enabled and the HSFET and LSFET start switching. If battery charging is disabled, BATFET turns off. Otherwise, BATFET stays on to charge the battery.
The device provides soft-start when ramp up the system rail. When the system rail is below 2.2V, the input current limit is forced to 100mA. After the system rises above 2.2V, the charger device sets the input current limit set by the lower value between register and ILIM pin.
As a battery charger, the device deploys a 1.5MHz step-down switching regulator. The fixed frequency oscillator keeps tight control of the switching frequency under all conditions of input voltage, battery voltage, charge current and temperature, simplifying output filter design.
A type III compensation network allows using ceramic capacitors at the output of the converter. An internal saw-tooth ramp is compared to the internal error control signal to vary the duty cycle of the converter. The ramp height is proportional to the PMID voltage to cancel out any loop gain variation due to a change in input voltage.
To improve light-load efficiency, the device switches to PFM control at light load when battery is below minimum system voltage setting or charging is disabled. During the PFM operation, the switching duty cycle is set by the ratio of SYS and VBUS.
The device can operate in boost converter mode to support USB On-The-Go (OTG) standard with fast startup and deliver power from the battery to other portable devices through USB port. The boost mode output current rating meets the USB On-The-Go 500mA output requirement. The maximum output current is 1.3A. The boost operation can be enabled only if all of the following conditions are valid:
In boost mode, the device employs a 1.5MHz step-up switching regulator. Similar to buck operation, the device switches from PWM operation to PFM operation at light load to improve efficiency.
During boost mode, the status register REG08[7:6] is set to 11, the VBUS output is 5V and the output current can reach up to 500mA or 1.3A, selected via I2C (REG01[0]).
Any fault during boost operation, including VBUS overvoltage or overcurrent, sets the fault register REG09[6] to 1 and an INT is asserted.
The device accommodates a wide range of input sources from USB, wall adapter, to car battery. The device provides automatic power path selection to supply the system (SYS) from input source (VBUS), battery (BAT), or both.
The device deploys Narrow VDC architecture (NVDC) with BATFET separating system from battery. The minimum system voltage is set by REG01[3:1]. Even with a fully depleted battery, the system is regulated above the minimum system voltage (default 3.5V).
When the battery is below minimum system voltage setting, the BATFET operates in linear mode (LDO mode), and the system is 150mV above the minimum system voltage setting. As the battery voltage rises above the minimum system voltage, BATFET is fully on and the voltage difference between the system and battery is the VDS of BATFET.
When the battery charging is disabled or terminated, the system is always regulated at 150mV above the minimum system voltage setting. The status register REG08[0] goes high when the system is in minimum system voltage regulation.
To meet maximum current limit in USB spec and avoid over loading the adapter, the device features Dynamic Power Management (DPM), which continuously monitors the input current and input voltage.
When input source is over-loaded, either the current exceeds the input current limit (REG00[2:0]) or the voltage falls below the input voltage limit (REG00[6:3]). The device then reduces the charge current until the input current falls below the input current limit and the input voltage rises above the input voltage limit.
When the charge current is reduced to zero, but the input source is still overloaded, the system voltage starts to drop. Once the system voltage falls below the battery voltage, the device automatically enters the supplement mode where the BATFET turns on and battery starts discharging so that the system is supported from both the input source and battery.
During DPM mode (either VINDPM or IINDPM), the status register REG08[3] will go high.
Figure 11 shows the DPM response with 9V/1.2A adapter, 3.2V battery, 2.8A charge current and 3.4V minimum system voltage setting.
When the system voltage falls below the battery voltage, the BATFET turns on and the BATFET gate is regulated the gate drive of BATFET so that the minimum BATFET VDS stays at 30mV when the current is low. This prevents oscillation from entering and exiting the supplement mode. As the discharge current increases, the BATFET gate is regulated with a higher voltage to reduce RDSON until the BATFET is in full conduction. At this point onwards, the BATFET VDS linearly increases with discharge current. Figure 12 shows the V-I curve of the BATFET gate regulation operation. BATFET turns off to exit supplement mode when the battery is below battery depletion threshold.
The device charges 1-cell Li-Ion battery with up to 4.5A charge current for high capacity tablet battery. The 12mΩ BATFET improves charging efficiency and minimizes the voltage drop during discharging.
With battery charging enabled at POR (REG01[5:4]=01), the device can complete a charging cycle without host involvement. The device default charging parameters are listed in .
DEFAULT MODE | bq24292i |
---|---|
Charging Voltage | 4.112 V |
Charging Current | 1.024 A |
Pre-charge Current | 256 mA |
Termination Current | 256 mA |
Temperature Profile | Hot/Cold |
Safety Timer | 8 hours |
A new charge cycle starts when the following conditions are valid:
The charger device automatically terminates the charging cycle when the charging current is below termination threshold and charge voltage is above recharge threshold. When a full battery voltage is discharged below recharge threshold (REG04[0]), the device automatically starts another charging cycle. After charging is done, either toggle CE pin or REG01[5:4] will initiate a new charging cycle.
The STAT output indicates the charging status of charging (LOW), charging complete or charge disable (HIGH) or charging fault (Blinking). The status register REG08[5:4] indicates the different charging phases: 00-charging disable, 01-precharge, 10-fast charge (constant current) and constant voltage mode, 11-charging done. Once a charging cycle is complete, an INT is asserted to notify the host.
The host can always control the charging operation and optimize the charging parameters by writing to the registers through I2C.
The device charges the battery in three phases: preconditioning, constant current and constant voltage. At the beginning of a charging cycle, the device checks the battery voltage and applies current.
VBAT | CHARGING CURRENT | REG DEFAULT SETTING | REG08[5:4] |
---|---|---|---|
<2V | 100mA | – | 01 |
2V-3V | REG03[7:4] | 256mA | 01 |
>3V | REG02[7:2] | 1024mA | 10 |
If the charger device is in DPM regulation or thermal regulation during charging, the actual charging current will be less than the programmed value. In this case, termination is temporarily disabled and the charging safety timer is counted at half the clock rate.
To speed up the charging cycle, we would like to stay in constant current mode as long as possible. In real system, the parasitic resistance, including routing, connector, MOSFETs and sense resistor in the battery pack, may force the charger device to move from constant current loop to constant voltage loop too early, extending the charge time.
The device allows the user to compensate for the parasitic resistance by increasing the voltage regulation set point according to the actual charge current and the resistance. For safe operation, the user should set the maximum allowed regulation voltage to REG06[4:2], and the minimum trace parasitic resistance (REG06[7:5]).
The high capacity battery usually has two or more single cells in parallel. The device provides two TS pins to monitor the thermistor (NTC) in each cell independently.
The device continuously monitors battery temperature by measuring the voltage between the TS pins and ground, typically determined by a negative temperature coefficient thermistor and an external voltage divider. The device compares this voltage against its internal thresholds to determine if charging is allowed. To initiate a charge cycle, the battery temperature must be within the VLTF to VHTF thresholds. During the charge cycle the battery temperature must be within the VLTF to VTCO thresholds, else the device suspends charging and waits until the battery temperature is within the VLTF to VHTF range.
When the TS fault occurs, the fault register REG09[2:0] indicates the actual condition on each TS pin and an INT is asserted to the host. The STAT pin indicates the fault when charging is suspended.
Assuming a 103AT NTC thermistor is used on the battery pack Equation 2, the value RT1 and RT2 can be determined by using the following equation:
Select 0°C to 45°C range for Li-ion or Li-polymer battery,
RTHCOLD = 27.28 kΩ
RTHHOT = 4.911 kΩ
RT1 = 5.52 kΩ
RT2 = 31.23 kΩ
The device terminates a charge cycle when the battery voltage is above recharge threshold, and the current is below termination current. After the charging cycle is complete, the BATFET turns off. The converter keeps running to power the system, and BATFET can turn back on to engage supplement mode.
When termination occurs, the status register REG08[5:4] is 11, and an INT is asserted to the host. Termination is temporarily disabled if the charger device is in input current/voltage regulation or thermal regulation. Termination can be disabled by writing 0 to REG05[7].
When REG02[0] is HIGH to reduce the charging current by 80%, the charging current could be less than the termination current. The charger device termination function should be disabled. When the battery is charged to fully capacity, the host can disable charging through CE pin or REG01[5:4].
Usually the STAT bit indicates charging complete when the charging current falls below termination threshold. Write REG05[6]=1 to enable an early “charge done” indication on STAT pin. The STAT pin goes high when the charge current reduces below 800mA. The charging cycle is still on-going until the current falls below the termination threshold.
The device has safety timer to prevent extended charging cycle due to abnormal battery conditions. The safety timer is 2 hours when the battery is below BATLOWV threshold. The user can program fast charge safety timer through I2C (REG05[2:1]). When safety timer expires, the fault register REG09[5:4] goes 11 and an INT is asserted to the host. The safety timer feature can be disabled via I2C (REG05[3]). The following actions restart the safety timer:
The following actions restart the safety timer:
During input voltage/current regulation, thermal regulation, or when FORCE_20PCT (REG02[0]) bit is set, , the safety timer counts at half clock rate since the actual charge current is likely to be below the register setting. For example, if the charger is in input current regulation (IINDPM) throughout the whole charging cycle, and the safety time is set to 5 hours, the safety timer will expire in 10 hours. This feature can be disabled by writing 0 to REG07[6].
It is recommended to disable safety timer first by clearing REG05[3] bit before safety timer configuraiton is changed. The safety timer can be re-enabled by setting REG05[3] bit.
The total charging time in default mode from USB100mA source is limited by a 45-min max timer. At the end of the timer, the device stops the converter and goes to HIZ.
The PG in the device goes LOW to indicate a good input source when all of the following conditions are met:
The device indicates charging state on the open drain STAT pin. The STAT pin can drive LED as the application diagram shows.
CHARGING STATE | STAT |
---|---|
Charging in progress (including recharge) | LOW |
Charging complete | HIGH |
Sleep mode, charge disable | HIGH |
Charge suspend (Input overvoltage, TS fault, timer fault, input or system overvoltage) | 10kΩ pull down |
When a fault occurs, instead of blinking, the STAT pin in the charger device has a 10kΩ pulldown resistor to ground. When the pullup resistor is 30kΩ, the STAT voltage during fault is 1/4 of the pullup rail.
In some applications, the host does not always monitor the charger operation. The INT notifies the system on the device operation. The following events will generate 256us INT pulse.
When a fault occurs, the charger device sends out INT and latches the fault state in REG09 until the host reads the fault register. Before the host reads REG09, the charger device would not send any INT upon new faults except NTC fault (REG09[2:0]). The NTC fault is not latched and always reports the current thermistor conditions. To read the current fault status, the host has to read REG09 two times consecutively. The 1st reads fault register status from the last INT and the 2nd reads the current fault register status.
For safe operation, the device has an additional hardware pin on ILIM to limit maximum input current on ILIM pin. The input maximum current is set by a resistor from ILIM pin to ground as:
The actual input current limit is the lower value between ILIM setting and register setting (REG00[2:0]). For example, if the register setting is 111 for 3A, and ILIM has a 353Ω resistor to ground for 1.5A, the input current limit is 1.5A. ILIM pin can be used to set the input current limit rather than the register settings.
The device regulates ILIM pin at 1V. If ILIM voltage exceeds 1V, the device enters input current regulation (Refer to Dynamic Power Path Management section).
The voltage on ILIM pin is proportional to the input current. ILIM pin can be used to monitor the input current following Equation 4:
For example, if ILIM pin sets 2A, and the ILIM voltage is 0.6V, the actual input current 1.2A. If ILIM pin is open, the input current is limited to zero since ILIM voltage floats above 1V. If ILIM pin is short, the input current limit is set by the register.
The charger device monitors the internal junction temperature TJ to avoid overheat the chip and limits the IC surface temperature. When the internal junction temperature exceeds the preset limit (REG06[1:0]), the device lowers down the charge current. The wide thermal regulation range from 60°C to 120°C allows the user to optimize the system thermal performance.
During thermal regulation, the actual charging current is usually below the programmed battery charging current. Therefore, termination is disabled, the safety timer runs at half the clock rate, and the status register REG08[1] goes high.
Additionally, the device has thermal shutdown to turn off the converter. The fault register REG09[5:4] is 10 and an INT is asserted to the host.
The charger device closely monitors the input and system voltage, as well as HSFET and LSFET current for safe buck mode operation.
The maximum input voltage for buck mode operation is 18V. If VBUS voltage exceeds 18V, the device stops switching immediately. During input over voltage (ACOV), the fault register REG09[5:4] will be set to 01. An INT is asserted to the host.
The charger device monitors the voltage at SYS. When system overvoltage is detected, the converter is stopped to protect components connected to SYS from high voltage damage.
The charger device closely monitors the Q1, Q2(HSFET) and Q3(LSFET) current to ensure safe boost mode operation. During overcurrent condition, the device will operate in hiccup mode for protection. While in hiccup mode cycle, the device turns off Q1 FET for tOTG_OCP_OFF (32ms typical) and turns on Q1 FET for tOTG_OCP_ON(100us typical) in an attempt to restart. If the overcurrent condition is removed, the boost converter will maintain the Q1 FET on state and the VBUS OTG output will operate normally. When overcurrent condition continues to exist, the device will repeat the hiccup cycle until overcurrent condition is removed.
The boost mode regulated output is 5V. When an adapter plugs in during boost mode, the VBUS voltage will rise above regulation target. Once the VBUS voltage exceeds VOTG_OVP, the charger device stops switching and the device exits boost mode. The fault register REG09[6] is set high to indicate fault in boost operation. An INT is asserted to the host.
The battery overvoltage limit is clamped at 4% above the battery regulation voltage. When battery over voltage occurs, the charger device immediately disables charge. The fault register REG09[5] goes high and an INT is asserted to the host.
If the battery voltage falls below 2V, the charge current is reduced to 100mA for battery safety.
If the system is shorted or exceeds the overcurrent limit, the BATFET is latched off. DC source insertion on VBUS is required to reset the latch-off condition and turn on BATFET.
The device uses I2C compatible interface for flexible charging parameter programming and instantaneous device status reporting. I2CTM is a bi-directional 2-wire serial interface developed by Philips Semiconductor (now NXP Semiconductors). Only two bus lines are required: a serial data line (SDA) and a serial clock line (SCL). Devices can be considered as masters or slaves when performing data transfers. A master is the device which initiates a data transfer on the bus and generates the clock signals to permit that transfer. At that time, any device addressed is considered a slave.
The device operates as a slave device with address 6BH, receiving control inputs from the master device like micro controller or a digital signal processor. The I2C interface supports both standard mode (up to 100kbits), and fast mode (up to 400kbits).
Both SDA and SCL are bi-directional lines, connecting to the positive supply voltage via a current source or pullup resistor. When the bus is free, both lines are HIGH. The SDA and SCL pins are open drain.
The data on the SDA line must be stable during the HIGH period of the clock. The HIGH or LOW state of the data line can only change when the clock signal on the SCL line is LOW. One clock pulse is generated for each data bit transferred.
All transactions begin with a START (S) and can be terminated by a STOP (P). A HIGH to LOW transition on the SDA line while SCl is HIGH defines a START condition. A LOW to HIGH transition on the SDA line when the SCL is HIGH defines a STOP condition.
START and STOP conditions are always generated by the master. The bus is considered busy after the START condition, and free after the STOP condition.
Every byte on the SDA line must be 8 bits long. The number of bytes to be transmitted per transfer is unrestricted. Each byte has to be followed by an Acknowledge bit. Data is transferred with the Most Significant Bit (MSB) first. If a slave cannot receive or transmit another complete byte of data until it has performed some other function, it can hold the clock line SCL low to force the master into a wait state (clock stretching). Data transfer then continues when the slave is ready for another byte of data and release the clock line SCL.
The acknowledge takes place after every byte. The acknowledge bit allows the receiver to signal the transmitter that the byte was successfully received and another byte may be sent. All clock pulses, including the acknowledge 9th clock pulse, are generated by the master.
The transmitter releases the SDA line during the acknowledge clock pulse so the receiver can pull the SDA line LOW and it remains stable LOW during the HIGH period of this clock pulse.
When SDA remains HIGH during the 9th clock pulse, this is the Not Acknowledge signal. The master can then generate either a STOP to abort the transfer or a repeated START to start a new transfer.
After the START, a slave address is sent. This address is 7 bits long followed by the eighth bit as a data direction bit (bit R/W). A zero indicates a transmission (WRITE) and a one indicates a request for data (READ).
If the register address is not defined, the charger IC send back NACK and go back to the idle state.
The charger device supports multi-read and multi-write on REG00 through REG08.
The fault register REG09 locks the previous fault and only clears it after the register is read. For example, if Charge Safety Timer Expiration fault occurs but recovers later, the fault register REG09 reports the fault when it is read the first time, but returns to normal when it is read the second time. To verify real time fault, the fault register REG09 should be read twice to get the real condition. In addition, the fault register REG09 does not support multi-read or multi-write.
The device is a host controlled device, but it can operate in default mode without host management. In default mode, device can be used as an autonomous charger with no host or with host in sleep.
When the charger is in default mode, REG09[7] is HIGH. When the charger is in host mode, REG09[7] is LOW. After power-on-reset, the device starts in watchdog timer expiration state, or default mode. All the registers are in the default settings.
Any write command to the device transitions the device from default mode to host mode. All the device parameters can be programmed by the host. To keep the device in host mode, the host has to reset the watchdog timer by writing 1 to REG01[6] before the watchdog timer expires (REG05[5:4]), or disable watchdog timer by setting REG05[5:4]=00.
When the input source is detected as 100mA USB host, and the battery voltage is above batgood threshold (VBATGD), the charger device enters HIZ state to meet the battery charging spec requirement.
If the charger device is in host mode, it will stay in HIZ state even after the USB100mA source is removed, and the adapter plugs in. During the HIZ state, REG00[7] is set HIGH and the system load is supplied from battery. It is recommended that the processor host always checks if the charger IC is in HIZ state when it wakes up. The host can write REG00[7] to 0 to exit HIZ state.
If the charger is in default mode, when the DC source is removed, the charger device will get out of HIZ state automatically. When the input source plugs in again, the charger IC runs detection on the input source and update the input current limit.
The total charging time in default mode from USB100mA source is limited by a 45-min max timer. At the end of the timer, the device stops the converter and goes to HIZ.
REGISTER | REGISTER NAME | RESET |
---|---|---|
REG00 | Input Source Control Register | 00111101, or 3D |
REG01 | Power-On Configuration Register | 00011011, or 1B |
REG02 | Charge Current Control Register | 00100000, or 20 |
REG03 | Pre-Charge/Termination Current Control Register | 00010001, or 11 |
REG04 | Charge Voltage Control Register | 10011010, or 9A |
REG05 | Charge Termination/Timer Control Register | 10011010, or 9A |
REG06 | IR Compensation / Thermal Regulation Control Register | 00000011, or 03 |
REG07 | Misc Operation Control Register | 01001011, or 4B |
REG08 | System Status Register | — |
REG09 | Fault Register | — |
REG0A | Vender / Part / Revision Status Register | — |
Address: 6BH. REG00-07 support Read and Write. REG08-0A are read only.
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
EN_HIZ | VINDPM[3] | VINDPM[2] | VINDPM[1] | VINDPM[0] | IINLIM[2] | IINLIM[1] | IINLIM[0] |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bit 7 | EN_HIZ | R/W | 0 | 0 – Disable, 1 – Enable | Default: Disable (0) |
INPUT VOLTAGE LIMIT | |||||
Bit 6 | VINDPM[3] | R/W | 0 | 640mV | Offset 3.88V, Range: 3.88V-5.08V Default: 4.44V (0111) |
Bit 5 | VINDPM[2] | R/W | 1 | 320mV | |
Bit 4 | VINDPM[1] | R/W | 1 | 160mV | |
Bit 3 | VINDPM[0] | R/W | 1 | 80mV | |
INPUT CURRENT LIMIT (ACTUAL INPUT CURRENT LIMIT IS THE LOWER OF I2C AND ILIM) | |||||
Bit 2 | IINLIM[2] | R/W | 1 | 000 – 100mA, 001 – 150mA, 010 – 500mA, 011 – 900mA, 100 – 1.2A, 101 – 1.5A, 110 – 2A, 111 – 3A |
Default SDP: 100mA (000)(OTG pin=0) or 500mA (010) (OTG pin=1) Default DCP/CDP: 1.5A (101) |
Bit 1 | IINLIM[1] | R/W | 0 | ||
Bit 0 | IINLIM[0] | R/W | 1 |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Register Reset | I2C Watchdog Timer Reset | CHG_CONFIG[1] | CHG_CONFIG[0] | SYS_MIN[2] | SYS_MIN[1] | SYS_MIN[0] | BOOST_LIM |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | NOTE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bit 7 | Register Reset | R/W | 0 | 0 – Keep current register setting, 1 – Reset to default |
Default: Keep current register setting (0) Back to 0 after register reset |
Bit 6 | I2C Watchdog Timer Reset | R/W | 0 | 0 – Normal ; 1 – Reset | Default: Normal (0) Back to 0 after timer reset |
CHARGER CONFIGURATION | |||||
Bit 5 | CHG_CONFIG[1] | R/W | 0 | 00 – Charge Disable, 01 – Charge Battery, 10/11 – OTG |
Default: Charge Battery (01) |
Bit 4 | CHG_CONFIG[0] | R/W | 1 | ||
MINIMUM SYSTEM VOLTAGE LIMIT | |||||
Bit 3 | SYS_MIN[2] | R/W | 1 | 0.4V | Offset: 3.0V, Range 3.0V-3.7V Default: 3.5V (101) |
Bit 2 | SYS_MIN[1] | R/W | 0 | 0.2V | |
Bit 1 | SYS_MIN[0] | R/W | 1 | 0.1V | |
BOOST MODE CURRENT LIMIT | |||||
Bit 0 | BOOST_LIM | R/W | 1 | 0 – 500mA, 1 – 1.3A | Default: 1.3A (1) |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
ICHG[5] | ICHG[4] | ICHG[3] | ICHG[2] | ICHG[1] | ICHG[0] | Reserved | FORCE_20PCT |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | NOTE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
FAST CHARGE CURRENT LIMIT | |||||
Bit 7 | ICHG[5] | R/W | 0 | 2048mA | Offset: 512mA Range: 512-4544mA Default: 1024mA (001000) |
Bit 6 | ICHG[4] | R/W | 0 | 1024mA | |
Bit 5 | ICHG[3] | R/W | 1 | 512mA | |
Bit 4 | ICHG[2] | R/W | 0 | 256mA | |
Bit 3 | ICHG[1] | R/W | 0 | 128mA | |
Bit 2 | ICHG[0] | R/W | 0 | 64mA | |
Bit 1 | Reserved | R/W | 0 | 0 - Reserved | |
Bit 0 | FORCE_20PCT | R/W | 0 | 0 – ICHG as REG02[7:2] (Fast Charge Current Limit) and REG03[7:4] (Pre-Charge Current Limit) programmed 1 – ICHG as 20% of REG02[7:2] (Fast Charge Current Limit) and 50% of REG03[7:4] (Pre-Charge Current Limit) programmed |
Default: (0) ICHG as 20% of REG02[7:2] (Fast Charge Current Limit) and 50% of REG03[7:4] (Pre-Charge Current Limit) programmed |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
IPRECHG[3] | IPRECHG[2] | IPRECHG[1] | IPRECHG[0] | ITERM[3] | ITERM[2] | ITERM[1] | ITERM[0] |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | NOTE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
PRE-CHARGE CURRENT LIMIT | |||||
Bit 7 | IPRECHG[3] | R/W | 0 | 1024mA | Offset: 128mA, Range: 128mA – 640mA Default: 256mA (0001) |
Bit 6 | IPRECHG[2] | R/W | 0 | 512mA | |
Bit 5 | IPRECHG[1] | R/W | 0 | 256mA | |
Bit 4 | IPRECHG[0] | R/W | 1 | 128mA | |
TERMINATION CURRENT LIMIT | |||||
Bit 3 | ITERM[3] | R/W | 0 | 1024mA | Offset: 128mA Range: 128mA – 2048mA Default: 256mA (0001) |
Bit 2 | ITERM[2] | R/W | 0 | 512mA | |
Bit 1 | ITERM[1] | R/W | 0 | 256mA | |
Bit 0 | ITERM[0] | R/W | 1 | 128mA |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
VREG[5] | VREG[4] | VREG[3] | VREG[2] | VREG[1] | VREG[0] | BATLOWV | VRECHG |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | NOTE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CHARGE VOLTAGE LIMIT | |||||
Bit 7 | VREG[5] | R/W | 1 | 512mV | Offset: 3.504V Range: 3.504V – 4.400V (111000) Default: 4.112V (100110) |
Bit 6 | VREG[4] | R/W | 0 | 256mV | |
Bit 5 | VREG[3] | R/W | 0 | 128mV | |
Bit 4 | VREG[2] | R/W | 1 | 64mV | |
Bit 3 | VREG[1] | R/W | 1 | 32mV | |
Bit 2 | VREG[0] | R/W | 0 | 16mV | |
BATTERY PRECHARGE TO FAST CHARGE THRESHOLD | |||||
Bit 1 | BATLOWV | R/W | 1 | 0 – 2.8V, 1 – 3.0V | Default: 3.0V (1) |
BATTERY RECHARGE THRESHOLD (BELOW BATTERY REGULATION VOLTAGE) | |||||
Bit 0 | VRECHG | R/W | 0 | 0 – 100mV, 1 – 300mV | Default: 100mV (0) |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
EN_TERM | TERM_STAT | WATCHDOG[1] | WATCHDOG[0] | EN_TIMER | CHG_TIMER[1] | CHG_TIMER[0] | Reserved |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | NOTE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
CHARGING TERMINATION ENABLE | |||||
Bit 7 | EN_TERM | R/W | 1 | 0 – Disable, 1 – Enable | Default: Enable termination (1) |
TERMINATION INDICATOR THRESHOLD | |||||
Bit 6 | TERM_STAT | R/W | 0 | 0 – Match ITERM, 1 – STAT pin high before actual termination when charge current below 800 mA |
Default Match ITERM (0) |
I2C WATCHDOG TIMER SETTING | |||||
Bit 5 | WATCHDOG[1] | R/W | 0 | 00 – Disable timer, 01 – 40s, 10 – 80s, 11 – 160s | Default: 40s (01) |
Bit 4 | WATCHDOG[0] | R/W | 1 | ||
CHARGING SAFETY TIMER ENABLE | |||||
Bit 3 | EN_TIMER | R/W | 1 | 0 – Disable, 1 – Enable | Default: Enable (1) |
FAST CHARGE TIMER SETTING | |||||
Bit 2 | CHG_TIMER[1] | R/W | 0 | 00 – 5 hrs, 01 – 8 hrs, 10 – 12 hrs, 11 – 20 hrs | Default: 8hours (01) (See Charging Safety Timer for details) |
Bit 1 | CHG_TIMER[0] | R/W | 1 | ||
Bit 0 | Reserved | R/W | 0 | 0 - Reserved |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
BAT_COMP[2] | BAT_COMP[1] | BAT_COMP[0] | VCLAMP[2] | VCLAMP[1] | VCLAMP[0] | TREG[1] | TREG[0] |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | NOTE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
IR COMPENSATION RESISTOR SETTING | |||||
Bit 7 | BAT_COMP[2] | R/W | 0 | 40mΩ | Range: 0 – 70mΩ Default: 0Ω (000) |
Bit 6 | BAT_COMP[1] | R/W | 0 | 20mΩ | |
Bit 5 | BAT_COMP[0] | R/W | 0 | 10mΩ | |
IR COMPENSATION VOLTAGE CLAMP (ABOVE REGULATION VOLTAGE) | |||||
Bit 4 | VCLAMP[2] | R/W | 0 | 64mV | Range: 0 – 112 mV Default: 0mV (000) |
Bit 3 | VCLAMP[1] | R/W | 0 | 32mV | |
Bit 2 | VCLAMP[0] | R/W | 0 | 16mV | |
THERMAL REGULATION THRESHOLD | |||||
Bit 1 | TREG[1] | R/W | 1 | 00 – 60°C, 01 – 80°C, 10 – 100°C, 11 – 120°C | Default: 120°C (11) |
Bit 0 | TREG[0] | R/W | 1 |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
DPDM_EN | TMR2X_EN | BATFET_Disable | Reserved | Reserved | Reserved | INT_MASK[1] | INT_MASK[0] |
R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W | R/W |
LEGEND: R/W = Read/Write; R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION | NOTE |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Set default input current limit from PSEL/OTG pins | |||||
Bit 7 | DPDM_EN | R/W | 0 | 0 – Not in Input source detection; 1 – Force Input source detection |
Default: Not in Input source detection (0). Reset to 0 after detection complete. INT pulse may not be generated |
SAFETY TIMER SETTING DURING INPUT DPM AND THERMAL REGULATION | |||||
Bit 6 | TMR2X_EN | R/W | 1 | 0 – Safety timer not slowed by 2X during input DPM or thermal regulation, 1 – Safety timer slowed by 2X during input DPM or thermal regulation |
Default: Safety timer slowed by 2X (1) |
FORCE BATFET OFF | |||||
Bit 5 | BATFET_Disable | R/W | 0 | 0 – Allow Q4 turn on, 1 – Turn off Q4 | Default: Allow Q4 turn on(0) |
Bit 4 | Reserved | R/W | 0 | 0 - Reserved | |
Bit 3 | Reserved | R/W | 1 | 1 - Reserved | |
Bit 2 | Reserved | R/W | 0 | 0 - Reserved | |
Bit 1 | INT_MASK[1] | R/W | 1 | 0 – No INT during CHRG_FAULT, 1 – INT on CHRG_FAULT | Default: INT on CHRG_FAULT (1) |
Bit 0 | INT_MASK[0] | R/W | 1 | 0 – No INT during BAT_FAULT, 1 – INT on BAT_FAULT | Default: INT on BAT_FAULT (1) |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
VBUS_STAT[1] | VBUS_STAT[0] | CHRG_STAT[1] | CHRG_STAT[0] | DPM_STAT | PG_STAT | THERM_STAT | VSYS_STAT |
R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R |
LEGEND: R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|---|---|
Bit 7 | VBUS_STAT[1] | R | 00 – Unknown (no input, or DPDM detection incomplete), 01 – USB host, 10 – Adapter port, 11 – OTG |
Bit 6 | VBUS_STAT[0] | R | |
Bit 5 | CHRG_STAT[1] | R | 00 – Not Charging, 01 – Pre-charge (<VBATLOWV), 10 – Fast Charging, 11 – Charge Termination Done |
Bit 4 | CHRG_STAT[0] | R | |
Bit 3 | DPM_STAT | R | 0 – Not DPM, 1 – VINDPM or IINDPM |
Bit 2 | PG_STAT | R | 0 – Not Power Good, 1 – Power Good |
Bit 1 | THERM_STAT | R | 0 – Normal, 1 – In Thermal Regulation |
Bit 0 | VSYS_STAT | R | 0 – Not in VSYSMIN regulation (BAT>VSYSMIN), 1 – In VSYSMIN regulation (BAT<VSYSMIN) |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
WATCHDOG_ FAULT |
BOOST_ FAULT |
CHRG_FAULT[1] | CHRG_FAULT[0] | BAT_FAULT | NTC_FAULT[2] | NTC_FAULT[1] | NTC_FAULT[0] |
R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R |
LEGEND: R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|---|---|
Bit 7 | WATCHDOG_FAULT | R | 0 – Normal, 1- Watchdog timer expiration |
Bit 6 | BOOST_FAULT | R | 0 – Normal, 1 – VBUS overloaded (OCP), or VBUS OVP in boost mode |
Bit 5 | CHRG_FAULT[1] | R | 00 – Normal, 01 – Input fault (VBUS OVP or VBAT<VBUS<3.8V), 10 - Thermal shutdown, 11 – Charge Safety Timer Expiration Note: a one time Input fault is generated when VBUS source is removed |
Bit 4 | CHRG_FAULT[0] | R | |
Bit 3 | BAT_FAULT | R | 0 – Normal, 1 – BATOVP |
Bit 2 | NTC_FAULT[2] | R | 000 – Normal, 001 – TS1 Cold, 010 – TS1 Hot, 011 – TS2 Cold, 100 – TS2 Hot, 101 – Both Cold, 110 – Both Hot |
Bit 1 | NTC_FAULT[1] | R | |
Bit 0 | NTC_FAULT[0] | R |
7 | 6 | 5 | 4 | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 |
Reserved | Reserved | PN[2] | PN[1] | PN[0] | TS_PROFILE | DEV_REG[0] | DEV_REG[1] |
R | R | R | R | R | R | R | R |
LEGEND: R = Read only; -n = value after reset |
BIT | FIELD | TYPE | RESET | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bit 7 | Reserved | R | 0 | 0 - Reserved |
Bit 6 | Reserved | R | 0 | 0 - Reserved |
DEVICE CONFIGURATION | ||||
Bit 5 | PN[2] | R | 0 | 011 |
Bit 4 | PN[1] | R | 1 | |
Bit 3 | PN[0] | R | 1 | |
Bit 2 | TS_PROFILE | R | 0 | 0 – Cold/Hot window |
Bit 1 | DEV_REG[0] | R | 0 | 00 |
Bit 0 | DEV_REG[1] | R | 0 |