ZHCSA11G May 2012 – November 2019 TCA9548A
PRODUCTION DATA.
In the event of a glitch or data corruption, TCA9548A can be reset to its default conditions by using the power-on reset feature. Power-on reset requires that the device go through a power cycle to be completely reset. This reset also happens when the device is powered on for the first time in an application.
A power-on reset is shown in Figure 17.
Table 3 specifies the performance of the power-on reset feature for TCA9548A for both types of power-on reset.
PARAMETER | MIN | MAX | UNIT | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
VCC_FT | Fall time | See Figure 17 | 1 | 100 | ms |
VCC_RT | Rise time | See Figure 17 | 0.1 | 100 | ms |
VCC_TRR | Time to re-ramp (when VCC drops below VPORF(min) – 50 mV or when VCC drops to GND) | See Figure 17 | 40 | μs | |
VCC_GH | Level that VCC can glitch down to, but not cause a functional disruption when VCC_GW = 1 μs | See Figure 18 | 1.2 | V | |
VCC_GW | Glitch width that does not cause a functional disruption when VCC_GH = 0.5 × VCC | See Figure 18 | 10 | μs |
Glitches in the power supply can also affect the power-on reset performance of this device. The glitch width (VCC_GW) and height (VCC_GH) are dependent on each other. The bypass capacitance, source impedance, and device impedance are factors that affect power-on reset performance. Figure 18 and Table 3 provide more information on how to measure these specifications.
VPOR is critical to the power-on reset. VPOR is the voltage level at which the reset condition is released and all the registers and the I2C/SMBus state machine are initialized to their default states. The value of VPOR differs based on the VCC being lowered to or from 0. Figure 19 and Table 3 provide more details on this specification.