24AA32A/24LC32A
32-Kbit I2C Serial EEPROM
Device Selection Table
VCC Range
Maximum Clock
Frequency
Temperature
Ranges
1.7V-5.5V
400 kHz(1)
I
24LC32A
2.5V-5.5V
400 kHz
I, E
Note 1:
100 kHz for VCC 4,000V
• More than 1 Million Erase/Write Cycles
• Data Retention > 200 Years
• Factory Programming Available
• RoHS Compliant
• Temperature Ranges:
- Industrial (I): -40°C to +85°C
- Extended (E): -40°C to +125°C
• Automotive AEC-Q100 Qualified
The Microchip Technology Inc. 24XX32A(1) is a 32-Kbit
Electrically Erasable PROM (EEPROM). The device is
organized as a single block of 4K x 8-bit memory with
a two-wire serial interface. Its low-voltage design
permits operation down to 1.7V, with standby and
active currents of only 1 µA and 1 mA, respectively.
The 24XX32A also has a page write capability for up to
32 bytes of data. Functional address lines allow up to
eight devices on the same bus, for up to 256 Kbits
address space.
Packages
Note 1:
24XX32A is used in this document as a
generic part number for the 24AA32A/
24LC32A devices.
Block Diagram
A0 A1 A2 WP
I/O
Control
Logic
Memory
Control
Logic
HV Generator
EEPROM
Array
XDEC
Page Latches
I/O
SCL
YDEC
SDA
• 8-Lead DFN, 8-Lead MSOP, 8-Lead PDIP, 8Lead SOIC, 8-Lead SOIJ, 5-Lead SOT-23, 8Lead TDFN, 8-Lead TSSOP and 8-Lead XRotated TSSOP
Vcc
VSS
Sense Amp.
R/W Control
Package Types
DFN/TDFN
A0 1
A1 2
A2 3
VSS 4
8 VCC
7 WP
6 SCL
5 SDA
SOT-23
PDIP/MSOP/SOIC/SOIJ/TSSOP
A0
1
8
VCC
SCL
1
A1
2
7
WP
VSS
2
A2
3
6
SCL
VSS
4
5
SDA
SDA
3
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
X-Rotated TSSOP
5
WP
4
VCC
WP
VCC
A0
A1
1
2
3
4
8
7
6
5
SCL
SDA
VSS
A2
DS20001713N-page 1
24AA32A/24LC32A
1.0
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
Absolute Maximum Ratings (†)
VCC .............................................................................................................................................................................6.5V
All inputs and outputs w.r.t. VSS ......................................................................................................... -0.3V to VCC +1.0V
Storage temperature ...............................................................................................................................-65°C to +150°C
Ambient temperature with power applied ................................................................................................-40°C to +125°C
ESD protection on all pins 4 kV
† NOTICE: Stresses above those listed under “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to
the device. This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at those or any other conditions
above those indicated in the operational listings of this specification is not implied. Exposure to maximum rating
conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability.
TABLE 1-1:
DC CHARACTERISTICS
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Industrial (I):
Extended (E):
Param.
Symbol
No.
Characteristic
Minimum
High-Level Input Voltage
0.7 VCC
—
—
D1
D2
VIH
TA = -40°C to +85°C, VCC = +1.7V to +5.5V
TA = -40°C to +125°C, VCC = +2.5V to +5.5V
Type
Maximum
Units
Conditions
—
—
V
—
0.3 VCC
V
VCC 2.5V
—
0.2 VCC
V
VCC < 2.5V
0.05 VCC
—
—
V
VCC 2.5V (Note 1)
—
—
0.40
V
IOL = 3.0 mA, VCC = 4.5V
IOL = 2.1 mA, Vcc = 2.5V
VIL
Low-Level Input Voltage
D3
VHYS
Hysteresis of Schmitt
Trigger Inputs (SDA,
SCL pins)
D4
VOL
Low-Level Output
Voltage
D5
ILI
Input Leakage Current
—
—
±1
µA
VIN = VSS or VCC
D6
ILO
Output Leakage Current
—
—
±1
µA
VOUT = VSS or VCC
D7
CIN,
COUT
Pin Capacitance
(all inputs/outputs)
—
—
10
pF
VCC = 5.0V (Note 1)
TA = +25°C, FCLK = 1 MHz
D8
ICC write
—
0.1
3
mA
VCC = 5.5V,
SCL = 400 kHz
D9
ICC read
—
0.05
400
µA
VCC = 5.5V,
SCL = 400 kHz
—
0.01
1
µA
SDA = SCL = VCC
A0, A1, A2, WP = VSS, ITemp.
—
—
5
µA
SDA = SCL = VCC = 5.5V
A0, A1, A2, WP = VSS, ETemp
Operating Current
D10
Note 1:
2:
ICCS
Standby Current
This parameter is periodically sampled and not 100% tested.
Typical measurements taken at room temperature.
DS20001713N-page 2
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
24AA32A/24LC32A
TABLE 1-2:
AC CHARACTERISTICS
Industrial (I): TA = -40°C to +85°C, VCC = +1.7V to +5.5V
Extended (E):TA = -40°C to +125°C, VCC = +2.5V to +5.5V
AC CHARACTERISTICS
Param.
Symbol
No.
1
FCLK
2
THIGH
3
TLOW
Characteristic
Clock Frequency
Clock High Time
Clock Low Time
4
TR
SDA and SCL Rise Time
5
TF
SDA and SCL Fall Time
6
THD:STA
Start Condition Hold Time
7
TSU:STA
Start Condition Setup Time
8
THD:DAT
Data Input Hold Time
9
TSU:DAT
Data Input Setup Time
10
TSU:STO
Stop Condition Setup Time
11
TSU:WP
WP Setup Time
12
THD:WP
WP Hold Time
13
TAA
Output Valid from Clock
14
TBUF
Bus free time: Time the bus
must be free before a new
transmission can start
15
TOF
Output Fall Time from VIH
Minimum to VIL Maximum
16
TSP
17
TWC
18
3:
4:
Units
Conditions
—
400
kHz
2.5V VCC 5.5V
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
—
100
kHz
600
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4000
—
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
1300
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4700
—
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
—
300
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V (Note 1)
—
1000
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
(Note 1)
—
300
ns
Note 1
600
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4000
—
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
600
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4700
—
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
Note 2
0
—
ns
100
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
250
—
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
600
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4000
—
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
600
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4000
—
ns
1.7V VCC < 2.5V (24AA32A)
1300
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4700
—
ns
1.7V VCC < 2.5V (24AA32A)
—
900
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V (Note 2)
—
3500
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
(Note 2)
1300
—
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
4700
—
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
20+0.1CB
250
ns
2.5V VCC 5.5V
—
250
ns
1.7V VCC 2.5V (24AA32A)
Input Filter Spike Suppression
(SDA and SCL pins)
—
50
ns
Note 1 and Note 3
Write Cycle Time
(byte or page)
—
5
ms
1,000,000
—
cycles
Endurance
Note 1:
2:
Minimum Maximum
+25°C, 5.5V, Page Mode
(Note 4)
Not 100% tested. CB = total capacitance of one bus line in pF.
As a transmitter the device must provide an internal minimum delay time to bridge the undefined region
(minimum 300 ns) of the falling edge of SCL to avoid unintended generation of Start or Stop conditions.
The combined TSP and VHYS specifications are due to new Schmitt Trigger inputs which provide improved
noise spike suppression. This eliminates the need for a TI specification for standard operation.
This parameter is not tested but ensured by characterization.
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
DS20001713N-page 3
24AA32A/24LC32A
FIGURE 1-1:
BUS TIMING DATA
5
SCL
SDA
IN
7
3
4
D4
2
8
10
9
6
16
14
13
SDA
OUT
(protected)
(unprotected)
WP
FIGURE 1-2:
12
11
BUS TIMING START/STOP
D4
SCL
6
7
10
SDA
Start
DS20001713N-page 4
Stop
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
24AA32A/24LC32A
2.0
PIN DESCRIPTIONS
The descriptions of the pins are listed in Table 2-1.
TABLE 2-1:
PIN FUNCTION TABLE
Name PDIP SOIC SOIJ TSSOP
Rotated
DFN(1) TDFN(1) MSOP SOT-23 CS
TSSOP
Description
A0
1
1
1
1
3
1
1
1
—
—
Chip Address Input
A1
2
2
2
2
4
2
2
2
—
—
Chip Address Input
A2
3
3
3
3
5
3
3
3
—
—
Chip Address Input
VSS
4
4
4
4
6
4
4
4
2
2
Ground
SDA
5
5
5
5
7
5
5
5
3
5
Serial Address/Data I/O
SCL
6
6
6
6
8
6
6
6
1
4
Serial Clock
WP
7
7
7
7
1
7
7
7
5
3
Write-Protect Input
VCC
8
8
8
8
2
8
8
8
4
1
Power Supply
Note 1:
2.1
The exposed pad on the DFN/TDFN packages can be connected to VSS or left floating.
A0, A1, A2 Chip Address Inputs
The A0, A1 and A2 inputs are used by the 24XX32A for
multiple device operation. The levels on these inputs
are compared with the corresponding bits in the client
address. The chip is selected if the comparison is true.
Up to eight devices may be connected to the same bus
by using different Chip Select bit combinations. These
inputs must be connected to either VCC or VSS.
In most applications, the chip address inputs A0, A1
and A2 are hard-wired to logic ‘0’ or logic ‘1’. For
applications in which these pins are controlled by a
microcontroller or other programmable device, the chip
address pins must be driven to logic ‘0’ or logic ‘1’
before normal device operation can proceed. Address
pins are not available in the SOT-23 package.
2.2
2.3
Serial Clock (SCL)
The SCL input is used to synchronize the data transfer
to and from the device.
2.4
Write-Protect (WP)
This pin must be connected to either VSS or VCC. If tied
to VSS, write operations are enabled. If tied to VCC,
write operations are inhibited but read operations are
not affected.
Serial Address/Data Input/Output
(SDA)
SDA is a bidirectional pin used to transfer addresses
and data into and out of the device. It is an open-drain
terminal; therefore, the SDA bus requires a pull-up
resistor to VCC (typical 10 k for 100 kHz, 2 k for
400 kHz)
For normal data transfer, SDA is allowed to change
only during SCL low. Changes during SCL high are
reserved for indicating Start and Stop conditions.
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
DS20001713N-page 5
24AA32A/24LC32A
3.0
FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION
The 24XX32A supports a bidirectional, two-wire bus
and data transmission protocol. A device that sends
data onto the bus is defined as transmitter, while a
device receiving data is defined as a receiver. The bus
has to be controlled by a host device which generates
the Serial Clock (SCL), controls the bus access and
generates the Start and Stop conditions, while the
24XX32A works as client. Both host and client can
operate as transmitter or receiver, but the host device
determines which mode is activated.
4.0
BUS CHARACTERISTICS
The following bus protocol has been defined:
• Data transfer may be initiated only when the bus
is not busy.
• During data transfer, the data line must remain
stable whenever the clock line is high. Changes in
the data line while the clock line is high will be
interpreted as a Start or Stop condition.
Accordingly, the following bus conditions have been
defined (Figure 4-1).
4.1
Start Data Transfer (B)
A high-to-low transition of the SDA line while the clock
(SCL) is high determines a Start condition. All
commands must be preceded by a Start condition.
4.3
Stop Data Transfer (C)
A low-to-high transition of the SDA line while the clock
(SCL) is high determines a Stop condition. All
operations must be ended with a Stop condition.
FIGURE 4-1:
Data Valid (D)
The state of the data line represents valid data when,
after a Start condition, the data line is stable for the
duration of the high period of the clock signal.
The data on the line must be changed during the low
period of the clock signal. There is one clock pulse per
bit of data.
Each data transfer is initiated with a Start condition and
terminated with a Stop condition. The number of data
bytes transferred between Start and Stop conditions is
determined by the host device and is, theoretically,
unlimited (although only the last 32 bytes will be stored
when doing a write operation). When an overwrite does
occur, it will replace data in a First-In First-Out (FIFO)
principle.
4.5
Acknowledge
Each receiving device, when addressed, is obliged to
generate an Acknowledge after the reception of each
byte. The host device must generate an extra clock
pulse which is associated with this Acknowledge bit.
Note:
Bus Not Busy (A)
Both data and clock lines remain high.
4.2
4.4
The 24XX32A does not generate any
Acknowledge
bits
if
an
internal
programming cycle is in progress.
The device that acknowledges, has to pull down the
SDA line during the Acknowledge clock pulse in such a
way that the SDA line is stable-low during the high
period of the Acknowledge-related clock pulse.
Moreover, setup and hold times must be taken into
account. During reads, a host must signal an end of
data to the client by not generating an Acknowledge bit
on the last byte that has been clocked out of the client.
In this case, the client (24XX32A) will leave the data
line high to enable the host to generate the Stop
condition.
DATA TRANSFER SEQUENCE ON THE SERIAL BUS
(A)
(B)
(D)
Start
Condition
Address or
Acknowledge
Valid
(D)
(C)
(A)
SCL
SDA
DS20001713N-page 6
Data
Allowed
to Change
Stop
Condition
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
24AA32A/24LC32A
5.0
DEVICE ADDRESSING
FIGURE 5-1:
A control byte is the first byte received following the
Start condition from the host device. The control byte
consists of a 4-bit control code. For the 24XX32A, this
is set as ‘1010’ binary for read and write operations.
The next 3 bits of the control byte are the Chip Select
bits (A2, A1, A0). The Chip Select bits allow the use of
up to eight 24XX32A devices on the same bus and are
used to select which device is accessed. The Chip
Select bits in the control byte must correspond to the
logic levels on the corresponding A2, A1 and A0 pins
for the device to respond. These bits are in effect the
three Most Significant bits of the word address. The
combination of the 4-bit control code and the next three
bits are called the client address.
For the SOT-23 package, the address pins are not
available. During device addressing, the A1, A2, and
A0 Chip Selects bits should be set to ‘0’.
The last bit of the control byte is the Read/Write (R/W)
bit and it defines the operation to be performed. When
set to a ‘1’, a read operation is selected. When set to a
zero, a write operation is selected. The next two bytes
received define the address of the first data byte
(Figure 5-2). Because only A11 to A0 are used, the
upper four address bits are “don’t care” bits. The upper
address bits are transferred first, followed by the Less
Significant bits.
CONTROL BYTE
FORMAT
Read/Write Bit
Chip Select
Bits
Control Code
S
1
0
1
A2
0
A1 A0 R/W ACK
Client Address
Start Bit
5.1
Acknowledge Bit
Contiguous Addressing Across
Multiple Devices
The Chip Select bits A2, A1 and A0 can be used to
expand the contiguous address space for up to
256 Kbits by adding up to eight 24XX32A devices on
the same bus. In this case, software can use A0 of the
control byte as address bit A12; A1 as address bit A13;
and A2 as address bit A14. It is not possible to
sequentially read across device boundaries.
The SOT-23 package do not support multiple device
addressing on the same bus.
Following the Start condition, the 24XX32A monitors
the SDA bus checking the device type identifier being
transmitted and, upon receiving a valid client address
and the R/W bit, the client device outputs an
Acknowledge signal on the SDA line. Depending on the
state of the R/W bit, the 24XX32A will select a read or
write operation.
FIGURE 5-2:
ADDRESS SEQUENCE BIT ASSIGNMENTS
Control Byte
1
0
1
Control
Code
0
A
2
A
1
Address High Byte
A
0 R/W
x
Chip
Select
Bits
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
x
x
x
A A
11 10
A
9
Address Low Byte
A
8
A
7
•
•
•
•
•
•
A
0
x = “don’t care” bit
DS20001713N-page 7
24AA32A/24LC32A
6.0
WRITE OPERATIONS
6.1
Byte Write
Following the Start condition from the host, the control
code (4 bits), the Chip Select (3 bits), and the R/W bit
(which is a logic low) are clocked onto the bus by the
host transmitter. This indicates to the addressed client
receiver that the address high byte will follow once it
has generated an Acknowledge bit during the ninth
clock cycle. Therefore, the next byte transmitted by
the host is the high-order byte of the word address
and will be written into the Address Pointer of the
24XX32A. The next byte is the Least Significant
Address Byte. After receiving another Acknowledge
signal from the 24XX32A, the host device will transmit
the data word to be written into the addressed
memory location. The 24XX32A acknowledges again
and the host generates a Stop condition. This initiates
the internal write cycle and, during this time, the
24XX32A will not generate Acknowledge signals
(Figure 6-1). If an attempt is made to write to the array
with the WP pin held high, the device will
acknowledge the command, but no write cycle will
occur. No data will be written and the device will
immediately accept a new command. After a byte
Write command, the internal Address Pointer will point
to the address location following the one that was just
written.
Note:
6.2
Page Write
The write control byte, word address and the first data
byte are transmitted to the 24XX32A in the same way
as in a byte write. However, instead of generating a
Stop condition, the host transmits up to 31 additional
bytes which are temporarily stored in the on-chip page
buffer and will be written into memory once the host has
transmitted a Stop condition. Upon receipt of each
word, the five lower Address Pointer bits, which form
the byte counter, are internally incremented by ‘1’. The
higher-order 7-bits of the word address remain
constant. If the host should transmit more than 32bytes prior to generating the Stop condition, the
Address Pointer will roll over and the previously
received data will be overwritten. As with the byte write
operation, once the Stop condition is received, an
internal write cycle will begin (Figure 6-2). If an attempt
is made to write to the array with the WP pin held high,
the device will acknowledge the command, but no write
cycle will occur, no data will be written, and the device
will immediately accept a new command.
Note:
When doing a write of less than 32-bytes
the data in the rest of the page is
refreshed along with the data bytes being
written. This will force the entire page to
endure a write cycle, for this reason
endurance is specified per page.
6.3
Page write operations are limited to
writing bytes within a single physical page,
regardless of the number of bytes
actually being written. Physical page
boundaries start at addresses that are
integer multiples of the page buffer size
(or ‘page size’) and end at addresses that
are integer multiples of page size – 1. If a
page write command attempts to write
across a physical page boundary, the
result is that the data wrap around to the
beginning of the current page (overwriting
data previously stored there), instead of
being written to the next page as might be
expected. It is therefore necessary for the
application software to prevent page write
operations that would attempt to cross a
page boundary.
Write Protection
The WP pin allows the user to write-protect the entire
array (000-FFF) when the pin is tied to VCC. If tied to
VSS the write protection is disabled. The WP pin is
sampled at the Stop bit for every Write command
(Figure 4-1). Toggling the WP pin after the Stop bit will
have no effect on the execution of the write cycle.
DS20001713N-page 8
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
24AA32A/24LC32A
FIGURE 6-1:
BYTE WRITE
Bus Activity
Host
S
T
A
R
T
Control
Byte
Address
High Byte
AA
S1 0 1 0A
210 0
SDA Line
S
T
O
P
Data
xxx x
A
C
K
Bus Activity
Address
Low Byte
P
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
x = “don’t care” bit
FIGURE 6-2:
PAGE WRITE
Bus Activity
Host
S
T
A
R
T
SDA Line
AA
S10 1 0A
2100
Bus Activity
Control
Byte
Address
High Byte
Address
Low Byte
Data Byte 0
S
T
O
P
P
Data Byte 31
xxxx
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
x = “don’t care” bit
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
DS20001713N-page 9
24AA32A/24LC32A
7.0
ACKNOWLEDGE POLLING
Since the device will not acknowledge during a write
cycle, this can be used to determine when the cycle is
complete (this feature can be used to maximize bus
throughput). Once the Stop condition for a write
command has been issued from the host, the device
initiates the internally-timed write cycle. ACK polling
can then be initiated immediately. This involves the
host sending a Start condition followed by the control
byte for a write command (R/W = 0). If the device is still
busy with the write cycle, then no ACK will be returned.
If no ACK is returned, the Start bit and control byte must
be re-sent. If the cycle is complete, the device will
return the ACK and the host can then proceed with the
next read or write operation. See Figure 7-1 for flow
diagram of this operation.
FIGURE 7-1:
ACKNOWLEDGE
POLLING FLOW
Send
Write Command
Send Stop
Condition to
Initiate Write Cycle
Send Start
Send Control Byte
with R/W = 0
Did Device
Acknowledge
(ACK = 0)?
No
Yes
Next
Operation
DS20001713N-page 10
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
24AA32A/24LC32A
8.0
READ OPERATION
8.3
Read operations are initiated in the same way as write
operations, with the exception that the R/W bit of the
control byte is set to ‘1’. There are three basic types of
read operations: current address read, random read
and sequential read.
8.1
Current Address Read
The 24XX32A contains an Address Pointer that
maintains the address of the last word accessed,
internally incremented by ‘1’. Therefore, if the previous
read access was to address ‘n’ (n is any legal address),
the next current address read operation would access
data from address n + 1.
Upon receipt of the control byte with R/W bit set to ‘1’,
the 24XX32A issues an Acknowledge and transmits
the 8-bit data word. The host will not acknowledge the
transfer, but does generate a Stop condition and the
24XX32A discontinues transmission (Figure 8-1).
8.2
Sequential Read
Sequential reads are initiated in the same way as a
random read, except that once the 24XX32A transmits
the first data byte, the host issues an Acknowledge as
opposed to the Stop condition used in a random read.
This Acknowledge directs the 24XX32A to transmit the
next sequentially addressed 8-bit word (Figure 8-3).
Following the final byte transmitted to the host, the host
will NOT generate an Acknowledge, but will generate a
Stop condition. To provide sequential reads, the
24XX32A contains an internal Address Pointer which is
incremented by ‘1’ upon completion of each operation.
This Address Pointer allows the entire memory
contents to be serially read during one operation. The
internal Address Pointer will automatically roll over
from address FFF to address 000 if the host
acknowledges the byte received from the array
address FFF.
Random Read
Random read operations allow the host to access any
memory location in a random manner. To perform this
type of read operation, the word address must first be
set. This is accomplished by sending the word
address to the 24XX32A as part of a write operation
(R/W bit set to ‘0’). Once the word address is sent, the
host generates a Start condition following the
Acknowledge. This terminates the write operation, but
not before the internal Address Pointer is set. The
host issues the control byte again, but with the R/W bit
set to a ‘1’. The 24XX32A will then issue an
Acknowledge and transmit the 8-bit data word. The
host will not acknowledge the transfer, but does
generate a Stop condition which causes the 24XX32A
to discontinue transmission (Figure 8-2). After a
random Read command, the internal Address Pointer
will point to the address location following the one that
was just read.
FIGURE 8-1:
CURRENT ADDRESS READ
Bus Activity
Host
S
T
A
R
T
SDA Line
S 1
Control
Byte
0 1 0
Bus Activity
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
S
T
O
P
Data Byte
A A A
1
2 1 0
P
A
C
K
N
O
A
C
K
DS20001713N-page 11
24AA32A/24LC32A
FIGURE 8-2:
Bus Activity
Host
RANDOM READ
S
T
A
R
T
Control
Byte
Address
High Byte
AA
xxxx
S1 0 1 0 A
2100
A
C
Bus Activity
K
x = “don’t care” bit
S
T
A
R
T
Address
Low Byte
SDA Line
FIGURE 8-3:
Bus Activity
Host
A
C
K
A
C
K
Control
Byte
AA
S1 0 1 0 A
2 1 01
S
T
O
P
Data
Byte
P
N
O
A
C
K
A
C
K
SEQUENTIAL READ
Control
Byte
Data n
Data n + 1
Data n + 2
Data n + x
S
T
O
P
P
SDA Line
Bus Activity
DS20001713N-page 12
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
A
C
K
N
O
A
C
K
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
24AA32A/24LC32A
9.0
PACKAGING INFORMATION
9.1
Package Marking Information
8-Lead 2x3 DFN
XXX
YWW
NN
Example
264
134
13
8-Lead MSOP
Example
XXXXXT
YWWNNN
4L32AI
13413F
8-Lead PDIP (300 mil)
Example
XXXXXXXX
T/XXXNNN
YYWW
8-Lead SOIC (3.90 mm)
XXXXXXXT
XXXXYYWW
NNN
24LC32A
I/P e3 13F
2134
Example
24LC32AI
SN e3 2134
13F
8-Lead SOIJ (5.28 mm)
Example
XXXXXXXX
T/XXXXXX
YYWWNNN
24LC32A
I/SM e3
213413F
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
DS20001713N-page 13
24AA32A/24LC32A
5-Lead SOT-23
Example
XXNN
M613
8-Lead 2x3 TDFN
XXX
YWW
NN
8-Lead TSSOP
DS20001713N-page 14
Example
A64
134
I3
Example
XXXX
4LA
TYWW
I134
NNN
13F
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
24AA32A/24LC32A
1st Line Marking Codes
Part Number TSSOP
TSSOP
X-Rotated
MSOP
261
—
264
265
24AA32A
4AA
4AAX
4A32AT(1)
24LC32A
4LA
4LAX
4L32AT(1)
Note 1:
2:
DFN
I Temp.
TDFN
E Temp.
I Temp.
SOT-23
E Temp.
I Temp.
A61
—
B6NN(2)
E Temp.
—
A64
A65
M6NN(2)
N6NN(2)
T = Temperature grade (I, E)
NN = Alphanumeric traceability code
Legend: XX...X
T
Y
YY
WW
NNN
e3
*
Part number or part number code
Temperature (I, E)
Year code (last digit of calendar year)
Year code (last 2 digits of calendar year)
Week code (week of January 1 is week ‘01’)
Alphanumeric traceability code (2 characters for small packages)
JEDEC® designator for Matte Tin (Sn)
Standard OTP marking consists of Microchip part number, year code, week
code, and traceability code.
Note:
For very small packages with no room for the JEDEC® designator
e3 , the marking will only appear on the outer carton or reel label.
Note:
In the event the full Microchip part number cannot be marked on one line, it will
be carried over to the next line, thus limiting the number of available
characters for customer-specific information.
2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
DS20001713N-page 15
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2002-2021 Microchip Technology Inc. and its subsidiaries
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