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  smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 1 of 27 CC900 single chip high performance rf transceiver applications ? uhf wireless data transmitters and receivers ? wireless alarm and security systems ? 868 and 915 mhz ism/srd band systems ? keyless entry with acknowledgement ? remote control systems ? home security and automation ? low power telemetry ? remote metering ? environmental control ? social alarms product description CC900 is a single-chip high performance uhf transceiver designed for low-power and low-voltage wireless applications. the circuit is mainly intended for the ism (industrial, scientific and medical) and srd (short range device) frequency bands at 868 and 915 mhz, but can easily be programmed for operation at other frequency bands in the 800-1000 mhz range. the main operating parameters of CC900 can be programmed via a serial interface, thus making CC900 a very flexible and easy to use transceiver. in a typical system CC900 will be used together with a microcontroller and a few external passive components. CC900 is based on chipcon?s smartrf ? technology. features ? single chip uhf rf transceiver ? frequency range 800 ? 1000 mhz ? high sensitivity (typical -110 dbm) ? programmable output power up to 4 dbm ? complies with en 300 220 ? small size (ssop-28 package) ? low supply voltage (2.7 v to 3.3 v) ? very few external components required ? no external rf switch required ? no external if filter required ? single port antenna connection ? fsk modulation with data-rate up to 9.6 kbit/s ? suitable for both narrow and wide band systems ? radio frequency (rf) programmable in steps of 250 hz makes crystal temp- erature drift compensation possible ? suitable for frequency hopping protocols ? development kit available ? easy-to-use software for generating the CC900 configuration data
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 2 of 27 pin assignment pin no. pin name pin type description 1 avdd power (a) power supply (3 v) for analog modules 2 agnd ground (a) ground connection (0 v) for analog modules 3 agnd ground (a) ground connection (0 v) for analog modules 4 agnd ground (a) ground connection (0 v) for analog modules 5 agnd ground (a) ground connection (0 v) for analog modules 6 rf_in rf input rf signal input from antenna (external ac-coupling) 7 rf_out rf output rf signal output to antenna 8 avdd power (a) power supply (3 v) for analog modules 9 avdd power (a) power supply (3 v) for analog modules 10 vco_in analog input external vco-tank input 11 agnd ground (a) ground connection (0 v) for analog modules 12 chp_out analog output charge pump current output 13 avdd power (a) power supply (3 v) for analog modules 14 avdd power (a) power supply (3 v) for analog modules 15 xosc_q1 analog input crystal, pin 1, or external clock input 16 xosc_q2 analog output crystal, pin 2 17 agnd ground (a) ground connection (0 v) for analog modules 18 dgnd ground (d) ground connection (0 v) for digital modules 19 lock digital output pll lock indicator. output is high when pll is in lock 20 dgnd ground (d) ground connection (0 v) for digital modules 21 dvdd power (d) power supply (3 v) for digital modules 22 dvdd power (d) power supply (3 v) for digital modules 23 dio digital input/output (bidirectional) data input in transmit mode demodulator output in receive mode 24 clock digital input programming clock for 3-wire bus 25 pdata digital input programming data for 3-wire bus 26 strobe digital input programming strobe (load) for 3-wire bus 27 if_in analog input input to if chain (from optional external ceramic filter). the input impedance is 1.5 k ? so a direct connection to an external ceramic filter is possible 28 if_out analog output output from first amplifier in if-chain (to optional external ceramic filter). the output impedance is 1.5 k ? so a direct connection to an external ceramic filter is possible a=analog, d=digital (top view) 1 14 15 avdd agnd agnd agnd rf_in rf_out avdd avdd vco_in agnd avdd chp_out avdd 2 3 4 6 5 7 8 9 11 12 13 10 28 if_out if_in strobe pdata clock dio dvdd dvdd dgnd lock dgnd xosc_q2 agnd xosc_q1 27 26 25 23 24 22 21 20 18 17 16 19 agnd CC900
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 3 of 27 absolute maximum ratings parameter min. max. units condition supply voltage, vdd -0.3 7.0 v voltage on any pin -0.3 vdd+0.3, max 7.0 v input rf level 10 dbm storage temperature range -50 150 c operating ambient temperature range -30 85 c lead temperature 260 c t = 10 s under no circumstances the absolute maximum ratings given above should be violated. stress exceeding one or more of the limiting values may cause permanent damage to the device. caution! esd sensitive device. precaution should be used when handling the device in order to prevent permanent damage. electrical specifications parameter min. typ. max. unit condition overall rf frequency range 800 868 1000 mhz programmable in steps of 250 hz transmit section transmit data rate 0.3 2.4 9.6 kbit/s manchester code is required. (9.6 kbit/s equals 19.2 kbaud/s using manchester code) binary fsk frequency separation 0 10 200 khz the frequency corresponding to the digital "0" is denoted f 0 , while f 1 corresponds to a digital "1". the frequency separation is f 1 - f 0 . the rf carrier frequency, f c , is then given by f c =( f 0 + f 1 )/2. (the frequency deviation is given by f d =+/-( f 1 - f 0 )/2 ) the frequency separation is programmable. programmable output power -20 4 dbm delivered to 50 ? load. the output power is programmable in steps of 1 db. rf output impedance 200 ? transmit mode, parallel equivalent. for matching details see ?input/ output matching? p. 13. harmonics -25 dbc when using a high output power level an external lc or saw filter may be used to reduce harmonics emission to comply with srd requirements. see p.14
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 4 of 27 parameter min. typ. max. unit condition receive section receiver sensitivity -110 dbm measured at a data rate of 1.2 kbit/s, 60 khz if and 20 khz frequency separation with a bit error rate better than 10 -3 . for other settings see p. 12. cascaded noise figure 3 db lo leakage -57 dbm depends on external components placement input impedance 16 ? 3.6 pf receive mode, series equivalent at 869 mhz. for matching details see ?input/ output matching? p.13. turn on time 500 3 5 30 s ms ms ms with precharging, 9.6 kbit/s without precharging, 9.6 kbit/s with precharging, 1.2 kbit/s without precharging, 1.2 kbit/s see ?demodulator precharging for reduced turn-on time? p.18. blocking / desensitization 1 mhz 2 mhz 5 mhz 30 35 50 db db db see p. 15 for details. using an external saw filter at the front end will improve the blocking performance if section intermediate frequency (if) 60 200 455 khz khz khz the if is programmable. either 60 khz, 200 khz or 455 khz can be chosen an optional external if filter can be used if 455 khz is chosen. the impedance level is 1.5 k ? frequency synthesiser section crystal oscillator frequency 4 12 13 mhz crystal frequency accuracy requirement +/- 50 ppm the crystal frequency accuracy and drift (ageing and temperature dependency) will determine the frequency accuracy of the transmitted signal. crystal operation parallel c151 and c161 are loading capacitors, see p. 14. crystal load capacitance 20 16 12 pf pf pf 4-6 mhz 6-10 mhz 10-13 mhz crystal oscillator start-up time 3 6 ms 12 mhz, 12 pf load output signal phase noise -90 dbc/hz 100 khz offset from carrier pll lock time (rx / tx turn time) 100 s
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 5 of 27 parameter min. typ. max. unit condition pll turn-on time, crystal oscillator off in power down mode 4 ms pll turn-on time, crystal oscillator on in power down mode 2 ms digital inputs/outputs logic "0" input voltage 0 0.3*vdd v logic "1" input voltage 0.7*vdd vdd v logic "0" output voltage 0 0.4 v output current -2.5 ma, 3.0 v supply voltage logic "1" output voltage 2.5 vdd v output current 2.5 ma, 3.0 v supply voltage logic "0" input current na -1 a input signal equals gnd logic "1" input current na 1 a input signal equals vdd power supply supply voltage 2.7 3.0 3.3 v v recommended operation voltage operating limits current consumption, receive mode 21 ma current consumption, average in receive mode using polling 210 a 1:100 receive to power down ratio current consumption, transmit mode: p=0.01 mw (-20 dbm) p=0.1 mw (-10 dbm) p=1 mw (0 dbm) p=2.5 mw (4 dbm) 25 31 54 91 ma ma ma ma the ouput power is delivered to a 50 ? load current consumption, power down 30 0.2 1 a a oscillator core on oscillator core off
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 6 of 27 circuit description figure 1. simplified block diagram of the CC900 . a simplified block diagram of CC900 is shown in figure 1. only signal pins are shown. in receive mode CC900 is configured as a traditional heterodyne receiver. the rf input signal is amplified by the low-noise amplifier (lna) and converted down to the intermediate frequency (if) by the mixer (mixer). in the intermediate frequency stage (if stage) this downconverted signal is amplified and filtered before being fed to the demodulator (demod). as an option an external if filter can be used for improved selectivity. after demodulation CC900 outputs the raw digital demodulated data on the pin dio. synchronisation and final qualification of the demodulated data is done by the interfacing digital system (microcontroller). in transmit mode the voltage controlled oscillator (vco) output signal is fed directly to the power amplifier (pa). the rf output is frequency shift keyed (fsk) by the digital bit stream fed to the pin dio. the internal t/r switch circuitry makes the antenna interface and matching very easy. the frequency synthesiser generates the local oscillator signal which is fed to the mixer in receive mode and to the pa in transmit mode. the frequency synthesiser consists of a crystal oscillator (xosc), phase detector (pd), charge pump (charge pump), vco, and frequency dividers (/r and /n). an external crystal must be connected to xosc, and an external lc-tank with a varactor diode is required for the vco. for flexibility the loop filter is external. for chip configuration CC900 includes a 3- wire digital serial interface (control). clock, pdata, strobe lna pa demod vco freq. divider pd osc ~ /n mixer charge pump vco_in rf_in dio chp_out lock if stage rf_out if_out if_in 3 control xosc_q2 xosc_q1 /r
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 7 of 27 configuration overview CC900 can be configured to achieve the best performance for different applications. through the programmable configuration registers the following key parameters can be programmed: ? receive/transmit mode. ? rf output power level. ? power amplifier operation class (a, ab, b or c). ? frequency synthesiser key parameters: rf output frequency, fsk modulation frequency separation (deviation), crystal oscillator reference frequency. ? power-down/power-up mode. ? reference oscillator on or off in power down mode (when on, shorter freq- uency synthesiser start-up time is achieved). ? the if (intermediate frequency) can be set to either 60 khz or 200 khz using on-chip filters, or 455 khz using an external filter. ? data rate can be selected. ? synthesiser lock indicator mode. the lock detection can be enabled/disabled. when enabled, two lock detection modes can be chosen, either "mono- stable" or continuous. ? in receive mode precharging of the demodulator can be used to achieve faster settling time (see p.18). configuration software chipcon provide users of CC900 with a program, smartrf studio (windows interface) that generates all necessary CC900 configuration data based on the user's selections of various parameters. based on the selections 8 hexadecimal numbers are generated. these hexa- decimal numbers will then be the necessary input to the microcontroller for configuration of CC900 . in addition the program will provide the user with the component values needed for the pll loop filter and the input/output matching circuit. figure 2 shows the user interface of the CC900 configuration software. figure 2. smartrf studio user interface.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 8 of 27 3-wire serial interface CC900 is programmed via a simple 3-wire interface (strobe, pdata and clock). a full configuration of CC900 requires sending 8 data frames of 16 bits each. with a clock rate of 2 mhz the time needed for a full configuration will therefore be less than 100 s. setting the device in power down mode requires sending one frame only and will therefore take less than 10 s. in each write-cycle 16 bits are sent on the pdata-line. the three most significant bits of each data frame ( bit15 , bit14 and bit13 ) are the address-bits. bit15 is the msb of the address and is sent as the first bit. see figure 3. a timing diagram for the programming is shown in figure 4. the clocking of the data on pdata is done on the negative edge of clock. when the last bit, bit0 , of the sixteen bits has been loaded, the strobe-pulse must be brought high and then low to load the data. the configuration data will be valid after a programmed power-down mode, but not when the power-supply is turned off. when changing mode, only the frames that are different need to be programmed. the timing specifications are given in table 1. clock pdata strobe 000 001 111 011 address first frame (000) data first frame address last frame (111) data last frame address second frame (001) data second frame m s b l s b l s b l s b m s b m s b l s b figure 3. serial data transfer (full configuration). clock strobe pdata bit 0 bit 1 bit 15 bit 14 t sd t hd t cs t sc t s,min t cl,min t ch,min figure 4. timing diagram, serial interface.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 9 of 27 parameter symbol min max units conditions clock, clock frequency f clock - 2 mhz clock low pulse duration t cl,min 50 ns the minimum time clock can be low. clock high pulse duration t ch,min 50 ns the minimum time clock can be high. pdata setup time t sd 5 - ns the minimum time data on pdata must be ready before the negative edge of clock. pdata hold time t hd 5 - ns the minimum time data must be held at pdata, after the negative edge of clock. clock to strobe time t cs 5 - ns the minimum time after the negative edge of clock before positive edge of strobe. strobe to clock time t sc 5 - ns the minimum time after the negative edge of strobe before negative edge of clock. strobe pulse duration t s,min 50 ns the minimum time strobe can be high. rise time t rise 100 ns the maximum rise time for clock and strobe fall time t fall 100 ns the maximum fall time for clock and strobe note: the set-up- and hold-times refer to 50% of vdd. table 1. serial interface, timing specification.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 10 of 27 microcontroller interface used in a typical system, CC900 will interface to a microcontroller. this microcontroller must be able to: ? program the asic into different modes via the 3-wire serial interface (pdata, strobe, clock). ? operate with the bidirectional data pin dio. ? perform oversampling of the de- modulator output (on pin dio), recover the clock corresponding to the actual datarate, and perform data quali- fication (on manchester encoded data). ? data to be sent must be manchester encoded. ? optionally the microcontroller can monitor the frequency lock status from pin lock. ? optionally the microcontroller can perform precharging of the receiver in order to reduce the turn-on time (see p.18). connecting the microcontroller the microcontroller uses 3 output pins for the serial interface (pdata, strobe and clock. a bi-directional pin is used for data to be transmitted and data received. optionally another pin can be used to monitor the lock signal. this signal is logic level high when the pll is in lock. see figure 6. data transmission the data to be sent has to be manchester encoded (also known as bi-phase-level coding). the manchester code ensures that the signal has a constant dc component that is necessary for the fsk demodulator. the manchester code is based on transitions; a ?0? is encoded as a low-to-high transition, a ?1? is encoded as a high-to-low transition. see figure 5. when the dio is logic level high, the upper fsk frequency is transmitted. the lower frequency is transmitted when dio is low. note that the receiver data output is inverted when using low-side lo, which is default using smartrf studio. data reception the output of the demodulator ( dio ) is a digital signal (alternating between 0 v and vdd). for small input signals, there will be some noise on this signal, located at the edges of the digital signal. the datarate of this signal may be up to 9.6 kbit/s. due to the manchester coding, the fundamental frequency of the signal is also 9.6 khz. an oversampling of 4-8 times the frequency of the demodulator-output is recommended. i.e. the sampling frequency should at least be 40-80 khz for 9.6 kbit/s. for a lower datarate the sampling frequency can be reduced. in a typical application the data output is sampled by the microcontroller, and stored in an accumulating register. the length of this register will typically be 4-8 bits (depending on the oversampling ratio). the qualification of the data (decide whether the signal is ?0? or ?1?) can be based on comparing the number of 0?s with the number of 1?s. see application note an008 ?oversampling and data decision for the cc400/CC900? for more details. time tx data 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 figure 5. manchester encoding. figure 6. microcontroller interface. CC900 pdata clock strobe dio lock micro- controller
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 11 of 27 application circuit very few external components are required for operation of CC900 . a typical application circuit for 869 mhz operation is shown in figure 7. 9.6 kbps data rate and 20 khz fsk separation are used. typical component values are shown in table 2. input / output matching l51 and c51 are the input match for the receiver, and l61 is the dc choke for the transmitter. an internal t/r switch circuitry makes it possible to connect the input and output together matching to 50 ? . see ?input/output matching? p.13 for details. synthesiser loop filter and vco tank the pll loop filter consists of c121-c123 and r121-r123. the component values are easily calculated using the smartrf studio software. the vco tank consists of c91-c93, l91 and the varactor (var). c91 determines the coupling to the internal vco amplifier, and thus the vco loop gain. this loop gain is also controlled by the ?vco gain? setting in smartrf studio, by changing the amplifier current. c92 together with the varactor?s capacitance ratio determines the vco sensitivity (mhz/v). the sensitivity should be 25 mhz/v. l91 and c93 is used to set the absolute range of the vco. see application note an012 ?vco fine-tuning cc400 and CC900? for more details. additional filtering additional external components (e.g. ceramic if-filter, rf lc or saw-filter) may be used in order to improve the performance for specific applications. see also ?optional lc filter? p.14 for further information. voltage supply decoupling c10-c12, c24-c25, c210 and c211 are voltage supply de-coupling capacitors. these capacitors should be placed as close as possible to the voltage supply pins of CC900 . the CC900db should be used as a reference design. lc or saw filter 1 14 15 avdd agnd agnd agnd rf_in rf_out avdd avdd vco_in agnd agnd avdd chp_out avdd if_out if_in strobe pdata clock dio dvdd dvdd dgnd lock dgnd xosc_q2 agnd xosc_q1 c51 l51 l61 xtal c122 c121 r121 r122 c123 r123 c91 c92 l91 var c93 to/from microcontroller 2 3 4 6 5 7 8 9 11 12 13 10 28 27 26 25 23 24 22 21 20 18 17 16 19 c151 c161 monopole antenna CC900 avdd=3v dvdd=3v c12 c24 c25 c210 c211 455khz filter optional optional c10 c11 r7 lc or saw filter 1 14 15 avdd agnd agnd agnd rf_in rf_out avdd avdd vco_in agnd agnd avdd chp_out avdd if_out if_in strobe pdata clock dio dvdd dvdd dgnd lock dgnd xosc_q2 agnd xosc_q1 c51 l51 l61 xtal xtal c122 c121 r121 r122 c123 r123 c91 c92 l91 var c93 to/from microcontroller 2 3 4 6 5 7 8 9 11 12 13 10 28 27 26 25 23 24 22 21 20 18 17 16 19 c151 c161 monopole antenna CC900 avdd=3v avdd=3v dvdd=3v c12 c24 c25 c210 c211 455khz filter optional optional c10 c11 r7 figure 7. typical CC900 application for 869.000 mhz operation.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 12 of 27 item description c10 1 nf, x7r, 0603 c11 33 nf, x7r, 0603 c12 1 nf, x7r, 0603 c24 220 pf, np0, 0603 c25 12 pf, np0, 0603 c51 220 pf, np0, 0603 c91 3.9 pf, np0, 0603 c92 3.9 pf, np0, 0603 c93 1.0 pf, np0, 0603 c121 680 pf, x7r, 0603 c122 33 pf, np0, 0603 c123 6.8 pf, np0, 0603 c161 15 pf, np0, 0603 c151 15 pf, np0, 0603 c210 1 nf, x7r, 0603 c211 33 nf, x7r, 0603 l51 12 nh, 0805 l61 100 nh, 0805 l91 3.3 nh, 0805 (murata lqn21a3n3) r7 10 k ? , 0603 r121 47 k ? , 0603 r122 220 k ? , 0603 r123 22 k ? , 0603 var bby53-03w, siemens xtal 12 mhz crystal, 12 pf load table 2. bill of materials for the application circuit. receiver sensitivity the sensitivity of the receiver depends on which if frequency and if filter that has been selected (60, 200 or 455 khz). it also depends on the data rate (0.3 ? 9.6 kbps) and the fsk frequency separation (0 ? 200 khz). frequency separation is twice the frequency deviation (for example, 20 khz separation is +/-10 khz deviation). some typical figures are shown in table 3. data rate if frequency separation CC900 60 khz 20 khz -110 dbm 200 khz 40 khz -107 dbm 1.2 kbit/s 455 khz ext 12 khz -108 dbm 60 khz 30 khz -108 dbm 200 khz 40 khz -105 dbm 2.4 kbit/s 455 khz ext 20 khz -103 dbm 60 khz 30 khz -107 dbm 200 khz 40 khz -104 dbm 4.8 kbit/s 455 khz ext 20 khz -100 dbm 60 khz 30 khz -105 dbm 200 khz 40 khz -102 dbm 9.6 kbit/s 455 khz ext 20 khz -97 dbm table 3. sensitivity for different if frequency, data rates and separation. in a narrow band system with very low frequency separation (less than 10 khz) the sensitivity will drop. to insure proper operation the separation should always be larger than 5 khz (+/- 2.5 khz deviation). for even smaller separation, or to improve the sensitivity, an external narrow band demodulator should be used. see application note an005 ?selecting system parameters and system configurations using cc400 / CC900? for more information on narrow band systems.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 13 of 27 output power the output power is controlled through several parameters in the configuration registers. table 4 shows recommended settings for the different output powers and corresponding typical current consumption. register output power class e9:8 f1:0 c8,a7:6,d12:11 current (ma) -15 ab 01 00 00010 28 -14 ab 01 00 00010 28 -13 ab 01 00 00010 28 -12 ab 01 00 00011 30 -11 ab 01 00 00100 31 -10 ab 01 00 00100 31 -9 ab 01 01 00101 37 -8 c 11 10 00001 40 -7 c 11 10 00001 40 -6 c 11 10 00010 42 -5 c 11 10 00010 42 -4 c 11 10 00011 44 -3 c 11 10 00011 44 -2 c 11 10 00100 46 -1 c 11 11 00101 53 0 c 11 11 00110 54 1 c 11 11 00111 56 2 c 11 11 01001 59 3 c 11 11 01110 67 4 c 11 11 11101 91 table 4. output power settings and typical current consumption. input / output matching three passive external components combined with the internal t/r switch circuitry ensures match in both rx and tx mode. the matching network for 868-870 mhz is shown in figure 8. the component values may have to be optimised to include layout parasitics. matching components for other frequencies can be found using the configuration software. see also application note an013 ?matching cc400 CC900? for more details. figure 8. input/output matching network. l61 rf_in rf_out avdd to antenna c51 l51 CC900 c51=220 pf l51=12 nh l61=100 nh f = 869 mhz
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 14 of 27 optional lc filter an optional lc filter may be added between the antenna and the matching network in certain applications. the filter will reduce the emission of harmonics and increase the receiver selectivity. the filter for use at 868-870 mhz is shown in figure 9. the component values may have to be optimised to include layout parasitics. the filter is designed for 50 ? terminations. figure 9. lc filter crystal oscillator an external clock signal or the internal crystal oscillator can be used as main frequency reference. an external clock signal should be connected to xosc_q1, while xosc_q2 should be left open. the crystal frequency must be in the range 4 - 13 mhz. using the internal crystal oscillator, the crystal must be connected between xosc_q1 and xosc_q2. the oscillator is designed for parallel mode operation of the crystal. in addition loading capacitors (c151 and c161) for the crystal are required. the loading capacitor values depend on the total load capacitance, c l , specified for the crystal. the total load capacitance seen between the crystal terminals should equal c l for the crystal to oscillate at the specified frequency. parasitic l c c c c + + = 161 151 1 1 1 the parasitic capacitance is constituted by the pins input capacitance and pcb stray capacitance. typically the total parasitic capacitance is 4.5 pf. a trimming capacitor may be placed across c151 for initial tuning if necessary. the crystal oscillator circuit is shown in figure 10. typical component values for different values of c l are given in table 3. the initial tolerance, temperature drift, ageing and load pulling should be carefully specified in order to meet the required frequency accuracy in a certain application. by specifying the total expected frequency accuracy in smartrf studio together with data rate and frequency separation, the software will calculate the total bandwidth and compare to the available if bandwidth. the software will report any contradictions and a more accurate crystal will be recommended if required. c161 c151 xtal xosc_q1 xosc_q2 figure 10. crystal oscillator circuit. l52 c53 f = 869 mhz c52=8.2 pf c53=8.2 pf l52=3.3 nh c52
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 15 of 27 item c l = 12 pf c l = 16 pf c l = 22 pf c151 15 pf 22 pf 33 pf c161 15 pf 22 pf 33 pf table 3. crystal oscillator component values. loop filter the loop filter is a lead-lag type of filter. the calculations for the loop filter components are done in the smartrf studio software. see application note an012, ?vco fine tuning for cc400 and CC900? for more detailed information. a spreadsheet, cc400_CC900_loop_filter_1_0.xls, is available from chipcon that will calculate the loop filter components for a desired bandwidth with different constants than the default values in smartrf studio. blocking -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 855 860 865 870 875 880 885 frequency dbc fm dbc cw dbc requirement if = 60 khz, separation = 20 khz. data rate = 1.2 kbit/s. interfering signal is cw (no modulation) or fm modulation. -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 855 860 865 870 875 880 885 frequency dbc fm dbc cw dbc requirement if = 200 khz, separation = 40 khz. data rate = 1.2 kbit/s. interfering signal is cw (no modulation) or fm modulation. -10 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 855 860 865 870 875 880 885 fm dbc cw dbc requirement if = 455 khz external, separation = 12 khz. data rate = 1.2 kbit/s. interfering signal is cw (no modulation) or fm modulation.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 16 of 27 pll lock indicator the CC900 pll lock indicator is available on the lock pin. the pll lock signal is not 100% conclusive. that is, if the lock signal indicates lock (i.e. a high signal on the lock pin) the pll has locked to the desired frequency. however, there might be situations where the lock signal does not indicate lock (i.e. a low signal on the lock pin) when in fact the pll has locked to the desired frequency. antenna considerations CC900 can be used together with various types of antennas. the most common antennas for short range communication are monopole, helical and loop antennas. monopole antennas are resonant antennas with a length corresponding to one quarter of the electrical wavelength ( /4). they are very easy to design and can be implemented simply as a ?piece of wire? or even integrated into the pcb. non-resonant monopole antennas shorter than /4 can also be used, but at the expense of range. in size and cost critical applications such an antenna may very well be integrated into the pcb. helical antennas can be thought of as a combination of a monopole and a loop antenna. they are a good compromise in size critical applications. but helical antennas tend to be more difficult to optimise than the simple monopole. loop antennas are easy to integrate into the pcb, but are less effective due to difficult impedance matching because of their very low radiation resistance. for low power applications the /4- monopole antenna is recommended giving the best range and because of its simplicity. the length of the /4-monopole antenna is given by: l = 7125 / f where f is in mhz, giving the length in cm. an antenna for 869 mhz should be 8.2 cm. the antenna should be connected as close as possible to the ic. if the antenna is located away from the input pin the antenna should be matched to the feeding transmission line. see application note an003 ?antennas? for more details.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 17 of 27 system considerations and guidelines srd regulations international regulations and national laws regulate the use of radio receivers and transmitters. srds (short range devices) for licence free operation are allowed to operate in the 868-870 mhz band in most european countries. in the united states such devices operate in the 902-928 mhz band. CC900 is designed to meet the requirements for operation in these bands. a summary of the most important aspects of these regulations can be found in application note an001, ?srd regulations for licence free transceiver operation?, available from the chipcon web site. low cost systems in systems where low cost is of great importance the 200 khz if should be used. the oscillator crystal can then be a low cost crystal with 50 ppm frequency tolerance. battery operated systems in low power applications the power down mode should be used when not being active. depending on the start-up time requirement, the oscillator core can be powered during power down. precharging of the demodulator may also be used to reduce the receiver turn-on time, see description p.18. narrow band systems CC900 is also suitable for use in narrow band systems. for systems with 25 khz channel spacing it is strict requirements to the frequency error. a unique feature in CC900 is the very fine frequency resolution of 250 hz. this can be used to do the temperature compensation of the crystal if the temperature drift curve is known, and a temperature sensor is included in the system. even initial adjustment can be done using the frequency programmability. this eliminates the need for an expensive tcxo and trimming in some applications. in less demanding applications a crystal with low temperature drift and ageing could be used. a trimmer capacitor in the crystal oscillator circuit (in parallel with c151) could be used to set the initial frequency accurately. it is also possible to include an external if- filter at 455 khz. this should be a ceramic filter with 1.5 k ? input/output impedance connected between if_out and if_in. typical bandwidth is 30 khz. due to the high q of such a filter a better selectivity can be achieved. see application note an005 ?selecting system parameters and system configurations using cc400 / CC900? for more details. high reliability systems using a saw filter as a preselector will improve the communication reliability in harsh environments by reducing the probability of blocking. the receiver sensitivity and the output power will be reduced due to the filter insertion loss. by inserting the filter in the rx path only, together with an external rx/tx switch, only the receiver sensitivity is reduced, and output power is remained. spread spectrum frequency hopping systems due to the very fast frequency shift properties of the pll, the CC900 is also suitable for frequency hopping systems. hop rates of 1-100 hops/s are usually used depending on the bit rate and the amount of data to be sent during each transmission. see application note an014 ?frequency hopping systems? for more details.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 18 of 27 demodulator precharging for reduced turn-on time the demodulator data slicer has an internal ac coupling giving a time constant of approximately 30 periods of the bit rate period. this means that before proper demodulation can take place, a minimum of 30 start-bits has to be received. in critical applications where the start-up time should be decreased in order to reduce the power consumption, this time constant can be reduced to 5 periods using the optional precharging possibility. the precharging is done during data reception by setting the precharging bit in the configuration register active with duration of at least 5 bit periods. data received without precharging precharge time data transmitted 5 bit periods t1 t2 t3 data valid data not valid data valid data not valid 5 bit periodes 30 bit periodes data received with precharging figure 10: demodulation using precharging. in the example shown in figure 10, data is transmitted continuously from the transmitter (all 1?s). at t=t 1 the receiver is turned on, and then the precharging is kept on for about 5 bit periods. at t=t 2 the received data is valid and precharging is turned off. when not using precharging, data is not valid until 30 bit periods, at t=t 3 .
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 19 of 27 pcb layout recommendations a two layer pcb is highly recommended. the bottom layer of the pcb should be the ?ground-layer?. the top layer should be used for signal routing, and the open areas should be filled with metallisation connected to ground using several vias. the ground pins should be connected to ground as close as possible to the package pin. the decoupling capacitors should also be placed as close as possible to the supply pins and connected to the ground plane by separate vias. the external components should be as small as possible and surface mount devices should be used. precaution should be used when placing the microcontroller in order to avoid interference with the rf circuitry. in most applications the ground plane can be one common plane, but in certain applications where the ground plane for the digital circuitry is expected to be noisy, the ground plane may be split in an analogue and a digital part. all agnd pins and avdd decoupling capacitors should be connected to the analogue ground plane. all dgnd pins and dvdd decoupling capacitors should be connected to the digital ground. the connection between the two ground planes should be implemented as a star connection with the power supply ground. the CC900db reference design is available from chipcon?s web site, and should be used as a guideline for pcb layout.
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 20 of 27 configuration registers the configuration of CC900 is done by programming the 8 13-bit configuration registers. the configuration data based on selected system parameters are most easily found by using the smartrf studio software. a complete description of the registers is given in the following tables. register overview address register name description 000 a main control register 001 b general control register 010 c general control register 011 d general control register 100 e general control register 101 f general control register 110 g general control register 111 h general control register
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 21 of 27 register a register name default value active description a[12] pd - h power down 0 = chip enable 1 = chip disable (only reference oscillator core on) a[11] rxtx - receive/transmit-mode control 0 = receive mode 1 = transmit mode a[10:8] s[2:0] 000 synthesiser test modes (apply when tdem2=0) modus (000): normal operation: rx/tx. modus (001): divided signal from vco at pd input monitored at lock pin. modulation (control of a-counter) is disabled. modus (010): divided signal from vco at pd input monitored at lock pin. modulation (control of a-counter) is enabled. modus (011): output from reference divider monitored at lock pin. modus (100): signal at tx_data pin used as modulation control overriding the signal from the dual-modulus divider. output monitored at lock pin. modus (101): output from prescaler monitored at lock pin. modulation (a-divider control) disabled. modus (110): output from prescaler monitored at lock pin. modulation (a-divider control) disabled. modus (111): shift register data output monitored at lock pin. a[7:6] pa[3:2] - pa gain programming. part of pa4:pa0. (pa1:pa0 is in frame d, pa4 is in frame c) a[5:4] lna[1:0] 10 lna bias current and gain 00 = 0.94ma=i 0 01 = 1.5* i 0 =1.40ma 10 = 2* i 0 =1.87ma (nominal setting) 11 = 3* i 0 =2.81ma a[3:2] mix[1:0] 10 mixer bias current and gain 00 = 0.36ma 01 = 0.54ma 10 = 0.72ma (nominal setting) 11 = 1.08ma a[1:0] lo[1:0] 10 lo drive (peak-differential = peak-peak single-ended) 00 = 144mv 01 = 288mv 10 = 432mv (nominal setting) 11 = 720mv
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 22 of 27 register b register name default value active description b[12] ptat_presc 00 prescaler bias current control. 0 = current proportional to poly resistor (ptpr) nominal setting 1 = curent proportional to absolute temperature b[11] ab[1] 00 antibacklash pulse width ab[1:0]. ab0 is fixed to 0. 00 = 0ns (nominal setting) 01 = 2.7ns 10 = 4.8ns 11 = 10.9ns tolerance (+200% / - 70%) b[10:7] a[3:0] - a-counter b[6:0] m[6:0] - m-counter register c register name default value active description c[12] ressyn 0 synthesiser reset 0 = normal operation 1 = reset synthesiser c[11:9] v[3:1] - vco gain programmering. lsb-bit vo = ?0?. 000= maximum gain 111=minimum gain reduce gain to reduce lo spurious emission c[8] pa[4] - pa gain programmering. part of pa4:pa0 c[7] fsig - charge pump polarity 0 = add charge when vref leads fvco (normal) 1 = sink charge when vref leads fvco c[6:5] chp[1:0] 10 charge pump current: 00 = 10a 01 = 20a 10 = 40a (nominal setting) 11 = 80a c[4] pdx - h reference oscillator power down 0 = power on even during main power down 1 = power down (during main power down) c[3:0] r[3:0] - r-divider register d register name default value active description d[12:11] pa[1:0] - pa gain programming. part pa4 d[10:0] k10:0] - k-counter k10 er sign bit (0=positive, 1 negative). negative k must be 2?s complement register e register name default value active description e[12] lw 0 pll l ock-w indow tolerance 0 = 21ns (normal setting) 1 = 44ns e[11] lm - lock mode (lock is reset when pll is reprogrammed). 0 = single shot 1 = continuous e[10] lh - lock detection enable 0 = lock detection enabled 1 = lock detection disabled (lock=1)
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 23 of 27 register name default value active description e[9:8] pacl[1:0] - pa ?class? 00 = class a 01 = class ab 10 = class b 11 = class c e[7:0] d[7:0] - d-counter frequency seperation programming register f register name default value active description f[12:11] dclk[1:0] - demodulator shift register clock selection 00 = external clock (25mhz) at tx_data. 01 = 12.8 mhz from crystal oscillator 10 = 25 mhz from prescaler 11 = 12.5mhz from prescaler f[10:9] demif[1:0] - demodulator phase shift / if control 00 = 60khz if 01 = 200khz if 10 = 455khz if 11 = test modes using dclk1:dclk0 f[8:6] tdem[2:0] 000 test modes for demodulator. output is monitored at lock pin. see also s2:s0 in frame a. tdem2=0: as described for s2:s0 in frame a tdem2=1 : demodulator test modes. modus (000): normal setting. modus (0xx): test as for s2:s0 in frame a monitored at lock pin. modus (100): demodulator input monitored at lock pin. modus (101): phase shifted signal monitored at lock pin. modus (110): phase detector output monitored at lock pin. modus (111): demodulator output at lock pin. if input at tx_data. f[5:3] paimp[2:0] - pa capacitor array. array is active in rx or tx depending on invarray. 000 = 0pf 001 = 0.75pf 010 = 1.5pf 011 = 2.25pf 100 = 3pf 101 = 3.75pf 110 = 4.5pf 111 = 5.25pf f[2] invarray - pa capacitor array activation. 0 = capacitor array active in rx mode 1 = capacitor array active in tx mode f[1:0] paec[1:0] - pa buffer amplifier drive level 00 = 3ma 01 = 5ma 10 = 8ma 11 = 11ma
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 24 of 27 register g register name default value active description g[12:11] ifq[1:0] - if filter q-value 00 = low 01 = 10 = 11 = high g[10:9] ifg[1:0] - if amplifer gain 00 = lowest 01 = 10 = 11 = highest g[8:6] lpif[2:0] - if filter low-pass cut-off 000 = lowest 001 = 010 = 011 = 100 = 101 = 110 = 111 = highest g[5:3] hpif[2:0] - if filter high-pass cut-off 000 = lowest 001 = 010 = 011 = 100 = 101 = 110 = 111 = highest g[2:0] mif[2:0] - if mode control, external filter selection 000 = differential input, 1. ceramic filter 001 = single-ended input 1. ceramic filter 010 = differential input, 1. and 2. ceramic filter (na) 011 = single-ended input, 1. and 2. ceramic filter (na) 100 = differential input, no ceramic filters filters 101 = single-ended input, no ceramic filters 110 = na 111 = single-ended input, 1. ceramic filter register h register name default value active description h[12:10] lpdem[2:0] - demodulator data filter cut-off (low pass) 000 = 5.8khz 001 = 9.3khz 010 = 13.9khz 011 = 19.9khz 100 = 28.0khz 101 = 36.2khz 110 = 64.8khz 111 = 134.2khz h[9] fastacidf 0 demodulator datafilter ac coupling time constant (precharge) 0 = normal/high time constant 1 = low time constant (precharge)
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 25 of 27 register name default value active description h[8] topfilt - demodulator data filter topology ac coupling by-pass 0 = two ac couplings 1 = one ac coupling h[7:6] hystdem[1:0] - demodulator data slicer comparator hysteresis 00 = 0mv 01 = 15mv 10 = 40mv 11 = 100mv h[5:4] hpdem[1:0] - demodulator data filter high-pass cut-off 00 = 30hz 01 = 60hz 10 = 120hz 11 = 240hz h[3] extacdf 0 demodulator external ac-coupling 0 = internal 1 = eksternal (na) h[2] ifsigext 0 if test mode if signal input at tx_data pin use lock pin as demodulator output 0 = normal 1 = test mode h[1] quadswing - quadrature detector output level 0 = vdd (normal setting) 1 = reduced amplitude (vdd/2) h[0] ifdoff 0 if and demodulator power down (overrided by global power down). 0 = if and demodulator active (if pd=0 and rxtx=0). normal setting. 1 = if and demodulator power down
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 26 of 27 package description (ssop-28) 10.50 9.90 notes : a. all linear dimensions are inn millimeters. b. this drawing is subject to change without notice. c. body dimensions do not include mold flash or protrusion not to exceed 0.1 mm d. falls within jedec mo-150 soldering information recommended soldering profile is according to cecc 00 802, edition 3 plastic tube specification ssop 5.3mm (.208?) antistatic tube. tube specification package tube width tube height tube length units per tube ssop 28 10.6 4 mm 20? 47
smartrf smartrf smartrf smartrf ? CC900 chipcon as smartrf ? CC900 datasheet (rev. 2.0) 2003-05-14 page 27 of 27 carrier tape and reel specification carrier tape and reel is in accordance with eia specification 481. tape and reel specification package tape width component pitch hole pitch reel diameter units per reel ssop 28 24 mm 12 mm 4 mm 13? 2000 ordering information ordering part number description CC900 single chip rf transceiver CC900dk CC900 development kit CC900sk CC900 sample kit (5 pcs) address: chipcon as gaustadallen 21 n-0349 oslo, norway telephone : (+47) 22 95 85 44 fax : (+47) 22 95 85 46 e-mail : wireless@chipcon.com (information about rf-ic products) support@chipcon.com (support on our standard products) web site : http://www.chipcon.com general information chipcon as believes the furnished information is correct and accurate at the time of this printing. however, chipcon as reserves the right to make changes to this product without notice. chipcon as does not assume any responsibility for the use of the described product. please refer to chipcon?s web site for the latest update. smartrf ? is a registered trademark of chipcon as. smartrf is chipcon's rf technology platform with rf library cells, modules and design expertise. based on smartrf chipcon develops standard component rf-circuits as well as full custom asics based on customers' requirements. ? 2003 chipcon as life support policy this chipcon product is not designed for use in life support appliances, devices, or systems where malfunction can reasonably be expected to result in a significant personal injury to the user, or as a critical component in any life support device or system whose failure to perform can be reasonably expected to cause the failure of the life support device or system, or to affect its safety or effectiveness. chipcon as customers using or selling these products for use in such applications do so at their own risk and agree to fully indemnify chipcon as for any damages resulting from such improper use or sale.


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