ZHCSCS0C September 2014 – March 2017
PRODUCTION DATA.
WPC-based wireless power systems consist of a charging pad (primary, transmitter) and the secondary-side equipment (receiver). The coils in the charging pad and secondary equipment magnetically couple to each other when the receiver is placed on the transmitter. Power is transferred from the primary to the secondary by transformer action between the coils. The receiver can achieve control over the amount of power transferred by getting the transmitter to change the field strength by changing the frequency, duty cycle, or voltage rail energizing the primary coil.
The receiver equipment communicates with the primary by modulating the load seen by the primary. This load modulation results in a change in the primary coil current or primary coil voltage, or both, which is measured and demodulated by the transmitter.
In WPC, the system communication is digital (packets that are transferred from the secondary to the primary). Differential biphase encoding is used for the packets. The bit rate is 2 kb/s. Various types of communication packets are defined. These include identification and authentication packets, error packets, control packets, power usage packets, and end power transfer packets, among others.
The bq51025 incorporates a two-way proprietary authentication with the bq500215 primary controller that allows optimal power transfer and system performance up to 10-W output power while still complying with WPC v1.2 specifications.
The bq51025 device integrates fully-compliant WPC v1.2 communication protocol to streamline the wireless power receiver designs (no extra software development required). Other unique algorithms such as Dynamic Rectifier Control are integrated to provide best-in-class system efficiency while keeping the smallest solution size of the industry.
As a WPC system, when the receiver (shown in Figure 6) is placed on the charging pad, the secondary coil couples to the magnetic flux generated by the coil in the transmitter, which consequently induces a voltage in the secondary coil. The internal synchronous rectifier feeds this voltage to the RECT pin, which in turn feeds the LDO which feeds the output.
The bq51025 device identifies and authenticates itself to the primary using the COMMx pins, switching on and off the COMM FETs, and hence, switching in and out COMM capacitors. If the authentication is successful, the primary remains powered-up. Using a proprietary authentication protocol, the bq51025 determines if the 10-W bq500215 primary controller is powering the device, in which case the bq51025 device allows operation up to 10-W. If the bq51025 determines that a standard WPC-compliant transmitter is powering it, it allows operation up to 5-W. The bq51025 device measures the voltage at the RECT pin, calculates the difference between the actual voltage and the desired voltage VRECT(REG) and sends back error packets to the transmitter. This process goes on until the input voltage settles at VRECT(REG) MAX. During a load change, the dynamic rectifier algorithm sets the target voltage between VRECT(REG) MAX and VRECT(REG) MIN, as shown in Table 1. This algorithm enhances the transient response of the power supply.
After the voltage at the RECT pin is at the desired value, the pass FET is enabled. The voltage control loop ensures that the output voltage is maintained at VOUT(REG), powering the downstream charger. The bq51025 device meanwhile continues to monitor the input voltage, and keeps sending control error packets (CEP) to the primary, on average, every 250 ms. If a large transient occurs, the feedback to the primary speeds up to 32-ms communication periods to converge on an operating point in less time.
The Dynamic Rectifier Control algorithm offers the end-system designer optimal transient response for a given maximum output current setting. This is achieved by providing enough voltage headroom across the internal regulator (LDO) at light loads in order to maintain regulation during a load transient. The WPC system has a relatively slow global feedback loop where it can take up to 150 ms to converge on a new rectifier voltage target. Therefore, a transient response depends on the loosely-coupled transformer's output-impedance profile. The Dynamic Rectifier Control allows for a 1.5-V change in rectified voltage before the transient response is observed at the output of the internal regulator (output of the bq51025 device). A 1-A application allows up to a 2-Ω output impedance. Figure 13 shows the Dynamic Rectifier Control behavior during active power transfer.
The Dynamic Power Scaling feature allows for the loss characteristics of the bq51025 device to be scaled based on the maximum expected output power in the end application. This effectively optimizes the efficiency for each application. This feature is achieved by scaling the loss of the internal LDO based on a percentage of the maximum output current. Note that the maximum output current is set by the KILIM term and the RILIM resistance (where RILIM = KILIM / IILIM). The flow diagram in Figure 13 shows how the rectifier is dynamically controlled (Dynamic Rectifier Control) based on the voltage level at the ILIM pin (VILIM). This voltage represents a fixed percentage of the IILIM setting. Table 1 summarizes how the rectifier behavior is dynamically adjusted based on two different RILIM settings. Table 1 is shown for IMAX, which is the maximum operating output current and is typically lower than IILIM (about 20% lower). See RILIM Calculations for more details on how to set IILIM.
Output Current Percentage (Low-Power Mode) |
Output Current Percentage (Proprietary Mode) |
Low Power (5-W) Mode RILIM = 700 Ω IILIM = 0.6 A (IMAX = 0.5 A) |
Low Power (5-W) Mode RILIM = 700 Ω IILIM = 1.2 A (IMAX = 1 A) |
Proprietary 10-W Mode RILIM = 495 Ω IILIM = 1.7 A (IMAX = 1.4 A) |
VRECT (2) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
0 to 10% | 0 to 5% | 0 to 0.05 A | 0 to 0.05 A | 0 to 0.070 A | VOUT + 2.0 |
10 to 20% | 5 to 10% | 0.05 to 0.1 A | 0.05 to 0.1 A | 0.070 to 0.14 A | VOUT + 1.6 |
20 to 40% | 10 to 20% | 0.1 to 0.2 A | 0.1 to 0.2 A | 0.14 to 0.28 A | VOUT + 0.6 |
>40% | >20% | >0.2 A | >0.2 A | >0.28 A | VOUT + 0.12 |
Table 1 shows the shift in the Dynamic Rectifier Control behavior based on the two different RILIM settings. With the rectifier voltage (VRECT) as the input to the internal LDO, this adjustment in the Dynamic Rectifier Control thresholds dynamically adjusts the power dissipation across the LDO where,
Figure 22 shows how the Dynamic Power Scaling feature reduces the VRECT with increased load, allowing the post-regulation LDO to have maximum headroom at low load conditions for better load transient performance and minimal power dissipation at high loads. Note that this feature balances efficiency with optimal system transient response.
The bq51025 device allows the designer to set the output voltage by setting a feedback resistor divider network from the OUT pin to the VO_REG pin, as seen in Figure 7. Select the resistor divider network so that the voltage at the VO_REG pin is 0.5 V (default setting) at the desired output voltage. The target VO_REG voltage can be changed through I2C by changing Table 4
Choose the desired output voltage VOUT and R6:
The bq51025 device includes a means of providing hardware overcurrent protection (IILIM) through an analog current regulation loop. The hardware current limit provides an extra level of safety by clamping the maximum allowable output current (for example, current compliance). The RILIM resistor size also sets the thresholds for the dynamic rectifier levels providing efficiency tuning per each application’s maximum system current. The calculation for the total RILIM resistance is as follows:
The RILIM allows for the ILIM pin to reach 1.2 V when operating in proprietary mode (up to 10-W output power) when the output current is equal to IILIM. When the receiver operates in standard WPC low-power mode, the ILIM pin voltage threshold is changed from 1.2 to 0.6 V, setting the low-power mode current limit to half of that at the proprietary mode setting.
In the case where having the current limit change by a factor of two between modes is not desired, the two current limit levels may be independently controlled in two ways:
To adjust the current limit for each mode through I2C, RILIM is chosen using Equation 4 where IILIM is the current limit for proprietary mode (that is, higher current setting). The host should first set the desired current limit value for low-power mode as a percentage of IILIM through the IO_REG bits and then disable the 2X current scaling by setting the I2C_ILIM bit in Table 5 and Table 6 respectively to enable programmability. By default, IO_REG is set to the highest current setting allowed by RILIM (that is, 100% of IILIM).
If I2C control is not available, the current limit for low power and proprietary modes can be set independently by shorting a portion of the R1 resistance using an external switch as shown in Figure 8. RILIM is calculated using Equation 4, where IILIM is the desired current limit for proprietary mode. The resistance to set the current limit in low-power mode, RILIM_LP is calculated by Equation 6.
where
The value for R1_A is given by RILIM_LP – RFOD. The value of R1_B is then RILIM – R1_A – RFOD. Note that with this method IILIM must be less than 2 × IILIM_LP
When choosing IILIM, consider the following two possible operating conditions:
However, in both cases, the charger must be capable of regulating the current drawn from the device to allow the output voltage to stay at a reasonable value. This same behavior is also necessary during the WPC communication. The following calculations show how such a design is achieved:
where
When referring to the application diagram shown in Typical Applications, RILIM is the sum of the R1 and RFOD resistance (that is, the total resistance from the ILIM pin to GND). RFOD is chosen according to the application. To obtain the tool for calculating RFOD, contact your TI representative. Use RFOD to allow the receiver implementation to comply with WPC v1.2 requirements related to received power accuracy.
The bq51025 device can also help manage the multiplexing of adapter power to the output and can shut off the TX when the adapter is plugged in and is above the VAD-EN. After the adapter is plugged in and the output turns off, the RX device sends an EPT to the TX. In this case, the AD_EN pins are then pulled to approximately 4 V below AD, which allows the device to turn on the back-to-back PMOS connected between AD and OUT (see Figure 32).
Both the AD and AD-EN pins are rated at 30 V, while the OUT pin is rated at 20 V. Note that it is required to connect a back-to-back PMOS between AD and OUT so that voltage is blocked in both directions. Also, when AD mode is enabled, no load can be pulled from the RECT pin because this could cause an internal device overvoltage in the bq51025 device.
The WPC v1.2 specification allows the receiver to turn off the transmitter and put the system in a low-power standby mode. There are two different ways to accomplish this with the bq51025 device. The EPT charge complete (WPC) can be sent to the TX by pulling the TS pin high (above 1.4 V). The bq51025 device will then sense this and send the appropriate signal to the TX, thus putting the TX in a low-power standby mode.
The WPC allows for a special command to terminate power transfer from the TX-termed EPT packet. The WPC v1.2 specifies the following reasons and their corresponding data field value in Table 2.
Reason | Value | Condition(1) |
---|---|---|
Unknown | 0x00 | AD > 3.6 V |
Charge complete | 0x01 | TS/CTRL > 1.4 V |
Internal fault | 0x02 | TJ > 150°C or RILIM < 215 Ω |
Over temperature | 0x03 | TS < VHOT, or TS/CTRL < 100 mV (2) |
Over voltage | 0x04 | VRECT voltage does not converge and stays higher than target |
Battery failure | 0x06 | Not sent |
Reconfigure | 0x07 | Not sent |
No response | 0x08 | Not sent |
Communication current limit is a feature that allows for error-free communication to happen between the RX and TX in the WPC mode. This is done by decoupling the coil from the load transients by limiting the output current during communication with the TX. The communication current limit is set according to Table 3. The communication current limit can be enabled by pulling CM_ILIM pin low or disabled by pulling the CM_ILIM pin high (>1.4 V) . An internal pulldown enables communication current limit when the CM_ILIM pin is left floating.
IOUT | Communication Current Limit |
---|---|
0 mA < IOUT < 100 mA | None |
100 mA < IOUT < 400 mA | IOUT + 50 mA |
400 mA < IOUT < Max current | IOUT – 50 mA |
When the communication current limit is enabled, the amount of current that the load can draw is limited. If the charger in the system does not have a VIN-DPM feature, the output of the receiver collapses if communication current limit is enabled. Please note that power dissipation within the device will increase during current limiting, lowering overall system efficiency. To disable communication current limit, pull CM_ILIM pin high.
PD_DET is an open-drain pin that goes low based on the voltage of the TMEM pin. When the voltage of TMEM is higher than 1.6 V, PD_DET is low. The voltage on the TMEM pin depends on capturing the energy from the digital ping from the transmitter and storing it on the C5 capacitor in Figure 9. After the receiver sends an EPT (charge complete), the transmitter shuts down and goes into a low-power mode. However, it continues to check if the receiver would like to renegotiate a power transfer by periodically performing the digital ping. The energy from the digital ping can be stored on the TMEM pin until the next digital ping refreshes the capacitor. The designer can choose a bleedoff resistor, RMEM, in parallel with C5 that sets the time constant so that the TMEM pin will fall below 1.6 V once the next ping timer expires. The duration between digital pings is indeterminate and depends on each transmitter manufacturer.
Set capacitor on C5 = TMEM to 2.2 µF. Resistor RMEM across C5 can be set by understanding the duration between digital pings (tping). Set the resistor such that:
PD_DET typically requires a pullup resistor to an external source. A higher current through the PD_DET pin may affect the output regulation of the device. To improve regulation, TI recommends pullup resistor values in the range of 15 to 100 kΩ.
The bq51025 device includes a ratiometric external temperature sense function. The temperature sense function has a low ratiometric threshold which represents a hot condition. TI recommends an external temperature sensor to provide safe operating conditions for the receiver product. This pin is best used for monitoring the surface that can be exposed to the end user (for example, place the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) resistor closest to the user touch point on the back cover). A resistor in series or parallel can be inserted to adjust the NTC to match the trip point of the device. The implementation in Figure 10 shows the series-parallel resistor implementation for setting the threshold at which VTS-HOT is reached. When the VTS-HOT threshold is reached, the device will send an EPT – overtemperature signal for a WPC transmitter.
Figure 10 shows a parallel resistor setup that can be used to adjust the trip point of VTS-HOT. After the NTC is chosen and RNTCHOT at VTS-HOT is determined from the data sheet of the NTC, use Equation 10 to calculate R1 and R3. In many cases, depending on the NTC resistor, R1 or R3 can be omitted. To omit R1, set R1 to 0, and to omit R3, set R3 to 10 MΩ in the calculation.
Connect a 5-MΩ resistor to ground in order to use PMODE to indicate the receiver mode of operation. PMODE is high when in low-power mode and low in proprietary mode. This pin may be used to control the gate of an NMOS switch to change the RILIM, and hence, the current limit based on the maximum power allowed by the transmitter (10 W for bq500215, 5 W or less otherwise). This pin may be left floating if not used. and show the PMODE behavior during startup.
The bq51025 device allows for I2C communication with the internal CPU. The I2C address for the device is 0x6C. In case the I2C is not used, ground SCL and SDA. See Register Maps for more information.
If the input voltage suddenly increases in potential for some condition (for example, a change in position of the equipment on the charging pad), the voltage-control loop inside the bq51025 device becomes active, and prevents the output from going beyond VOUT(REG). The receiver then starts sending back error packets every 32 ms until the input voltage comes back to an acceptable level, and then maintains the error communication every 250 ms.
If the input voltage increases in potential beyond VRECT_OVP, the device switches off the LDO and informs the primary to terminate power. In addition, a proprietary voltage protection circuit is activated by means of CCLAMP1 and CCLAMP2 that protects the device from voltages beyond the maximum rating of the device.
The bq51025 device provides the host through I2C with power signal frequency information that would enable it to determine the optimal alignment position on the charging surface of a frequency-controlled transmitter. For these WPC transmitters, the power signal frequency increases as the coupling between the primary and secondary coils increases. By finding the position in the charging pad that has the highest frequency, the host can determine that the best possible alignment with the transmitter coil has been achieved.
The bq51025 continuously stores a measurement of the power signal frequency in I2C register 0xFB to provide the host the information it needs to determine optimal placement. The power signal frequency is given by:
where
Figure 11 shows the expected register values across the frequency range.
At startup operation, the bq51025 device must comply with proper handshaking to be granted a power contract from the WPC transmitter. The transmitter initiates the handshake by providing an extended digital ping after analog ping detects an object on the transmitter surface. If a receiver is present on the transmitter surface, the receiver then provides the signal strength, configuration, and identification packets to the transmitter (see volume 1 of the WPC specification for details on each packet). These are the first three packets sent to the transmitter. The only exception is if there is a true shutdown condition on the AD or TS/CTRL pins where the receiver shuts down the transmitter immediately. See Table 2 for details. After the transmitter has successfully received the signal strength, configuration, and identification packets, the receiver is granted a power contract and is then allowed to control the operating point of the power transfer. With the use of the bq51025 device Dynamic Rectifier Control algorithm, the receiver informs the transmitter to adjust the rectifier voltage to approximately 8 V prior to enabling the output supply. For startup flow diagram details, see Figure 12.
To operate in 10-W mode, the bq51025 device performs a proprietary handshaking procedure with the transmitter. If the transmitter (bq500215) responds to the bq51025 handshake, a 10-W power contract is granted and the bq51025 operates in 10-W mode, setting the proper output current limit and control. If there is no response from the transmitter, the bq51025 device defaults to 5-W mode operation.
After the startup procedure is established, the receiver enters the active-power transfer stage (considered the main loop of operation). The Dynamic Rectifier Control algorithm determines the rectifier voltage target based on a percentage of the maximum output current level setting (set by KILIM and RILIM). The receiver sends control error packets to converge on these targets. As the output current changes, the rectifier voltage target dynamically changes. As a note, the feedback loop of the WPC system is relatively slow, it can take up to 150 ms to converge on a new rectifier voltage target. It should be understood that the instantaneous transient response of the system is open loop and dependent on the receiver coil output impedance at that operating point. The main loop also determines if any conditions in Table 2 are true in order to discontinue power transfer. Figure 13 shows the active-power transfer loop.
Locations 0x01 and 0x02 can be written at any time. Locations 0xE0 to 0xFF are only functional when VRECT > VUVLO. When VRECT goes below VUVLO, locations 0xE0 to 0xFF are reset.
Memory Location: 0x01, Default State: 00000001 | |||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write | Not used | |
B6 | Read / Write | Not used | |
B5 | Read / Write | Not used | |
B4 | Read / Write | Not used | |
B3 | Read / Write | Not used | |
B2 | VOREG2 | Read / Write | 450, 500, 550, 600, 650, 700, 750, or 800 mV(1)
Changes VO_REG target Default value 001 |
B1 | VOREG1 | Read / Write | |
B0 | VOREG0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0x02, Default State: 00000111 | |||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION |
B7 (MSB) | JEITA | Read / Write | Not used |
B6 | Read / Write | Not used | |
B5 | ITERM2 | Read / Write | Not used. |
B4 | ITERM1 | Read / Write | |
B3 | ITERM0 | Read / Write | |
B2 | IOREG2 | Read / Write | 10%, 20%, 30%, 40%, 50%, 60%, 80%, and 100% of IILIM current based on configuration 000, 001, ….111 |
B1 | IOREG1 | Read / Write | |
B0 | IOREG0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xF0, Reset State: 00000000 | |||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION |
B7 | Reserved | Read/Write | |
B6 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B5 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B4 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B3 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B2 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B1 | I2C_ILIM | Read / Write | Set bit to 1 to disable 2× current limit scaling between low-power and proprietary modes. Must be set to 1 to correctly adjust the current limit for each mode through I2C |
B0 | Reserved | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xE0, Reset State: 10000000 | |||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION |
B7 | USER_PKT_DONE | Read/Write | Set bit to 0 to send proprietary packet with header in 0xE2. CPU checks header to pick relevant payload from 0xF1 to 0xF4 This bit will be set to 1 after the user packet with the header in register 0xE2 is sent. |
B6 | USER_PKT_ERR | Read | 00 = No error in sending packet 01 = Error: No transmitter present 10 = Illegal header found: packet will not be sent 11 = Error: Not defined yet |
B5 | |||
B4 | FOD Mailer | Read / Write | Not used |
B3 | ALIGN Mailer | Read / Write | Setting this bit to 1 enables alignment aid mode where the CEP = 0 is sent until this bit is set to 0 (or CPU reset occurs) |
B2 | FOD Scaler | Read / Write | Not used, write to 0 if register is written |
B1 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B0 | Reserved | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xEF, Reset State: 00000000 | |||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION |
B7 | PMODE | Read | Power mode 0 = Low-power mode 5 W 1 = Proprietary 10 W |
B6 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B5 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B4 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B3 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B2 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B1 | Reserved | Read / Write | |
B0 | Reserved | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xFB, Reset State: 00000000 | |||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION |
B7 | FREQ7 | Read | Power signal frequency. See Equation 11 for calculation. |
B6 | FREQ6 | Read | |
B5 | FREQ5 | Read | |
B4 | FREQ4 | Read | |
B3 | FREQ3 | Read | |
B2 | FREQ2 | Read | |
B1 | FREQ1 | Read | |
B0 | FREQ0 | Read |
Memory Location: 0xE1, Reset State: 00000000(1) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION | |
B7 (MSB) | ESR_ENABLE | Read / Write | Enables I2C based ESR in received power, Enable = 1, Disable = 0 | |
B6 | OFF_ENABLE | Read / Write | Enables I2C based offset power, Enable = 1, Disable = 0 | |
B5 | RoFOD5 | Read / Write | 000 = 0 mW 001 = 78 mW 010 = 156 mW 011 = 234 mW 100 = 312 mW |
101 = 390 mW 110 = 468 mW 111 = 546 mW The value is added to received power message |
B4 | RoFOD4 | Read / Write | ||
B3 | RoFOD3 | Read / Write | ||
B2 | RsFOD2 | Read / Write | 000 = ESR 001 = ESR 010 = ESR × 2 011 = ESR × 3 100 = ESR × 4 |
101 = ESR 110 = ESR 111 = ESR x 0.5 |
B1 | RsFOD1 | Read / Write | ||
B0 | RsFOD0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xE2, Reset State: 00000000(1) | |
---|---|
BIT | READ / WRITE |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write |
B6 | Read / Write |
B5 | Read / Write |
B4 | Read / Write |
B3 | Read / Write |
B2 | Read / Write |
B1 | Read / Write |
B0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xE3, Reset State: 00000000 Range – 0 to 12 V This register reads back the VRECT voltage with LSB = 46 mV |
|||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | READ / WRITE | FUNCTION |
B7 (MSB) | VRECT7 | Read | LSB = 46 mV |
B6 | VRECT6 | Read | |
B5 | VRECT5 | Read | |
B4 | VRECT4 | Read | |
B3 | VRECT3 | Read | |
B2 | VRECT2 | Read | |
B1 | VRECT1 | Read | |
B0 | VRECT0 | Read |
Memory Location: 0xE4, Reset State: 00000000 This register reads back the VOUT voltage with LSB = 46 mV |
|||
---|---|---|---|
BIT | NAME | Read / Write | FUNCTION |
B7 (MSB) | VOUT7 | Read / Write | LSB = 46 mV |
B6 | VOUT6 | Read / Write | |
B5 | VOUT5 | Read / Write | |
B4 | VOUT4 | Read / Write | |
B3 | VOUT3 | Read / Write | |
B2 | VOUT2 | Read / Write | |
B1 | VOUT1 | Read / Write | |
B0 | VOUT0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xE7, Reset State: 00000000 This register reads back the MSByte for received power in Proprietary 10-W Mode only |
|
---|---|
BIT | Read / Write |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write |
B6 | Read / Write |
B5 | Read / Write |
B4 | Read / Write |
B3 | Read / Write |
B2 | Read / Write |
B1 | Read / Write |
B0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xE8, Reset State: 00000000 | |
---|---|
BIT | Read / Write |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write |
B6 | Read / Write |
B5 | Read / Write |
B4 | Read / Write |
B3 | Read / Write |
B2 | Read / Write |
B1 | Read / Write |
B0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xF1, Reset State: 00000000 | |
---|---|
BIT | Read / Write |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write |
B6 | Read / Write |
B5 | Read / Write |
B4 | Read / Write |
B3 | Read / Write |
B2 | Read / Write |
B1 | Read / Write |
B0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xF2, Reset State: 00000000 | |
---|---|
BIT | Read / Write |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write |
B6 | Read / Write |
B5 | Read / Write |
B4 | Read / Write |
B3 | Read / Write |
B2 | Read / Write |
B1 | Read / Write |
B0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xF3, Reset State: 00000000 | |
---|---|
BIT | Read / Write |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write |
B6 | Read / Write |
B5 | Read / Write |
B4 | Read / Write |
B3 | Read / Write |
B2 | Read / Write |
B1 | Read / Write |
B0 | Read / Write |
Memory Location: 0xF4, Reset State: 00000000 | |
---|---|
BIT | Read / Write |
B7 (MSB) | Read / Write |
B6 | Read / Write |
B5 | Read / Write |
B4 | Read / Write |
B3 | Read / Write |
B2 | Read / Write |
B1 | Read / Write |
B0 | Read / Write |