PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
16-Bit Flash Microcontrollers with 12-Bit Pipeline A/D,
Sigma-Delta A/D, USB On-The-Go and XLP Technology
Advanced Analog Features
Extreme Low-Power Features
• 12-Bit, up to 50-Channel, High-Speed, Pipeline
Analog-to-Digital Converter (A/D):
- Conversion rates up to 10 Msps
- Compatibility features for low conversion rates
- Flexible operating modes with auto-accumulate,
Threshold Detect and channel scan using
sample lists
- Conversion available during Sleep and Idle
• 16-Bit Sigma-Delta Analog-to-Digital Converter (A/D):
- Programmable data rate with dithering option and
adjustable oversampling ratios
- Two differential channels
- Configurable input gain stage
• Two 10-Bit Digital-to-Analog Converters (DAC):
- Fast settling time supports 1 Msps update rate
• Two Rail-to-Rail, Input/Output, General Purpose
Operational Amplifiers:
- 2.5 MHz gain bandwidth product (typical)
- Flexible input multiplexing options
- Optional Comparator mode
• Three Rail-to-Rail, Enhanced Analog Comparators
with Programmable Input/Output Configuration
• Three On-Chip Programmable Voltage References
• Charge Time Measurement Unit (CTMU):
- Used for capacitive touch sensing, up to
50 channels
- Time measurement down to 100 ps resolution
- Operation in Sleep mode
• Multiple Power Management Options for Extreme
Power Reduction:
- VBAT allows for lowest power consumption on
backup battery (with or without RTCC)
- Deep Sleep allows near total power-down, with
the ability to wake-up on internal or external
triggers
- Full RAM and state retention in select Deep Sleep
and VBAT modes
- Sleep and Idle modes selectively shut down
peripherals and/or core for substantial power
reduction and fast wake-up
- Doze mode allows CPU to run at a lower clock
speed than peripherals
• Alternate Clock modes allow On-the-Fly Switching to
a Lower Clock Speed for Selective Power Reduction
• Extreme Low-Power Current Consumption for
Deep Sleep:
- WDT: 270 nA @ 3.3V, typical
- RTCC: 350 nA @ 32 kHz, 3.3V, typical
- Deep Sleep current, 75 nA, 3.3V, typical
Analog Peripherals
Device
Data RAM
(bytes)
Pins
12-Bit HS A/D (ch)
16-Bit A/D (diff ch)
10-Bit DAC
Op Amps
Comparators
CTMU (ch)
Input Capture
Output Compare/PWM
I2C
SPI
UART w/IrDA®
EPMP/PSP
16-Bit Timers
LCD Controller (pixels)
USB OTG
Deep Sleep w/VBAT
Digital Peripherals
Program Flash
(bytes)
Memory
PIC24FJ128GC010
128K
8K
100
50
2
2
2
3
50
9
9
2
2
4
Y
5
472
Y
Y
PIC24FJ128GC006
128K
8K
64
30
2
2
2
3
30
9
9
2
2
4
Y
5
248
Y
Y
PIC24FJ64GC010
64K
8K
100
50
2
2
2
3
50
9
9
2
2
4
Y
5
472
Y
Y
PIC24FJ64GC006
64K
8K
64
30
2
2
2
3
30
9
9
2
2
4
Y
5
248
Y
Y
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 1
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
Universal Serial Bus Features
High-Performance CPU
• USB v2.0 On-The-Go (OTG) Compliant
• USB Device mode Operation from FRC Oscillator –
No Crystal Oscillator Required
• Dual Role Capable – Can Act as Either Host or
Peripheral
• Low-Speed (1.5 Mb/s) and Full-Speed (12 Mb/s)
USB Operation in Host mode
• Full-Speed USB Operation in Device mode
• Low Jitter PLL for USB
• Supports up to 32 Endpoints (16 bidirectional):
- USB module can use any RAM location on the
device as USB endpoint buffers
• On-Chip USB Transceiver with Interface for Off-Chip
USB Transceiver
• Supports Control, Interrupt, Isochronous and
Bulk Transfers
• On-Chip Pull-up and Pull-Down Resistors
• Modified Harvard Architecture
• Up to 16 MIPS Operation @ 32 MHz
• C Compiler Optimized Instruction Set
Architecture (ISA)
• 8 MHz Internal Oscillator:
- 96 MHz PLL option for USB clocking
- Multiple clock divide options
- Run-time self-calibration capability for maintaining
better than ±0.20% accuracy
- Fast start-up
• 17-Bit x 17-Bit Single-Cycle Hardware
Fractional/Integer Multiplier
• 32-Bit by 16-Bit Hardware Divider
• 16 x 16-Bit Working Register Array
• Two Address Generation Units (AGUs) for Separate
Read and Write Addressing of Data Memory
Peripheral Features
• LCD Display Controller:
- Up to 59 segments by 8 commons
- Internal charge pump and low-power, internal
resistor biasing
- Operation in Sleep mode
• Up to Five External Interrupt Sources
• Peripheral Pin Select (PPS); Allows Independent I/O
Mapping of Many Peripherals
• Five 16-Bit Timers/Counters with Prescaler:
- Can be paired as 32-bit timers/counters
• Six-Channel DMA Supports All Peripheral modules:
- Minimizes CPU overhead, increases data
throughput and lowers power consumption
• Nine Input Capture modules, each with a Dedicated
16-Bit Timer
• Nine Output Compare/PWM modules, each with a
Dedicated 16-Bit Timer
• Enhanced Parallel Master/Slave Port (EPMP/EPSP)
• Hardware Real-Time Clock and Calendar (RTCC):
- Run, Sleep, Deep Sleep and VBAT modes
• Two 3-Wire/4-Wire SPI modules (support 4 Frame
modes) with 8-Level FIFO Buffer
• Two I2C modules Support Multi-Master/Slave mode
and 7-Bit/10-Bit Addressing
• Four UART modules:
- Support RS-485, RS-232 and LIN/J2602
- On-chip hardware encoder/decoder for IrDA®
- Auto-wake-up on Auto-Baud Detect (ABD)
- 4-level deep FIFO buffer
• Programmable, 32-Bit Cyclic Redundancy Check
(CRC) Generator
• Digital Signal Modulator (DSM) Provides On-Chip
FSK and PSK Modulation for a Digital Signal Stream
• High-Current Sink/Source (18 mA/18 mA) on All I/O Pins
• Configurable Open-Drain Outputs on Digital I/O Pins
• 5.5V Tolerant Inputs on Select Pins
DS30009312D-page 2
Special Microcontroller Features
• Supply Voltage Range of 2.0V to 3.6V
• Two On-Chip Voltage Regulators (1.8V and 1.2V) for
Regular and eXtreme Low-Power Operation
• 20,000 Erase/Write Cycle Endurance Flash Program
Memory, Typical
• Flash Data Retention: 20 Years Minimum
• Self-Programmable under Software Control
• Programmable Reference Clock Output
• In-Circuit Serial Programming™ (ICSP™) and
In-Circuit Emulation (ICE) via 2 Pins
• JTAG Boundary Scan Support
• Fail-Safe Clock Monitor Operation:
- Detects clock failure and switches to on-chip,
low-power RC Oscillator
• Power-on Reset (POR), Power-up Timer (PWRT)
and Oscillator Start-up Timer (OST)
• Separate Brown-out Reset (BOR) and Deep Sleep
Brown-out Reset (DSBOR) Circuits
• Programmable High/Low-Voltage Detect (HLVD)
• Flexible Watchdog Timer (WDT) with its Own
RC Oscillator for Reliable Operation
• Standard and Ultra Low-Power Watchdog Timers for
Reliable Operation in Standard and Deep Sleep
modes
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
Pin Diagrams
64-Pin TQFP (10 mm x 10 mm)
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
59
58
60
61
62
64
63
RE4
RE3
RE2
RE1
RE0
RF1
RF0
VBAT
VCAP
RD7
RD6
RD5
RD4
RD3
RD2
RD1
64-Pin QFN (9 mm x 9 mm)(1)
48
RE5
RE6
1
RE7
RG6
RG7
RG8
MCLR
3
46
4
45
5
44
6
43
RG9
VSS
VDD
RB5
8
42
7
41
PIC24FJXXXGC006
RD11
RD10
RD9
RD8
VSS
OSCO/RC15
OSCI/RC12
VDD
D+/RG2
D-/RG3
VUSB3V3
VBUS
RF3
32
31
30
RC14
RC13
RD0
RB6
RB7
AVDD
AVSS
SVSS
CH0+
CH0CH1+
CH1SVDD
RB12
RB13
RB14
RB15
RF4
RF5
29
33
28
34
16
27
35
15
26
36
14
25
13
24
37
23
38
12
21
22
39
11
20
10
19
40
18
9
17
RB4
RB3
RB2
RB1
RB0
47
2
Legend: Shaded pins indicate pins tolerant to up to +5.5 VDC. See Table 1 for a complete description of pin functions.
Note 1: It is recommended to connect the metal pad on the bottom of the 64-pin QFN package to VSS.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 3
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1:
COMPLETE PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS FOR 64-PIN DEVICES
Pin
Function
Pin
Function
1
CTED4/PMD5/LCDBIAS2/CN63/RE5
33
AN30/SEG12/RP16/USBID/PMA12/CN71/RF3
2
PMD6/LCDBIAS1/CN64/RE6
34
VBUS/CN83
3
PMD7/LCDBIAS0/CN65/RE7
35
VUSB3V3
4
BGBUF2/AN17/OA1P1/C1IND/SEG0/RP21/T5CK/PMA5/CN8/
RG6
36
D-/CN73/RG3
5
VLCAP1/AN18/OA1N4/C1INC/RP26/PMA4/CN9/RG7
37
D+/CN72/RG2
6
VLCAP2/AN19/OA1N3/C2IND/RP19/PMA3/CN10/RG8
38
VDD
OSCI/CLKI/CN23/RC12
7
MCLR
39
8
AN49/OA1P0/C2INC/SEG1/DAC1/RP27/PMA2/CN11/RG9
40
OSCO/CLKO/CN22/RC15
9
VSS
41
VSS
10
VDD
42
AN40/SEG13/RP2/RTCC/DMLN/OCTRIG1/PMA13/CN53/RD8
11
PGEC3/AN5/OA1OUT/C1INA/SEG2/RP18/CN7/RB5
43
AN24/SEG14/RP4/SDA1/DPLN/PMACK2/CN54/RD9
12
PGED3/AN4/OA1N0/C1INB/SEG3/RP28/USBOEN/CN6/RB4
44
AN41/C3IND/SEG15/RP3/SCL1/PMA15/CS2/CN55/RD10
13
AN3/OA2OUT/C2INA/SEG4/VPIO/CN5/RB3
45
TMS/AN42/OA2P0/C3INC/SEG16/RP12/PMA14/CS1/CN56/
RD11
14
AN2/OA2N2/CTCMP/C2INB/SEG5/RP13/T4CK/VMIO/CTED13/
PMA7/CN4/RB2
46
AN43/OA2N0/SEG17/RP11/VCMPST3/DMH/INT0/CN49/RD0
15
PGEC1/CVREF-/AVREF-/AN1/OA2P1/SEG6/RP1/CTED12/CN3/
RB1
47
SOSCI/RC13
16
PGED1/CVREF+/AVREF+/DVREF+/BGBUF1/AN0/SEG7/RP0/
PMA6/CN2/RB0
48
PWRLCLK/SOSCO/RPI37/SCLKI/RC14
17
PGEC2/AN6/OA1P3/RP6/LCDBIAS3/CN24/RB6
49
AN35/SEG20/RP24/CN50/RD1(1)
18
PGED2/AN7/COM6/SEG30/RP7/CN25/RB7
50
AN25/OA2N1/SEG21/RP23/DPH/PMACK1/CN51/RD2
19
AVDD
51
AN44/OA2P4/SEG22/RP22/PMBE0/CN52/RD3
20
AVSS
52
AN47/OA1P4/SEG23/RP25/PMWR/CN13/RD4
21
SVSS
53
AN48/OA1N1/SEG24/RP20/PMRD/CN14/RD5
22
CH0+
54
AN34/OA1P2/C3INB/SEG25/CN15/RD6
23
CH0-
55
AN20/C3INA/SEG26/CN16/RD7
24
CH1+/SVREF+
56
VCAP
25
CH1-/CH1SE/SVREF-
57
VBAT
COM7/SEG27/VCMPST1/CN68/RF0
26
SVDD
58
27
TCK/AN12/COM5/SEG18/T1CK/CTED2/PMA11/CN30/RB12
59
COM4/SEG47/VCMPST2/CN69/RF1
28
TDI/AN13/OA2P3/SEG19/DAC2/CTED1/PMA10/CN31/RB13
60
COM3/PMD0/CN58/RE0
29
TDO/AN14/OA2N4/SEG8/RP14/CTED5/CTPLS/PMA1/CN32/
RB14
61
COM2/PMD1/CN59/RE1
30
AN15/SEG9/RP29/T2CK/REFO/CTED6/PMA0/CN12/RB15
62
COM1/PMD2/CN60/RE2
31
AN11/OA2N3/SEG10/RP10/SDA2/T3CK/PMA9/CN17/RF4
63
COM0/CTED9/PMD3/CN61/RE3
32
CVREF/AN10/OA2P2/SEG11/RP17/SCL2/PMA8/CN18/RF5
64
HLVDIN/SEG62/CTED8/PMD4/CN62/RE4
Legend: RPn and RPIn represent remappable pins for Peripheral Pin Select (PPS) functions.
Note 1: RD1 is an analog pin and implements the AN35/SEG20/RP24/CN50/RD1 functions. However, there is not an ANSx bit associated with the
RD1 port. Using the RD1 pin for the AN35 function would cause a worst-case increase in device current consumption of 500 µA.
DS30009312D-page 4
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
Pin Diagrams (Continued)
100
99
98
97
96
95
94
93
92
91
90
89
88
87
86
85
84
83
82
81
80
79
78
77
76
RE4
RE3
RE2
RG13
RG12
RG14
RE1
RE0
RA7
RA6
RG0
RG1
RF1
RF0
VBAT
VCAP
RD7
RD6
RD5
RD4
RD13
RD12
RD3
RD2
RD1
100-Pin TQFP (12 mm x 12 mm)
RG15
1
75
VSS
VDD
2
74
RC14
RE5
3
73
RC13
RE6
4
72
RD0
RE7
5
71
RD11
RC1
6
70
RD10
RC2
7
69
RD9
RC3
8
68
RD8
RC4
9
67
RA15
RG6
10
66
RA14
RG7
11
65
VSS
RG8
12
64
OSCO/RC15
MCLR
13
63
OSCI/RC12
RG9
14
62
VDD
VSS
15
61
RA5
VDD
16
60
RA4
RA0
17
59
RA3
RE8
18
58
RA2
RE9
19
57
D+/RG2
RB5
20
56
D-/RG3
RB4
21
55
VUSB3V3
RB3
22
54
VBUS/RF7
RB2
23
RF8
RB1
24
53
25
52
RF2
RB0
51
RF3
RD14
RD15
RF4
RF5
RB6
RB7
RA9
RA10
AVDD
AVSS
SVSS
CH0+
CH0CH1+
CH1SVDD
RA1
RF13
RF12
RB12
RB13
RB14
RB15
VSS
VDD
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
PIC24FJXXXGC010
Legend: Shaded pins indicate pins tolerant to up to +5.5 VDC. See Table 2 for a complete description of pin functions.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 5
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 2:
COMPLETE PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS FOR 100-PIN DEVICES
Pin
Function
Pin
Function
1
AN33/SEG50/CTED3/CN82/RG15
41
AN12/COM5/SEG18/T1CK/CTED2/PMA11/CN30/RB12
2
VDD
42
AN13/OA2P3/SEG19/DAC2/CTED1/PMA10/CN31/RB13
AN14/OA2N4/SEG8/RP14/CTED5/CTPLS/PMA1/CN32/RB14
3
CTED4/PMD5/LCDBIAS2/CN63/RE5
43
4
PMD6/LCDBIAS1/CN64/RE6
44
AN15/SEG9/RP29/T2CK/REFO/CTED6/PMA0/CN12/RB15
5
PMD7/LCDBIAS0/CN65/RE7
45
VSS
6
AN8/OA1N1/SEG32/RPI38/CN45/RC1
46
VDD
7
SEG51/RPI39/CN46/RC2
47
AN28/SEG38/RPI43/CN20/RD14
8
AN9/SEG33/RPI40/CN47/RC3
48
AN29/SEG39/RP5/CN21/RD15
9
AN16/SEG52/RPI41/PMCS2/CN48/RC4
49
AN11/OA2N3/SEG10/RP10/SDA2(3)/T3CK/PMA9/CN17/RF4
10
BGBUF2/AN17/OA1P1/C1IND/SEG0/RP21/T5CK/PMA5/CN8/
RG6
50
CVREF/AN10/OA2P2/SEG11/RP17/SCL2(3)/PMA8/CN18/RF5
AN30/SEG12/RP16/USBID/PMA12/CN71/RF3
11
VLCAP1/AN18/OA1N4/C1INC/RP26/PMA4/CN9/RG7
51
12
VLCAP2/AN19/OA1N2/C2IND/RP19/PMA3/CN10/RG8
52
AN31/SEG40/RP30/CN70/RF2
13
MCLR
53
AN32/SEG41/RP15/CN74/RF8
14
AN49/OA1P0/C2INC/SEG1/DAC1/RP27/PMA2/CN11/RG9
54
VBUS/CN83/RF7
15
VSS
55
VUSB3V3
16
VDD
56
D-/CN73/RG3
17
TMS/SEG48/CTED0/CN33/RA0
57
D+/CN72/RG2
18
SEG34/RPI33/PMCS1/CN66/RE8
58
SEG55/SCL2/CN35/RA2
19
AN21/SEG35/RPI34/PMA19/CN67/RE9
59
SEG56/SDA2/PMA20/CN36/RA3
20
PGEC3/AN5/OA1OUT/C1INA/SEG2/RP18/CN7/RB5
60
TDI/AN36/SEG29/PMA21/CN37/RA4
21
PGED3/AN4/OA1N0/C1INB/SEG3/RP28/USBOEN/CN6/RB4
61
TDO/AN37/SEG28/CN38/RA5
22
AN3/OA2OUT/C2INA/SEG4/VPIO/CN5/RB3
62
VDD
23
AN2/OA2N2/CTCMP/C2INB/SEG5/RP13/T4CK/VMIO/CTED13/
CN4/RB2
63
OSCI/CLKI/CN23/RC12
24
PGEC1/CVREF-/AVREF-/AN1/OA2P1/SEG6/RP1/CTED12/CN3/
RB1
64
OSCO/CLKO/CN22/RC15
25
PGED1/CVREF+/AVREF+/DVREF+/BGBUF1/AN0/SEG7/RP0/CN2/
RB0
65
VSS
26
PGEC2/AN6/OA1P3/RP6/LCDBIAS3/CN24/RB6
66
AN38/SEG42/RPI36/SCL1/OCTRIG2/PMA22/CN43/RA14
27
PGED2/AN7/COM6/SEG30/RP7/CN25/RB7
67
AN39/SEG43/RPI35/SDA1/PMBE1/CN44/RA15
28
CVREF-(1)/AVREF-(2)/SEG36/PMA7/CN41/RA9
68
AN40/SEG13/RP2/RTCC/DMLN/OCTRIG1/PMA13/CN53/RD8
29
CVREF+(1)/AVREF+(2)/SEG37/PMA6/CN42/RA10
69
AN24/SEG14/RP4/DPLN/PMACK2/CN54/RD9
30
AVDD
70
AN41/C3IND/SEG15/RP3/PMA15/CS2/CN55/RD10
31
AVSS
71
AN42/OA2P0/C3INC/SEG16/RP12/PMA14/CS1/CN56/RD11
32
SVSS
72
AN43/OA2N0/SEG17/RP11/VCMPST3/DMH/INT0/CN49/RD0
33
CH0+
73
SOSCI/RC13
34
CH0-
74
PWRLCLK/SOSCO/SCLKI/RPI37/RC14
35
CH1+/SVREF+
75
VSS
36
CH1-/CH1SE/SVREF-
76
AN35/SEG20/RP24/CN50/RD1(4)
37
SVDD
77
AN25/OA2N1/SEG21/RP23/DPH/PMACK1/CN51/RD2
38
TCK/AN26/SEG31/CN34/RA1
78
AN44/OA2P4/SEG22/RP22/PMBE0/CN52/RD3
39
AN27/SEG53/RP31/CN76/RF13
79
AN45/SEG44/RPI42/PMD12/CN57/RD12
40
SEG54/RPI32/CTED7/PMA18/CN75/RF12
80
AN46/SEG45/PMD13/CN19/RD13
Legend:
Note 1:
2:
3:
4:
RPn and RPIn represent remappable pins for Peripheral Pin Select (PPS) functions.
Alternate pin assignments for the external comparator voltage references as determined by the ALTCVREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for the external A/D voltage references as determined by the ALTADREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for I2C2 as determined by the I2C2SEL Configuration bit.
RD1 is an analog pin and implements the AN35/SEG20/RP24/CN50/RD1 functions. However, there is not an ANSx bit associated with the
RD1 port. Using the RD1 pin for the AN35 function would cause a worst-case increase in device current consumption of 500 µA.
DS30009312D-page 6
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 2:
COMPLETE PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS FOR 100-PIN DEVICES (CONTINUED)
Pin
Function
Pin
Function
81
AN47/OA1P4/SEG23/RP25/PMWR/CN13/RD4
91
82
AN48/OA1N1/SEG24/RP20/PMRD/CN14/RD5
92
AN23/SEG57/CN39/RA6
AN22/SEG58/PMA17/CN40/RA7
83
AN34/OA1P2/C3INB/SEG25/PMD14/CN15/RD6
93
COM3/PMD0/CN58/RE0
84
AN20/C3INA/SEG26/PMD15/CN16/RD7
94
COM2/PMD1/CN59/RE1
85
VCAP
95
SEG59/CTED11/PMA16/CN81/RG14
86
VBAT
96
SEG60/CN79/RG12
87
COM7/SEG27/VCMPST1/PMD11/CN68/RF0
97
SEG61/CTED10/CN80/RG13
88
COM4/SEG47/VCMPST2/PMD10/CN69/RF1
98
COM1/PMD2/CN60/RE2
89
SEG46/PMD9/CN78/RG1
99
COM0/CTED9/PMD3/CN61/RE3
90
SEG49/PMD8/CN77/RG0
100
HLVDIN/SEG62/CTED8/PMD4/CN62/RE4
Legend:
Note 1:
2:
3:
4:
RPn and RPIn represent remappable pins for Peripheral Pin Select (PPS) functions.
Alternate pin assignments for the external comparator voltage references as determined by the ALTCVREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for the external A/D voltage references as determined by the ALTADREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for I2C2 as determined by the I2C2SEL Configuration bit.
RD1 is an analog pin and implements the AN35/SEG20/RP24/CN50/RD1 functions. However, there is not an ANSx bit associated with the
RD1 port. Using the RD1 pin for the AN35 function would cause a worst-case increase in device current consumption of 500 µA.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 7
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
Pin Diagrams (Continued)
121-Pin BGA (10 mm x 10 mm, Top View)
A
B
C
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
RE4
RE3
RG13
RE0
RG0
RF1
VBAT
N/C
RD12
RD2
RD1
N/C
RG15
RE2
RE1
RA7
RF0
VCAP
RD5
RD3
VSS
RC14
RE6
VDD
RG12
RG14
RA6
N/C
RD7
RD4
N/C
RC13
RD11
RC1
RE7
RE5
N/C
N/C
N/C
RD6
RD13
RD0
N/C
RD10
RC4
RC3
RG6
RC2
N/C
RG1
N/C
RA15
RD8
RD9
RA14
MCLR
RG8
RG9
RG7
VSS
N/C
N/C
VDD
OSCI/
RC12
VSS
OSCO/
RC15
RE8
RE9
RA0
N/C
VDD
VDD
VSS
N/C
RA5
RA3
RA4
RB5
RB4
N/C
N/C
CH0-
N/C
N/C
VBUS/
RF7
RB3
RB2
RB7
AVDD
SVDD
RA1
RB12
N/C
N/C
RF8
D-/RG3
RB1
RB0
RA10
SVSS
CH1+
RF12
RB14
VDD
RD15
RF3
RF2
RB6
RA9
AVSS
CH0+
CH1-
RF13
RB13
RB15
RD14
RF4
RF5
D
E
F
G
H
VUSB3V3 D+/RG2
RA2
J
K
L
Legend: Shaded balls indicate pins tolerant to up to +5.5 VDC. See Table 3 for complete pinout descriptions.
DS30009312D-page 8
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 3:
COMPLETE PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS FOR 121-PIN DEVICES
Pin
Function
Pin
Function
A1
HLVDIN/SEG62/CTED8/PMD4/CN62/RE4
E1
AN16/SEG52/RPI41/PMCS2/CN48/RC4
A2
COM0/CTED9/PMD3/CN61/RE3
E2
AN9/OA1N2/SEG33/RPI40/CN47/RC3
A3
SEG61/CTED10/CN80/RG13
E3
BGBUF2/AN17/OA1P1/C1IND/SEG0/RP21/T5CK/PMA5/CN8/
RG6
A4
COM3/PMD0/CN58/RE0
E4
SEG51/RPI39/CN46/RC2
A5
SEG49/PMD8/CN77/RG0
E5
N/C
A6
COM4/SEG47/VCMPST2/PMD10/CN69/RF1
E6
SEG46/PMD9/CN78/RG1
A7
VBAT
E7
N/C
A8
N/C
E8
AN39/SEG43/RPI35/SDA1/PMBE1/CN44/RA15
A9
AN45/SEG44/RPI42/PMD12/CN57/RD12
E9
AN40/SEG13/RP2/RTCC/DMLN/OCTRIG1/PMA13/CN53/
RD8
A10
AN25/OA2N1/SEG21/RP23/DPH/PMACK1/CN51/RD2
E10
AN24/SEG14/RP4/DPLN/PMACK2/CN54/RD9
A11
AN35/SEG20/RP24/CN50/RD1
E11
AN38/SEG42/RPI36/SCL1/OCTRIG2/PMA22/CN43/RA14
B1
N/C
F1
MCLR
B2
AN33/SEG50/CTED3/CN82/RG15
F2
VLCAP2/AN19/OA1N3/C2IND/RP19/PMA3/CN10/RG8
B3
COM1/PMD2/CN60/RE2
F3
AN49/C2INC/SEG1/DAC1/RP27/PMA2/CN11/RG9
B4
COM2/PMD1/CN59/RE1
F4
VLCAP1/AN18/OA1N4/C1INC/RP26/PMA4/CN9/RG7
B5
AN22/SEG58/PMA17/CN40/RA7
F5
VSS
B6
COM7/SEG27/VCMPST1/PMD11/CN68/RF0
F6
N/C
B7
VCAP
F7
N/C
B8
AN48/OA1N1/SEG24/RP20/PMRD/CN14/RD5
F8
VDD
B9
AN44/OA2P4/SEG22/RP22/PMBE0/CN52/RD3
F9
OSCI/CLKI/CN23/RC12
B10
VSS
F10
VSS
B11
PWRLCLK/SOSCO/SCLKI/RPI37/RC14
F11
OSCO/CLKO/CN22/RC15
C1
PMD6/LCDBIAS1/CN64/RE6
G1
SEG34/RPI33/PMCS1/CN66/RE8
AN21/SEG35/RPI34/PMA19/CN67/RE9
C2
VDD
G2
C3
SEG60/CN79/RG12
G3
TMS/SEG48/CTED0/CN33/RA0
C4
SEG59/CTED11/PMA16/CN81/RG14
G4
N/C
C5
AN23/SEG57/CN39/RA6
G5
VDD
C6
N/C
G6
VDD
C7
AN20/C3INA/SEG26/PMD15/CN16/RD7
G7
VSS
C8
AN47/OA1P4/SEG23/RP25/PMWR/CN13/RD4
G8
N/C
C9
N/C
G9
TDO/AN37/SEG28/CN38/RA5
C10
SOSCI/RC13
G10
SEG56/SDA2/PMA20/CN36/RA3
C11
AN42/OA2P0/C3INC/SEG16/RP12/PMA14/CS1/CN56/RD11
G11
TDI/AN36/SEG29/PMA21/CN37/RA4
D1
AN8/OA1N1/SEG32/RPI38/CN45/RC1
H1
PGEC3/AN5/OA1OUT/C1INA/SEG2/RP18/CN7/RB5
D2
PMD7/LCDBIAS0/CN65/RE7
H2
PGED3/AN4/OA1N0/C1INB/SEG3/RP28/USBOEN/CN6/RB4
D3
CTED4/PMD5/LCDBIAS2/CN63/RE5
H3
N/C
D4
N/C
H4
N/C
D5
N/C
H5
CH0-
D6
N/C
H6
N/C
D7
AN34/OA1P2/C3INB/SEG25/PMD14/CN15/RD6
H7
N/C
D8
AN46/SEG45/PMD13/CN19/RD13
H8
VBUS/CN83/RF7
D9
AN43/OA2N0/SEG17/RP11/VCMPST3/DMH/INT0/CN49/RD0
H9
VUSB3V3
D10
N/C
H10
D+/CN72/RG2
AN41/C3IND/SEG15/RP3/PMA15/CS2/CN55/RD10
H11
SEG55/SCL2/CN35/RA2
D11
Legend:
Note 1:
2:
3:
RPn and RPIn represent remappable pins for Peripheral Pin Select (PPS) functions.
Alternate pin assignments for the external comparator voltage references as determined by the ALTCVREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for the external A/D voltage references as determined by the ALTADREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for I2C2 as determined by the I2C2SEL Configuration bit.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 9
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 3:
COMPLETE PIN FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS FOR 121-PIN DEVICES (CONTINUED)
Pin
Function
Pin
Function
J1
AN3/OA2OUT/C2INA/SEG4/VPIO/CN5/RB3
K7
AN14/OA2N4/SEG8/RP14/CTED5/CTPLS/PMA1/CN32/RB14
J2
AN2/OA2N2/CTCMP/C2INB/SEG5/RP13/T4CK/VMIO/
CTED13/CN4/RB2
K8
VDD
J3
PGED2/AN7/COM6/SEG30/RP7/CN25/RB7
K9
AN29/SEG39/RP5/CN21/RD15
J4
AVDD
K10
AN30/SEG12/RP16/USBID/PMA12/CN71/RF3
J5
SVDD
K11
AN31/SEG40/RP30/CN70/RF2
J6
TCK/AN26/SEG31/CN34/RA1
L1
PGEC2/AN6/OA1P3/RP6/LCDBIAS3/CN24/RB6
J7
AN12/COM5/SEG18/T1CK/CTED2/PMA11/CN30/RB12
L2
CVREF-(1)/AVREF-(2)/SEG36/PMA7/CN41/RA9
J8
N/C
L3
AVSS
J9
N/C
L4
CH0+
J10
AN32/SEG41/RP15/CN74/RF8
L5
CH1-/CH1SE/SVREF-
J11
D-/CN73/RG3
L6
AN27/SEG53/RP31/CN76/RF13
K1
PGEC1/CVREF-/AVREF-/AN1/OA2P1/SEG6/RP1/CTED12/
CN3/RB1
L7
AN13/OA2P3/SEG19/DAC2/CTED1/PMA10/CN31/RB13
K2
PGED1/CVREF+/AVREF+/DVREF+/BGBUF1/AN0/SEG7/RP0/
CN2/RB0
L8
AN15/SEG9/RP29/T2CK/REFO/CTED6/PMA0/CN12/RB15
K3
CVREF+(1)/AVREF+(2)/SEG37/PMA6/CN42/RA10
L9
AN28/SEG38/RPI43/CN20/RD14
K4
SVSS
L10
AN11/OA2N3/SEG10/RP10/SDA2(3)/T3CK/PMA9/CN17/RF4
K5
CH1+/SVREF+
L11
CVREF/AN10/OA2P2/SEG11/RP17/SCL2(3)/PMA8/CN18/RF5
K6
Legend:
Note 1:
2:
3:
SEG54/RPI32/CTED7/PMA18/CN75/RF12
RPn and RPIn represent remappable pins for Peripheral Pin Select (PPS) functions.
Alternate pin assignments for the external comparator voltage references as determined by the ALTCVREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for the external A/D voltage references as determined by the ALTADREF Configuration bit.
Alternate pin assignments for I2C2 as determined by the I2C2SEL Configuration bit.
DS30009312D-page 10
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
Table of Contents
1.0 Device Overview ........................................................................................................................................................................ 13
2.0 Guidelines for Getting Started with 16-Bit Microcontrollers........................................................................................................ 33
3.0 CPU ........................................................................................................................................................................................... 39
4.0 Memory Organization ................................................................................................................................................................. 45
5.0 Direct Memory Access Controller (DMA) ................................................................................................................................... 83
6.0 Flash Program Memory.............................................................................................................................................................. 91
7.0 Resets ........................................................................................................................................................................................ 97
8.0 Interrupt Controller ................................................................................................................................................................... 103
9.0 Oscillator Configuration ............................................................................................................................................................ 159
10.0 Power-Saving Features............................................................................................................................................................ 171
11.0 I/O Ports ................................................................................................................................................................................... 185
12.0 Timer1 ...................................................................................................................................................................................... 217
13.0 Timer2/3 and Timer4/5 ............................................................................................................................................................ 219
14.0 Input Capture with Dedicated Timers ....................................................................................................................................... 225
15.0 Output Compare with Dedicated Timers .................................................................................................................................. 229
16.0 Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)............................................................................................................................................... 239
17.0 Inter-Integrated Circuit (I2C) ..................................................................................................................................................... 251
18.0 Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter (UART) ........................................................................................................... 259
19.0 Universal Serial Bus with On-The-Go Support (USB OTG) ..................................................................................................... 267
20.0 Data Signal Modulator.............................................................................................................................................................. 301
21.0 Enhanced Parallel Master Port (EPMP) ................................................................................................................................... 305
22.0 Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) Controller.................................................................................................................................... 317
23.0 Real-Time Clock and Calendar (RTCC) .................................................................................................................................. 327
24.0 32-Bit Programmable Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC) Generator ........................................................................................ 339
25.0 Overview of Advanced Analog Features .................................................................................................................................. 345
26.0 12-Bit High-Speed, Pipeline A/D Converter ............................................................................................................................. 351
27.0 16-Bit Sigma-Delta Analog-to-Digital (A/D) Converter ............................................................................................................. 373
28.0 10-Bit Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC)................................................................................................................................. 379
29.0 Dual Operational Amplifier Module........................................................................................................................................... 381
30.0 Triple Comparator Module........................................................................................................................................................ 385
31.0 Comparator Voltage Reference................................................................................................................................................ 391
32.0 Charge Time Measurement Unit (CTMU) ................................................................................................................................ 393
33.0 High/Low-Voltage Detect (HLVD)............................................................................................................................................. 401
34.0 Special Features ...................................................................................................................................................................... 403
35.0 Development Support............................................................................................................................................................... 417
36.0 Instruction Set Summary .......................................................................................................................................................... 421
37.0 Electrical Characteristics .......................................................................................................................................................... 429
38.0 DC and AC Device Characteristics Graphs.............................................................................................................................. 453
39.0 Packaging Information.............................................................................................................................................................. 477
Appendix A: Revision History............................................................................................................................................................. 491
Index .................................................................................................................................................................................................. 493
The Microchip Web Site ..................................................................................................................................................................... 499
Customer Change Notification Service .............................................................................................................................................. 499
Customer Support .............................................................................................................................................................................. 499
Product Identification System ............................................................................................................................................................ 501
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 11
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TO OUR VALUED CUSTOMERS
It is our intention to provide our valued customers with the best documentation possible to ensure successful use of your Microchip
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To determine if an errata sheet exists for a particular device, please check with one of the following:
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DS30009312D-page 12
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
1.0
DEVICE OVERVIEW
This document contains device-specific information for
the following devices:
• PIC24FJ64GC006
• PIC24FJ128GC006
• PIC24FJ64GC010
• PIC24FJ128GC010
The PIC24FJ128GC010 family expands the capabilities
of the PIC24F family by adding a complete selection of
advanced analog peripherals to its existing digital
features. This combination, along with its ultra
low-power features, Direct Memory Access (DMA) for
peripherals, USB On-The-Go (OTG) and a built-in LCD
controller and driver, makes this family the new
standard for mixed-signal PIC® microcontrollers in one
economical and power-saving package.
1.1
1.1.1
Aside from these new features, PIC24FJ128GC010
family devices also include all of the legacy power-saving
features of previous PIC24F microcontrollers, such as:
• On-the-Fly Clock Switching, allowing the selection
of a lower power clock during run time
• Doze Mode Operation, for maintaining peripheral
clock speed while slowing the CPU clock
• Instruction-Based Power-Saving modes, for quick
invocation of Idle and the many Sleep modes
1.1.3
Core Features
16-BIT ARCHITECTURE
Central to all PIC24F devices is the 16-bit modified
Harvard architecture, first introduced with Microchip’s
dsPIC® Digital Signal Controllers (DSCs). The PIC24F
CPU core offers a wide range of enhancements, such as:
• 16-bit data and 24-bit address paths with the
ability to move information between data and
memory spaces
• Linear Addressing of up to 12 Mbytes (program
space) and 32 Kbytes (data)
• A 16-element Working register array with built-in
software stack support
• A 17 x 17 hardware multiplier with support for
integer math
• Hardware support for 32 by 16-bit division
• An instruction set that supports multiple
addressing modes and is optimized for high-level
languages, such as ‘C’
• Operational performance up to 16 MIPS
1.1.2
Many of these new low-power modes also support the
continuous operation of the low-power, on-chip
Real-Time Clock and Calendar (RTCC), making it
possible for an application to keep time while the
device is otherwise asleep.
XLP POWER-SAVING TECHNOLOGY
The PIC24FJ128GC010 family of devices introduces a
greatly expanded range of power-saving operating
modes for the ultimate in power conservation. The new
modes include:
• Retention Sleep with essential circuits being
powered from a separate low-voltage regulator
• Retention Deep Sleep, a lower power mode that
maintains data RAM for fast start-up
• Deep Sleep without RTCC for the lowest possible
power consumption under software control
• VBAT mode (with or without RTCC) to continue
limited operation from a backup battery when VDD
is removed
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
OSCILLATOR OPTIONS AND
FEATURES
All of the devices in the PIC24FJ128GC010 family offer
five different oscillator options, allowing users a range
of choices in developing application hardware. These
include:
• Two Crystal modes
• Two External Clock modes
• A Phase-Locked Loop (PLL) frequency multiplier,
which allows clock speeds of up to 32 MHz
• A Fast Internal Oscillator (FRC) – nominal 8 MHz
output, with multiple frequency divider options and
automatic frequency self-calibration during
run time
• A separate Low-Power Internal RC Oscillator
(LPRC) – 31 kHz nominal, for low-power,
timing-insensitive applications.
The internal oscillator block also provides a stable
reference source for the Fail-Safe Clock Monitor
(FSCM). This option constantly monitors the main clock
source against a reference signal provided by the internal oscillator and enables the controller to switch to the
internal oscillator, allowing for continued low-speed
operation or a safe application shutdown.
1.1.4
EASY MIGRATION
Regardless of the memory size, all devices share the
same rich set of peripherals, allowing for a smooth
migration path as applications grow and evolve. This
extends the ability of applications to grow from the
relatively simple, to the powerful and complex, while
still selecting a Microchip device.
DS30009312D-page 13
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
1.2
Advanced Analog Features
The centerpiece of the PIC24FJ128GC010 family is the
advanced analog block. This feature set provides application developers with all the tools they need for single
chip applications that demand high analog performance.
Included in the advanced analog block are:
• A new 12-bit Pipeline A/D Converter (A/D)
module. A major departure from previous PIC24F
A/D Converters, this module offers up to
50 single-ended input channels (or up to
25 differential channel pairs) and conversion rates
of up to ten million samples per second. It also
provides a wider range of new features that allow
the converter to assess and make decisions on
incoming data without CPU intervention.
• A dual differential channel, Sigma-Delta A/D
Converter, for applications requiring
high-precision conversions (up to 16-bit resolution).
The Sigma-Delta Converter also offers
programmable gain on each channel pair and
user-configurable data rate, between 244 samples
per second and 62.5 ksps.
• Two independent, 10-bit Digital-to-Analog
Converters (DACs), each capable of conversion
rates up to one million samples per second.
• A comparator module with three analog comparators that are configurable for a wide range of
operations. The comparators also have their own
independent, configurable voltage reference.
• A dual operational amplifier module with multiple
input options, selectable power modes, and
rail-to-rail operation on the inputs and outputs.
Each of the op amps can also be configured to
function as a comparator, complete with interrupt
generation.
• A dedicated, integrated band gap voltage reference for all analog modules, providing a range of
on-chip reference voltages and two buffered
reference outputs.
• Flexible multiplexing options for the entire analog
block, allowing for the convenient sharing of
signals between the analog modules.
DS30009312D-page 14
1.3
DMA Controller
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices also add a Direct
Memory Access (DMA) controller to the existing
PIC24F architecture. The DMA acts in concert with the
CPU, allowing data to move between data memory and
peripherals without the intervention of the CPU,
increasing data throughput, and decreasing execution
time overhead. Six independently programmable channels make it possible to service multiple peripherals at
virtually the same time, with each channel peripheral
performing a different operation. Many types of data
transfer operations are supported.
1.4
USB On-The-Go (OTG)
USB On-The-Go provides on-chip functionality as a
target device compatible with the USB 2.0 standard, as
well as limited stand-alone functionality as a USB
embedded host. By implementing the USB Host Negotiation Protocol (HNP), the module can also dynamically
switch between device and host operation, allowing
for a much wider range of versatile USB-enabled
applications on a microcontroller platform.
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices also incorporate an
integrated USB transceiver and precision oscillator,
minimizing the required complexity of implementing a
complete USB device, embedded host, dual role or
On-The-Go application.
1.5
LCD Controller
With the PIC24FJ128GC010 family of devices,
Microchip introduces its versatile Liquid Crystal Display
(LCD) controller and driver to the PIC24F family. The
on-chip LCD driver includes many features that make
the integration of displays in low-power applications
easier. These include an integrated voltage regulator
with charge pump and an integrated internal resistor
ladder that allows contrast control in software, and
display operation above device VDD.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
1.6
Other Special Features
• Peripheral Pin Select (PPS): The Peripheral Pin
Select feature allows most digital peripherals to
be mapped over a fixed set of digital I/O pins.
Users may independently map the input and/or
output of any one of the many digital peripherals
to any one of the I/O pins.
• Communications: The PIC24FJ128GC010
family incorporates several different serial
communication peripherals to handle a range of
application requirements. There are two independent I2C modules that support both Master and
Slave modes of operation. Devices also have,
through the PPS feature, four independent UARTs
with built-in IrDA® encoders/decoders and two SPI
modules.
• CTMU Interface: In addition to their other analog
features, members of the PIC24FJ128GC010
family include the CTMU interface module. This
provides a convenient method for precision time
measurement and pulse generation, and can
serve as an interface for capacitive sensors.
• Enhanced Parallel Master/Parallel Slave Port:
This module allows rapid and transparent access
to the microcontroller data bus, and enables the
CPU to directly address external data memory. The
parallel port can function in Master or Slave mode,
accommodating data widths of 4, 8 or 16 bits, and
address widths of up to 23 bits in Master modes.
• Real-Time Clock and Calendar (RTCC): This
module implements a full-featured clock and
calendar with alarm functions in hardware, freeing
up timer resources and program memory space
for use of the core application.
• Data Signal Modulator (DSM): The Data Signal
Modulator (DSM) allows the user to mix a digital
data stream (the “modulator signal”) with a carrier
signal to produce a modulated output.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
1.7
Details on Individual Family
Members
Devices in the PIC24FJ128GC010 family are available
in 64-pin and 100/121-pin packages. The general block
diagram for all devices is shown in Figure 1-1.
The devices are differentiated from each other in
six ways:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
Flash program memory (64 Kbytes for
PIC24FJ64GC0XX devices and 128 Kbytes for
PIC24FJ128GC0XX devices).
Available I/O pins and ports (53 pins on 6 ports
for 64-pin devices and 85 pins on 7 ports for
100/121-pin devices).
Available Interrupt-on-Change Notification (ICN)
inputs (52 on 64-pin devices and 82 on
100/121-pin devices).
Available remappable pins (29 pins on 64-pin
devices and 44 pins on 100/121-pin devices).
Maximum available drivable LCD pixels (248 for
64-pin devices and 472 on 100/121-pin devices.)
Analog input channels for the Pipeline A/D
Converter (29 channels for 64-pin devices and
50 channels for 100/121-pin devices).
All other features for devices in this family are identical.
These are summarized in Table 1-1 and Table 1-2.
A list of pin features available on the PIC24FJ128GC010
family devices, sorted by function, is shown in Table 1-3.
Note that this table shows the pin location of individual
peripheral features and not how they are multiplexed on
the same pin. This information is provided in the pinout
diagrams in the beginning of the data sheet. Multiplexed
features are sorted by the priority given to a feature, with
the highest priority peripheral being listed first.
DS30009312D-page 15
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-1:
DEVICE FEATURES FOR THE PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY: 64-PIN DEVICES
Features
PIC24FJ64GC006
Operating Frequency
Program Memory (bytes)
Program Memory (instructions)
PIC24FJ128GC006
DC – 32 MHz
64K
128K
22,016
Data Memory (bytes)
44,032
8K
Interrupt Sources (soft vectors/
NMI traps)
65 (61/4)
I/O Ports
Ports B, C, D, E, F, G
Total I/O Pins
53
Remappable Pins
30 (29 I/Os, 1 input only)
Timers:
5(1)
Total Number (16-bit)
32-Bit (from paired 16-bit timers)
2
Input Capture w/Timer Channels
9(1)
Output Compare/PWM Channels
9(1)
Input Change Notification Interrupt
52
Serial Communications:
UART
4(1)
SPI (3-wire/4-wire)
2(1)
I2C
2
Digital Signal Modulator
Yes
Parallel Communications (EPMP/PSP)
Yes
JTAG Boundary Scan
Yes
12-Bit Pipeline Analog-to-Digital
Converter (A/D) (input channels)
29
Sigma-Delta Analog-to-Digital Converter
(A/D) (differential channels)
2
Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC)
2
Operational Amplifiers
2
Analog Comparators
3
CTMU Interface
Yes
LCD Controller (available pixels)
196 (28 SEG x 7 COM)
Resets (and delays)
Core POR, VDD POR, VBAT POR, BOR, RESET Instruction,
MCLR, WDT, Illegal Opcode, REPEAT Instruction,
Hardware Traps, Configuration Word Mismatch
(OST, PLL Lock)
Instruction Set
76 Base Instructions, Multiple Addressing Mode Variations
Packages
Note 1:
64-Pin TQFP and QFN
Peripherals are accessible through remappable pins.
DS30009312D-page 16
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-2:
DEVICE FEATURES FOR THE PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY: 100/121-PIN DEVICES
Features
PIC24FJ64GC010
Operating Frequency
Program Memory (bytes)
Program Memory (instructions)
PIC24FJ128GC010
DC – 32 MHz
64K
128K
22,016
Data Memory (bytes)
44,032
8K
Interrupt Sources (soft vectors/
NMI traps)
66 (62/4)
I/O Ports
Ports A, B, C, D, E, F, G
Total I/O Pins
85
Remappable Pins
44 (32 I/Os, 12 input only)
Timers:
5(1)
Total Number (16-bit)
32-Bit (from paired 16-bit timers)
2
Input Capture w/Timer Channels
9(1)
Output Compare/PWM Channels
9(1)
Input Change Notification Interrupt
82
Serial Communications:
UART
4(1)
SPI (3-wire/4-wire)
2(1)
I2C
2
Digital Signal Modulator
Yes
Parallel Communications (EPMP/PSP)
Yes
JTAG Boundary Scan
Yes
12-Bit Pipeline Analog-to-Digital
Converter (A/D) (input channels)
50
Sigma-Delta Analog-to-Digital
Converter (A/D) (differential channels)
2
Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC)
2
Operational Amplifiers
2
Analog Comparators
3
CTMU Interface
Yes
LCD Controller (available pixels)
472 (59 SEG x 8 COM)
Resets (and delays)
Core POR, VDD POR, VBAT POR, BOR, RESET Instruction,
MCLR, WDT, Illegal Opcode, REPEAT Instruction,
Hardware Traps, Configuration Word Mismatch
(OST, PLL Lock)
Instruction Set
76 Base Instructions, Multiple Addressing Mode Variations
Packages
Note 1:
100-Pin TQFP and 121-Pin BGA
Peripherals are accessible through remappable pins.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 17
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 1-1:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY GENERAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
Data Bus
Interrupt
Controller
PORTA(1)
16
(12 I/Os)
16
16
8
Data Latch
EDS and
Table Data
Access Control
DMA
Controller
Data RAM
PCH
PCL
Program Counter
Repeat
Stack
Control
Control
Logic
Logic
23
PORTB
Address
Latch
(16 I/Os)
16
23
16
16
Read AGU
Write AGU
Address Latch
Program Memory/
Extended Data
Space
PORTC(1)
(8 I/Os)
Data Latch
16
Address Bus
EA MUX
24
16
Inst Latch
Inst Register
Instruction
Decode and
Control
Control Signals
OSCO/CLKO
OSCI/CLKI
Power-up
Timer
Timing
Generation
REFO
(16 I/Os)
Literal
Data
DMA
Data Bus
PORTE(1)
(10 I/Os)
Divide
Support
16 x 16
W Reg Array
17x17
Multiplier
PORTF(1)
Oscillator
Start-up Timer
FRC/LPRC
Oscillators
(10 I/Os)
16-Bit ALU
Power-on
Reset
BGBUF1
BGBUF2
PORTD(1)
16
16
Precision
Band Gap
References
Watchdog
Timer
PORTG(1)
Voltage
Regulators
HLVD & BOR
(12 I/Os)
VCAP
VBAT
VDD, VSS
MCLR
EPMP/PSP
Timer1
Timers
2/3 & 4/5 (2)
RTCC
DSM
UART
1/2/3/4(2)
12-Bit
Pipeline
A/D
10-Bit
DACs
Comparators(2)
USB
OTG
IC
1-9(2)
Note 1:
2:
OC/PWM
1-9(2)
ICNs(1)
SPI
1/2(2)
I2C
1/2
16-Bit
A/D
CTMU
Op Amps
LCD
Driver
Not all I/O pins or features are implemented on all device pinout configurations. See Table 1-3 for specific implementations by pin count.
These peripheral I/Os are only accessible through remappable pins.
DS30009312D-page 18
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
AN0
16
25
K2
I
ANA
AN1
15
24
K1
I
ANA
AN2
14
23
J2
I
ANA
AN3
13
22
J1
I
ANA
AN4
12
21
H2
I
ANA
AN5
11
20
H1
I
ANA
AN6
17
26
L1
I
ANA
AN7
18
27
J3
I
ANA
AN8
—
6
D1
I
ANA
AN9
—
8
E2
I
ANA
AN10
32
50
L11
I
ANA
ANA
AN11
31
49
L10
I
AN12
27
41
J7
I
ANA
AN13
28
42
L7
I
ANA
AN14
29
43
K7
I
ANA
AN15
30
44
L8
I
ANA
AN16
—
9
E1
I
ANA
AN17
4
10
E3
I
ANA
AN18
5
11
F4
I
ANA
AN19
6
12
F2
I
ANA
AN20
55
84
C7
I
ANA
AN21
—
19
G2
I
ANA
AN22
—
92
B5
I
ANA
AN23
—
91
C5
I
ANA
AN24
43
69
E10
I
ANA
AN25
50
77
A10
I
ANA
AN26
—
38
J6
I
ANA
AN27
—
39
L6
I
ANA
AN28
—
47
L9
I
ANA
AN29
—
48
K9
I
ANA
AN30
33
51
K10
I
ANA
AN31
—
52
K11
I
ANA
AN32
—
53
J10
I
ANA
AN33
—
1
B2
I
ANA
AN34
54
83
D7
I
ANA
AN35
49
76
A11
I
ANA
AN36
—
60
G11
I
ANA
AN37
—
61
G9
I
ANA
AN38
—
66
E11
I
ANA
AN39
—
67
E8
I
ANA
AN40
42
68
E9
I
ANA
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
Description
12-Bit Pipeline A/D Converter Inputs.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
DS30009312D-page 19
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
AN41
44
70
D11
I
ANA
AN42
45
71
C11
I
ANA
AN43
46
72
D9
I
ANA
AN44
51
78
B9
I
ANA
AN45
—
79
A9
I
ANA
Description
12-Bit Pipeline A/D Converter Inputs.
AN46
—
80
D8
I
ANA
AN47
52
81
C8
I
ANA
AN48
53
82
B8
I
ANA
AN49
8
14
F3
I
ANA
AVDD
19
30
J4
P
—
AVREF+
16
25, 29
K2, K3
I
ANA
Pipeline A/D Reference Voltage (high) Input.
AVREF-
15
24, 28
K1, L2
I
ANA
Pipeline A/D Reference Voltage (low) Input.
AVss
20
31
L3
P
—
BGBUF1
16
25
K2
O
—
Buffered Band Gap Reference 1 Voltage Output.
BGBUF2
4
10
E3
O
—
Buffered Band Gap Reference 2 Voltage Output.
C1INA
11
20
H1
I
ANA
C1INB
12
21
H2
I
ANA
Comparator 1 Input B.
C1INC
5
11
F4
I
ANA
Comparator 1 Input C.
C1IND
4
10
E3
I
ANA
Comparator 1 Input D.
C2INA
13
22
J1
I
ANA
Comparator 2 Input A.
C2INB
14
23
J2
I
ANA
Comparator 2 Input B.
C2INC
8
14
F3
I
ANA
Comparator 2 Input C.
C2IND
6
12
F2
I
ANA
Comparator 2 Input D.
C3INA
55
84
C7
I
ANA
Comparator 3 Input A.
C3INB
54
83
D7
I
ANA
Comparator 3 Input B.
C3INC
45
71
C11
I
ANA
Comparator 3 Input C.
C3IND
44
70
D11
I
ANA
Comparator 3 Input D.
CH0+
22
33
L4
I
ANA
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter Channel 0 Non-Inverting
Analog Input.
CH0-
23
34
H5
I
ANA
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter Channel 0 Inverting
Analog Input.
CH1+
24
35
K5
I
ANA
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter Channel 1 Non-Inverting
Analog Input.
CH1-
25
36
L5
I
ANA
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter Channel 1 Inverting
Analog Input.
CH1SE
25
36
L5
I
ANA
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter Single-Ended Channel 1
Analog Input.
CLKI
39
63
F9
I
ANA
Main Clock Input Connection.
40
64
F11
O
—
CLKO
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
DS30009312D-page 20
Positive Supply for Analog modules.
Ground Reference for Analog modules.
Comparator 1 Input A.
System Clock Output.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
CN2
16
25
K2
I
ST
CN3
15
24
K1
I
ST
CN4
14
23
J2
I
ST
CN5
13
22
J1
I
ST
CN6
12
21
H2
I
ST
CN7
11
20
H1
I
ST
CN8
4
10
E3
I
ST
CN9
5
11
F4
I
ST
CN10
6
12
F2
I
ST
CN11
8
14
F3
I
ST
CN12
30
44
L8
I
ST
ST
CN13
52
81
C8
I
CN14
53
82
B8
I
ST
CN15
54
83
D7
I
ST
CN16
55
84
C7
I
ST
CN17
31
49
L10
I
ST
CN18
32
50
L11
I
ST
CN19
—
80
D8
I
ST
CN20
—
47
L9
I
ST
CN21
—
48
K9
I
ST
CN22
40
64
F11
I
ST
CN23
39
63
F9
I
ST
CN24
17
26
L1
I
ST
CN25
18
27
J3
I
ST
CN30
27
41
J7
I
ST
CN31
28
42
L7
I
ST
CN32
29
43
K7
I
ST
CN33
—
17
G3
I
ST
CN34
—
38
J6
I
ST
CN35
—
58
H11
I
ST
CN36
—
59
G10
I
ST
CN37
—
60
G11
I
ST
CN38
—
61
G9
I
ST
CN39
—
91
C5
I
ST
CN40
—
92
B5
I
ST
CN41
—
28
L2
I
ST
CN42
—
29
K3
I
ST
CN43
—
66
E11
I
ST
CN44
—
67
E8
I
ST
CN45
—
6
D1
I
ST
CN46
—
7
E4
I
ST
CN47
—
8
L11
I
ST
CN48
—
9
E1
I
ST
46
72
D9
I
ST
CN49
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
Description
Interrupt-on-Change Inputs.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
DS30009312D-page 21
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
CN50
49
76
A11
I
ST
CN51
50
77
A10
I
ST
CN52
51
78
B9
I
ST
CN53
42
68
E9
I
ST
CN54
43
69
E10
I
ST
CN55
44
70
D11
I
ST
CN56
45
71
C11
I
ST
CN57
—
79
A9
I
ST
CN58
60
93
A4
I
ST
CN59
61
94
B4
I
ST
CN60
62
98
B3
I
ST
CN61
63
99
A2
I
ST
CN62
64
100
A1
I
ST
CN63
1
3
D3
I
ST
CN64
2
4
C1
I
ST
CN65
3
5
D2
I
ST
CN66
—
18
G1
I
ST
CN67
—
19
G2
I
ST
CN68
58
87
B6
I
ST
CN69
59
88
A6
I
ST
CN70
—
52
K11
I
ST
CN71
33
51
K10
I
ST
CN72
37
57
H10
I
ST
CN73
36
56
J11
I
ST
CN74
—
53
J10
I
ST
CN75
—
40
K6
I
ST
CN76
—
39
L6
I
ST
CN77
—
90
A5
I
ST
CN78
—
89
E6
I
ST
CN79
—
96
C3
I
ST
CN80
—
97
A3
I
ST
CN81
—
95
C4
I
ST
CN82
—
1
B2
I
ST
CN83
34
54
H8
I
ST
COM0
63
99
A2
O
—
COM1
62
98
B3
O
—
COM2
61
94
B4
O
—
COM3
60
93
A4
O
—
COM4
59
88
A6
O
—
COM5
27
41
J7
O
—
COM6
18
27
J3
O
—
COM7
58
87
B6
O
—
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
DS30009312D-page 22
Description
Interrupt-on-Change Inputs.
LCD Driver Common Outputs.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
CS1
45
71
C11
I/O
ST/TTL
Parallel Master Port Chip Select 1 Strobe (shared with
PMA14).
CS2
44
70
D11
O
—
Parallel Master Port Chip Select 2 Strobe (shared with
PMA15).
CTCMP
14
23
J2
I
ANA
CTED0
—
17
G3
I
ST
CTED1
28
42
L7
I
ST
CTED2
27
41
J7
I
ST
CTED3
—
1
B2
I
ST
ST
Description
CTMU Comparator 2 Input (Pulse mode).
CTMU External Edge Inputs.
CTED4
1
3
D3
I
CTED5
29
43
K7
I
ST
CTED6
30
44
L8
I
ST
CTED7
—
40
K6
I
ST
CTED8
64
100
A1
I
ST
CTED9
63
99
A2
I
ST
CTED10
—
97
A3
I
ST
CTED11
—
95
C4
I
ST
CTED12
15
24
K1
I
ST
CTED13
14
23
J2
I
ST
CTPLS
29
43
K7
O
—
CTMU Pulse Output.
CVREF
32
50
L11
O
—
Comparator Voltage Reference Output.
CVREF+
16
25, 29
K2, K3
I
ANA
Comparator Reference Voltage (high) Input.
CVREF-
15
24, 28
K1, L2
I
ANA
Comparator Reference Voltage (low) Input.
D+
37
57
H10
I/O
—
USB Differential Plus Line (internal transceiver).
D-
36
56
J11
I/O
—
USB Differential Minus Line (internal transceiver).
DAC1
8
14
F3
O
—
DAC Converter 1 Analog Output.
DAC2
28
42
L7
O
—
DAC Converter 2 Analog Output.
DMH
46
72
D9
O
—
D- External Pull-up Control Output.
DMLN
42
68
E9
O
—
D- External Pull-Down Control Output.
DPH
50
77
A10
O
—
D+ External Pull-up Control Output.
DPLN
43
69
E10
O
—
D+ External Pull-Down Control Output.
DVREF+
16
25
K2
I
ANA
INT0
46
72
D9
I
ST
LCDBIAS0
3
5
D2
I
ANA
LCDBIAS1
2
4
C1
I
ANA
DAC Positive Reference Input.
External Interrupt Input 0.
Bias Inputs for LCD Driver Charge Pump.
LCDBIAS2
1
3
D3
I
ANA
LCDBIAS3
17
26
L1
I
ANA
HLVDIN
64
100
A1
I
ANA
MCLR
7
13
F1
I
ST
Master Clear (device Reset) Input. This line is brought
low to cause a Reset.
OCTRIG1
42
68
E9
I
ST
Output Compare External Trigger 1 Input.
OCTRIG2
—
66
E11
I
ST
Output Compare External Trigger 2 Input.
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
High/Low-Voltage Detect Input.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
DS30009312D-page 23
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
OA1N0
12
21
H2
I
ANA
OA1N1
53
82
B8
I
ANA
OA1N2
—
8
E2
I
ANA
OA1N3
6
12
F2
I
ANA
OA1N4
5
11
F4
I
ANA
OA1OUT
11
20
H1
O
—
OA1P0
8
14
F3
I
ANA
OA1P1
4
10
E3
I
ANA
OA1P2
54
83
D7
I
ANA
OA1P3
17
26
L1
I
ANA
OA1P4
52
81
C8
I
ANA
OA2N0
46
72
D9
I
ANA
OA2N1
50
77
A10
I
ANA
OA2N2
14
23
J2
I
ANA
OA2N3
31
49
L10
I
ANA
Description
Op Amp 1 Negative (inverting) Inputs.
Op Amp 1 (analog) Output (digital output in Comparator
mode).
Op Amp 1 Positive (non-inverting) Inputs.
Op Amp 2 Negative (inverting) Inputs.
OA2N4
29
43
K7
I
ANA
OA2OUT
13
22
J1
O
—
OA2P0
45
71
C11
I
ANA
OA2P1
15
24
K1
I
ANA
OA2P2
32
50
L11
I
ANA
OA2P3
28
42
L7
I
ANA
OA2P4
51
78
B9
I
ANA
OSCI
39
63
F9
I
ANA
OSCO
40
64
F11
O
—
Main Oscillator Output Connection.
PGEC1
15
24
K1
I/O
ST
PGEC2
17
26
L1
I/O
ST
In-Circuit Debugger/Emulator/ICSP™ Programming
Clock.
PGEC3
11
20
H1
I/O
ST
PGED1
16
25
K2
I/O
ST
PGED2
18
27
J3
I/O
ST
Op Amp 2 (analog) Output (digital output in Comparator
mode).
Op Amp 2 Positive (non-inverting) Inputs.
Main Oscillator Input Connection.
In-Circuit Debugger/Emulator/ICSP Programming Data.
PGED3
12
21
H2
I/O
ST
PMA0
30
44
L8
I/O
ST
Parallel Master Port Address Bit 0 Input (Buffered Slave
modes) and Output (Master modes).
PMA1
29
43
K7
I/O
ST
Parallel Master Port Address Bit 1 Input (Buffered Slave
modes) and Output (Master modes).
PMA2
8
14
F3
O
—
Parallel Master Port Address (bits).
PMA3
6
12
F2
O
—
PMA4
5
11
F4
O
—
PMA5
4
10
E3
O
—
PMA6
16
29
K3
O
—
14
28
L2
O
—
PMA7
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
DS30009312D-page 24
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
50
L11
O
—
49
L10
O
—
28
42
L7
O
—
PMA11
27
41
J7
O
—
PMA12
33
51
K10
O
—
PMA13
42
68
E9
O
—
PMA14
45
71
C11
O
—
PMA15
44
70
D11
O
—
PMA16
—
95
C4
O
—
PMA17
—
92
B5
O
—
PMA18
—
40
K6
O
—
PMA19
—
19
G2
O
—
PMA20
—
59
G10
O
—
PMA21
—
60
G11
O
—
PMA22
—
66
E11
O
—
PMACK1
50
77
A10
I
ST/TTL
PMACK2
43
69
E10
I
ST/TTL
Parallel Master Port Acknowledge Input 2.
PMBE0
51
78
B9
O
—
Parallel Master Port Byte Enable 0 Strobe.
PMBE1
—
67
E8
O
—
Parallel Master Port Byte Enable 1 Strobe.
PMCS1
—
18
G1
I/O
ST/TTL
Parallel Master Port Chip Select 1 Strobe.
PMCS2
—
9
K10
O
—
Parallel Master Port Chip Select 2 Strobe.
PMD0
60
93
A4
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD1
61
94
B4
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD2
62
98
B3
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD3
63
99
A2
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD4
64
100
A1
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD5
1
3
D3
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD6
2
4
C1
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD7
3
5
D2
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD8
—
90
A5
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD9
—
89
E6
I/O
ST/TTL
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
PMA8
32
PMA9
31
PMA10
Description
Parallel Master Port Address (bits).
Parallel Master Port Acknowledge Input 1.
Parallel Master Port Data (Demultiplexed Master mode)
or Address/Data (Multiplexed Master modes).
PMD10
—
88
A6
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD11
—
87
B6
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD12
—
79
A9
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD13
—
80
D8
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD14
—
83
D7
I/O
ST/TTL
PMD15
—
84
C7
I/O
ST/TTL
PMRD
53
82
B8
O
—
Parallel Master Port Read Strobe.
PMWR
52
81
C8
O
—
Parallel Master Port Write Strobe.
PWRLCLK
48
74
B11
I
ST/TTL
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
Power Line (50 Hz/60 Hz) External Clock Input for
RTCC.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
DS30009312D-page 25
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
RA0
—
17
G3
I/O
ST
RA1
—
38
J6
I/O
ST
RA2
—
58
H11
I/O
ST
RA3
—
59
G10
I/O
ST
RA4
—
60
G11
I/O
ST
RA5
—
61
G9
I/O
ST
RA6
—
91
C5
I/O
ST
RA7
—
92
B5
I/O
ST
RA9
—
28
L2
I/O
ST
RA10
—
29
K3
I/O
ST
RA14
—
66
E11
I/O
ST
RA15
—
67
E8
I/O
ST
RB0
16
25
K2
I/O
ST
RB1
15
24
K1
I/O
ST
RB2
14
23
J2
I/O
ST
RB3
13
22
J1
I/O
ST
RB4
12
21
H2
I/O
ST
RB5
11
20
H1
I/O
ST
RB6
17
26
L1
I/O
ST
RB7
18
27
J3
I/O
ST
RB12
27
41
J7
I/O
ST
RB13
28
42
L7
I/O
ST
RB14
29
43
K7
I/O
ST
RB15
30
44
L8
I/O
ST
RC1
—
6
D1
I/O
ST
RC2
—
7
E4
I/O
ST
RC3
—
8
E2
I/O
ST
RC4
—
9
E1
I/O
ST
RC12
39
63
F9
I/O
ST
RC13
47
73
C10
I
ST
RC14
48
74
B11
I
ST
40
64
F11
I/O
ST
RC15
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
DS30009312D-page 26
Description
PORTA Digital I/Os.
PORTB Digital I/Os.
PORTC Digital I/Os.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
72
D9
I/O
ST
76
A11
I/O
ST
50
77
A10
I/O
ST
RD3
51
78
B9
I/O
ST
RD4
52
81
C8
I/O
ST
RD5
53
82
B8
I/O
ST
RD6
54
83
D7
I/O
ST
RD7
55
84
C7
I/O
ST
RD8
42
68
E9
I/O
ST
RD9
43
69
E10
I/O
ST
RD10
44
70
D11
I/O
ST
RD11
45
71
C11
I/O
ST
RD12
—
79
A9
I/O
ST
RD13
—
80
D8
I/O
ST
RD14
—
47
L9
I/O
ST
RD15
—
48
K9
I/O
ST
RE0
60
93
A4
I/O
ST
RE1
61
94
B4
I/O
ST
RE2
62
98
B3
I/O
ST
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
RD0
46
RD1
49
RD2
RE3
63
99
A2
I/O
ST
RE4
64
100
A1
I/O
ST
RE5
1
3
D3
I/O
ST
RE6
2
4
C1
I/O
ST
Description
PORTD Digital I/Os.
PORTE Digital I/Os.
RE7
3
5
D2
I/O
ST
RE8
—
18
G1
I/O
ST
RE9
—
19
G2
I/O
ST
REFO
30
44
L8
O
—
Reference Clock Output.
RF0
58
87
B6
I/O
ST
PORTF Digital I/Os.
RF1
59
88
A6
I/O
ST
RF2
—
52
K11
I/O
ST
RF3
33
51
K10
I/O
ST
RF4
31
49
L10
I/O
ST
RF5
32
50
L11
I/O
ST
RF7
—
54
H8
I/O
ST
RF8
—
53
J10
I/O
ST
RF12
—
40
K6
I/O
ST
RF13
—
39
L6
I/O
ST
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
DS30009312D-page 27
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
I/O
Input
Buffer
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
RG0
—
90
A5
I/O
ST
RG1
—
89
E6
I/O
ST
RG2
37
57
H10
I/O
ST
RG3
36
56
J11
I/O
ST
RG6
4
10
E3
I/O
ST
RG7
5
11
F4
I/O
ST
RG8
6
12
F2
I/O
ST
RG9
8
14
F3
I/O
ST
RG12
—
96
C3
I/O
ST
RG13
—
97
A3
I/O
ST
RG14
—
95
C4
I/O
ST
RG15
—
1
B2
I/O
ST
RP0
16
25
K2
I/O
ST
RP1
15
24
K1
I/O
ST
RP2
42
68
E9
I/O
ST
RP3
44
70
D11
I/O
ST
RP4
43
69
E10
I/O
ST
RP5
—
48
K9
I/O
ST
RP6
17
26
L1
I/O
ST
RP7
18
27
J3
I/O
ST
RP10
31
49
L10
I/O
ST
RP11
46
72
D9
I/O
ST
RP12
45
71
C11
I/O
ST
ST
RP13
14
23
J2
I/O
RP14
29
43
K7
I/O
ST
RP15
—
53
J10
I/O
ST
RP16
33
51
K10
I/O
ST
RP17
32
50
L11
I/O
ST
RP18
11
20
H1
I/O
ST
RP19
6
12
F2
I/O
ST
RP20
53
82
B8
I/O
ST
ST
RP21
4
10
E3
I/O
RP22
51
78
B9
I/O
ST
RP23
50
77
A10
I/O
ST
RP24
49
76
A11
I/O
ST
RP25
52
81
C8
I/O
ST
RP26
5
11
F4
I/O
ST
RP27
8
14
F3
I/O
ST
RP28
12
21
H2
I/O
ST
RP29
30
44
L8
I/O
ST
RP30
—
52
K11
I/O
ST
RP31
—
39
L6
I/O
ST
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
DS30009312D-page 28
Description
PORTG Digital I/Os.
Remappable Peripherals (input or output).
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
RPI32
—
40
K6
I
ST
RPI33
—
18
G1
I
ST
RPI34
—
19
G2
I
ST
RPI35
—
67
E8
I
ST
RPI36
—
66
E11
I
ST
RPI37
48
74
B11
I
ST
RPI38
—
6
D1
I
ST
RPI39
—
7
E4
I
ST
RPI40
—
8
E2
I
ST
RPI41
—
9
E1
I
ST
RPI42
—
79
A9
I
ST
ST
Description
Remappable Peripherals (input only).
RPI43
—
47
L9
I
RTCC
42
68
E9
O
—
Real-Time Clock Alarm/Seconds Pulse Output.
SCL1
44
66
E11
I/O
I2C
I2C1 Synchronous Serial Clock Input/Output.
SCL2
32
50, 58
H11, L11
I/O
I2C
I2C2 Synchronous Serial Clock Input/Output.
SCLKI
48
74
B11
I
ST
Secondary Oscillator Digital Clock Input.
SDA1
43
67
E8
I/O
I2C
I2C1 Data Input/Output.
SDA2
31
49, 59
G10, L10
I/O
I2C
I2C2 Data Input/Output.
SEG0
4
10
E3
O
—
LCD Driver Segment Outputs.
SEG1
8
14
F3
O
—
SEG2
11
20
H1
O
—
SEG3
12
21
H2
O
—
SEG4
13
22
J1
O
—
SEG5
14
23
J2
O
—
SEG6
15
24
K1
O
—
SEG7
16
25
K2
O
—
SEG8
29
43
K7
O
—
SEG9
30
44
L8
O
—
SEG10
31
49
L10
O
—
SEG11
32
50
L11
O
—
SEG12
33
51
K10
O
—
SEG13
42
68
E9
O
—
SEG14
43
69
E10
O
—
SEG15
44
70
D11
O
—
SEG16
45
71
C11
O
—
SEG17
46
72
D9
O
—
SEG18
27
41
J7
O
—
SEG19
28
42
L7
O
—
SEG20
49
76
A11
O
—
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
DS30009312D-page 29
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
SEG21
50
77
A10
O
—
SEG22
51
78
B9
O
—
SEG23
52
81
C8
O
—
SEG24
53
82
B8
O
—
SEG25
54
83
D7
O
—
SEG26
55
84
C7
O
—
SEG27
58
87
B6
O
—
SEG28
—
61
G9
O
—
SEG29
—
60
G11
O
—
SEG30
18
27
J3
O
—
SEG31
—
38
J6
O
—
SEG32
—
6
D1
O
—
SEG33
—
8
E2
O
—
SEG34
—
18
G1
O
—
SEG35
—
19
G2
O
—
SEG36
—
28
L2
O
—
SEG37
—
29
K3
O
—
SEG38
—
47
L9
O
—
SEG39
—
48
K9
O
—
SEG40
—
52
K11
O
—
SEG41
—
53
J10
O
—
SEG42
—
66
E11
O
—
SEG43
—
67
E8
O
—
SEG44
—
79
A9
O
—
SEG45
—
80
D8
O
—
SEG46
—
89
E6
O
—
SEG47
59
88
A6
O
—
SEG48
—
17
G3
O
—
SEG49
—
90
A5
O
—
SEG50
—
1
B2
O
—
SEG51
—
7
E4
O
—
SEG52
—
9
E1
O
—
SEG53
—
39
L6
O
—
SEG54
—
40
K6
O
—
SEG55
—
58
H11
O
—
SEG56
—
59
G10
O
—
SEG57
—
91
C5
O
—
SEG58
—
92
B5
O
—
SEG59
—
95
C4
O
—
SEG60
—
96
C3
O
—
SEG61
—
97
A3
O
—
SEG62
64
100
A1
O
—
Legend:
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
DS30009312D-page 30
Description
LCD Driver Segment Outputs.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 1-3:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY PINOUT DESCRIPTION (CONTINUED)
Pin Number/Grid Locator
Pin
Function
64-Pin
TQFP/QFN
100-Pin
TQFP
121-Pin
BGA
I/O
Input
Buffer
Description
SOSCI
47
73
C10
I
ANA
SOSCO
48
74
B11
O
ANA
Secondary Oscillator Input.
SVDD
26
37
J5
P
—
SVREF+
24
35
K5
I
ANA
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter Voltage Reference (high).
SVREF-
25
36
L5
I
ANA
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter Voltage Reference (low).
Secondary Oscillator Output.
Positive Supply for Sigma-Delta A/D Converter.
SVss
21
32
K4
P
—
Ground Reference for Sigma-Delta A/D Converter.
T1CK
27
41
J7
I
ST
External Timer1 Clock Input.
T2CK
30
44
L8
I
ST
External Timer2 Clock Input.
T3CK
31
49
L10
I
ST
External Timer3 Clock Input.
T4CK
14
23
J2
I
ST
External Timer4 Clock Input.
T5CK
4
10
E3
I
ST
External Timer5 Clock Input.
TCK
27
38
J6
I
ST
JTAG Test Clock/Programming Clock Input.
TDI
28
60
G11
I
ST
JTAG Test Data/Programming Data Input.
TDO
29
61
G9
O
—
JTAG Test Data Output.
TMS
45
17
G3
I
ST
JTAG Test Mode Select Input.
USBID
33
51
K10
I
ST
USB OTG ID (OTG mode only).
USBOE
12
21
H2
O
—
USB Output Enable Control (for external transceiver).
VBAT
57
86
A7
P
—
Backup Battery (B+) Input.
VBUS
34
54
H8
P
—
USB VBUS Connection (5V nominal).
VCAP
56
85
B7
P
—
External Filter Capacitor Connection.
VCMPST1
58
87
B6
I
ST
USB VBUS External Comparator Input 1.
VCMPST2
59
88
A6
I
ST
USB VBUS External Comparator Input 2.
VCMPST3
46
72
D9
I
ST
USB VBUS External Comparator Input 3.
10, 38
2, 16,
46,62
C2,G5,
K8, F8
P
—
Positive Supply for Peripheral Digital Logic and I/O Pins.
5
11
F4
P
ANA
VDD
VLCAP1
VLCAP2
6
12
F2
P
ANA
VMIO
14
23
J2
I/O
ST
VPIO
VSS
VUSB3V3
Legend:
LCD Drive Charge Pump Capacitor Pins.
USB Differential Minus Input/Output
(external transceiver).
13
22
J1
I/O
ST
USB Differential Plus Input/Output (external transceiver).
9, 41
15, 45,
65, 75
F5, G7,
F10, B10
P
—
Ground Reference for Logic and I/O Pins.
35
55
H9
P
—
USB Transceiver Power Input Voltage (3.3V nominal).
TTL = TTL input buffer
ANA = Analog level input/output
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
ST = Schmitt Trigger input buffer
I2C = I2C/SMBus input buffer
DS30009312D-page 31
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
NOTES:
DS30009312D-page 32
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
2.0
GUIDELINES FOR GETTING
STARTED WITH 16-BIT
MICROCONTROLLERS
FIGURE 2-1:
RECOMMENDED
MINIMUM CONNECTIONS
C2(2)
• All VDD and VSS pins
(see Section 2.2 “Power Supply Pins”)
• All analog power pins (AVDD, SVDD, AVSS and
SVSS), regardless of whether or not the analog
device features are used
(see Section 2.2 “Power Supply Pins”)
• The USB transceiver supply, VUSB3V3, regardless
of whether or not the USB module is used
(see Section 2.2 “Power Supply Pins”)
• MCLR pin
(see Section 2.3 “Master Clear (MCLR) Pin”)
• VCAP pin
(see Section 2.4 “Voltage Regulator Pin (VCAP)”)
These pins must also be connected if they are being
used in the end application:
• PGECx/PGEDx pins used for In-Circuit Serial
Programming™ (ICSP™) and debugging purposes
(see Section 2.5 “ICSP Pins”)
• OSCI and OSCO pins when an external oscillator
source is used
(see Section 2.6 “External Oscillator Pins”)
Additionally, the following pins may be required:
• Any voltage reference pins used when external
voltage reference for analog modules is
implemented (AVREF+/AVREF-, CVREF+/CVREF-,
DVREF+ and SVREF+/SVREF-)
Note:
All analog power supply and return pins
must always be connected, regardless of
whether any of the analog modules are
being used.
VSS
VDD
R2
MCLR
C1
VCAP
(4)
C7
(1)
PIC24FJXXX
VSS
VUSB3V3
VDD
VSS
C3(3)
C6(2)
C5(2)
SVSS
The following pins must always be connected:
R1
SVDD
Getting started with the PIC24FJ128GC010 family
family of 16-bit microcontrollers requires attention to a
minimal set of device pin connections before
proceeding with development.
VDD
AVSS
Basic Connection Requirements
AVDD
2.1
C4(2)
Key (all values are recommendations):
C1 through C6: 0.1 F, 25V X7R ceramic
C7: 10 F, 16V or greater, tantalum or ceramic
R1: 10 kΩ
R2: 100Ω to 470Ω
Note 1: See Section 2.4 “Voltage Regulator Pin
(VCAP)” for details on selecting the proper
capacitor for VCAP.
2: The example shown is for a PIC24F device with
five power and ground pairs (including analog
and USB). Other devices may have more or
less pairs; adjust the number of decoupling
capacitors appropriately.
3: See Section 19.1 “Hardware Configuration”
for details on connecting the pins for USB
operation.
4: C1 is optional, see Section 2.3 “Master Clear
(MCLR) Pin” and Section 2.5 “ICSP Pins” for
more information.
The minimum mandatory connections are shown in
Figure 2-1.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 33
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
2.2
2.2.1
Power Supply Pins
DECOUPLING CAPACITORS
The use of decoupling capacitors on every pair of
power supply pins is required. This includes digital
supply (VDD and VSS) and all analog supplies (AVDD,
SVDD, AVSS and SVSS).
Consider the following criteria when using decoupling
capacitors:
• Value and type of capacitor: A 0.1 F (100 nF),
25V or 50V, X7R dielectric ceramic capacitor is
recommended. The capacitor should be a
low-ESR device with a resonance frequency in
the range of 20 MHz and higher.
• Placement on the printed circuit board: The
decoupling capacitors should be placed as close
to the pins as possible. It is recommended to
place the capacitors on the same side of the
board as the device. If space is constricted, the
capacitor can be placed on another layer on the
PCB using a via; however, ensure that the trace
length from the pin to the capacitor is no greater
than 0.25 inch (6 mm).
• Handling high-frequency noise: If the board is
experiencing high-frequency noise (upward of
tens of MHz), add a second ceramic type capacitor in parallel to the above described decoupling
capacitor. The value of the second capacitor can
be in the range of 0.01 F to 0.001 F. Place this
second capacitor next to each primary decoupling
capacitor. In high-speed circuit designs, consider
implementing a pair of capacitances as close to
the power and ground pins as possible
(e.g., 0.1 F in parallel with 0.001 F).
• Maximizing performance: On the board layout
from the power supply circuit, run the power and
return traces to the decoupling capacitors first,
and then to the device pins. This ensures that the
decoupling capacitors are first in the power chain.
Equally important is to keep the trace length
between the capacitor and the power pins to a
minimum, thereby reducing PCB trace
inductance.
2.2.2
BULK CAPACITORS
On boards with power traces running longer than
six inches in length, it is suggested to use a tank capacitor for integrated circuits, including microcontrollers, to
supply a local power source. The value of the tank
capacitor should be determined based on the trace
resistance that connects the power supply source to
the device, and the maximum current drawn by the
device in the application. In other words, select the tank
capacitor so that it meets the acceptable voltage sag at
the device. Typical values range from 4.7 F to 47 F.
DS30009312D-page 34
2.3
Master Clear (MCLR) Pin
The MCLR pin provides two specific device functions:
device Reset, and device programming and debugging. If programming and debugging are not required
in the end application, a direct connection to VDD may
be all that is required. The addition of other components, to help increase the application’s resistance to
spurious Resets from voltage sags, may be beneficial.
A typical configuration is shown in Figure 2-1. Other
circuit designs may be implemented, depending on the
application’s requirements.
During programming and debugging, the resistance
and capacitance that can be added to the pin must
be considered. Device programmers and debuggers
drive the MCLR pin. Consequently, specific voltage
levels (VIH and VIL) and fast signal transitions must
not be adversely affected. Therefore, specific values
of R1 and C1 will need to be adjusted based on the
application and PCB requirements. For example, it is
recommended that the capacitor, C1, be isolated
from the MCLR pin during programming and debugging operations by using a jumper (Figure 2-2). The
jumper is replaced for normal run-time operations.
Any components associated with the MCLR pin
should be placed within 0.25 inch (6 mm) of the pin.
FIGURE 2-2:
EXAMPLE OF MCLR PIN
CONNECTIONS
VDD
R1
R2
MCLR
JP
PIC24FJXXX
C1
Note 1: R1 10 k is recommended. A suggested
starting value is 10 k. Ensure that the MCLR
pin VIH and VIL specifications are met.
2: R2 470 will limit any current flowing into
MCLR from the external capacitor, C, in the
event of MCLR pin breakdown, due to
Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) or Electrical
Overstress (EOS). Ensure that the MCLR pin
VIH and VIL specifications are met.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
2.4
FIGURE 2-3:
Voltage Regulator Pin (VCAP)
A low-ESR (< 5Ω) capacitor is required on the VCAP pin
to stabilize the output voltage of the on-chip voltage
regulator. The VCAP pin must not be connected to VDD
and must use a capacitor of 10 µF connected to ground.
The type can be ceramic or tantalum. Suitable examples
of capacitors are shown in Table 2-1. Capacitors with
equivalent specification can be used.
FREQUENCY vs. ESR
PERFORMANCE FOR
SUGGESTED VCAP
10
ESR ()
1
The placement of this capacitor should be close to VCAP.
It is recommended that the trace length not exceed
0.25 inch (6 mm). Refer to Section 37.0 “Electrical
Characteristics” for additional information.
0.1
0.01
Designers may use Figure 2-3 to evaluate ESR
equivalence of candidate devices.
0.001
Refer to Section 34.2 “On-Chip Voltage Regulator”
for details on connecting and using the on-chip
regulator.
0.01
0.1
1
10
100
Frequency (MHz)
1000 10,000
Note: Typical data measurement at +25°C, 0V DC bias.
.
TABLE 2-1:
SUITABLE CAPACITOR EQUIVALENTS
Make
Part #
Nominal
Capacitance
Base Tolerance
Rated Voltage
Temp. Range
TDK
C3216X7R1C106K
10 µF
±10%
16V
-55 to +125ºC
TDK
C3216X5R1C106K
10 µF
±10%
16V
-55 to +85ºC
Panasonic
ECJ-3YX1C106K
10 µF
±10%
16V
-55 to +125ºC
Panasonic
ECJ-4YB1C106K
10 µF
±10%
16V
-55 to +85ºC
Murata
GRM319R61C106KE15D
10 µF
±10%
16V
-55 to +85ºC
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 35
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
CONSIDERATIONS FOR CERAMIC
CAPACITORS
In recent years, large value, low-voltage, surface-mount
ceramic capacitors have become very cost effective in
sizes up to a few tens of microfarad. The low-ESR, small
physical size and other properties make ceramic
capacitors very attractive in many types of applications.
Ceramic capacitors are suitable for use with the internal voltage regulator of this microcontroller. However,
some care is needed in selecting the capacitor to
ensure that it maintains sufficient capacitance over the
intended operating range of the application.
Typical low-cost, 10 F ceramic capacitors are available
in X5R, X7R and Y5V dielectric ratings (other types are
also available, but are less common). The initial tolerance specifications for these types of capacitors are
often specified as ±10% to ±20% (X5R and X7R) or
-20%/+80% (Y5V). However, the effective capacitance
that these capacitors provide in an application circuit will
also vary based on additional factors, such as the
applied DC bias voltage and the temperature. The total
in-circuit tolerance is, therefore, much wider than the
initial tolerance specification.
The X5R and X7R capacitors typically exhibit satisfactory temperature stability (ex: ±15% over a wide
temperature range, but consult the manufacturer’s data
sheets for exact specifications). However, Y5V capacitors typically have extreme temperature tolerance
specifications of +22%/-82%. Due to the extreme
temperature tolerance, a 10 F nominal rated Y5V type
capacitor may not deliver enough total capacitance to
meet minimum internal voltage regulator stability and
transient response requirements. Therefore, Y5V
capacitors are not recommended for use with the
internal regulator.
In addition to temperature tolerance, the effective
capacitance of large value ceramic capacitors can vary
substantially, based on the amount of DC voltage
applied to the capacitor. This effect can be very significant, but is often overlooked or is not always
documented.
Typical DC bias voltage vs. capacitance graph for X7R
type capacitors is shown in Figure 2-4.
FIGURE 2-4:
Capacitance Change (%)
2.4.1
DC BIAS VOLTAGE vs.
CAPACITANCE
CHARACTERISTICS
10
0
-10
16V Capacitor
-20
-30
-40
10V Capacitor
-50
-60
-70
6.3V Capacitor
-80
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
DC Bias Voltage (VDC)
When selecting a ceramic capacitor to be used with the
internal voltage regulator, it is suggested to select a
high-voltage rating, so that the operating voltage is a
small percentage of the maximum rated capacitor
voltage. The minimum DC rating for the ceramic
capacitor on VCAP is 16V. Suggested capacitors are
shown in Table 2-1.
2.5
ICSP Pins
The PGECx and PGEDx pins are used for In-Circuit
Serial Programming (ICSP) and debugging purposes.
It is recommended to keep the trace length between
the ICSP connector and the ICSP pins on the device as
short as possible. If the ICSP connector is expected to
experience an ESD event, a series resistor is recommended, with the value in the range of a few tens of
ohms, not to exceed 100Ω.
Pull-up resistors, series diodes and capacitors on the
PGECx and PGEDx pins are not recommended as they
will interfere with the programmer/debugger communications to the device. If such discrete components are
an application requirement, they should be removed
from the circuit during programming and debugging.
Alternatively, refer to the AC/DC characteristics and
timing requirements information in the respective
device Flash programming specification for information
on capacitive loading limits and pin Voltage Input High
(VIH) and Voltage Input Low (VIL) requirements.
For device emulation, ensure that the “Communication
Channel Select” (i.e., PGECx/PGEDx pins), programmed
into the device, matches the physical connections for the
ICSP to the Microchip debugger/emulator tool.
The MCLR connection from the ICSP header should connect directly to the MCLR pin on the device. A capacitor to
ground (C1 in Figure 2-2) is optional, but if used, may
interfere with ICSP operation if the value exceeds 0.01 F.
In most cases, this capacitor is not required.
For more information on available Microchip
development tools connection requirements, refer to
Section 35.0 “Development Support”.
DS30009312D-page 36
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
2.6
External Oscillator Pins
FIGURE 2-5:
Many microcontrollers have options for at least two
oscillators: a high-frequency Primary Oscillator and a
low-frequency Secondary Oscillator (refer to
Section 9.0 “Oscillator Configuration” for details).
The oscillator circuit should be placed on the same
side of the board as the device. Place the oscillator
circuit close to the respective oscillator pins with no
more than 0.5 inch (12 mm) between the circuit
components and the pins. The load capacitors should
be placed next to the oscillator itself, on the same side
of the board.
Use a grounded copper pour around the oscillator
circuit to isolate it from surrounding circuits. The
grounded copper pour should be routed directly to the
MCU ground. Do not run any signal traces or power
traces inside the ground pour. Also, if using a two-sided
board, avoid any traces on the other side of the board
where the crystal is placed.
Layout suggestions are shown in Figure 2-5. In-line
packages may be handled with a single-sided layout
that completely encompasses the oscillator pins. With
fine-pitch packages, it is not always possible to completely surround the pins and components. A suitable
solution is to tie the broken guard sections to a mirrored
ground layer. In all cases, the guard trace(s) must be
returned to ground.
In planning the application’s routing and I/O assignments, ensure that adjacent port pins, and other
signals in close proximity to the oscillator, are benign
(i.e., free of high frequencies, short rise and fall times
and other similar noise).
For additional information and design guidance on
oscillator circuits, please refer to these Microchip
Application Notes, available at the corporate web site
(www.microchip.com):
• AN826, “Crystal Oscillator Basics and Crystal
Selection for rfPIC™ and PICmicro® Devices”
• AN849, “Basic PICmicro® Oscillator Design”
• AN943, “Practical PICmicro® Oscillator Analysis
and Design”
• AN949, “Making Your Oscillator Work”
SUGGESTED
PLACEMENT OF THE
OSCILLATOR CIRCUIT
Single-Sided and In-Line Layouts:
Copper Pour
(tied to ground)
Primary Oscillator
Crystal
DEVICE PINS
Primary
Oscillator
OSCI
C1
`
OSCO
GND
C2
`
SOSCO
SOSC I
Secondary
Oscillator
Crystal
`
Sec Oscillator: C1
Sec Oscillator: C2
Fine-Pitch (Dual-Sided) Layouts:
Top Layer Copper Pour
(tied to ground)
Bottom Layer
Copper Pour
(tied to ground)
OSCO
C2
Oscillator
Crystal
GND
C1
OSCI
DEVICE PINS
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 37
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
2.7
Configuration of Analog and
Digital Pins During ICSP
Operations
If an ICSP compliant emulator is selected as a debugger, it automatically initializes all of the A/D input pins
(ANx) as “digital” pins. Depending on the particular
device, this is done by setting all bits in the ADxPCFG
register(s) or clearing all bits in the ANSx registers.
All PIC24F devices will have either one or more
ADxPCFG registers or several ANSx registers (one for
each port); no device will have both. Refer to
Section 11.2 “Configuring Analog Port Pins
(ANSx)” for more specific information.
The bits in these registers that correspond to the A/D
pins that initialized the emulator must not be
changed by the user application firmware; otherwise,
communication errors will result between the debugger
and the device.
If your application needs to use certain A/D pins as
analog input pins during the debug session, the user
application must modify the appropriate bits during
initialization of the A/D module, as follows:
• For devices with an ADxPCFG register, clear the
bits corresponding to the pin(s) to be configured
as analog. Do not change any other bits, particularly those corresponding to the PGECx/PGEDx
pair, at any time.
• For devices with ANSx registers, set the bits
corresponding to the pin(s) to be configured as
analog. Do not change any other bits, particularly
those corresponding to the PGECx/PGEDx pair,
at any time.
When a Microchip debugger/emulator is used as a
programmer, the user application firmware must
correctly configure the ADxPCFG or ANSx registers.
Automatic initialization of these registers is only done
during debugger operation. Failure to correctly configure
the register(s) will result in all A/D pins being recognized
as analog input pins, resulting in the port value being
read as a logic ‘0’, which may affect user application
functionality.
DS30009312D-page 38
2.8
Sigma-Delta A/D Connections
The Sigma-Delta A/D Converter has input and power
connections that are independent from the rest of the
microcontroller. These connections are required to use
the converter, and are in addition to the connection and
layout connections provided in Section 2.1 “Basic
Connection Requirements” and Section 2.2 “Power
Supply Pins”.
2.8.1
VOLTAGE AND GROUND
CONNECTIONS
To minimize noise interference, the Sigma-Delta A/D
Converter has independent voltage pins. Converter circuits are supplied through the SVDD pin. Independent
ground return is provided through the SVSS pin.
As with the microcontroller’s VDD/VSS and AVDD/AVSS
pins, bypass capacitors are required on SVDD and SVSS.
Requirements for these capacitors are identical to those
for the VDD/VSS and AVDD/AVSS pins.
It is recommended that designs using the Sigma-Delta
A/D Converter incorporate a separate ground return
path for analog circuits. The analog and digital grounds
may be tied to a single point at the power source.
Analog pins that require grounding should be tied to
this analog return. SVSS can be tied to the digital
ground, along with VSS and AVSS.
2.8.2
ANALOG INPUTS
The analog signals to be converted are connected to the
pins of CH0 and/or CH1. Each channel has inverting and
non-inverting inputs (CHx- and CHx+, respectively), and
is fully differential.
If not used for conversion, CH1+ and CH1- can be used
to supply an external voltage reference to the converter. If an external reference is not used and CH1 is
not needed as a conversion input, both pins should be
connected to the analog ground return.
2.9
Unused I/Os
Unused I/O pins should be configured as outputs and
driven to a logic low state. Alternatively, connect a 1 kΩ
to 10 kΩ resistor to VSS on unused pins and drive the
output to logic low.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
3.0
Note:
CPU
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24
Family
Reference
Manual”, “CPU with Extended Data
Space (EDS)” (DS39732) which is available from the Microchip web site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the
information in the FRM.
The PIC24F CPU has a 16-bit (data) modified, Harvard
architecture with an enhanced instruction set and a
24-bit instruction word with a variable length opcode
field. The Program Counter (PC) is 23 bits wide and
addresses up to 4M instructions of user program
memory space. A single-cycle instruction prefetch
mechanism is used to help maintain throughput and
provides predictable execution. All instructions execute
in a single cycle, with the exception of instructions that
change the program flow, the double-word move
(MOV.D) instruction and the table instructions.
Overhead-free program loop constructs are supported
using the REPEAT instructions, which are interruptible
at any point.
PIC24F devices have sixteen, 16-bit Working registers
in the programmer’s model. Each of the Working
registers can act as a data, address or address offset
register. The 16th Working register (W15) operates as
a Software Stack Pointer (SSP) for interrupts and calls.
The lower 32 Kbytes of the Data Space (DS) can be
accessed linearly. The upper 32 Kbytes of the Data
Space are referred to as Extended Data Space to which
the extended data RAM, EPMP memory space or
program memory can be mapped.
The Instruction Set Architecture (ISA) has been
significantly enhanced beyond that of the PIC18, but
maintains an acceptable level of backward compatibility. All PIC18 instructions and addressing modes are
supported, either directly, or through simple macros.
Many of the ISA enhancements have been driven by
compiler efficiency needs.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
The core supports Inherent (no operand), Relative,
Literal and Memory Direct Addressing modes, along
with three groups of addressing modes. All modes support Register Direct and various Register Indirect
modes. Each group offers up to seven addressing
modes. Instructions are associated with predefined
addressing modes, depending upon their functional
requirements.
For most instructions, the core is capable of executing
a data (or program data) memory read, a Working register (data) read, a data memory write and a program
(instruction) memory read per instruction cycle. As a
result, three parameter instructions can be supported,
allowing trinary operations (that is, A + B = C) to be
executed in a single cycle.
A high-speed, 17-bit x 17-bit multiplier has been
included to significantly enhance the core arithmetic
capability and throughput. The multiplier supports
Signed, Unsigned and Mixed mode, 16-bit x 16-bit or
8-bit x 8-bit, integer multiplication. All multiply
instructions execute in a single cycle.
The 16-bit ALU has been enhanced with integer divide
assist hardware that supports an iterative non-restoring
divide algorithm. It operates in conjunction with the
REPEAT instruction looping mechanism and a selection
of iterative divide instructions to support 32-bit (or
16-bit), divided by 16-bit, integer signed and unsigned
division. All divide operations require 19 cycles to
complete but are interruptible at any cycle boundary.
The PIC24F has a vectored exception scheme, with up to
8 sources of non-maskable traps and up to 118 interrupt
sources. Each interrupt source can be assigned to one of
seven priority levels.
A block diagram of the CPU is shown in Figure 3-1.
3.1
Programmer’s Model
The programmer’s model for the PIC24F is shown in
Figure 3-2. All registers in the programmer’s model are
memory-mapped and can be manipulated directly by
instructions. A description of each register is provided
in Table 3-1. All registers associated with the
programmer’s model are memory-mapped.
DS30009312D-page 39
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 3-1:
PIC24F CPU CORE BLOCK DIAGRAM
EDS and Table
Data Access
Control Block
Data Bus
Interrupt
Controller
16
8
16
16
Data Latch
23
Data RAM
Up to 0x7FFF
PCH
PCL
Program Counter
Loop
Stack
Control
Control
Logic
Logic
23
Address
Latch
23
16
RAGU
WAGU
Address Latch
EA MUX
Address Bus
Data Latch
ROM Latch
24
16
Instruction
Decode and
Control
Instruction Reg
Control Signals
to Various Blocks
Hardware
Multiplier
Divide
Support
16
Literal Data
Program Memory/
Extended Data
Space
16
16 x 16
W Register Array
16
16-Bit ALU
16
To Peripheral Modules
TABLE 3-1:
CPU CORE REGISTERS
Register(s) Name
W0 through W15
PC
SR
SPLIM
TBLPAG
RCOUNT
CORCON
DISICNT
DSRPAG
DSWPAG
DS30009312D-page 40
Description
Working Register Array
23-Bit Program Counter
ALU STATUS Register
Stack Pointer Limit Value Register
Table Memory Page Address Register
REPEAT Loop Counter Register
CPU Control Register
Disable Interrupt Count Register
Data Space Read Page Register
Data Space Write Page Register
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 3-2:
PROGRAMMER’S MODEL
15
Divider Working Registers
0
W0 (WREG)
W1
W2
Multiplier Registers
W3
W4
W5
W6
W7
Working/Address
Registers
W8
W9
W10
W11
W12
W13
W14
Frame Pointer
W15
Stack Pointer
0
SPLIM
0
22
0
0
PC
7
0
TBLPAG
9
Program Counter
Table Memory Page
Address Register
0
Data Space Read Page Register
DSRPAG
8
0
Data Space Write Page Register
DSWPAG
15
0
RCOUNT
15
Stack Pointer Limit
Value Register
SRH
SRL
REPEAT Loop Counter
Register
0
— — — — — — — DC 2 IPL
1 0 RA N OV Z C
ALU STATUS Register (SR)
0
15
— — — — — — — — — — — — IPL3 ———
CPU Control Register (CORCON)
13
0
DISICNT
Disable Interrupt Count Register
Registers or bits are shadowed for PUSH.S and POP.S instructions.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 41
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
3.2
CPU Control Registers
SR: ALU STATUS REGISTER(1)
REGISTER 3-1:
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
DC
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0(2)
IPL2
R/W-0(2)
(3)
(3)
IPL1
R/W-0(2)
IPL0
(3)
R-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0,
R/W-0
RA
N
OV
Z
C
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-9
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 8
DC: ALU Half Carry/Borrow bit
1 = A carry out from the 4th low-order bit (for byte-sized data) or 8th low-order bit (for word-sized data)
of the result occurred
0 = No carry out from the 4th or 8th low-order bit of the result has occurred
bit 7-5
IPL: CPU Interrupt Priority Level (IPL) Status bits(2,3)
111 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 7 (15); user interrupts are disabled
110 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 6 (14)
101 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 5 (13)
100 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 4 (12)
011 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 3 (11)
010 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 2 (10)
001 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 1 (9)
000 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 0 (8)
bit 4
RA: REPEAT Loop Active bit
1 = REPEAT loop is in progress
0 = REPEAT loop is not in progress
bit 3
N: ALU Negative bit
1 = Result was negative
0 = Result was not negative (zero or positive)
bit 2
OV: ALU Overflow bit
1 = Overflow occurred for signed (2’s complement) arithmetic in this arithmetic operation
0 = No overflow has occurred
bit 1
Z: ALU Zero bit
1 = An operation resulted in the ALU having a value of zero.
0 = An operation resulted in the ALU having a non-zero value.
bit 0
C: ALU Carry/Borrow bit
1 = A carry out from the Most Significant bit (MSb) of the result occurred
0 = No carry out from the Most Significant bit of the result occurred
Note 1:
2:
3:
ALU result flags are not affected for every operation. See Table 36-2 for details.
The IPLx Status bits are read-only when NSTDIS (INTCON1) = 1.
The IPLx Status bits are concatenated with the IPL3 (CORCON) bit to form the CPU Interrupt Priority
Level (IPL). The value in parentheses indicates the IPL when IPL3 = 1.
DS30009312D-page 42
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 3-2:
CORCON: CPU CORE CONTROL REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
—
—
U-0
—
U-0
R/C-0
r-1
U-0
U-0
—
IPL3(1)
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
C = Clearable bit
r = Reserved bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3
IPL3: CPU Interrupt Priority Level Status bit(1)
1 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is greater than 7
0 = CPU Interrupt Priority Level is 7 or less
bit 2
Reserved: Read as ‘1’
bit 1-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
x = Bit is unknown
The IPL3 bit is concatenated with the IPL bits (SR) to form the CPU Interrupt priority Level; see
Register 3-1 for bit description.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 43
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
3.3
Arithmetic Logic Unit (ALU)
The PIC24F ALU is 16 bits wide and is capable of addition, subtraction, bit shifts and logic operations. Unless
otherwise mentioned, arithmetic operations are 2’s
complement in nature. Depending on the operation, the
ALU may affect the values of the Carry (C), Zero (Z),
Negative (N), Overflow (OV) and Digit Carry (DC)
Status bits in the SR register. The C and DC Status bits
operate as Borrow and Digit Borrow bits, respectively,
for subtraction operations.
The ALU can perform 8-bit or 16-bit operations,
depending on the mode of the instruction that is used.
Data for the ALU operation can come from the W
register array, or data memory, depending on the
addressing mode of the instruction. Likewise, output
data from the ALU can be written to the W register array
or a data memory location.
The PIC24F CPU incorporates hardware support for
both multiplication and division. This includes a
dedicated hardware multiplier and support hardware
for 16-bit divisor division.
3.3.1
MULTIPLIER
The ALU contains a high-speed, 17-bit x 17-bit
multiplier. It supports unsigned, signed or mixed sign
operation in several multiplication modes:
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
16-bit x 16-bit signed
16-bit x 16-bit unsigned
16-bit signed x 5-bit (literal) unsigned
16-bit unsigned x 16-bit unsigned
16-bit unsigned x 5-bit (literal) unsigned
16-bit unsigned x 16-bit signed
8-bit unsigned x 8-bit unsigned
TABLE 3-2:
3.3.2
DIVIDER
The divide block supports signed and unsigned integer
divide operations with the following data sizes:
1.
2.
3.
4.
32-bit signed/16-bit signed divide
32-bit unsigned/16-bit unsigned divide
16-bit signed/16-bit signed divide
16-bit unsigned/16-bit unsigned divide
The quotient for all divide instructions ends up in W0
and the remainder in W1. Sixteen-bit signed and
unsigned DIV instructions can specify any W register
for both the 16-bit divisor (Wn), and any W register
(aligned) pair (W(m + 1):Wm) for the 32-bit dividend.
The divide algorithm takes one cycle per bit of divisor,
so both 32-bit/16-bit and 16-bit/16-bit instructions take
the same number of cycles to execute.
3.3.3
MULTIBIT SHIFT SUPPORT
The PIC24F ALU supports both single bit and
single-cycle, multibit arithmetic and logic shifts. Multibit
shifts are implemented using a shifter block, capable of
performing up to a 15-bit arithmetic right shift, or up to
a 15-bit left shift, in a single cycle. All multibit shift
instructions only support Register Direct Addressing for
both the operand source and result destination.
A full summary of instructions that use the shift
operation is provided in Table 3-2.
INSTRUCTIONS THAT USE THE SINGLE BIT AND MULTIBIT SHIFT OPERATION
Instruction
Description
ASR
Arithmetic shift right source register by one or more bits.
SL
Shift left source register by one or more bits.
LSR
Logical shift right source register by one or more bits.
DS30009312D-page 44
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.0
MEMORY ORGANIZATION
As Harvard architecture devices, PIC24F microcontrollers feature separate program and data memory
spaces and buses. This architecture also allows direct
access of program memory from the Data Space (DS)
during code execution.
4.1
Program Memory Space
The program address memory space of the
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices is 4M instructions.
The space is addressable by a 24-bit value derived
FIGURE 4-1:
User access to the program memory space is restricted
to the lower half of the address range (000000h to
7FFFFFh). The exception is the use of TBLRD/TBLWT
operations, which use TBLPAG to permit access to
the Configuration bits and Device ID sections of the
configuration memory space.
Memory maps for the PIC24FJ128GC010 family of
devices are shown in Figure 4-1.
PROGRAM SPACE MEMORY MAP FOR PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY DEVICES
PIC24FJ64GC0XX
PIC24F128GC0XX
GOTO Instruction
Reset Address
GOTO Instruction
Reset Address
Interrupt Vector Table
Interrupt Vector Table
Reserved
Alternate Vector Table
User Flash
Program Memory
(22K Instructions)
Flash Config. Words
User Memory Space
from either the 23-bit Program Counter (PC) during program execution, or from table operation or Data Space
remapping, as described in Section 4.3 “Interfacing
Program and Data Memory Spaces”.
Reserved
Alternate Vector Table
User Flash
Program Memory
(44K Instructions)
Flash Config. Words
Unimplemented
Read ‘0’
000000h
000002h
000004h
0000FEh
000100h
000104h
0001FEh
000200h
00ABFEh
00AC00h
0157FEh
015800h
Unimplemented
Read ‘0’
7FFFFEh
800000h
Configuration Memory Space
Reserved
Device Config. Registers
Device Config. Registers
Reserved
Reserved
DEVID (2)
Note:
Reserved
F7FFFEh
F80000h
F8000Eh
F80010h
FEFFFEh
FF0000h
DEVID (2)
FFFFFEh
Memory areas are not shown to scale.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 45
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.1.1
PROGRAM MEMORY
ORGANIZATION
4.1.3
In PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices, the top four words
of on-chip program memory are reserved for configuration information. On device Reset, the configuration
information is copied into the appropriate Configuration
register. The addresses of the Flash Configuration Word
for devices in the PIC24FJ128GC010 family are shown
in Table 4-1. Their location in the memory map is shown
with the other memory vectors in Figure 4-1.
The program memory space is organized in
word-addressable blocks. Although it is treated as
24 bits wide, it is more appropriate to think of each
address of the program memory as a lower and upper
word, with the upper byte of the upper word being
unimplemented. The lower word always has an even
address, while the upper word has an odd address
(Figure 4-2).
The Configuration Words in program memory are a
compact format. The actual Configuration bits are
mapped in several different registers in the configuration
memory space. Their order in the Flash Configuration
Words does not reflect a corresponding arrangement in
the configuration space. Additional details on the device
Configuration Words are provided in Section 34.0
“Special Features”.
Program memory addresses are always word-aligned
on the lower word and addresses are incremented or
decremented by two during code execution. This
arrangement also provides compatibility with data
memory space addressing and makes it possible to
access data in the program memory space.
4.1.2
HARD MEMORY VECTORS
TABLE 4-1:
All PIC24F devices reserve the addresses between
000000h and 000200h for hard-coded program execution vectors. A hardware Reset vector is provided to
redirect code execution from the default value of the
PC on device Reset to the actual start of code. A GOTO
instruction is programmed by the user at 000000h with
the actual address for the start of code at 000002h.
msw
Address
Configuration Word
Addresses
PIC24FJ64GC0XX
22,016
00ABF8h:00ABFEh
PIC24FJ128GC0XX
44,032
0157F8h:0157FEh
least significant word
most significant word
16
8
PC Address
(lsw Address)
0
0x000000
0x000002
0x000004
0x000006
00000000
00000000
00000000
00000000
Program Memory
‘Phantom’ Byte
(read as ‘0’)
DS30009312D-page 46
Program
Memory
(Words)
PROGRAM MEMORY ORGANIZATION
23
0x000001
0x000003
0x000005
0x000007
FLASH CONFIGURATION
WORDS FOR PIC24FJ128GC0
FAMILY DEVICES
Device
PIC24F devices also have two Interrupt Vector Tables
(IVTs), located from 000004h to 0000FFh and 000100h
to 0001FFh. These vector tables allow each of the
many device interrupt sources to be handled by separate ISRs. A more detailed discussion of the Interrupt
Vector Tables is provided in Section 8.1 “Interrupt
Vector Table”.
FIGURE 4-2:
FLASH CONFIGURATION WORDS
Instruction Width
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.2
Note:
The upper half of data memory address space (8000h to
FFFFh) is used as a window into the Extended Data
Space (EDS). This allows the microcontroller to directly
access a greater range of data beyond the standard
16-bit address range. EDS is discussed in detail in
Section 4.2.5 “Extended Data Space (EDS)”.
Data Memory Space
This data sheet summarizes the features
of this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference source. For more information, refer
to the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference
Manual”, “Data Memory with Extended
Data Space (EDS)” (DS39733) which is
available from the Microchip web site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
The lower half of DS is compatible with previous PIC24F
microcontrollers without EDS. All PIC24FJ128GC010
family devices implement 8 Kbytes of data RAM in the
lower half of the DS, from 0800h to 27FFh.
4.2.1
The PIC24F core has a 16-bit wide data memory space,
addressable as a single linear range. The Data Space
(DS) is accessed using two Address Generation Units
(AGUs), one each for read and write operations. The
Data Space memory map is shown in Figure 4-3.
The 16-bit wide data addresses in the data memory
space point to bytes within the Data Space. This gives a
DS address range of 64 Kbytes or 32K words. The lower
half (0000h to 7FFFh) is used for implemented (on-chip)
memory addresses.
FIGURE 4-3:
The data memory space is organized in
byte-addressable, 16-bit wide blocks. Data is aligned in
data memory and registers as 16-bit words, but all Data
Space Effective Addresses (EAs) resolve to bytes. The
Least Significant Bytes (LSBs) of each word have even
addresses, while the Most Significant Bytes (MSBs)
have odd addresses.
DATA SPACE MEMORY MAP FOR PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY DEVICES
MSB
Address
MSB
0001h
1FFFh
2001h
LSB
SFR Space
07FFh
0801h
Lower 32 Kbytes
Data Space
DATA SPACE WIDTH
8 Kbytes Data RAM
27FFh
2801h
LSB
Address
0000h
07FEh
0800h
1FFEh
2000h
27FEh
2800h
Unimplemented
SFR
Space
Near
Data Space
EDS Page 0x1
(32 Kbytes)
EDS Page 0x2
(32 Kbytes)
7FFFh
8001h
7FFEh
8000h
EPMP Memory Space
EDS Page 0x4
EDS Window
Upper 32 Kbytes
Data Space
EDS Page 0x3
EDS Page 0x1FF
EDS Page 0x200
EDS Page 0x2FF
FFFFh
FFFEh
EDS Page 0x300
EDS Page 0x3FF
Program Space Visibility
Area to Access Lower
Word of Program Memory
Program Space Visibility
Area to Access Upper
Word of Program Memory
Note: Memory areas are not shown to scale.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 47
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.2.2
DATA MEMORY ORGANIZATION
AND ALIGNMENT
A Sign-Extend (SE) instruction is provided to allow users
to translate 8-bit signed data to 16-bit signed values.
Alternatively, for 16-bit unsigned data, users can clear
the MSB of any W register by executing a Zero-Extend
(ZE) instruction on the appropriate address.
To maintain backward compatibility with PIC® MCUs and
improve Data Space memory usage efficiency, the
PIC24F instruction set supports both word and byte
operations. As a consequence of byte accessibility, all
EA calculations are internally scaled to step through
word-aligned memory. For example, the core recognizes
that Post-Modified Register Indirect Addressing mode
[Ws++] will result in a value of Ws + 1 for byte operations
and Ws + 2 for word operations.
Although most instructions are capable of operating on
word or byte data sizes, it should be noted that some
instructions operate only on words.
4.2.3
The 8-Kbyte area between 0000h and 1FFFh is
referred to as the Near Data Space. Locations in this
space are directly addressable via a 13-bit absolute
address field within all memory direct instructions. The
remainder of the Data Space is addressable indirectly.
Additionally, the whole Data Space is addressable
using MOV instructions, which support Memory Direct
Addressing with a 16-bit address field.
Data byte reads will read the complete word, which
contains the byte, using the LSB of any EA to determine which byte to select. The selected byte is placed
onto the LSB of the data path. That is, data memory
and registers are organized as two parallel, byte-wide
entities with shared (word) address decode but
separate write lines. Data byte writes only write to the
corresponding side of the array or register which
matches the byte address.
4.2.4
All word accesses must be aligned to an even address.
Misaligned word data fetches are not supported, so
care must be taken when mixing byte and word
operations or translating from 8-bit MCU code. If a
misaligned read or write is attempted, an address error
trap will be generated. If the error occurred on a read,
the instruction underway is completed; if it occurred on
a write, the instruction will be executed but the write will
not occur. In either case, a trap is then executed, allowing the system and/or user to examine the machine
state prior to execution of the address Fault.
SPECIAL FUNCTION REGISTER
(SFR) SPACE
The first 2 Kbytes of the Near Data Space, from 0000h
to 07FFh, are primarily occupied with Special Function
Registers (SFRs). These are used by the PIC24F core
and peripheral modules for controlling the operation of
the device.
SFRs are distributed among the modules that they control and are generally grouped together by module. Much
of the SFR space contains unused addresses; these are
read as ‘0’. A diagram of the SFR space, showing where
the SFRs are actually implemented, is shown in
Table 4-2. Each implemented area indicates a 32-byte
region where at least one address is implemented as an
SFR. A complete list of implemented SFRs, including
their addresses, is shown in Tables 4-3 through 4-39.
All byte loads into any W register are loaded into the
LSB. The Most Significant Byte (MSB) is not modified.
TABLE 4-2:
NEAR DATA SPACE
IMPLEMENTED REGIONS OF SFR DATA SPACE
SFR Space Address
xx00
Timers
100h
I
2C
xx60
A/D
DAC
SPI/URT(1)
xxC0
Compare
SPI
—
—
—
—
URT
I/O
DMA
—
—
—
EPMP
RTC/CMP(2)
CRC
700h
—
—
System
—
—
USB
—
600h
xxE0
Interrupts
Capture
A/D
500h
xxA0
ICN
—
URT
xx80
A/D
300h
400h
xx40
Core
000h
200h
xx20
AVR
NVM/PMD
S/D
LCD
ANA
PPS
CTM
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Legend: — = No implemented SFRs in this block; URT = UART; S/D = Sigma-Delta A/D; AVR = Analog Reference
Note 1: This region includes registers for the op amp module.
2: This region includes registers for the Digital Signal Modulator (DSM) module.
DS30009312D-page 48
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-3:
File
Name
Addr
CPU CORE REGISTERS MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
WREG0
0000
Working Register 0
0000
WREG1
0002
Working Register 1
0000
WREG2
0004
Working Register 2
0000
WREG3
0006
Working Register 3
0000
WREG4
0008
Working Register 4
0000
WREG5
000A
Working Register 5
0000
WREG6
000C
Working Register 6
0000
WREG7
000E
Working Register 7
0000
WREG8
0010
Working Register 8
0000
WREG9
0012
Working Register 9
0000
WREG10
0014
Working Register 10
0000
0016
Working Register 11
0000
0018
Working Register 12
0000
WREG13
001A
Working Register 13
0000
WREG14
001C
Working Register 14
0000
WREG15
001E
Working Register 15
0800
SPLIM
0020
Stack Pointer Limit Value Register
xxxx
PCL
002E
Program Counter Low Word Register
PCH
0030
—
—
—
—
—
—
DSRPAG
0032
—
—
—
—
—
—
DSWPAG
0034
—
—
—
—
—
—
RCOUNT
0036
SR
0042
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
DC
IPL2
IPL1
IPL0
RA
N
OV
Z
C
CORCON
0044
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IPL3
r
—
—
DISICNT
0052
—
—
TBLPAG
0054
—
—
—
—
0000
Program Counter Register High Byte
0000
Extended Data Space Read Page Address Register
—
0000
Extended Data Space Write Page Address Register
0000
REPEAT Loop Counter Register
xxxx
Disable Interrupts Counter Register
—
—
—
—
—
—
Table Memory Page Address Register
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
0000
0004
xxxx
0000
DS30009312D-page 49
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
WREG11
WREG12
File
Addr
Name
ICN REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
CNPD1 0056
CN15PDE
CN14PDE
CN13PDE
CN12PDE
CN11PDE
CN10PDE
CN9PDE
CN8PDE
CN7PDE
CN6PDE
CNPD2 0058
CN31PDE
CN30PDE
—
—
—
—
CN25PDE
CN24PDE
CN23PDE
CN22PDE
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
CN5PDE
CN4PDE
CN3PDE
CN21PDE(1) CN20PDE(1) CN19PDE(1)
Bit 2
Bit 1
CN63PDE
CN62PDE
CN61PDE
CN60PDE
CN59PDE
CN58PDE
CNPD5 005E CN79PDE(1) CN78PDE(1) CN77PDE(1) CN76PDE(1) CN75PDE(1) CN74PDE(1)
CN57PDE(1)
CN56PDE
CN55PDE
CN54PDE
CN53PDE
CN52PDE
CN73PDE
CN72PDE
CN71PDE
CN70PDE(1)
CN69PDE
CN68PDE
CN51PDE
All
Resets
CN2PDE
—
—
0000
CN18PDE
CN17PDE
CN16PDE
0000
CN32PDE
0000
CN49PDE
CN48PDE(1)
0000
CN65PDE
CN64PDE
0000
CNPD3 005A CN47PDE(1) CN46PDE(1) CN45PDE(1) CN44PDE(1) CN43PDE(1) CN42PDE(1) CN41PDE(1) CN40PDE(1) CN39PDE(1) CN38PDE(1) CN37PDE(1) CN36PDE(1) CN35PDE(1) CN34PDE(1) CN33PDE(1)
CNPD4 005C
Bit 0
CN50PDE
CN67PDE(1) CN66PDE(1)
CN82PDE(1) CN81PDE(1) CN80PDE(1)
CNPD6 0060
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
CN83PDE
CNEN1 0062
CN15IE
CN14IE
CN13IE
CN12IE
CN11IE
CN10IE
CN9IE
CN8IE
CN7IE
CN6IE
CN5IE
CN4IE
CN3IE
CN2IE
—
—
0000
CNEN2 0064
CN31IE
CN30IE
—
—
—
—
CN25IE
CN24IE
CN23IE
CN22IE
CN21IE(1)
CN20IE(1)
CN19IE(1)
CN18IE
CN17IE
CN16IE
0000
CNEN3 0066
CN47IE(1)
CN46IE(1)
CN45IE(1)
CN44IE(1)
CN43IE(1)
CN42IE(1)
CN41IE(1)
CN40IE(1)
CN39IE(1)
CN38IE(1)
CN37IE(1)
CN36IE(1)
CN35IE(1)
CN34IE(1)
CN33IE(1)
CN32IE
0000
CNEN4 0068
CN63IE
CN62IE
CN61IE
CN60IE
CN59IE
CN58IE
CN57IE(1)
CN56IE
CN55IE
CN54IE
CN53IE
CN52IE
CN51IE
CN50IE
CN49IE
CN48IE(1)
0000
CNEN5 006A
CN79IE(1)
CN78IE(1)
CN77IE(1)
CN76IE(1)
CN75IE(1)
CN74IE(1)
CN73IE
CN72IE
CN71IE
CN70IE(1)
CN69IE
CN68IE
CN67IE(1)
CN66IE(1)
CN65IE
CN64IE
0000
CNEN6 006C
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
CN83IE
CN82IE(1)
CN81IE(1)
CN80IE(1)
0000
CNPU1 006E
CN15PUE
CN14PUE
CN13PUE
CN12PUE
CN11PUE
CN10PUE
CN9PUE
CN8PUE
CN7PUE
CN6PUE
CN5PUE
CN4PUE
CN3PUE
CN2PUE
—
—
0000
CNPU2 0070
CN31PUE
CN30PUE
—
—
—
—
CN25PUE
CN24PUE
CN23PUE
CN22PUE
CN18PUE
CN17PUE
CN16PUE
0000
CN32PUE
0000
CN49PUE
CN48PUE(1)
0000
CN65PUE
CN64PUE
0000
CN21PUE(1) CN20PUE(1) CN19PUE(1)
CNPU3 0072 CN47PUE(1) CN46PUE(1) CN45PUE(1) CN44PUE(1) CN43PUE(1) CN42PUE(1) CN41PUE(1) CN40PUE(1) CN39PUE(1) CN38PUE(1) CN37PUE(1) CN36PUE(1) CN35PUE(1) CN34PUE(1) CN33PUE(1)
CNPU4 0074
CN63PUE
CN62PUE
CN61PUE
CN60PUE
CN59PUE
CN58PUE
CNPU5 0076 CN79PUE(1) CN78PUE(1) CN77PUE(1) CN76PUE(1) CN75PUE(1) CN74PUE(1)
CNPU6 0078
Legend:
Note 1:
—
—
—
—
—
— = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
—
CN57PUE(1)
CN56PUE
CN55PUE
CN54PUE
CN53PUE
CN52PUE
CN73PUE
CN72PUE
CN71PUE
CN70PUE(1)
CN69PUE
CN68PUE
—
—
—
—
—
—
CN51PUE
CN50PUE
CN67PUE(1) CN66PUE(1)
CN83PUE
CN82PUE(1) CN81PUE(1) CN80PUE(1)
0000
0000
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 50
TABLE 4-4:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-5:
File
Name
INTERRUPT CONTROLLER REGISTER MAP
All
Resets
OSCFAIL
—
0000
INT1EP
INT0EP
0000
OC1IF
IC1IF
INT0IF
0000
CNIF
CMIF
MI2C1IF
SI2C1IF
0000
DMA3IF
—
—
SPI2IF
SPF2IF
0000
INT3IF
—
—
MI2C2IF
SI2C2IF
—
0000
—
—
—
CRCIF
U2ERIF
U1ERIF
—
0000
U4ERIF
USB1IF
—
—
U3TXIF
U3RXIF
U3ERIF
—
0000
AMP2IF
AMP1IF
—
—
LCDIF
—
—
—
—
0000
—
—
—
—
JTAGIF
—
—
—
—
—
0000
SPI1IE
SPF1IE
T3IE
T2IE
OC2IE
IC2IE
DMA0IE
T1IE
OC1IE
IC1IE
INT0IE
0000
T4IE
OC4IE
OC3IE
DMA2IE
IC8IE
IC7IE
—
INT1IE
CNIE
CMIE
MI2C1IE
SI2C1IE
0000
OC8IE
OC7IE
OC6IE
OC5IE
IC6IE
IC5IE
IC4IE
IC3IE
DMA3IE
—
—
SPI2IE
SPF2IE
0000
DMA5IE
—
—
—
—
—
—
INT4IE
INT3IE
—
—
MI2C2IE
SI2C2IE
—
0000
DAC1IE
CTMUIE
—
—
—
—
HLVDIE
—
—
—
—
CRCIE
U2ERIE
U1ERIE
—
0000
—
—
IC9IE
OC9IE
—
—
U4TXIE
U4RXIE
U4ERIE
USB1IE
—
—
U3TXIE
U3RXIE
U3ERIE
—
0000
00A0
—
—
—
—
—
FSTIE
SDA1IE
AMP2IE
AMP1IE
—
—
LCDIE
—
—
—
—
0000
IEC7
00A2
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
JTAGIE
—
—
—
—
—
0000
IPC0
00A4
—
T1IP2
T1IP1
T1IP0
—
OC1IP2
OC1IP1
OC1IP0
—
IC1IP2
IC1IP1
IC1IP0
—
INT0IP2
INT0IP1
INT0IP0
4444
IPC1
00A6
—
T2IP2
T2IP1
T2IP0
—
OC2IP2
OC2IP1
OC2IP0
—
IC2IP2
IC2IP1
IC2IP0
—
DMA0IP2
DMA0IP1
DMA0IP0
4444
IPC2
00A8
—
U1RXIP2
U1RXIP1
U1RXIP0
—
SPI1IP2
SPI1IP1
SPI1IP0
—
SPF1IP2
SPF1IP1
SPF1IP0
—
T3IP2
T3IP1
T3IP0
4444
IPC3
00AA
—
—
—
—
—
DMA1IP2
DMA1IP1
DMA1IP0
—
AD1IP2
AD1IP1
AD1IP0
—
U1TXIP2
U1TXIP1
U1TXIP0
0444
IPC4
00AC
—
CNIP2
CNIP1
CNIP0
—
CMIP2
CMIP1
CMIP0
—
—
SI2C1IP2
SI2C1IP1
SI2C1IP0
4444
IPC5
00AE
—
IC8IP2
IC8IP1
IC8IP0
—
IC7IP2
IC7IP1
IC7IP0
—
—
—
—
—
INT1IP2
INT1IP1
INT1IP0
4404
IPC6
00B0
—
T4IP2
T4IP1
T4IP0
—
OC4IP2
OC4IP1
OC4IP0
—
OC3IP2
OC3IP1
OC3IP0
—
DMA2IP2
DMA2IP1
DMA2IP0
4444
IPC7
00B2
—
U2TXIP2
U2TXIP1
U2TXIP0
—
U2RXIP2
U2RXIP1
U2RXIP0
—
INT2IP2
INT2IP1
INT2IP0
—
T5IP2
T5IP1
T5IP0
4444
IPC8
00B4
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
SPI2IP2
SPI2IP1
SPI2IP0
—
SPF2IP2
SPF2IP1
SPF2IP0
0044
IPC9
00B6
—
IC5IP2
IC5IP1
IC5IP0
—
IC4IP2
IC4IP1
IC4IP0
—
IC3IP2
IC3IP1
IC3IP0
—
DMA3IP2
DMA3IP1
DMA3IP0
4444
IPC10
00B8
—
OC7IP2
OC7IP1
OC7IP0
—
OC6IP2
OC6IP1
OC6IP0
—
OC5IP2
OC5IP1
OC5IP0
—
IC6IP2
IC6IP1
IC6IP0
4444
IPC11
00BA
—
—
—
—
—
DMA4IP2
DMA4IP1
DMA4IP0
—
PMPIP2
PMPIP1
PMPIP0
—
OC8IP2
OC8IP1
OC8IP0
0444
IPC12
00BC
—
—
—
—
—
MI2C2IP2 MI2C2IP1 MI2C2IP0
—
SI2C2IP2
SI2C2IP1
SI2C2IP0
—
—
—
—
0440
IPC13
00BE
—
—
—
—
—
INT4IP2
INT4IP1
INT4IP0
—
INT3IP2
INT3IP1
INT3IP0
—
—
—
—
0440
IPC15
00C2
—
—
—
—
—
RTCIP2
RTCIP1
RTCIP0
—
DMA5IP2
DMA5IP1
DMA5IP0
—
—
—
—
0440
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
INTCON1
0080
INTCON2
0082
IFS0
NSTDIS
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ALTIVT
DISI
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
INT4EP
INT3EP
INT2EP
0084
—
DMA1IF
AD1IF
U1TXIF
U1RXIF
SPI1IF
SPF1IF
T3IF
T2IF
OC2IF
IC2IF
DMA0IF
T1IF
IFS1
0086
U2TXIF
U2RXIF
INT2IF
T5IF
T4IF
OC4IF
OC3IF
DMA2IF
IC8IF
IC7IF
—
INT1IF
IFS2
0088
—
DMA4IF
PMPIF
OC8IF
OC7IF
OC6IF
OC5IF
IC6IF
IC5IF
IC4IF
IC3IF
IFS3
008A
—
RTCIF
DMA5IF
—
—
—
—
—
—
INT4IF
IFS4
008C
DAC2IF
DAC1IF
CTMUIF
—
—
—
—
HLVDIF
—
IFS5
008E
—
—
IC9IF
OC9IF
—
—
U4TXIF
U4RXIF
IFS6
0090
—
—
—
—
—
FSTIF
SDA1IF
IFS7
0092
—
—
—
—
—
—
IEC0
0094
—
DMA1IE
AD1IE
U1TXIE
U1RXIE
IEC1
0096
U2TXIE
U2RXIE
INT2IE
T5IE
IEC2
0098
—
DMA4IE
PMPIE
IEC3
009A
—
RTCIE
IEC4
009C
DAC2IE
IEC5
009E
IEC6
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, maintain as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
MATHERR ADDRERR STKERR
MI2C1IP2 MI2C1IP1 MI2C1IP0
Bit 1
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 51
Bit 0
Addr
File
Name
INTERRUPT CONTROLLER REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
Bit 0
All
Resets
—
—
4440
HLVDIP1
HLVDIP0
0004
—
—
4440
—
—
—
4440
—
—
—
—
4400
U4TXIP0
—
U4RXIP2
U4RXIP1
U4RXIP0
0044
IC9IP1
IC9IP0
—
OC9IP2
OC9IP1
OC9IP0
0044
—
—
—
—
LCDIP2
LCDIP1
LCDIP0
4004
—
SDA1IP2
SDA1IP1
SDA1IP0
—
AMP2IP2
AMP2IP1
AMP2IP0
0444
—
—
JTAGIP2
JTAGIP1
JTAGIP0
—
—
—
—
0040
ILR0
—
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
IPC16
00C4
—
CRCIP2
CRCIP1
CRCIP0
—
U2ERIP2
U2ERIP1
U2ERIP0
—
U1ERIP2
U1ERIP1
U1ERIP0
—
—
IPC18
00C8
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
HLVDIP2
IPC19
00CA
—
DAC2IP2
DAC2IP1
DAC2IP0
—
DAC1IP2
DAC1IP1
DAC1IP0
—
CTMUIP2 CTMUIP1 CTMUIP0
—
—
IPC20
00CC
—
U3TXIP2
U3TXIP1
U3TXIP0
—
U3RXIP2
U3RXIP1
U3RXIP0
—
U3ERIP2
U3ERIP1
U3ERIP0
—
IPC21
00CE
—
U4ERIP2
U4ERIP1
U4ERIP0
—
USB1IP2
USB1IP1
USB1IP0
—
—
—
—
IPC22
00D0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
U4TXIP2
U4TXIP1
IPC23
00D2
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC9IP2
IPC25
00D6
—
AMP1IP2
AMP1IP1
AMP1IP0
—
—
—
—
—
IPC26
00D8
—
—
—
—
—
FSTIP2
FSTIP1
FSTIP0
IPC29
00DE
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
CPUIRQ
r
VHOLD
—
ILR3
ILR2
ILR1
INTTREG 00E0
Bit 2
Bit 1
VECNUM6 VECNUM5 VECNUM4 VECNUM3 VECNUM2 VECNUM1 VECNUM0
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, maintain as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-6:
File
Name
Addr
TIMER REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TMR1
0100
Timer1 Register
PR1
0102
Timer1 Period Register
T1CON
0104
TMR2
0106
Timer2 Register
TMR3HLD
0108
Timer3 Holding Register (for 32-bit timer operations only)
0000
TMR3
010A
Timer3 Register
0000
PR2
010C
Timer2 Period Register
FFFF
PR3
010E
Timer3 Period Register
T2CON
0110
TON
—
TSIDL
—
—
—
TIECS1
TIECS0
—
TGATE
TCKPS1
TCKPS0
T32
—
TCS
—
T3CON
0112
TON
—
TSIDL
—
—
—
TIECS1
TIECS0
—
TGATE
TCKPS1
TCKPS0
—
—
TCS
—
TMR4
0114
Timer4 Register
TMR5HLD
0116
Timer5 Holding Register (for 32-bit operations only)
0000
TMR5
0118
Timer5 Register
0000
PR4
011A
Timer4 Period Register
FFFF
PR5
011C
Timer5 Period Register
T4CON
011E
TON
—
TSIDL
—
—
—
TIECS1
TIECS0
—
TGATE
TCKPS1
TCKPS0
T45
—
TCS
—
0000
T5CON
0120
TON
—
TSIDL
—
—
—
TIECS1
TIECS0
—
TGATE
TCKPS1
TCKPS0
—
—
TCS
—
0000
TON
—
TSIDL
—
—
—
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TIECS1
TIECS0
—
0000
FFFF
TGATE
TCKPS1
TCKPS0
—
TSYNC
TCS
—
0000
0000
FFFF
0000
0000
0000
FFFF
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 52
TABLE 4-5:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-7:
INPUT CAPTURE REGISTER MAP
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
0000
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
IC1CON1
0140
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
IC1CON2
0142
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
IC1BUF
0144
Input Capture 1 Buffer Register
IC1TMR
0146
Timer Value 1 Register
IC2CON1
0148
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC2CON2
014A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC2BUF
014C
Input Capture 2 Buffer Register
IC2TMR
014E
Timer Value 2 Register
IC3CON1
0150
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC3CON2
0152
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC3BUF
0154
Input Capture 3 Buffer Register
IC3TMR
0156
Timer Value 3 Register
IC4CON1
0158
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC4CON2
015A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC4BUF
015C
Input Capture 4 Buffer Register
IC4TMR
015E
Timer Value 4 Register
IC5CON1
0160
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC5CON2
0162
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC5BUF
0164
Input Capture 5 Buffer Register
IC5TMR
0166
Timer Value 5 Register
IC6CON1
0168
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC6CON2
016A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC6BUF
016C
Input Capture 6 Buffer Register
IC6TMR
016E
Timer Value 6 Register
IC7CON1
0170
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC7CON2
0172
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC7BUF
0174
Input Capture 7 Buffer Register
IC7TMR
0176
Timer Value 7 Register
IC8CON1
0178
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC8CON2
018A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC8BUF
018C
Input Capture 8 Buffer Register
IC8TMR
018E
Timer Value 8 Register
IC9CON1
0180
—
—
ICSIDL
ICTSEL2
ICTSEL1
ICTSEL0
—
—
—
ICI1
ICI0
IC9CON2
0182
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC32
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
IC9BUF
0184
Input Capture 9 Buffer Register
0000
IC9TMR
0186
Timer Value 9 Register
xxxx
Legend:
Bit 8
— = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
—
ICI1
ICI0
ICTRIG
TRIGSTAT
—
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
0000
xxxx
ICOV
ICBNE
ICM2
ICM1
ICM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000D
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 53
File
Name
OUTPUT COMPARE REGISTER MAP
File
Name
Addr
OC1CON1
0190
—
OC1CON2
0192
FLTMD
OC1RS
0194
Output Compare 1 Secondary Register
0000
OC1R
0196
Output Compare 1 Register
0000
OC1TMR
0198
Timer Value 1 Register
Bit 15
OC2CON1 019A
—
OC2CON2 019C
FLTMD
Bit 14
Bit 13
—
OCSIDL
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
—
OCSIDL
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
OCINV
—
DCB1
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
OCINV
—
DCB1
Bit 9
Bit 8
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
DCB0
OC32
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
0000
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
000C
xxxx
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
DCB0
OC32
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000C
OC2RS
019E
Output Compare 2 Secondary Register
0000
OC2R
01A0
Output Compare 2 Register
0000
OC2TMR
01A2
Timer Value 2 Register
OC3CON1 01A4
—
OC3CON2 01A6
FLTMD
—
OCSIDL
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
OCINV
—
DCB1
xxxx
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
DCB0
OC32
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000C
OC3RS
01A8
Output Compare 3 Secondary Register
0000
OC3R
01AA
Output Compare 3 Register
0000
OC3TMR
01AC
Timer Value 3 Register
OC4CON1 01AE
—
OC4CON2 01B0
FLTMD
—
OCSIDL
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
OCINV
—
DCB1
xxxx
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
DCB0
OC32
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000C
OC4RS
01B2
Output Compare 4 Secondary Register
0000
OC4R
01B4
Output Compare 4 Register
0000
OC4TMR
01B6
Timer Value 4 Register
OC5CON1 01B8
—
OC5CON2 01BA
FLTMD
—
OCSIDL
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
OCINV
—
DCB1
xxxx
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
ENFLT0
OCFLT1
OCFLT1
DCB0
OC32
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000C
OC5RS
01BC
Output Compare 5 Secondary Register
0000
OC5R
01BE
Output Compare 5 Register
0000
OC5TMR
01C0
Timer Value 5 Register
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
OC6CON1 01C2
—
OC6CON2 01C4
FLTMD
—
OCSIDL
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
OCINV
—
DCB1
xxxx
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
DCB0
OC32
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000C
OC6RS
01C6
Output Compare 6 Secondary Register
0000
OC6R
01C8
Output Compare 6 Register
0000
OC6TMR
01CA
Timer Value 6 Register
xxxx
Legend:
— = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 54
TABLE 4-8:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-8:
File
Name
OUTPUT COMPARE REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
Addr
Bit 15
OC7CON1 01CC
—
OC7CON2 01CE
FLTMD
Bit 14
Bit 13
—
OCSIDL
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
OCINV
—
DCB1
Bit 9
Bit 8
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
DCB0
OC32
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
0000
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
000C
OC7RS
01D0
Output Compare 7 Secondary Register
0000
OC7R
01D2
Output Compare 7 Register
0000
OC7TMR
01D4
Timer Value 7 Register
OC8CON1 01D6
—
—
OC8CON2 01D8
FLTMD
OCSIDL
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
OCINV
—
DCB1
xxxx
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
DCB0
OC32
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000C
OC8RS
01DA
Output Compare 8 Secondary Register
0000
OC8R
01DC
Output Compare 8 Register
0000
OC8TMR
01DE
Timer Value 8 Register
OC9CON1 01E0
—
—
OC9CON2 01E2
FLTMD
OCSIDL
OCTSEL2 OCTSEL1 OCTSEL0
FLTOUT FLTTRIEN
OCINV
—
DCB1
xxxx
ENFLT2
ENFLT1
ENFLT0
OCFLT2
OCFLT1
DCB0
OC32
OCTRIG
TRIGSTAT
OCTRIS
OCFLT0
TRIGMODE
OCM2
OCM1
OCM0
SYNCSEL4 SYNCSEL3 SYNCSEL2 SYNCSEL1 SYNCSEL0
0000
000C
01E4
Output Compare 9 Secondary Register
0000
OC9R
01E6
Output Compare 9 Register
0000
OC9TMR
01E8
Timer Value 9 Register
xxxx
Legend:
— = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
I2C REGISTER MAP
TABLE 4-9:
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
I2C1RCV
0200
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C1 Receive Register
I2C1TRN
0202
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C1 Transmit Register
I2C1BRG
0204
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2CEN
—
I2CSIDL
SCLREL
IPMIEN
A10M
DISSLW
SMEN
GCEN
STREN
ACKDT
ACKEN
RCEN
PEN
RSEN
SEN
—
—
—
BCL
GCSTAT
ADD10
IWCOL
I2COV
DAC
P
S
R/W
RBF
TBF
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
0000
00FF
Baud Rate Generator Register
0000
DS30009312D-page 55
I2C1CON
0206
I2C1STAT
0208
I2C1ADD
020A
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C1MSK
020C
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C2RCV
0210
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C2 Receive Register
I2C2TRN
0212
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C2 Transmit Register
I2C2BRG
0214
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2CEN
—
I2CSIDL
SCLREL
IPMIEN
A10M
DISSLW
SMEN
GCEN
STREN
ACKDT
ACKEN
RCEN
PEN
RSEN
SEN
—
—
—
BCL
GCSTAT
ADD10
IWCOL
I2COV
DAC
P
S
R/W
RBF
TBF
ACKSTAT TRSTAT
All
Resets
1000
0000
I2C1 Address Register
0000
I2C1 Address Mask Register
0000
0000
00FF
Baud Rate Generator Register
0000
I2C2CON
0216
I2C2STAT
0218
I2C2ADD
021A
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C2 Address Register
0000
I2C2MSK
021C
—
—
—
—
—
—
I2C2 Address Mask Register
0000
ACKSTAT TRSTAT
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
1000
0000
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
OC9RS
File
Name
Addr
U1MODE
0220
U1STA
0222
UART REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
UARTEN
—
USIDL
IREN
RTSMD
—
UEN1
UEN0
—
UTXBRK
UTXEN
UTXBF
TRMT
UTXISEL1 UTXINV UTXISEL0
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 0
All
Resets
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
WAKE
LPBACK
ABAUD
RXINV
BRGH
PDSEL1
PDSEL0
STSEL
0000
URXISEL1 URXISEL0 ADDEN
RIDLE
PERR
FERR
OERR
URXDA
0110
U1TXREG
0224
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART1 Transmit Register
xxxx
U1RXREG
0226
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART1 Receive Register
0000
U1BRG
0228
U2MODE
0230
U2STA
0232
Baud Rate Generator Prescaler Register
UARTEN
—
USIDL
UTXISEL1 UTXINV UTXISEL0
IREN
RTSMD
—
UEN1
UEN0
—
UTXBRK
UTXEN
UTXBF
TRMT
WAKE
LPBACK
0000
ABAUD
RXINV
BRGH
PDSEL1
PDSEL0
STSEL
0000
URXISEL1 URXISEL0 ADDEN
RIDLE
PERR
FERR
OERR
URXDA
0110
U2TXREG
0234
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART2 Transmit Register
xxxx
U2RXREG
0236
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART2 Receive Register
0000
U2BRG
0238
U3MODE
0250
U3STA
0252
Baud Rate Generator Prescaler Register
UARTEN
—
USIDL
UTXISEL1 UTXINV UTXISEL0
IREN
RTSMD
—
UEN1
UEN0
—
UTXBRK
UTXEN
UTXBF
TRMT
WAKE
LPBACK
0000
ABAUD
RXINV
BRGH
PDSEL1
PDSEL0
STSEL
0000
URXISEL1 URXISEL0 ADDEN
RIDLE
PERR
FERR
OERR
URXDA
0110
U3TXREG
0254
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART3 Transmit Register
xxxx
U3RXREG
0256
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART3 Receive Register
0000
U3BRG
0258
U4MODE
02B0
U4STA
02B2
Baud Rate Generator Prescaler Register
UARTEN
—
USIDL
UTXISEL1 UTXINV UTXISEL0
IREN
RTSMD
—
UEN1
UEN0
—
UTXBRK
UTXEN
UTXBF
TRMT
WAKE
LPBACK
0000
ABAUD
RXINV
BRGH
PDSEL1
PDSEL0
STSEL
0000
URXISEL1 URXISEL0 ADDEN
RIDLE
PERR
FERR
OERR
URXDA
0110
U4TXREG
02B4
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART4 Transmit Register
xxxx
U4RXREG
02B6
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UART4 Receive Register
0000
U4BRG
02B8
Baud Rate Generator Prescaler Register
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-11:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
File
Name
SPI REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
SPI1STAT
0240
SPIEN
—
SPISIDL
—
—
SPI1CON1
0242
—
—
—
DISSCK
DISSDO
MODE16
SPI1CON2
0244
FRMEN
SPIFSD
SPIFPOL
—
—
—
SPI1BUF
0248
SPI2STAT
0260
Bit 9
Bit 8
SPIBEC2 SPIBEC1 SPIBEC0
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
SRMPT
SPIROV
SRXMPT
SISEL2
SISEL1
SISEL0
SPITBF
SPIRBF
0000
SMP
CKE
SSEN
CKP
MSTEN
SPRE2
SPRE1
SPRE0
PPRE1
PPRE0
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
SPIFE
SPIBEN
0000
SPIRBF
0000
SPI1 Transmit and Receive Buffer Register
SPIEN
—
SPISIDL
—
—
All
Resets
SPIBEC2 SPIBEC1 SPIBEC0
0000
SRMPT
SPIROV
SRXMPT
SISEL2
SISEL1
SISEL0
SPITBF
SPI2CON1
0262
—
—
—
DISSCK
DISSDO
MODE16
SMP
CKE
SSEN
CKP
MSTEN
SPRE2
SPRE1
SPRE0
PPRE1
PPRE0
0000
SPI2CON2
0264
FRMEN
SPIFSD
SPIFPOL
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
SPIFE
SPIBEN
0000
SPI2BUF
0268
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
SPI2 Transmit and Receive Buffer Register
0000
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 56
TABLE 4-10:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-12:
File
Name
Addr
OP AMP REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
AMP1CON
024A
AMPEN
—
AMPSIDL AMPSLP
INTPOL1 INTPOL0
CMOUT
CMPSEL
SPDSEL
AMPOE
NINSEL2 NINSEL1 NINSEL0 PINSEL2
PINSEL1
PINSEL0
0000
AMP2CON
024C
AMPEN
—
AMPSIDL AMPSLP
INTPOL1 INTPOL0
CMOUT
CMPSEL
SPDSEL
AMPOE
NINSEL2 NINSEL1 NINSEL0 PINSEL2
PINSEL1
PINSEL0
0000
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-13:
File
Name
Addr
PORTA REGISTER MAP(1)
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit2
TRISA
02C0
TRISA
—
—
—
TRISA
—
TRISA
C6FF
PORTA
02C2
RA
—
—
—
RA
—
RA
xxxx
LATA
02C4
LATA
—
—
—
LATA
—
LATA
xxxx
ODCA
02C6
ODA
—
—
—
ODA
—
ODA
0000
TABLE 4-14:
File
Name
Addr
PORTB REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
TRISB
02C8
TRISB
—
—
—
—
TRISB
F0FF
PORTB
02CA
RB
—
—
—
—
RB
xxxx
LATB
02CC
LATB
—
—
—
—
LATB
xxxx
ODCB
02CE
ODB
—
—
—
—
ODB
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
DS30009312D-page 57
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal. Reset values shown are for 100/121-pin devices.
Note 1: PORTA and all associated bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices.
File
Name
PORTC REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
TRISC15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
—
—
TRISC12
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Bit 4(1)
Bit 0
All
Resets
TRISC
—
901E
RC
—
xxxx
Bit 3(1)
Bit 2(1)
Bit 1(1)
TRISC
02D0
PORTC
02D2
LATC
02D4
LATC15
—
—
LATC12
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
LATC
—
xxxx
ODCC
02D6
ODC15
—
—
ODC12
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ODC
—
0000
Bit 0
All
Resets
Legend:
Note 1:
2:
3:
4:
— = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal. Reset values shown are for 100/121-pin devices.
These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
RC12 and RC15 are only available when the Primary Oscillator is disabled or when EC mode is selected (POSCMD Configuration bits = 11 or 00); otherwise read as ‘0’.
RC15 is only available when the POSCMD Configuration bits = 11 or 00 and the OSCIOFCN Configuration bit = 1.
RC13 and RC14 are input ports only and cannot be used as output ports.
TABLE 4-16:
File
Name
RC(2,3,4)
Addr
PORTD REGISTER MAP
Bit 15(1)
Bit 14(1)
Bit 13(1)
Bit 12(1)
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
TRISD
02D8
TRISD
PORTD
02DA
RD
xxxx
LATD
02DC
LATD
xxxx
ODCD
02DE
ODD
0000
FFFF
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal. Reset values shown are for 100/121-pin devices.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
TABLE 4-17:
File
Name
PORTE REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9(1)
Bit 8(1)
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TRISE
02E0
—
—
—
—
—
—
TRISE
03FF
PORTE
02E2
—
—
—
—
—
—
RE
xxxx
LATE
02E4
—
—
—
—
—
—
LATE
xxxx
ODCE
02E6
—
—
—
—
—
—
ODE
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal. Reset values shown are for 100/121-pin devices.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 58
TABLE 4-15:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
‘
TABLE 4-18:
File
Name
PORTF REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13(1)
Bit 12(1)
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8(1)
Bit 7(1)
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
All
Resets
Bit 0
TRISF
02E8
—
—
TRISF
—
—
—
TRISF
—
TRISF
31BF
PORTF
02EA
—
—
RF
—
—
—
RF
—
RF
xxxx
LATF
02EC
—
—
LATF
—
—
—
LATF
—
LATF
xxxx
ODCF
02EE
—
—
ODF
—
—
—
ODF
—
ODF
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal. Reset values shown are for 100/121-pin devices.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
TABLE 4-19:
File
Name
Addr
PORTG REGISTER MAP
Bit 15(1)
Bit 14(1)
Bit 13(1)
Bit 12(1)
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1(1)
All
Resets
Bit 0(1)
02F0
TRISG
—
—
TRISG
—
—
TRISG
F3CF
02F2
RG
—
—
RG
—
—
RG
xxxx
LATG
02F4
LATG
—
—
LATG
—
—
LATG
xxxx
ODCG
02F6
ODG
—
—
ODG
—
—
ODG
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal. Reset values shown are for 100/121-pin devices.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
TABLE 4-20:
File
Name
PADCFG1
PAD CONFIGURATION REGISTER MAP (PADCFG1)
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
02FC
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
PMPTTL
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-21:
File
Name
Addr
CTMUCON1 078A
CTMU REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
CTMUEN
—
CTMUSIDL
TGEN
EDGEN
EDGSEQEN
IDISSEN
CTTRIG
—
—
—
—
—
—
DS30009312D-page 59
—
—
0000
CTMUCON2 078C EDG1MOD EDG1POL EDG1SEL3 EDG1SEL2 EDG1SEL1 EDG1SEL0 EDG2STAT EDG1STAT EDG2MOD EDG2POL EDG2SEL3 EDG2SEL2 EDG2SEL1 EDG2SEL0
—
—
0000
CTMUICON
—
—
0000
Legend:
078E
ITRIM5
ITRIM4
ITRIM3
ITRIM2
ITRIM1
— = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
ITRIM0
IRNG1
IRNG0
—
—
—
—
—
—
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TRISG
PORTG
DAC REGISTER MAP
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
DAC1CON
0440
DACEN
—
DAC1DAT
0442
DAC2CON
0444
DAC2DAT
0446
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
—
—
DACTRIG
—
DACSIDL DACSLP DACFM
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
DACTSEL4 DACTSEL3 DACTSEL2 DACTSEL1 DACTSEL0 DACREF1 DACREF0
DAC1 Input Value Register
DACEN
—
DACSIDL DACSLP DACFM
—
—
DACTRIG
—
All
Resets
0000
0000
DACTSEL4 DACTSEL3 DACTSEL2 DACTSEL1 DACTSEL0 DACREF1 DACREF0
DAC2 Input Value Register
0000
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-23:
SIGMA-DELTA A/D REGISTER MAP
File
Name
Addr
SD1CON1
04D0
SD1CON2
04D2
SDDIV2
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
SDON
—
SDSIDL
SDRST
r
CHOP1
CHOP0
SDINT1
SDINT0
—
SDDIV1
SDDIV0
SDOSR2 SDOSR1 SDOSR0
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
SDGAIN2 SDGAIN1 SDGAIN0 DITHER1 DITHER0
—
Bit 5
—
SDWM1
SDWM0
—
—
—
SDCS1
SDCS0
—
—
—
Bit 4
Bit 3
VOSCAL
—
RNDRES1 RNDRES0
—
—
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
SDREFN SDREFP PWRLVL
All
Resets
0000
—
—
SDRDY
0000
SDCH2
SDCH1
SDCH0
0000
SD1CON3
04D4
SD1RESH
04D6
Sigma-Delta A/D Result Register (bits)
0000
SD1RESL
04D8
Sigma-Delta A/D Result Register (bits)
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-24:
File
Name
Addr
ANCFG 04DE
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
ANSA
04E0
ANSB
04E2
ANSC
04E4
ANSD
ANALOG CONFIGURATION REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
—
—
—
—
—
—
ANSA(1)
ANSB
—
—
—
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
—
—
—
—
—
—
ANSA(1)
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
04E6
ANSD
ANSE(2) 04E8
—
ANSF
—
ANSG
—
Bit 10
04EA
(1)
04EC ANSG15
—
—
—
—
—
ANSE9
—
ANSF13(1)
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
VBG2EN
—
—
0000
—
ANSA1(1)
—
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
—
—
—
—
—
ANSA(1)
ANSB
—
—
—
ANSC(1)
—
(1)
—
ANSF(1)
ANSE
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: The ANSAx, ANSCx, ANSD, ANSF and ANSG15 bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
2: This register is not available in 64-pin devices.
—
ANSF(1)
—
ANSG
—
—
—
—
C6F2
F0FF
—
ANSC1(1)
—
—
ANSD0
FFFD
—
—
02F0
—
ANSF0
21BD
—
—
83C0
001A
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 60
TABLE 4-22:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-25:
12-BIT PIPELINE A/D CONVERTER REGISTER MAP
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
ADCON1
0500
ADON
—
ADCON2
0502 PVCFG1 PVCFG0
ADCON3
0504
ADTMRPR
0506
ADSTATH
050A
Bit 12
Bit 11
ADSIDL
ADSLP
—
NVCFG0
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
—
—
PWRLVL
0000
—
RFPUMP
r
0300
ADCS2
ADCS1
ADCS0
0000
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
FORM3
FORM2
FORM1
FORM0
PUMPEN
ADCAL
—
—
—
—
BUFORG
r
r
r
r
—
—
—
SLEN1
SLEN0
ADCS7
ADCS6
ADCS5
ADCS4
ADCS3
—
—
—
ADRC
—
—
—
SLEN3
SLEN2
—
—
—
—
—
—
A/D Trigger Timer Period Value Register
—
—
—
—
0000
PUMPST ADREADY ADBUSY 0000
0508
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
SLOV
—
—
r
ACCIF
SL3IF
SL2IF
SL1IF
SL0IF
0000
051E
ASEN
SLINT1
SLINT0
WM1
WM0
CM2
CM1
CM0
CTMEN
r
MULCHEN
SAMC4
SAMC3
SAMC2
SAMC1
SAMC0
0000
ADL0CONL
051C
SLEN
SAMP
ADL1CONH
053A
ASEN
SLINT1
ADL1CONL
0538
SLEN
SAMP
ADL2CONH
0556
ASEN
SLINT1
ADL2CONL
0554
SLEN
SAMP
ADL3CONH
0402
ASEN
SLINT1
ADL3CONL
0400
SLEN
SAMP
ADL0PTR
0520
—
ADNEXT
ADL1PTR
053C
—
ADL2PTR
0558
ADL3PTR
0404
SLENCLR SLTSRC4 SLTSRC3 SLTSRC2 SLTSRC1 SLTSRC0
SLINT0
WM1
WM0
CM2
CM1
CM0
SLENCLR SLTSRC4 SLTSRC3 SLTSRC2 SLTSRC1 SLTSRC0
SLINT0
WM1
WM0
CM2
CM1
CM0
THSRC
—
—
SLSIZE4
SLSIZE3
SLSIZE2
SLSIZE1
SLSIZE0
0000
CTMEN
r
MULCHEN
SAMC4
SAMC3
SAMC2
SAMC1
SAMC0
0000
THSRC
—
—
SLSIZE4
SLSIZE3
SLSIZE2
SLSIZE1
SLSIZE0
0000
CTMEN
r
MULCHEN
SAMC4
SAMC3
SAMC2
SAMC1
SAMC0
0000
THSRC
—
—
SLSIZE4
SLSIZE3
SLSIZE2
SLSIZE1
SLSIZE0
0000
CTMEN
r
MULCHEN
SAMC4
SAMC3
SAMC2
SAMC1
SAMC0
0000
THSRC
—
—
SLSIZE4
SLSIZE3
SLSIZE2
SLSIZE1
SLSIZE0
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
0000
ADNEXT
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
0000
—
ADNEXT
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
0000
—
ADNEXT
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
0000
SLENCLR SLTSRC4 SLTSRC3 SLTSRC2 SLTSRC1 SLTSRC0
SLINT0
WM1
WM0
CM2
CM1
CM0
SLENCLR SLTSRC4 SLTSRC3 SLTSRC2 SLTSRC1 SLTSRC0
ADL0STAT
0522 ADTACT
LBUSY
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADTDLY
—
ADLIF
—
—
—
—
—
0000
ADL1STAT
053E ADTACT
LBUSY
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADTDLY
—
ADLIF
—
—
—
—
—
0000
ADL2STAT
055A ADTACT
LBUSY
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADTDLY
—
ADLIF
—
—
—
—
—
0000
ADL3STAT
0406 ADTACT
LBUSY
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADTDLY
—
ADLIF
—
—
—
—
—
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
DS30009312D-page 61
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
ADSTATL
ADL0CONH
File
Name
12-BIT PIPELINE A/D CONVERTER REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
ADTBL0
0300
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL1
0302
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL2
0304
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL3
0306
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL4
0308
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL5
030A
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL6
030C
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL7
030E
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL8
0310
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL9
0312
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL10
0314
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL11
0316
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL12
0318
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL13
031A
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL14
031C
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL15
031E
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL16
0320
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL17
0322
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL18
0324
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL19
0326
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL20
0328
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL21
032A
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL22
032C
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL23
032E
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL24
0330
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL25
0332
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL26
0334
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL27
0336
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL28
0338
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL29
033A
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL30
033C
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
ADTBL31
033E
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 62
TABLE 4-25:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-25:
12-BIT PIPELINE A/D CONVERTER REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
Addr
ADRES0
0340
A/D Result Register 0
0000
ADRES1
0342
A/D Result Register 1
0000
ADRES2
0344
A/D Result Register 2
0000
ADRES3
0346
A/D Result Register 3
0000
ADRES4
0348
A/D Result Register 4
0000
ADRES5
034A
A/D Result Register 5
0000
ADRES6
034C
A/D Result Register 6
0000
ADRES7
034E
A/D Result Register 7
0000
ADRES8
0350
A/D Result Register 8
0000
ADRES9
0352
A/D Result Register 9
0000
ADRES10
0354
A/D Result Register 10
0000
ADRES11
0356
A/D Result Register 11
0000
ADRES12
0358
A/D Result Register 12
0000
ADRES13
035A
A/D Result Register 13
0000
ADRES14
035C
A/D Result Register 14
0000
ADRES15
035E
A/D Result Register 15
0000
ADRES16
0360
A/D Result Register 16
0000
ADRES17
0362
A/D Result Register 17
0000
ADRES18
0364
A/D Result Register 18
0000
ADRES19
0366
A/D Result Register 19
0000
ADRES20
0368
A/D Result Register 20
0000
ADRES21
036A
A/D Result Register 21
0000
ADRES22
036C
A/D Result Register 22
0000
ADRES23
036E
A/D Result Register 23
0000
ADRES24
0370
A/D Result Register 24
0000
ADRES25
0372
A/D Result Register 25
0000
ADRES26
0374
A/D Result Register 26
0000
ADRES27
0376
A/D Result Register 27
0000
ADRES28
0378
A/D Result Register 28
0000
ADRES29
037A
A/D Result Register 29
0000
ADRES30
037C
A/D Result Register 30
0000
ADRES31
037E
A/D Result Register 31
0000
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 63
File
Name
File
Name
12-BIT PIPELINE A/D CONVERTER REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
ACCONH
050E
—
—
—
ACCONL
050C
—
—
TBLSEL5
Bit 12
Bit 11
—
—
TBLSEL4 TBLSEL3
Bit 10
—
TBLSEL2
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
—
—
ACEN
ACIE
—
TBLSEL1 TBLSEL0 COUNT7 COUNT6 COUNT5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
—
—
—
COUNT4 COUNT3 COUNT2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
—
—
0000
COUNT1 COUNT0 0000
ACRESH
0512
A/D Accumulation High Result Register (bits)
0000
ACRESL
0510
A/D Accumulation Low Result Register (bits)
0000
ADCHITH
0516
CHH
0000
ADCHITL
0514
CHH
0000
ADTH0H
0526
TH
0000
ADTH0L
0524
TH
0000
ADTH1H
0542
TH
0000
ADTH1L
0540
TH
0000
ADTH2H
055E
TH
0000
ADTH2L
055C
TH
0000
ADTH3H
040A
TH
0000
ADTH3L
0408
TH
ADL0MSEL3 052E
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADL0MSEL2 052C
—
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
MSEL
ADL0MSEL1 052A
MSEL
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADL1MSEL3 054A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ADL1MSEL2 0548
—
0000
MSEL
0000
0000
MSEL
ADL1MSEL0 0544 MSEL15
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
MSEL
ADL2MSEL1 0562
MSEL
ADL2MSEL0 0560 MSEL15
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
MSEL
MSEL
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
—
—
0000
MSEL
0000
0000
—
ADL3MSEL1 040E
—
0000
—
ADL3MSEL2 0410
ADL3MSEL0 040C MSEL15
0000
—
ADL2MSEL2 0564
ADL3MSEL3 0412
—
MSEL
ADL1MSEL1 0546
0000
0000
ADL0MSEL0 0528 MSEL15
ADL2MSEL3 0566
MSEL
—
—
0000
MSEL
0000
0000
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
0000
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 64
TABLE 4-25:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-26:
DMA REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
DMACON
0380
DMAEN
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
PRSSEL
0000
DMABUF
0382
DMA Transfer Data Buffer Register
0000
DMAL
0384
DMA High Address Limit Register
0000
DMAH
0386
DMA Low Address Limit Register
DMACH0
0388
—
—
—
—
—
NULLW
RELOAD
CHREQ
DMAINT0
038A
DBUFWF
—
CHSEL5
CHSEL4
CHSEL3
CHSEL2
CHSEL1
CHSEL0
DMASRC0
038C
DMA Channel 0 Source Address Register
0000
DMADST0
038E
DMA Channel 0 Destination Address Register
0000
DMACNT0
0390
DMA Channel 0 Transaction Count Register
DMACH1
0392
—
—
—
—
—
NULLW
RELOAD
CHREQ
DMAINT1
0394
DBUFWF
—
CHSEL5
CHSEL4
CHSEL3
CHSEL2
CHSEL1
CHSEL0
DMASRC1
0396
DMA Channel 1 Source Address Register
0000
DMADST1
0398
DMA Channel 1 Destination Address Register
0000
DMACNT1
039A
DMA Channel 1 Transaction Count Register
DMACH2
039C
—
—
—
—
—
NULLW
RELOAD
CHREQ
DMAINT2
039E
DBUFWF
—
CHSEL5
CHSEL4
CHSEL3
CHSEL2
CHSEL1
CHSEL0
DMASRC2
03A0
DMA Channel 2 Source Address Register
0000
DMADST2
03A2
DMA Channel 2 Destination Address Register
0000
DMACNT2
03A4
DMA Channel 2 Transaction Count Register
DMACH3
03A6
—
—
—
—
—
NULLW
RELOAD
CHREQ
DMAINT3
03A8
DBUFWF
—
CHSEL5
CHSEL4
CHSEL3
CHSEL2
CHSEL1
CHSEL0
DMASRC3
03AA
DMA Channel 3 Source Address Register
0000
DMADST3
03AC
DMA Channel 3 Destination Address Register
0000
DMACNT3
03AE
DMA Channel 3 Transaction Count Register
DMACH4
03B0
—
—
—
—
—
NULLW
RELOAD
CHREQ
DMAINT4
03B2
DBUFWF
—
CHSEL5
CHSEL4
CHSEL3
CHSEL2
CHSEL1
CHSEL0
DMASRC4
03B4
DMA Channel 4 Source Address Register
0000
DMADST4
03B6
DMA Channel 4 Destination Address Register
0000
DMACNT4
03B8
DMA Channel 4 Transaction Count Register
DMACH5
03BA
—
—
—
—
—
NULLW
RELOAD
CHREQ
DMAINT5
03BC
DBUFWF
—
CHSEL5
CHSEL4
CHSEL3
CHSEL2
CHSEL1
CHSEL0
DMASRC5
03BE
DMA Channel 5 Source Address Register
0000
DMADST5
03C0
DMA Channel 5 Destination Address Register
0000
DMACNT5
03C2
DMA Channel 5 Transaction Count Register
0001
Legend:
— = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
0000
SAMODE1 SAMODE0 DAMODE1 DAMODE0 TRMODE1 TRMODE0
HIGHIF
LOWIF
DONEIF
HALFIF
OVRUNIF
—
LOWIF
DONEIF
HALFIF
OVRUNIF
—
LOWIF
DONEIF
HALFIF
OVRUNIF
—
LOWIF
DONEIF
HALFIF
OVRUNIF
—
LOWIF
DONEIF
HALFIF
OVRUNIF
—
LOWIF
SIZE
CHEN
0000
—
HALFEN
0000
SIZE
CHEN
0000
—
HALFEN
0000
SIZE
CHEN
0000
—
HALFEN
0000
SIZE
CHEN
0000
—
HALFEN
0000
0001
SAMODE1 SAMODE0 DAMODE1 DAMODE0 TRMODE1 TRMODE0
HIGHIF
0000
0001
SAMODE1 SAMODE0 DAMODE1 DAMODE0 TRMODE1 TRMODE0
HIGHIF
HALFEN
0001
SAMODE1 SAMODE0 DAMODE1 DAMODE0 TRMODE1 TRMODE0
HIGHIF
0000
—
0001
SAMODE1 SAMODE0 DAMODE1 DAMODE0 TRMODE1 TRMODE0
HIGHIF
CHEN
0001
SAMODE1 SAMODE0 DAMODE1 DAMODE0 TRMODE1 TRMODE0
HIGHIF
SIZE
DONEIF
HALFIF
OVRUNIF
—
SIZE
CHEN
0000
—
HALFEN
0000
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 65
Addr
File Name
USB OTG REGISTER MAP
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
U1OTGIR
0480
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IDIF
T1MSECIF
LSTATEIF
U1OTGIE
0482
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IDIE
T1MSECIE
LSTATEIE
U1OTGSTAT
0484
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ID
—
LSTATE
—
U1OTGCON
0486
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
DPPULUP
DMPULUP
U1PWRC
0488
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UACTPND
—
—
048A(1)
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
STALLIF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
STALLIF
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
U1IR
U1IE
U1EIR
U1EIE
048C(1)
048E(1)
0490(1)
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 0
All
Resets
—
VBUSVDIF
0000
—
VBUSVDIE
0000
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
ACTVIF
SESVDIF
SESENDIF
ACTVIE
SESVDIE SESENDIE
SESVD
SESEND
—
VBUSVD
0000
r
OTGEN
r
VBUSDIS
0000
USLPGRD
—
—
USUSPND
USBPWR
00x0
RESUMEIF
IDLEIF
TRNIF
SOFIF
UERRIF
URSTIF
0000
ATTACHIF(1)
RESUMEIF
IDLEIF
TRNIF
SOFIF
UERRIF
DETACHIF(1)
0000
STALLIE
—
RESUMEIE
IDLEIE
TRNIE
SOFIE
UERRIE
URSTIE
0000
—
STALLIE
ATTACHIE(1)
RESUMEIE
IDLEIE
TRNIE
SOFIE
UERRIE
—
—
BTSEF
—
DMAEF
BTOEF
DFN8EF
CRC16EF
CRC5EF
PIDEF
0000
—
—
BTSEF
—
DMAEF
BTOEF
DFN8EF
CRC16EF
EOFEF(1)
PIDEF
0000
—
—
—
BTSEE
—
DMAEE
BTOEE
DFN8EE
CRC16EE
CRC5EE
PIDEE
0000
—
—
—
—
BTSEE
—
DMAEE
BTOEE
DFN8EE
CRC16EE
EOFEE(1)
PIDEE
0000
DPPULDWN DMPULDWN
DETACHIE(1) 0000
U1STAT
0492
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ENDPT3
ENDPT2
ENDPT1
ENDPT0
DIR
PPBI
—
—
0000
U1CON
0494(1)
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
SE0
PKTDIS
—
HOSTEN
RESUME
PPBRST
USBEN
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
JSTATE(1)
SE0
TOKBUSY
USBRST
HOSTEN
RESUME
PPBRST
SOFEN(1)
0000
LSPDEN(1)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
U1ADDR
0496
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
USB Device Address (ADDR) Register
U1BDTP1
0498
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Buffer Descriptor Table Base Address Register
U1FRML
049A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Frame Count Register Low Byte
U1FRMH
049C
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Frame Count Register High Byte
U1TOK(2)
049E
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
U1SOF(2)
04A0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
U1CNFG1
04A6
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UTEYE
UOEMON
—
USBSIDL
U1CNFG2
04A8
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UVCMPSEL
U1EP0
04AA
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
LSPD(1)
RETRYDIS(1)
U1EP1
04AC
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
U1EP2
04AE
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
U1EP3
04B0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
U1EP4
04B2
—
—
—
—
—
—
U1EP5
04B4
—
—
—
—
—
U1EP6
04B6
—
—
—
—
U1EP7
04B8
—
—
—
U1EP8
04BA
—
—
U1EP9
04BC
—
U1EP10
04BE
—
PID3
PID2
PID1
PID0
EP3
0000
—
0000
0000
0000
EP2
EP1
EP0
—
—
PPB1
PPB0
0000
PUVBUS
EXTI2CEN
—
UVCMPDIS
UTRDIS
0000
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
Start-of-Frame Size Register
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: Alternate register or bit definitions when the module is operating in Host mode.
2: This register is available in Host mode only.
0000
0000
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 66
TABLE 4-27:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-27:
File
Name
USB OTG REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
U1EP11
04C0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
U1EP12
04C2
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
U1EP13
04C4
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
U1EP14
04C6
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
U1EP15
04C8
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: Alternate register or bit definitions when the module is operating in Host mode.
2: This register is available in Host mode only.
TABLE 4-28:
Addr
LCDREG
LCDREF
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
BIAS2
BIAS1
BIAS0
MODE13
CKSEL1
CKSEL0
0000
LRLBP1
LRLBP0
—
LRLAT2
LRLAT1
LRLAT0
0000
CS1
CS0
LMUX2
LMUX1
LMUX0
0000
0000
Bit 14
0580
CPEN
—
—
0582
LCDIRE
—
LCDCST2 LCDCST1 LCDCST0 VLCD3PE VLCD2PE VLCD1PE LRLAP1
LRLAP0
LCDCON
0584
LCDEN
—
LCDSIDL
—
SLPEN
WERR
—
—
—
—
—
Bit 6
Bit 4
Bit 15
Bit 5
LCDPS
0586
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
WFT
BIASMD
LCDA
WA
LP3
LP2
LP1
LP0
LCDSE0
0588
SE15
SE14
SE13
SE12
SE11
SE10
SE09
SE08
SE07
SE06
SE05
SE04
SE03
SE02
SE01
SE00
0000
LCDSE1
058A
SE31(1)
SE30
SE29(1)
SE28(11)
SE27
SE26
SE25
SE24
SE23
SE22
SE21
SE20
SE019
SE18
SE17
SE16
0000
LCDSE2
058C
SE47
SE46(1)
SE45(1)
SE44(1)
SE43(1)
SE42(1)
SE41(1)
SE40(1)
SE39(1)
SE38(1)
SE37(1)
SE36(1)
SE35(1)
SE34(1)
SE33(1)
SE32(1)
0000
SE60(1)
SE59(1)
SE58(1)
SE57(1)
SE56(1)
SE55(1)
SE54(1)
SE53(1)
SE52(1)
SE51(1)
SE50(1)
SE49(1)
SE48(1)
0000
S12C0
S11C0
S10C0
S09C0
S08C0
S07C0
S06C0
S05C0
S04C0
S03C0
S02C0
S01C0
S00C0
0000
S27C0
S26C0
S25C0
S24C0
S23C0
S22C0
S21C0
S20C0
S19C0
S18C0
S17C0
S16C0
0000
LCDSE3
058E
—
SE62
SE61(1)
LCDDATA0
0590
S15C0
S14C0
S13C0
LCDDATA1
0592
S31C0(1)
S30C0
LCDDATA2
0594
S47C0
LCDDATA3
0596
—
S29C0(1) S28C0(1)
S46C0(1) S45C0(1) S44C0(1) S43C0(1) S42C0(1) S41C0(1) S40C0(1) S39C0(1) S38C0(1) S37C0(1) S36C0(1) S35C0(1) S34C0(1) S33C0(1) S32C0(1)
0000
S61C0(1) S60C0(1) S59C0(1) S58C0(1) S57C0(1) S56C0(1) S55C0(1) S54C0(1) S53C0(1) S52C0(1) S51C0(1) S50C0(1) S49C0(1)
0000
S62C0
LCDDATA4
0598
S15C1
S14C1
LCDDATA5
059A
S31C1(1)
S30C1
LCDDATA6
059C
S47C1
LCDDATA7
059E
—
S13C1
S12C1
S29C1(1) S28C1(1)
S48C0
S11C1
S10C1
S09C1
S08C1
S07C1
S06C1
S05C1
S04C1
S03C1
S02C1
S01C1
S00C1
0000
S27C1
S26C1
S25C1
S24C1
S23C1
S22C1
S21C1
S20C1
S19C1
S18C1
S17C1
S16C1
0000
S46C1(1) S45C1(1) S44C1(1) S43C1(1) S42C1(1) S41C1(1) S40C1(1) S39C1(1) S38C1(1) S37C1(1) S36C1(1) S35C1(1) S34C1(1) S33C1(1) S32C1(1)
0000
S61C1(1) S60C1(1) S59C1(1) S58C1(1) S57C1(1) S56C1(1) S55C1(1) S54C1(1) S53C1(1) S52C1(1) S51C1(1) S50C1(1) S49C1(1)
0000
S62C1
DS30009312D-page 67
LCDDATA8
05A0
S15C2
S14C2
LCDDATA9
05A2
S31C2(1)
S30C2
LCDDATA10
05A4
S47C2
LCDDATA11
05A6
—
S62C2
LCDDATA12
05A8
S15C3
S14C3
S13C2
S12C2
S29C2(1) S28C2(1)
S48C1
S11C2
S10C2
S09C2
S08C2
S07C2
S06C2
S05C2
S04C2
S03C2
S02C2
S01C2
S00C2
0000
S27C2
S26C2
S25C2
S24C2
S23C2
S22C2
S21C2
S20C2
S19C2
S18C2
S17C2
S16C2
0000
S46C2(1) S45C2(1) S44C2(1) S43C2(1) S42C2(1) S41C2(1) S40C2(1) S39C2(1) S38C2(1) S37C2(1) S36C2(1) S35C2(1) S34C2(1) S33C2(1) S32C2(1)
0000
S61C2(1) S60C2(1) S59C2(1) S58C2(1) S57C2(1) S56C2(1) S55C2(1) S54C2(1) S53C2(1) S52C2(1) S51C2(1) S50C2(1) S49C2(1)
S48C2
0000
S00C3
0000
S13C3
S12C3
S11C3
S10C3
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
S09C3
S08C3
S07C3
S06C3
S05C3
S04C3
S03C3
S02C3
S01C3
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
File
Name
LCD CONTROLLER REGISTER MAP
LCD CONTROLLER REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
LCDDATA13
05AA
S31C3(1)
S30C3
LCDDATA14
05AC
S47C3
S46C3(1)
LCDDATA15
05AE
—
S62C3
LCDDATA16
05B0
S15C4
S14C4
LCDDATA17
05B2
S31C4(1)
S30C4
LCDDATA18
05B4
S47C4
LCDDATA19
05B6
—
S62C4
Bit 13
Bit 12
S29C3(1) S28C3(1)
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
S27C3
S26C3
S25C3
S24C3
S23C3
S22C3
S21C3
S20C3
S19C3
S18C3
S17C3
S16C3
0000
S45C3(1) S44C3(1) S43C3(1) S42C3(1) S41C3(1) S40C3(1) S39C3(1) S38C3(1) S37C3(1) S36C3(1) S35C3(1) S34C3(1) S33C3(1) S32C3(1)
0000
S61C3(1) S60C3(1) S59C3(1) S58C3(1) S57C3(1) S56C3(1) S55C3(1) S54C3(1) S53C3(1) S52C3(1) S51C3(1) S50C3(1) S49C3(1)
0000
S13C4
S12C4
S29C4(1) S28C4(1)
S48C3
S11C4
S10C4
S09C4
S08C4
S07C4
S06C4
S05C4
S04C4
S03C4
S02C4
S01C4
S00C4
0000
S27C4
S26C4
S25C4
S24C4
S23C4
S22C4
S21C4
S20C4
S19C4
S18C4
S17C4
S16C4
0000
S46C4(1) S45C4(1) S44C4(1) S43C4(1) S42C4(1) S41C4(1) S40C4(1) S39C4(1) S38C4(1) S37C4(1) S36C4(1) S35C4(1) S34C4(1) S33C4(1) S32C4(1)
0000
S61C4(1) S60C4(1) S59C4(1) S58C4(1) S57C4(1) S56C4(1) S55C4(1) S54C4(1) S53C4(1) S52C4(1) S51C4(1) S50C4(1) S49C4(1)
0000
LCDDATA20
05B8
S15C5
S14C5
LCDDATA21
05BA
S31C5(1)
S30C5
LCDDATA22
05BC
S47C5
LCDDATA23
05BE
—
S62C5
S13C5
S12C5
S29C5(1) S28C5(1)
S48C4
S11C5
S10C5
S09C5
S08C5
S07C5
S06C5
S05C5
S04C5
S03C5
S02C5
S01C5
S00C5
0000
S27C5
S26C5
S25C5
S24C5
S23C5
S22C5
S21C5
S20C5
S19C5
S18C5
S17C5
S16C5
0000
S46C5(1) S45C5(1) S44C5(1) S43C5(1) S42C5(1) S41C5(1) S40C5(1) S39C5(1) S38C5(1) S37C5(1) S36C5(1) S35C5(1) S34C5(1) S33C5(1) S32C5(1)
0000
S61C5(1) S60C5(1) S59C5(1) S58C5(1) S57C5(1) S56C5(1) S55C5(1) S54C5(1) S53C5(1) S52C5(1) S51C5(1) S50C5(1) S49C5(1)
0000
LCDDATA24
05C0
S15C6
S14C6
LCDDATA25
05C2
S31C6(1)
S30C6
LCDDATA26
05C4
S47C6
LCDDATA27
05C6
—
S62C6
S13C6
S12C6
S29C6(1) S28C6(1)
S48C5
S11C6
S10C6
S09C6
S08C6
S07C6
S06C6
S05C6
S04C6
S03C6
S02C6
S01C6
S00C6
0000
S27C6
S26C6
S25C6
S24C6
S23C6
S22C6
S21C6
S20C6
S19C6
S18C6
S17C6
S16C6
0000
S46C6(1) S45C6(1) S44C6(1) S43C6(1) S42C6(1) S41C6(1) S40C6(1) S39C6(1) S38C6(1) S37C6(1) S36C6(1) S35C6(1) S34C6(1) S33C6(1) S32C6(1)
0000
S61C6(1) S60C6(1) S59C6(1) S58C6(1) S57C6(1) S56C6(1) S55C6(1) S54C6(1) S53C6(1) S52C6(1) S51C6(1) S50C6(1) S49C6(1)
0000
LCDDATA28
05C8
S15C7
S14C7
LCDDATA29
05CA
S31C7(1)
S30C7
LCDDATA30
05CC
S47C7
LCDDATA31
05CE
—
S13C7
S12C7
S29C7(1) S28C7(1)
S48C6
S11C7
S10C7
S09C7
S08C7
S07C7
S06C7
S05C7
S04C7
S03C7
S02C7
S01C7
S00C7
0000
S27C7
S26C7
S25C7
S24C7
S23C7
S22C7
S21C7
S20C7
S19C7
S18C7
S17C7
S16C7
0000
S46C7(1) S45C7(1) S44C7(1) S43C7(1) S42C7(1) S41C7(1) S40C7(1) S39C7(1) S38C7(1) S37C7(1) S36C7(1) S35C7(1) S34C7(1) S33C7(1) S32C7(1)
0000
S61C7(1) S60C7(1) S59C7(1) S58C7(1) S57C7(1) S56C7(1) S55C7(1) S54C7(1) S53C7(1) S52C7(1) S51C7(1) S50C7(1) S49C7(1)
0000
S62C7
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
S48C7
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 68
TABLE 4-28:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-29:
File
Name
PARALLEL MASTER/SLAVE PORT REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
PMCON1
0600
PMPEN
—
PSIDL
PMCON2
0602
BUSY
—
ERROR
ADRMUX1 ADRMUX0
—
MODE1
MODE0
TIMEOUT
—
—
—
—
PMCON3
0604 PTWREN PTRDEN PTBE1EN PTBE0EN
—
PMCON4
0606
PMCS1CF
0608
PMCS1BS
060A
Bit 12
Bit 11
AWAITM1 AWAITM0
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
CSF1
CSF0
ALP
ALMODE
—
BUSKEEP
IRQM1
IRQM0
0000
RADDR23 RADDR22 RADDR21 RADDR20 RADDR19 RADDR18 RADDR17 RADDR16
AWAITE
—
CSDIS
CSP
CSPTEN
BEP
—
WRSP
RDSP
SM
PTEN21
PTEN20
PTEN19
PTEN18
PTEN17
PTEN16
PTSZ1
PTSZ0
—
—
—
—
—
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
ACKM0
PMCS2CF
060E
CSDIS
CSP
PMCS2BS
0610
AMWAIT2 AMWAIT1 AMWAIT0
CSPTEN
BEP
—
—
—
—
0200
WRSP
RDSP
SM
DWAITB1 DWAITB0 DWAITM3 DWAITM2 DWAITM1 DWAITM0 DWAITE1 DWAITE0
ACKP
ACKM0
AMWAIT2 AMWAIT1 AMWAIT0
—
—
—
0000
PTSZ1
PTSZ0
—
—
—
—
—
0000
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
0600
BASE
ACKM1
0000
0000
ACKP
BASE
ACKM1
0000
PTEN22
PTEN
PMCS1MD 060C
PMCS2MD 0612
Bit 13
DWAITB1 DWAITB0 DWAITM3 DWAITM2 DWAITM1 DWAITM0 DWAITE1 DWAITE0
0000
Data Out Register 1
Data Out Register 1
xxxx
PMDOUT2 0616
Data Out Register 2
Data Out Register 2
xxxx
xxxx
PMDIN1
0618
Data In Register 1
Data In Register 1
PMDIN2
061A
Data In Register 2
Data In Register 2
PMSTAT
061C
IBF
IBOV
—
—
IB3F
IB2F
IB1F
IB0F
OBE
OBUF
—
—
OB3E
xxxx
OB2E
OB1E
OB0E
008F
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-30:
REAL-TIME CLOCK AND CALENDAR (RTCC) REGISTER MAP
File
Name
Addr
ALRMVAL
0620
ALCFGRPT
0622
RTCVAL
0624
RCFGCAL
0626
RTCEN
RTCPWC
0628
PWCEN PWCPOL
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
ALRMEN
CHIME
AMASK3
AMASK2
AMASK1
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
ARPT5
ARPT4
ARPT3
ARPT2
ARPT1
ARPT0
0000
Alarm Value Register Window Based on ALRMPTR
AMASK0 ALRMPTR1 ALRMPTR0
ARPT7
ARPT6
xxxx
RTCC Value Register Window Based on RTCPTR
—
RTCWREN RTCSYNC HALFSEC
PWCPRE
PWSPRE
RTCLK1
All
Resets
Bit 5
xxxx
RTCOE
RTCPTR1
RTCPTR0
CAL7
CAL6
CAL5
CAL4
CAL3
CAL2
CAL1
CAL0
Note 1
RTCLK0
RTCOUT1
RTCOUT0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Note 1
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: The status of the RCFGCAL and RTCPWR registers on POR is ‘0000’, and on other Resets, it is unchanged
DS30009312D-page 69
TABLE 4-31:
File
Name
DATA SIGNAL MODULATOR (DSM) REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
MDCON
062A
MDEN
—
MDSIDL
—
—
—
—
MDSRC
062C
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
MDCAR
—
—
MDOE
MDSLR
MDOPOL
—
—
—
MDBIT
0020
—
SODIS
—
—
—
MS3
MS2
MS1
MS0
000x
062E
CHODIS
CHPOL
CHSYNC
—
CH3
CH2
CH1
CH0
CLODIS
CLPOL
CLSYNC
—
CL3
CL2
CL1
CL0
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; x = unknown value on Reset. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Bit 3
Bit 2
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
PMDOUT1 0614
File
Name
COMPARATORS REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
CMSTAT
0630
CMIDL
—
—
—
—
CVRCON
0632
—
—
—
—
—
C3EVT
C2EVT
C1EVT
CM1CON
0634
CON
COE
CPOL
—
—
—
CEVT
CM2CON
0636
CON
COE
CPOL
—
—
—
CEVT
CM3CON
0638
CON
COE
CPOL
—
—
—
CEVT
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
—
—
—
—
—
C3OUT
C2OUT
C1OUT
0000
CVREN
CVROE
CVRSS
CVR4
CVR3
CVR2
CVR1
CVR0
0000
COUT
EVPOL1
EVPOL0
—
CREF
—
—
CCH1
CCH0
0000
COUT
EVPOL1
EVPOL0
—
CREF
—
—
CCH1
CCH0
0000
COUT
EVPOL1
EVPOL0
—
CREF
—
—
CCH1
CCH0
0000
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
CVREFP CVREFM1 CVREFM0
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-33:
File
Name
CRC REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
CRCCON1
0640
CRCEN
—
CSIDL
CRCCON2
0642
—
—
—
CRCXORL
0644
CRCXORH
0646
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
VWORD4 VWORD3 VWORD2 VWORD1 VWORD0 CRCFUL CRCMPT CRCISEL
CRCGO LENDIAN
DWIDTH4 DWIDTH3 DWIDTH2 DWIDTH1 DWIDTH0
PLEN4
—
—
—
PLEN3
—
—
—
0040
PLEN2
PLEN1
PLEN0
0000
X
—
X
0000
0000
CRCDATL
0648
CRC Data Input Register Low
0000
CRCDATH
064A
CRC Data Input Register High
0000
CRCWDATL
064C
CRC Result Register Low
0000
CRCWDATH
064E
CRC Result Register High
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
TABLE 4-34:
BAND GAP BUFFER INTERFACE REGISTER MAP
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
BUFCON0
0670
BUFEN
—
BUFSIDL
BUFSLP
—
—
—
BUFCON1
0672
BUFEN
—
BUFSIDL
BUFSLP
—
—
—
BUFCON2
0674
BUFEN
—
BUFSIDL
BUFSLP
—
—
—
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
—
—
BUFSTBY
—
—
—
—
BUFREF1 BUFREF0
0000
—
BUFOE
BUFSTBY
—
—
—
—
BUFREF1 BUFREF0
0000
—
BUFOE
BUFSTBY
—
—
—
—
BUFREF1 BUFREF0
0000
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 70
TABLE 4-32:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-35:
PERIPHERAL PIN SELECT REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 0
All
Resets
RPINR0
0680
—
—
INT1R5
INT1R4
INT1R3
INT1R2
INT1R1
INT1R0
—
—
—
—
—
—
RPINR1
0682
—
—
INT3R5
INT3R4
INT3R3
INT3R2
INT3R1
INT3R0
—
—
INT2R5
INT2R4
INT2R3
INT2R2
—
—
003F
INT2R1
INT2R0
RPINR2
0684
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
INT4R5
INT4R4
INT4R3
INT4R2
3F00
INT4R1
INT4R0
RPINR7
068E
—
—
IC2R5
IC2R4
IC2R3
IC2R2
IC2R1
IC2R0
—
—
IC1R5
IC1R4
IC1R3
3F3F
IC1R2
IC1R1
IC1R0
RPINR8
0690
—
—
IC4R5
IC4R4
IC4R3
IC4R2
IC4R1
IC4R0
—
—
IC3R5
IC3R4
3F3F
IC3R3
IC3R2
IC3R1
IC3R0
RPINR9
0692
—
—
IC6R5
IC6R4
IC6R3
IC6R2
IC6R1
IC6R0
—
—
IC5R5
3F3F
IC5R4
IC5R3
IC5R2
IC5R1
IC5R0
RPINR10
0694
—
—
IC8R5
IC8R4
IC8R3
IC8R2
IC8R1
IC8R0
—
—
3F3F
IC7R5
IC7R4
IC7R3
IC7R2
IC7R1
IC7R0
RPINR11
0696
—
—
OCFBR5
OCFBR4
OCFBR3
OCFBR2
OCFBR1
OCFBR0
—
003F
—
OCFAR5
OCFAR4
OCFAR3
OCFAR2
OCFAR1
OCFAR0
RPINR15
069E
—
—
IC9R5
IC9R4
IC9R3
IC9R2
IC9R1
IC9R0
3F3F
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
RPINR17
06A2
—
—
U3RXR5
U3RXR4
U3RXR3
U3RXR2
U3RXR1
3F00
U3RXR0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
RPINR18
06A4
—
3F00
—
U1CTSR5 U1CTSR4 U1CTSR3 U1CTSR2 U1CTSR1 U1CTSR0
—
—
U1RXR5
U1RXR4
U1RXR3
U1RXR2
U1RXR1
U1RXR0
RPINR19
06A6
3F3F
—
—
U2CTSR5 U2CTSR4 U2CTSR3 U2CTSR2 U2CTSR1 U2CTSR0
—
—
U2RXR5
U2RXR4
U2RXR3
U2RXR2
U2RXR1
U2RXR0
RPINR20
3F3F
06A8
—
—
—
—
SDI1R5
SDI1R4
SDI1R3
SDI1R2
SDI1R1
SDI1R0
3F3F
RPINR21
06AA
—
—
—
—
SS1R5
SS1R4
SS1R3
SS1R2
SS1R1
SS1R0
3F3F
RPINR22
06AC
—
—
—
—
SDI2R5
SDI2R4
SDI2R3
SDI2R2
SDI2R1
SDI2R0
3F3F
RPINR23
06AE
—
—
TMRCKR5 TMRCKR4 TMRCKR3 TMRCKR2 TMRCKR1 TMRCKR0
—
—
SS2R5
SS2R4
SS2R3
SS2R2
SS2R1
SS2R0
003F
RPINR27
06B6
—
—
U4CTSR5 U4CTSR4 U4CTSR3 U4CTSR2 U4CTSR1 U4CTSR0
—
—
U4RXR5
U4RXR4
U4RXR3
U4RXR2
U4RXR1
U4RXR0
3F3F
RPINR30
06BC
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
MDMIR5
MDMIR4
MDMIR3
MDMIR2
MDMIR1
MDMIR0
003F
RPINR31
06BE
—
—
MDC2R5
MDC2R4
MDC2R3
MDC2R2
MDC2R1
MDC2R0
—
—
MDC1R5
MDC1R4
MDC1R3
MDC1R2
MDC1R1
MDC1R0
3F3F
SCK1R5
SCK1R4
SCK1R3
SCK1R2
SCK1R1
SCK1R0
U3CTSR5 U3CTSR4 U3CTSR3 U3CTSR2 U3CTSR1 U3CTSR0
SCK2R5
SCK2R4
SCK2R3
SCK2R2
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
SCK2R1
SCK2R0
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
DS30009312D-page 71
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
File
Name
PERIPHERAL PIN SELECT REGISTER MAP (CONTINUED)
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
RPOR0
06C0
—
—
RP1R5
RP1R4
RP1R3
RP1R2
RP1R1
RP1R0
—
—
RP0R5
RP0R4
RP0R3
RP0R2
RP0R1
RP0R0
0000
RPOR1
06C2
—
—
RP3R5
RP3R4
RP3R3
RP3R2
RP3R1
RP3R0
—
—
RP2R5
RP2R4
RP2R3
RP2R2
RP2R1
RP2R0
0000
RPOR2
06C4
—
—
RP5R5(1)
RP5R4(1)
RP5R3(1)
RP5R2(1)
RP5R1(1)
RP5R0(1)
—
—
RP4R5
RP4R4
RP4R3
RP4R2
RP4R1
RP4R0
0000
RPOR3
06C6
—
—
RP7R5
RP7R4
RP7R3
RP7R2
RP7R1
RP7R0
—
—
RP6R5
RP6R4
RP6R3
RP6R2
RP6R1
RP6R0
0000
RPOR4
06C8
—
—
RP9R5
RP9R4
RP9R3
RP9R2
RP9R1
RP9R0
—
—
RP8R5
RP8R4
RP8R3
RP8R2
RP8R1
RP8R0
0000
RPOR5
06CA
—
—
RP11R5
RP11R4
RP11R3
RP11R2
RP11R1
RP11R0
—
—
RP10R5
RP10R4
RP10R3
RP10R2
RP10R1
RP10R0
0000
RPOR6
06CC
—
—
RP13R5
RP13R4
RP13R3
RP13R2
RP13R1
RP13R0
—
—
RP12R5
RP12R4
RP12R3
RP12R2
RP12R1
RP12R0
0000
RPOR7
06CE
—
—
—
—
RP14R5
RP14R4
RP14R3
RP14R2
RP14R1
RP14R0
0000
RPOR8
06D0
—
—
RP17R5
RP17R4
RP17R3
RP17R2
RP17R1
RP17R0
—
—
RP16R5
RP16R4
RP16R3
RP16R2
RP16R1
RP16R0
0000
RPOR9
06D2
—
—
RP19R5
RP19R4
RP19R3
RP19R2
RP19R1
RP19R0
—
—
RP18R5
RP18R4
RP18R3
RP18R2
RP18R1
RP18R0
0000
RPOR10
06D4
—
—
RP21R5
RP21R4
RP21R3
RP21R2
RP21R1
RP21R0
—
—
RP20R5
RP20R4
RP20R3
RP20R2
RP20R1
RP20R0
0000
RPOR11
06D6
—
—
RP23R5
RP23R4
RP23R3
RP23R2
RP23R1
RP23R0
—
—
RP22R5
RP22R4
RP22R3
RP22R2
RP22R1
RP22R0
0000
RPOR12
06D8
—
—
RP25R5
RP25R4
RP25R3
RP25R2
RP25R1
RP25R0
—
—
RP24R5
RP24R4
RP24R3
RP24R2
RP24R1
RP24R0
0000
RPOR13
06DA
—
—
RP27R5
RP27R4
RP27R3
RP27R2
RP27R1
RP27R0
—
—
RP26R5
RP26R4
RP26R3
RP26R2
RP26R1
RP26R0
0000
RPOR14
06DC
—
—
RP29R5
RP29R4
RP29R3
RP29R2
RP29R1
RP29R0
—
—
RP28R5
RP28R4
RP28R3
RP28R2
RP28R1
RP28R0
0000
RPOR15
06DE
—
—
—
—
RP30R5
RP30R4
RP30R3
RP30R2
RP30R1
RP30R0
0000
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
IDLE
BOR
RP15R5(1) RP15R4(1) RP15R3(1) RP15R2(1) RP15R1(1) RP15R0(1)
RP31R5(1) RP31R4(1) RP31R3(1) RP31R2(1) RP31R1(1) RP31R0(1)
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: These bits are unimplemented in 64-pin devices, read as ‘0’.
TABLE 4-36:
File
Name
SYSTEM CONTROL (CLOCK AND RESET) REGISTER MAP
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
RCON
0740
TRAPR
IOPUWR
OSCCON
0742
—
COSC2
CLKDIV
0746
ROI
DOZE2
OSCTUN
0748
STEN
REFOCON 074E
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
—
RETEN
—
DPSLP
CM
PMSLP
EXTR
SWR
SWDTEN
WDTO
SLEEP
COSC1
COSC0
—
NOSC2
NOSC1
NOSC0
CLKLOCK
IOLOCK
LOCK
—
CF
DOZE1
DOZE0
DOZEN
RCDIV2
RCDIV1
RCDIV0
CPDIV1
CPDIV0
PLLEN
—
—
—
—
STSIDL
STSRC
STLOCK
STLPOL
STOR
STORPOL
—
—
TUN5
TUN4
TUN3
ROEN
—
ROSSLP
ROSEL
RODIV3
RODIV2
RODIV1
RODIV0
—
—
—
—
HLVDCON
0756
HLVDEN
—
LSIDL
—
—
—
—
—
VDIR
BGVST
IRVST
—
RCON2
0762
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
r
POR
Note 1
OSWEN
Note 2
—
—
3100
TUN2
TUN1
TUN0
0000
—
—
—
—
0000
HLVDL3
HLVDL2
HLVDL1
HLVDL0
0000
VDDBOR VDDPOR
VBPOR
VBAT
Note 1
POSCEN SOSCEN
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: The Reset value of the RCON register is dependent on the type of Reset event. See Section 7.0 “Resets” for more information.
2: The Reset value of the OSCCON register is dependent on both the type of Reset event and the device configuration. See Section 9.0 “Oscillator Configuration” for more information.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
DS30009312D-page 72
TABLE 4-35:
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
TABLE 4-37:
DEEP SLEEP REGISTER MAP
File
Name
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
DSCON
0758
DSEN
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
r
DSBOR
RELEASE
0000(1)
DSWAKE
075A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
DSINT0
DSFLT
—
—
DSWDT
DSRTCC
DSMCLR
—
—
0000(1)
DSGPR0
075C
Deep Sleep Semaphore Data 0 Register
0000(1)
DSGPR1
075E
Deep Sleep Semaphore Data 1 Register
0000(1)
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’; r = reserved, do not modify. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: These registers are only reset on a VDD POR event.
TABLE 4-38:
NVM REGISTER MAP
Addr
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
NVMCON
0760
WR
WREN
WRERR
—
—
—
—
—
—
ERASE
—
—
NVMKEY
0766
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
NVMOP3 NVMOP2 NVMOP1 NVMOP0 0000(1)
NVMKEY Register
0000
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
Note 1: The Reset value shown is for POR only. The value on other Reset states is dependent on the state of memory write or erase operations at the time of Reset.
TABLE 4-39:
File
Name
Addr
PMD REGISTER MAP
Bit 15
Bit 14
Bit 13
Bit 12
Bit 11
Bit 10
Bit 9
Bit 8
Bit 7
Bit 6
Bit 5
Bit 4
Bit 3
Bit 2
Bit 1
Bit 0
All
Resets
PMD1
0770
T5MD
T4MD
T3MD
T2MD
T1MD
—
—
—
I2C1MD
U2MD
U1MD
SPI2MD
SPI1MD
—
—
ADC1MD
0000
PMD2
0772
IC8MD
IC7MD
IC6MD
IC5MD
IC4MD
IC3MD
IC2MD
IC1MD
OC8MD
OC7MD
OC6MD
OC5MD
OC4MD
OC3MD
OC2MD
OC1MD
0000
PMD3
0774
—
—
—
—
TXMMD
PMPMD
CRCMD
DAC1MD
—
—
U3MD
—
I2C2MD
—
PMD4
0776
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
UPWMMD
U4MD
—
PMD5
0778
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
IC9MD
—
—
—
—
PMD6
077A
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
LCDMD
PMD7
077C
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
CMPMD RTCCMD
Legend: — = unimplemented, read as ‘0’. Reset values are shown in hexadecimal.
REFOMD CTMUMD HLVDMD USB1MD
—
—
OC9MD
0000
AMP1MD DAC2MD AMP2MD SDA1MD
—
—
0000
DMA1MD DMA0MD
—
—
0000
—
—
0000
0000
—
DS30009312D-page 73
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
File
Name
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.2.5
EXTENDED DATA SPACE (EDS)
The Extended Data Space (EDS) allows PIC24F
devices to address a much larger range of data than
would otherwise be possible with a 16-bit address
range. EDS includes any additional internal data memory not directly accessible by the lower 32-Kbyte data
address space and any external memory through the
Enhanced Parallel Master Port (EPMP).
In addition, EDS also allows read access to the
program memory space. This feature is called Program
Space Visibility (PSV) and is discussed in detail in
Section 4.3.3 “Reading Data from Program Memory
Using EDS”.
Figure 4-4 displays the entire EDS space. The EDS is
organized as pages, called EDS pages, with one page
equal to the size of the EDS window (32 Kbytes). A
particular EDS page is selected through the Data
Space Read register (DSRPAG) or Data Space Write
register (DSWPAG). For PSV, only the DSRPAG register is used. The combination of the DSRPAG register
value and the 16-bit wide data address forms a 24-bit
Effective Address (EA).
FIGURE 4-4:
Special
Function
Registers
The data addressing range of PIC24FJ128GC010 family
devices depends on the version of the Enhanced
Parallel Master Port (EPMP) implemented on a particular device; this is, in turn, a function of the device pin
count. Table 4-40 lists the total memory accessible
by each of the devices in this family. For more details
on accessing external memory using EPMP, refer to
the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”,
“Enhanced Parallel Master Port (EPMP)” (DS39730).
.
TABLE 4-40:
TOTAL ACCESSIBLE DATA
MEMORY
Internal
RAM
Family
External RAM
Access Using
EPMP
PIC24FJXXXGC010
8K
Up to 16 Mbytes
PIC24FJXXXGC006
8K
Up to 64K
Accessing Page 0 in the EDS window will
generate an address error trap as Page 0
is the base data memory (data locations,
0800h to 7FFFh, in the lower Data Space).
Note:
EXTENDED DATA SPACE
0000h
0800h
Internal
Data
Memory
Space
(up to
30 Kbytes)
EDS Pages
8000h
32-Kbyte
EDS
Window
FFFEh
008000h
FF8000h
000000h
7F8000h
000001h
7F8001h
External
Memory
Access
Using
EPMP(1)
External
Memory
Access
Using
EPMP(1)
Program
Space
Access
(Lower
Word)
Program
Space
Access
(Lower
Word)
Program
Space
Access
(Upper
Word)
Program
Space
Access
(Upper
Word)
00FFFEh
FFFFFEh
007FFEh
7FFFFEh
007FFFh
7FFFFFh
DSxPAG
= 001h
DSx PAG
= 1FFh
DSRPAG
= 200h
DSRPAG
= 2FFh
DSRPAG
= 300h
DSRPAG
= 3FFh
EPMP Memory Space(1)
Program Memory
Note 1: The range of addressable memory available is dependent on the device pin count and EPMP implementation.
DS30009312D-page 74
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.2.5.1
Data Read from EDS
In order to read the data from the EDS space, first, an
Address Pointer is set up by loading the required EDS
page number into the DSRPAG register and assigning
the offset address to one of the W registers. Once the
above assignment is done, the EDS window is enabled
by setting bit 15 of the Working register, assigned with
the offset address; then, the contents of the pointed
EDS location can be read.
Example 4-1 shows how to read a byte, word and
double-word from EDS.
Note:
Figure 4-5 illustrates how the EDS space address is
generated for read operations.
All read operations from EDS space have
an overhead of one instruction cycle.
Therefore, a minimum of two instruction
cycles is required to complete an EDS
read. EDS reads under the REPEAT
instruction: the first two accesses take
three cycles and the subsequent
accesses take one cycle.
When the Most Significant bit (MSb) of EA is ‘1’ and
DSRPAG = 0, the lower 9 bits of DSRPAG are concatenated to the lower 15 bits of the EA to form a 24-bit
EDS space address for read operations.
FIGURE 4-5:
EDS ADDRESS GENERATION FOR READ OPERATIONS
Select
9
8
Wn
1
0
DSRPAG Reg
15 Bits
9 Bits
24-Bit EA
0 = Extended SRAM and EPMP
Wn is Byte Select
EXAMPLE 4-1:
EDS READ CODE IN ASSEMBLY
; Set the EDS page from where
mov
#0x0002, w0
mov
w0, DSRPAG
mov
#0x0800, w1
bset
w1, #15
the data to be read
;page 2 is selected for read
;select the location (0x800) to be read
;set the MSB of the base address, enable EDS mode
;Read a byte from the selected location
mov.b
[w1++], w2
;read Low byte
mov.b
[w1++], w3
;read High byte
;Read a word from the selected location
mov
[w1], w2
;
;Read Double - word from the selected location
mov.d
[w1], w2
;two word read, stored in w2 and w3
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 75
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.2.5.2
Data Write into EDS
In order to write data to EDS space, such as in EDS
reads, an Address Pointer is set up by loading the
required EDS page number into the DSWPAG register
and assigning the offset address to one of the W registers. Once the above assignment is done, then the
EDS window is enabled by setting bit 15 of the Working
register, assigned with the offset address, and the
accessed location can be written.
0x8000. While developing code in assembly, care must
be taken to update the Data Space Page registers when
an Address Pointer crosses the page boundary. The ‘C’
compiler keeps track of the addressing, and increments
or decrements the Page registers accordingly, while
accessing contiguous data memory locations.
Note 1: All write operations to EDS are executed
in a single cycle.
2: Use of Read/Modify/Write operation on
any EDS location under a REPEAT
instruction is not supported. For example,
BCLR, BSW, BTG, RLC f, RLNC f, RRC f,
RRNC f, ADD f, SUB f, SUBR f, AND f,
IOR f, XOR f, ASR f, ASL f.
Figure 4-6 illustrates how the EDS space address is
generated for write operations.
When the MSb of EA is ‘1’, the lower 9 bits of DSWPAG
are concatenated to the lower 15 bits of EA to form a
24-bit EDS address for write operations. Example 4-2
shows how to write a byte, word and double-word to
EDS.
3: Use the DSRPAG register while
performing Read/Modify/Write operations.
The Data Space Page registers (DSRPAG/DSWPAG)
do not update automatically while crossing a page
boundary when the rollover happens from 0xFFFF to
FIGURE 4-6:
EDS ADDRESS GENERATION FOR WRITE OPERATIONS
Select
8
Wn
1
0
DSWPAG Reg
9 Bits
15 Bits
24-Bit EA
Wn is Byte Select
EXAMPLE 4-2:
EDS WRITE CODE IN ASSEMBLY
; Set the EDS page where the data to be written
mov
#0x0002, w0
mov
w0, DSWPAG
;page 2 is selected for write
mov
#0x0800, w1
;select the location (0x800) to be written
bset
w1, #15
;set the MSB of the base address, enable EDS mode
;Write a byte to the selected location
mov
#0x00A5, w2
mov
#0x003C, w3
mov.b
w2, [w1++]
;write Low byte
mov.b
w3, [w1++]
;write High byte
;Write a word to the selected location
mov
#0x1234, w2
;
mov
w2, [w1]
;
;Write a Double - word to the selected location
mov
#0x1122, w2
mov
#0x4455, w3
mov.d
w2, [w1]
;2 EDS writes
DS30009312D-page 76
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 4-41:
EDS MEMORY ADDRESS WITH DIFFERENT PAGES AND ADDRESSES
DSRPAG
(Data Space Read
Register)
DSWPAG
(Data Space Write
Register)
Source/Destination
Address While
Indirect
Addressing
x(1)
x(1)
0000h to 1FFFh
000000h to
001FFFh
2000h to 7FFFh
002000h to
007FFFh
001h
001h
008000h to
00FFFEh
002h
002h
010000h to
017FFEh
003h
•
•
•
•
•
1FFh
003h
•
•
•
•
•
1FFh
018000h to
0187FEh
•
•
•
•
FF8000h to
FFFFFEh
000h
000h
8000h to FFFFh
EPMP Memory Space
Address Error Trap(3)
If the source/destination address is below 8000h, the DSRPAG and DSWPAG registers are not considered.
This Data Space can also be accessed by Direct Addressing.
When the source/destination address is above 8000h and DSRPAG/DSWPAG are ‘0’, an address error
trap will occur.
SOFTWARE STACK
Apart from its use as a Working register, the W15
register in PIC24F devices is also used as a Software
Stack Pointer (SSP). The pointer always points to the
first available free word and grows from lower to higher
addresses. It predecrements for stack pops and postincrements for stack pushes, as shown in Figure 4-7.
Note that for a PC push during any CALL instruction,
the MSB of the PC is zero-extended before the push,
ensuring that the MSB is always clear.
Note:
Comment
Near Data Space(2)
Invalid Address
A PC push during exception processing
will concatenate the SR register to the
MSB of the PC prior to the push.
The Stack Pointer Limit Value register (SPLIM), associated with the Stack Pointer, sets an upper address
boundary for the stack. SPLIM is uninitialized at Reset.
As is the case for the Software Stack Pointer,
SPLIM is forced to ‘0’ as all stack operations must
be word-aligned. Whenever an EA is generated using
W15 as a source or destination pointer, the resulting
address is compared with the value in SPLIM. If the
contents of the Stack Pointer (W15) and the SPLIM register are equal, and a push operation is performed, a
stack error trap will not occur. The stack error trap will
occur on a subsequent push operation. Thus, for
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
example, if it is desirable to cause a stack error trap
when the stack grows beyond address, 2000h in RAM,
initialize the SPLIM with the value, 1FFEh.
Similarly, a Software Stack Pointer underflow (stack
error) trap is generated when the Stack Pointer address
is found to be less than 0800h. This prevents the stack
from interfering with the SFR space.
A write to the SPLIM register should not be immediately
followed by an indirect read operation using W15.
FIGURE 4-7:
0000h
Stack Grows Towards
Higher Address
Note 1:
2:
3:
4.2.6
24-Bit EA
Pointing to EDS
CALL STACK FRAME
15
0
PC
000000000 PC
W15 (before CALL)
W15 (after CALL)
POP : [--W15]
PUSH : [W15++]
DS30009312D-page 77
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.3
4.3.1
Interfacing Program and Data
Memory Spaces
ADDRESSING PROGRAM SPACE
Since the address ranges for the data and program
spaces are 16 and 24 bits, respectively, a method is
needed to create a 23-bit or 24-bit program address
from 16-bit data registers. The solution depends on the
interface method to be used.
The PIC24F architecture uses a 24-bit wide program
space and 16-bit wide Data Space. The architecture is
also a modified Harvard scheme, meaning that data
can also be present in the program space. To use this
data successfully, it must be accessed in a way that
preserves the alignment of information in both spaces.
For table operations, the 8-bit Table Memory Page
Address register (TBLPAG) is used to define a 32K word
region within the program space. This is concatenated
with a 16-bit EA to arrive at a full 24-bit program space
address. In this format, the MSBs of TBLPAG are
used to determine if the operation occurs in the user
memory (TBLPAG = 0) or the configuration memory
(TBLPAG = 1).
Aside from normal execution, the PIC24F architecture
provides two methods by which program space can be
accessed during operation:
• Using table instructions to access individual bytes
or words anywhere in the program space
• Remapping a portion of the program space into
the Data Space (Program Space Visibility)
For remapping operations, the 10-bit Extended Data
Space Read register (DSRPAG) is used to define a
16K word page in the program space. When the Most
Significant bit (MSb) of the EA is ‘1’, and the MSb (bit 9)
of DSRPAG is ‘1’, the lower 8 bits of DSRPAG are concatenated with the lower 15 bits of the EA to form a
23-bit program space address. The DSRPAG bit
decides whether the lower word (when the bit is ‘0’) or
the higher word (when the bit is ‘1’) of program memory
is mapped. Unlike table operations, this strictly limits
remapping operations to the user memory area.
Table instructions allow an application to read or write
to small areas of the program memory. This makes the
method ideal for accessing data tables that need to be
updated from time to time. It also allows access to all
bytes of the program word. The remapping method
allows an application to access a large block of data on
a read-only basis, which is ideal for look-ups from a
large table of static data. It can only access the least
significant word of the program word.
Table 4-42 and Figure 4-8 show how the program EA is
created for table operations, and remapping accesses
from the data EA. Here, P refer to a program
space word, whereas D refer to a Data Space
word.
TABLE 4-42:
PROGRAM SPACE ADDRESS CONSTRUCTION
Access
Space
Access Type
Instruction Access
(Code Execution)
User
TBLRD/TBLWT
(Byte/Word Read/Write)
User
Program Space Address
Note 1:
2:
PC
0
0
0xx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx xxx0
Configuration
Program Space Visibility
(Block Remap/Read)
User
TBLPAG
Data EA
0xxx xxxx
xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx
TBLPAG
Data EA
1xxx xxxx
xxxx xxxx xxxx xxxx
0
DSRPAG(2)
Data EA(1)
0
xxxx xxxx
xxx xxxx xxxx xxxx
Data EA is always ‘1’ in this case, but is not used in calculating the program space address. Bit 15 of
the address is DSRPAG.
DSRPAG is always ‘1’ in this case. DSRPAG decides whether the lower word or higher word of
program memory is read. When DSRPAG is ‘0’, the lower word is read and when it is ‘1’, the higher
word is read.
DS30009312D-page 78
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 4-8:
DATA ACCESS FROM PROGRAM SPACE ADDRESS GENERATION
Program Counter
Program Counter
0
0
23 Bits
EA
Table Operations(2)
1/0
1/0
TBLPAG
8 Bits
16 Bits
24 Bits
Select
Program Space Visibility(1)
(Remapping)
1-Bit
0
EA
1
1/0
DSRPAG
8 Bits
15 Bits
23 Bits
User/Configuration
Space Select
Byte Select
Note 1: DSRPAG acts as word select. DSRPAG should always be ‘1’ to map program memory to data memory.
2: The instructions, TBLRDH/TBLWTH/TBLRDL/TBLWTL, decide if the higher or lower word of program memory is
accessed. TBLRDH/TBLWTH instructions access the higher word and TBLRDL/TBLWTL instructions access the
lower word. Table Read operations are permitted in the configuration memory space.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 79
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.3.2
DATA ACCESS FROM PROGRAM
MEMORY USING TABLE
INSTRUCTIONS
The TBLRDL and TBLWTL instructions offer a direct
method of reading or writing the lower word of any
address within the program space without going through
Data Space. The TBLRDH and TBLWTH instructions are
the only method to read or write the upper 8 bits of a
program space word as data.
The PC is incremented by two for each successive
24-bit program word. This allows program memory
addresses to directly map to Data Space addresses.
Program memory can thus be regarded as two, 16-bit
word-wide address spaces, residing side by side, each
with the same address range. TBLRDL and TBLWTL
access the space which contains the least significant
data word, and TBLRDH and TBLWTH access the space
which contains the upper data byte.
Two table instructions are provided to move byte or
word-sized (16-bit) data to and from program space.
Both function as either byte or word operations.
1.
TBLRDL (Table Read Low): In Word mode, it
maps the lower word of the program space
location (P) to a data address (D).
In Byte mode, either the upper or lower byte of
the lower program word is mapped to the lower
byte of a data address. The upper byte is
selected when byte select is ‘1’; the lower byte
is selected when it is ‘0’.
FIGURE 4-9:
2.
TBLRDH (Table Read High): In Word mode, it
maps the entire upper word of a program address
(P) to a data address. Note that
D, the ‘phantom’ byte, will always be ‘0’.
In Byte mode, it maps the upper or lower byte of
the program word to D of the data
address, as above. Note that the data will
always be ‘0’ when the upper ‘phantom’ byte is
selected (Byte Select = 1).
In a similar fashion, two table instructions, TBLWTH
and TBLWTL, are used to write individual bytes or
words to a program space address. The details of
their operation are described in Section 6.0 “Flash
Program Memory”.
For all table operations, the area of program memory
space to be accessed is determined by the Table
Memory Page Address register (TBLPAG). TBLPAG
covers the entire program memory space of the
device, including user and configuration spaces. When
TBLPAG = 0, the table page is located in the user
memory space. When TBLPAG = 1, the page is
located in configuration space.
Note:
Only Table Read operations will execute
in the configuration memory space where
Device IDs are located. Table Write
operations are not allowed.
ACCESSING PROGRAM MEMORY WITH TABLE INSTRUCTIONS
Program Space
TBLPAG
02
Data EA
23
15
0
000000h
23
16
8
0
00000000
020000h
030000h
00000000
00000000
00000000
‘Phantom’ Byte
TBLRDH.B (Wn = 0)
TBLRDL.B (Wn = 1)
TBLRDL.B (Wn = 0)
TBLRDL.W
800000h
DS30009312D-page 80
The address for the table operation is determined by the data EA
within the page defined by the TBLPAG register.
Only read operations are shown; write operations are also valid in
the user memory area.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
4.3.3
READING DATA FROM PROGRAM
MEMORY USING EDS
The upper 32 Kbytes of Data Space may optionally be
mapped into any 16K word page of the program space.
This provides transparent access of stored constant
data from the Data Space without the need to use
special instructions (i.e., TBLRDL/H).
Program space access through the Data Space occurs
when the MSb of EA is ‘1’ and the DSRPAG is also
‘1’. The lower 8 bits of DSRPAG are concatenated to the
Wn bits to form a 23-bit EA to access program
memory. The DSRPAG bit decides which word
should be addressed; when the bit is ‘0’, the lower word
and when ‘1’, the upper word of the program memory is
accessed.
The entire program memory is divided into 512 EDS
pages, from 200h to 3FFh, each consisting of 16K words
of data. Pages, 200h to 2FFh, correspond to the lower
words of the program memory, while 300h to 3FFh
correspond to the upper words of the program memory.
Using this EDS technique, the entire program memory
can be accessed. Previously, the access to the upper
word of the program memory was not supported.
TABLE 4-43:
Source Address While
Indirect Addressing
200h
•
•
•
2FFh
8000h to FFFFh
000h
Note 1:
For operations that use PSV and are executed outside
a REPEAT loop, the MOV and MOV.D instructions will
require one instruction cycle in addition to the specified
execution time. All other instructions will require two
instruction cycles in addition to the specified execution
time.
For operations that use PSV, which are executed inside
a REPEAT loop, there will be some instances that
require two instruction cycles in addition to the
specified execution time of the instruction:
• Execution in the first iteration
• Execution in the last iteration
• Execution prior to exiting the loop due to an
interrupt
• Execution upon re-entering the loop after an
interrupt is serviced
Any other iteration of the REPEAT loop will allow the
instruction accessing data, using PSV, to execute in a
single cycle.
EDS PROGRAM ADDRESS WITH DIFFERENT PAGES AND ADDRESSES
DSRPAG
(Data Space Read Register)
300h
•
•
•
3FFh
Table 4-43 provides the corresponding 23-bit EDS
address for program memory with EDS page and
source addresses.
23-Bit EA Pointing
to EDS
Comment
000000h to 007FFEh
•
•
•
7F8000h to 7FFFFEh
Lower words of 4M program
instructions; (8 Mbytes) for
read operations only.
000001h to 007FFFh
•
•
•
7F8001h to 7FFFFFh
Upper words of 4M program
instructions (4 Mbytes remaining,
4 Mbytes are phantom bytes); for
read operations only.
Invalid Address
Address error trap(1)
When the source/destination address is above 8000h and DSRPAG/DSWPAG are ‘0’, an address error
trap will occur.
EXAMPLE 4-3:
EDS READ CODE FROM PROGRAM MEMORY IN ASSEMBLY
; Set the EDS page from where the data to be read
mov
#0x0202, w0
mov
w0, DSRPAG
;page 0x202, consisting lower words, is selected for read
mov
#0x000A, w1
;select the location (0x0A) to be read
bset
w1, #15
;set the MSB of the base address, enable EDS mode
;Read a byte from the selected location
mov.b
[w1++], w2
;read Low byte
mov.b
[w1++], w3
;read High byte
;Read a word from the selected location
mov
[w1], w2
;
;Read Double - word from the selected location
mov.d
[w1], w2
;two word read, stored in w2 and w3
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 81
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 4-10:
PROGRAM SPACE VISIBILITY OPERATION TO ACCESS LOWER WORD
When DSRPAG = 10 and EA = 1
Program Space
DSRPAG
202h
23
15
Data Space
0
000000h
0000h
Data EA
010000h
017FFEh
The data in the page
designated by
DSRPAG is mapped
into the upper half of
the data memory
space....
8000h
EDS Window
FFFFh
7FFFFEh
FIGURE 4-11:
...while the lower
15 bits of the EA
specify an exact
address within the
EDS area. This corresponds exactly to the
same lower 15 bits of
the actual program
space address.
PROGRAM SPACE VISIBILITY OPERATION TO ACCESS UPPER WORD
When DSRPAG = 11 and EA = 1
Program Space
DSRPAG
302h
23
15
Data Space
0
000000h
0000h
Data EA
010001h
017FFFh
The data in the page
designated by
DSRPAG is mapped
into the upper half of
the data memory
space....
8000h
EDS Window
FFFFh
7FFFFEh
DS30009312D-page 82
...while the lower
15 bits of the EA
specify an exact
address within the
EDS area. This corresponds exactly to the
same lower 15 bits of
the actual program
space address.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
5.0
DIRECT MEMORY ACCESS
CONTROLLER (DMA)
This data sheet summarizes the features of
the PIC24FJ128GC010 family of devices.
It is not intended to be a comprehensive
reference source. To complement the
information in this data sheet, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”, “Direct Memory Access Controller
(DMA)” (DS39742) which is available
from
the
Microchip
web
site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
Note:
The Direct Memory Access (DMA) controller is
designed to service high data throughput peripherals
operating on the SFR bus, allowing them to access
data memory directly and alleviating the need for
CPU-intensive management. By allowing these
data-intensive peripherals to share their own data path,
the main data bus is also deloaded, resulting in
additional power savings.
The DMA controller functions both as a peripheral and
a direct extension of the CPU. It is located on the
microcontroller data bus, between the CPU and DMA
controller-enabled peripherals, with direct access to
SRAM. This partitions the SFR bus into two buses,
allowing the DMA controller access to the DMA
capable peripherals located on the new DMA SFR bus.
The controller serves as a master device on the DMA
SFR bus, controlling data flow from DMA capable
peripherals.
FIGURE 5-1:
The controller also monitors CPU instruction processing directly, allowing it to be aware of when the CPU
requires access to peripherals on the DMA bus, and
automatically relinquishing control to the CPU as
needed. The use of DMA increases the time the
processor can execute code while the DMA is
transferring data.
The DMA controller includes these features:
• Six Multiple Independent and Independently
Programmable Channels
• Concurrent Operation with the CPU (no DMA
caused Wait states)
• DMA Bus Arbitration
• Five Programmable Address modes
• Four Programmable Transfer modes
• Four Flexible Internal Data Transfer modes
• Byte or Word Support for Data Transfer
• 16-Bit Source and Destination Address Register
for Each Channel, Dynamically Updated and
Reloadable
• 16-Bit Transaction Count Register, Dynamically
Updated and Reloadable
• Upper and Lower Address Limit Registers
• Counter Half-Full Level Interrupt
• Software Triggered Transfer
• Null Write mode for Symmetric Buffer Operations
A simplified block diagram of the DMA controller is
shown if Figure 5-1.
DMA CONTROLLER FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
CPU Execution Monitoring
To DMA Enabled
Peripherals
To I/O Ports
and Peripherals
Control
Logic
DMACON
DMAH
DMAL
DMABUF
Data
Bus
DMACH0
DMAINT0
DMASRC0
DMADST0
DMACNT0
DMACH1
DMAINT1
DMASRC1
DMADST1
DMACNT1
DMACH4
DMAINT4
DMASRC4
DMADST4
DMACNT4
DMACH5
DMAINT5
DMASRC5
DMADST5
DMACNT5
Channel 0
Channel 1
Channel 4
Channel 5
Data RAM
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
Data RAM
Address Generation
DS30009312D-page 83
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
5.1
Summary of DMA Operations
The DMA controller is capable of moving data between
addresses according to a number of different parameters. Each of these parameters can be independently
configured for any transaction. In addition, any or all of
the DMA channels can independently perform a different
transaction at the same time. Transactions are classified
by these parameters:
•
•
•
•
Source and destination (SFRs and data RAM)
Data size (byte or word)
Trigger source
Transfer mode (One-Shot, Repeated or
Continuous)
• Addressing modes (Fixed Address or Address
Blocks, with or without Address Increment/
Decrement)
In addition, the DMA controller provides channel priority
arbitration for all channels.
5.1.1
SOURCE AND DESTINATION
Using the DMA controller, data may be moved between
any two addresses in the Data Space. The SFR space
(0000h to 07FFh), or the data RAM space (0800h to
FFFFh) can serve as either the source or the destination. Data can be moved between these areas in either
direction, or between addresses in either area. The four
different combinations are shown in Figure 5-2.
If it is necessary to protect areas of data RAM, the DMA
controller allows the user to set upper and lower address
boundaries for operations in the Data Space above the
SFR space. The boundaries are set by the DMAH and
DMAL Limit registers. If a DMA channel attempts an
operation outside of the address boundaries, the
transaction is terminated and an interrupt is generated.
5.1.2
DATA SIZE
The DMA controller can handle both 8-bit and 16-bit
transactions. Size is user-selectable using the SIZE bit
(DMACHn). By default, each channel is configured
for word-size transactions. When byte-size transactions are chosen, the LSb of the source and/or
destination address determines if the data represents
the upper or lower byte of the data RAM location.
5.1.3
Since the source and destination addresses for any
transaction can be programmed independently of the
trigger source, the DMA controller can use any trigger
to perform an operation on any peripheral. This also
allows DMA channels to be cascaded to perform more
complex transfer operations.
5.1.4
TRANSFER MODE
The DMA controller supports four types of data
transfers, based on the volume of data to be moved for
each trigger.
• One-Shot: A single transaction occurs for each
trigger.
• Continuous: A series of back-to-back transactions
occur for each trigger. The number of transactions
is determined by the DMACNTn Transaction
Counter register.
• Repeated One-Shot: A single transaction is
performed repeatedly, once per trigger, until the
DMA channel is disabled.
• Repeated Continuous: A series of transactions
are performed repeatedly, one cycle per trigger,
until the DMA channel is disabled.
All transfer modes allow the option to have the source
and destination addresses, and counter value automatically reloaded after the completion of a transaction.
Repeated mode transfers do this automatically.
5.1.5
ADDRESSING MODES
The DMA controller also supports transfers between
single addresses or address ranges. The four basic
options are:
• Fixed-to-Fixed: Between two constant addresses
• Fixed-to-Block: From a constant source address
to a range of destination addresses
• Block-to-Fixed: From a range of source
addresses to a single, constant destination
address
• Block-to-Block: From a range to source
addresses to a range of destination addresses
The option to select auto-increment or auto-decrement
of source and/or destination addresses is available for
Block Addressing modes.
TRIGGER SOURCE
The DMA controller can use 63 of the device’s interrupt
sources to initiate a transaction. The DMA trigger
sources occur in reverse order of their natural interrupt
priority and are shown in Table 5-1.
These sources cannot be used as DMA triggers:
• Input Capture 8 and 9
• Output Compare 7, 8 and 9
• USB
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FIGURE 5-2:
TYPES OF DMA DATA TRANSFERS
Peripheral to Memory
Memory to Peripheral
SFR Area
SFR Area
DMADSTn
DMASRCn
Data RAM
07FFh
0800h
Data RAM
DMAL
DMA RAM Area
DMA RAM Area
07FFh
0800h
DMAL
DMADSTn
DMASRCn
DMAH
DMAH
Peripheral to Peripheral
Memory to Memory
SFR Area
SFR Area
DMASRCn
DMADSTn
Data RAM
DMA RAM Area
07FFh
0800h
DMAL
07FFh
0800h
Data RAM
DMA RAM Area
DMAL
DMASRCn
DMADSTn
DMAH
Note:
DMAH
Relative sizes of memory areas are not shown to scale.
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5.1.6
CHANNEL PRIORITY
Each DMA channel functions independently of the
others, but also competes with the others for access to
the data and DMA buses. When access collisions
occur, the DMA controller arbitrates between the
channels using a user-selectable priority scheme. Two
schemes are available:
• Round Robin: When two or more channels
collide, the lower numbered channel receives
priority on the first collision. On subsequent collisions, the higher numbered channels each
receive priority based on their channel number.
• Fixed: When two or more channels collide, the
lowest numbered channel always receives
priority, regardless of past history.
5.2
Typical Setup
To set up a DMA channel for a basic data transfer:
1.
Enable the DMA controller (DMAEN = 1) and
select an appropriate channel priority scheme
by setting or clearing PRSSEL.
2. Program DMAH and DMAL with appropriate
upper and lower address boundaries for data
RAM operations.
3. Select the DMA channel to be used and disable
its operation (CHEN = 0).
4. Program the appropriate source and destination
addresses for the transaction into the channel’s
DMASRCn and DMADSTn registers. For PIA
Mode Addressing, use the base address value.
5. Program the DMACNTn register for the number
of triggers per transfer (One-Shot or Continuous
modes) or the number of words (bytes) to be
transferred (Repeated modes).
6. Set or clear the SIZE bit to select the data size.
7. Program the TRMODE bits to select the
Data Transfer mode.
8. Program the SAMODE and DAMODE
bits to select the addressing mode.
9. Enable the DMA channel by setting CHEN.
10. Enable the trigger source interrupt.
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5.3
Peripheral Module Disable
Unlike other peripheral modules, the channels of the
DMA controller cannot be individually powered down
using the Peripheral Module Disable x (PMDx) registers. Instead, the channels are controlled as two
groups. The DMA0MD bit (PMD7) selectively
controls DMACH0 through DMACH3. The DMA1MD bit
(PMD7) controls DMACH4 and DMACH5. Setting
both bits effectively disables the DMA controller.
5.4
Registers
The DMA controller uses a number of registers to control
its operation. The number of registers depends on the
number of channels implemented for a particular device.
There are always four module-level registers (one
control and three buffer/address registers):
• DMACON: DMA Engine Control Register
(Register 5-1)
• DMAH and DMAL: DMA High and Low Address
Limit Registers
• DMABUF: DMA Data Buffer Register
Each of the DMA channels implements five registers
(two control and three buffer/address registers):
• DMACHn: DMA Channel n Control Register
(Register 5-2)
• DMAINTn: DMA Channel n Interrupt Register
(Register 5-3)
• DMASRCn: DMA Data Source Address Pointer
for Channel n Register
• DMADSTn: DMA Data Destination Source for
Channel n Register
• DMACNTn: DMA Transaction Counter for
Channel n Register
For PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices, there are a
total of 34 DMA registers.
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REGISTER 5-1:
DMACON: DMA ENGINE CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
DMAEN
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
PRSSEL
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
x = Bit is unknown
DMAEN: DMA Module Enable bit
1 = Enables module
0 = Disables module and terminates all active DMA operation(s)
bit 14-1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
PRSSEL: Channel Priority Scheme Selection bit
1 = Round robin scheme
0 = Fixed priority scheme
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REGISTER 5-2:
DMACHn: DMA CHANNEL n CONTROL REGISTER
U-0
—
U-0
—
U-0
—
r-0
—
U-0
—
R/W-0
NULLW
R/W-0
RELOAD(1)
R/W-0
CHREQ(3)
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
SAMODE1
bit 7
SAMODE0
DAMODE1
DAMODE0
TRMODE1
TRMODE0
SIZE
Legend:
R = Readable bit
r = Reserved bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
R/W-0
CHEN
bit 0
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-13
bit 12
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Reserved: Maintain as ‘0’
bit 11
bit 10
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
NULLW: Null Write Mode bit
1 = A dummy write is initiated to DMASRCn for every write to DMADSTn
0 = No dummy write is initiated
bit 9
RELOAD: Address and Count Reload bit(1)
1 = DMASRCn, DMADSTn and DMACNTn registers are reloaded to their previous values upon the
start of the next operation
0 = DMASRCn, DMADSTn and DMACNTn are not reloaded on the start of the next operation(2)
CHREQ: DMA Channel Software Request bit(3)
1 = A DMA request is initiated by software; automatically cleared upon completion of a DMA transfer
0 = No DMA request is pending
bit 8
bit 7-6
SAMODE: Source Address Mode Selection bits
11 = Reserved
10 = DMASRCn is decremented based on the SIZE bit after a transfer completion
01 = DMASRCn is incremented based on the SIZE bit after a transfer completion
00 = DMASRCn remains unchanged after a transfer completion
DAMODE: Destination Address Mode Selection bits
11 = Reserved
10 = DMADSTn is decremented based on the SIZE bit after a transfer completion
01 = DMADSTn is incremented based on the SIZE bit after a transfer completion
00 = DMADSTn remains unchanged after a transfer completion
TRMODE: Transfer Mode Selection bits
11 = Repeated Continuous
10 = Continuous
01 = Repeated One-Shot
00 = One-Shot
SIZE: Data Size Selection bit
1 = Byte (8-bit)
0 = Word (16-bit)
bit 5-4
bit 3-2
bit 1
bit 0
CHEN: DMA Channel Enable bit
1 = The corresponding channel is enabled
0 = The corresponding channel is disabled
Note 1:
2:
3:
Only the original DMACNTn is required to be stored to recover the original DMASRCn and DMADSTn.
DMASRCn, DMADSTn and DMACNTn are always reloaded in Repeated mode transfers
(DMACHn = 1), regardless of the state of the RELOAD bit.
The number of transfers executed while CHREQ is set depends on the configuration of TRMODE.
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REGISTER 5-3:
DMAINTn: DMA CHANNEL n INTERRUPT REGISTER
R-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
DBUFWF(1)
—
CHSEL5
CHSEL4
CHSEL3
CHSEL2
CHSEL1
CHSEL0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
HIGHIF(1,2)
LOWIF(1,2)
DONEIF(1)
HALFIF(1)
OVRUNIF(1)
—
—
HALFEN
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
x = Bit is unknown
DBUFWF: Buffered Data Write Flag bit(1)
1 = The content of the DMA buffer has not been written to the location specified in DMADSTn or
DMASRCn in Null Write mode
0 = The content of the DMA buffer has been written to the location specified in DMADSTn or
DMASRCn in Null Write mode
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13-8
CHSEL: DMA Channel Trigger Selection bits
See Table 5-1 for a complete list.
bit 7
HIGHIF: DMA High Address Limit Interrupt Flag bit(1,2)
1 = The DMA channel has attempted to access an address higher than DMAH or the upper limit of the
data RAM space
0 = The DMA channel has not invoked the high address limit interrupt
bit 6
LOWIF: DMA Low Address Limit Interrupt Flag bit(1,2)
1 = The DMA channel has attempted to access the DMA SFR address lower than DMAL but above the
SFR range (07FFh)
0 = The DMA channel has not invoked the low address limit interrupt
bit 5
DONEIF: DMA Complete Operation Interrupt Flag bit(1)
If CHEN = 1:
1 = The previous DMA session has ended with completion
0 = The current DMA session has not yet completed
If CHEN = 0:
1 = The previous DMA session has ended with completion
0 = The previous DMA session has ended without completion
bit 4
HALFIF: DMA 50% Watermark Level Interrupt Flag bit(1)
1 = DMACNTn has reached the halfway point to 0000h
0 = DMACNTn has not reached the halfway point
bit 3
OVRUNIF: DMA Channel Overrun Flag bit(1)
1 = The DMA channel is triggered while it is still completing the operation based on the previous trigger
0 = The overrun condition has not occurred
bit 2-1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
HALFEN: Halfway Completion Watermark bit
1 = Interrupts are invoked when DMACNTn has reached its halfway point and at completion
0 = An interrupt is invoked only at the completion of the transfer
Note 1:
2:
Setting these flags in software does not generate an interrupt.
Testing for address limit violations (DMASRCn or DMADSTn is either greater than DMAH or less than
DMAL) is NOT done before the actual access.
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TABLE 5-1:
DMA TRIGGER SOURCES
CHSEL
Trigger (Interrupt)
CHSEL
Trigger (Interrupt)
000000
(Unimplemented)
100000
UART2 Transmit
000001
DAC2
100001
UART2 Receive
000010
LCD
100010
External Interrupt 2
000011
UART4 Transmit
100011
Timer5
000100
UART4 Receive
100100
Timer4
000101
UART4 Error
100101
Output Compare 4
000110
UART3 Transmit
100110
Output Compare 3
000111
UART3 Receive
100111
DMA Channel 2
001000
UART3 Error
101000
DAC1
001001
CTMU Event
101001
External Interrupt 1
001010
HLVD
101010
Interrupt-on-Change
001011
CRC Done
101011
Comparators Event
001100
UART2 Error
101100
I2C1 Master Event
001101
UART1 Error
101101
I2C1 Slave Event
001110
RTCC
101110
DMA Channel 1
001111
DMA Channel 5
101111
Pipeline A/D Converter
010000
External Interrupt 4
110000
UART1 Transmit
010001
External Interrupt 3
110001
UART1 Receive
010010
I2C2 Master Event
110010
SPI1 Event
010011
I2C2 Slave Event
110011
SPI1 Error
010100
DMA Channel 4
110100
Timer3
010101
EPMP
110101
Timer2
Output Compare 2
010110
Output Compare 7
110110
010111
Output Compare 6
110111
Input Capture 2
011000
Output Compare 5
111000
DMA Channel 0
011001
Input Capture 6
111001
Timer1
011010
Input Capture 5
111010
Output Compare 1
011011
Input Capture 4
111011
Input Capture 1
011100
Input Capture 3
111100
External Interrupt 0
011101
DMA Channel 3
111101
Op Amp 2
011110
SPI2 Event
111110
Op Amp 1
011111
SPI2 Error
111111
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter
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6.0
Note:
microcontroller just before shipping the product. This
also allows the most recent firmware or a custom
firmware to be programmed.
FLASH PROGRAM MEMORY
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24
Family
Reference
Manual”, “PIC24F Flash Program
Memory” (DS30009715) which is available from the Microchip web site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
RTSP is accomplished using TBLRD (Table Read) and
TBLWT (Table Write) instructions. With RTSP, the user
may write program memory data in blocks of 64 instructions (192 bytes) at a time and erase program memory
in blocks of 512 instructions (1536 bytes) at a time.
6.1
Regardless of the method used, all programming of
Flash memory is done with the Table Read and Write
instructions. These allow direct read and write access to
the program memory space from the data memory while
the device is in normal operating mode. The 24-bit target
address in the program memory is formed using the
TBLPAG bits and the Effective Address (EA) from
a W register, specified in the table instruction, as shown
in Figure 6-1.
The PIC24FJ128GC010 family of devices contains
internal Flash program memory for storing and executing application code. The program memory is readable,
writable and erasable. The Flash can be programmed
in three ways:
• In-Circuit Serial Programming™ (ICSP™)
• Run-Time Self-Programming (RTSP)
• Enhanced In-Circuit Serial Programming
(Enhanced ICSP)
The TBLRDL and the TBLWTL instructions are used to
read or write to bits of program memory.
TBLRDL and TBLWTL can access program memory in
both Word and Byte modes.
ICSP allows a PIC24FJ128GC010 family device to be
serially programmed while in the end application circuit.
This is simply done with two lines for the programming
clock and programming data (named PGECx and
PGEDx, respectively), and three other lines for power
(VDD), ground (VSS) and Master Clear (MCLR). This
allows customers to manufacture boards with
unprogrammed devices and then program the
FIGURE 6-1:
Table Instructions and Flash
Programming
The TBLRDH and TBLWTH instructions are used to read
or write to bits of program memory. TBLRDH
and TBLWTH can also access program memory in Word
or Byte mode.
ADDRESSING FOR TABLE REGISTERS
24 Bits
Using
Program
Counter
Program Counter
0
0
Working Reg EA
Using
Table
Instruction
User/Configuration
Space Select
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
1/0
TBLPAG Reg
8 Bits
16 Bits
24-Bit EA
Byte
Select
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6.2
RTSP Operation
The PIC24F Flash program memory array is organized
into rows of 64 instructions or 192 bytes. RTSP allows
the user to erase blocks of eight rows (512 instructions)
at a time and to program one row at a time. It is also
possible to program single words.
The 8-row erase blocks and single row write blocks are
edge-aligned, from the beginning of program memory, on
boundaries of 1536 bytes and 192 bytes, respectively.
When data is written to program memory using TBLWT
instructions, the data is not written directly to memory.
Instead, data written using Table Writes is stored in
holding latches until the programming sequence is
executed.
Any number of TBLWT instructions can be executed
and a write will be successfully performed. However,
64 TBLWT instructions are required to write the full row
of memory.
To ensure that no data is corrupted during a write,
any unused address should be programmed with
FFFFFFh. This is because the holding latches reset to
an unknown state, so if the addresses are left in the
Reset state, they may overwrite the locations on rows
which were not rewritten.
6.3
Enhanced In-Circuit Serial
Programming
Enhanced In-Circuit Serial Programming uses an
on-board bootloader, known as the Program Executive
(PE), to manage the programming process. Using an
SPI data frame format, the Program Executive can
erase, program and verify program memory. For more
information on Enhanced ICSP, see the device
programming specification.
6.4
Control Registers
There are two SFRs used to read and write the
program Flash memory: NVMCON and NVMKEY.
The NVMCON register (Register 6-1) controls which
blocks are to be erased, which memory type is to be
programmed and when the programming cycle starts.
NVMKEY is a write-only register that is used for write
protection. To start a programming or erase sequence,
the user must consecutively write 55h and AAh to the
NVMKEY register. Refer to Section 6.5 “Programming
Operations” for further details.
The basic sequence for RTSP programming is to set up
a Table Pointer, then do a series of TBLWT instructions
to load the buffers. Programming is performed by
setting the control bits in the NVMCON register.
Data can be loaded in any order and the holding registers
can be written to multiple times before performing a write
operation. Subsequent writes, however, will wipe out any
previous writes.
Note:
Writing to a location multiple times without
erasing is not recommended.
All of the Table Write operations are single-word writes
(2 instruction cycles), because only the buffers are written. A programming cycle is required for programming
each row.
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REGISTER 6-1:
NVMCON: FLASH MEMORY CONTROL REGISTER
R/S-0, HC(1)
R/W-0(1)
R-0, HSC(1)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
WR
WREN
WRERR
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0(1)
U-0
—
U-0
ERASE
—
R/W-0(1)
U-0
—
NVMOP3
(2)
R/W-0(1)
R/W-0(1)
(2)
NVMOP2
NVMOP1
(2)
R/W-0(1)
NVMOP0(2)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
S = Settable bit
HC = Hardware Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
bit 15
WR: Write Control bit(1)
1 = Initiates a Flash memory program or erase operation; the operation is self-timed and the bit is
cleared by hardware once the operation is complete
0 = Program or erase operation is complete and inactive
bit 14
WREN: Write Enable bit(1)
1 = Enables Flash program/erase operations
0 = Inhibits Flash program/erase operations
bit 13
WRERR: Write Sequence Error Flag bit(1)
1 = An improper program or erase sequence attempt, or termination has occurred (bit is set
automatically on any set attempt of the WR bit)
0 = The program or erase operation completed normally
bit 12-7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6
ERASE: Erase/Program Enable bit(1)
1 = Performs the erase operation specified by NVMOP on the next WR command
0 = Performs the program operation specified by NVMOP on the next WR command
bit 5-4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3-0
NVMOP: NVM Operation Select bits(1,2)
1111 = Memory bulk erase operation (ERASE = 1) or no operation (ERASE = 0)(3)
0011 = Memory word program operation (ERASE = 0) or no operation (ERASE = 1)
0010 = Memory page erase operation (ERASE = 1) or no operation (ERASE = 0)
0001 = Memory row program operation (ERASE = 0) or no operation (ERASE = 1)
Note 1:
2:
3:
These bits can only be reset on a Power-on Reset.
All other combinations of NVMOP are unimplemented.
Available in ICSP™ mode only; refer to the device programming specification.
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6.5
4.
Programming Operations
A complete programming sequence is necessary for
programming or erasing the internal Flash in RTSP
mode. During a programming or erase operation, the
processor stalls (Waits) until the operation is finished.
Setting the WR bit (NVMCON) starts the operation and the WR bit is automatically cleared when the
operation is finished.
6.5.1
5.
PROGRAMMING ALGORITHM FOR
FLASH PROGRAM MEMORY
The user can program one row of Flash program memory
at a time. To do this, it is necessary to erase the 8-row
erase block containing the desired row. The general
process is:
1.
2.
3.
6.
Read eight rows of program memory
(512 instructions) and store in data RAM.
Update the program data in RAM with the
desired new data.
Erase the block (see Example 6-1):
a) Set the NVMOPx bits (NVMCON) to
‘0010’ to configure for the block erase. Set
the ERASE (NVMCON) and WREN
(NVMCON) bits.
b) Write the starting address of the block to be
erased into the TBLPAG and W registers.
c) Write 55h to NVMKEY.
d) Write AAh to NVMKEY.
e) Set the WR bit (NVMCON). The erase
cycle begins and the CPU stalls for the duration of the erase cycle. When the erase is
done, the WR bit is cleared automatically.
EXAMPLE 6-1:
#0x55, W0
W0, NVMKEY
#0xAA, W1
W1, NVMKEY
NVMCON, #WR
DS30009312D-page 94
For protection against accidental operations, the write
initiate sequence for NVMKEY must be used to allow
any erase or program operation to proceed. After the
programming command has been executed, the user
must wait for the programming time until programming
is complete. The two instructions following the start of
the programming sequence should be NOPs, as shown
in Example 6-4.
ERASING A PROGRAM MEMORY BLOCK (ASSEMBLY LANGUAGE CODE)
; Set up NVMCON for block erase operation
MOV
#0x4042, W0
MOV
W0, NVMCON
; Init pointer to row to be ERASED
MOV
#tblpage(PROG_ADDR), W0
MOV
W0, TBLPAG
MOV
#tbloffset(PROG_ADDR), W0
TBLWTL W0, [W0]
DISI
#5
MOV.B
MOV
MOV.B
MOV
BSET
NOP
NOP
Write the first 64 instructions from data RAM into
the program memory buffers (see Example 6-3).
Write the program block to Flash memory:
a) Set the NVMOPx bits to ‘0001’ to configure
for row programming. Clear the ERASE bit
and set the WREN bit.
b) Write 55h to NVMKEY.
c) Write AAh to NVMKEY.
d) Set the WR bit. The programming cycle
begins and the CPU stalls for the duration
of the write cycle. When the write to Flash
memory is done, the WR bit is cleared
automatically.
Repeat Steps 4 and 5, using the next available
64 instructions from the block in data RAM by
incrementing the value in TBLPAG, until all
512 instructions are written back to Flash
memory.
;
; Initialize NVMCON
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
;
Initialize Program Memory (PM) Page Boundary SFR
Initialize in-page EA pointer
Set base address of erase block
Block all interrupts with priority >16;
// Initialize PM Page Boundary SFR
offset = progAddr & 0xFFFF;
// Initialize lower word of address
__builtin_tblwtl(offset, 0x0000);
// Set base address of erase block
// with dummy latch write
NVMCON = 0x4042;
// Initialize NVMCON
asm("DISI #5");
// Block all interrupts with priority 16;
// Initialize PM Page Boundary SFR
offset = progAddr & 0xFFFF;
// Initialize lower word of address
//Perform TBLWT instructions to write latches
__builtin_tblwtl(offset, progDataL);
// Write to address low word
__builtin_tblwth(offset, progDataH);
// Write to upper byte
asm(“DISI #5”);
// Block interrupts with priority VBUS_VLD
If UVCMPSEL = 1
VBUSVLD
SESSVLD
SESSEND
Bus Condition
0
0
1
VBUS < VB_SESS_END
0
0
0
VB_SESS_END < VBUS < VA_SESS_VLD
0
1
0
VA_SESS_VLD < VBUS < VA_VBUS_VLD
1
1
0
VBUS > VBUS_VLD
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19.7
USB OTG Module Registers
There are a total of 37 memory-mapped registers associated with the USB OTG module. They can be divided
into four general categories:
•
•
•
•
USB OTG Module Control (12)
USB Interrupt (7)
USB Endpoint Management (16)
USB VBUS Power Control (2)
This total does not include the (up to) 128 BD registers
in the BDT. Their prototypes, described in Register 19-1
and Register 19-2, are shown separately in
Section 19.2 “USB Buffer Descriptors and the BDT”.
DS30009312D-page 282
All USB OTG registers are implemented in the Least
Significant Byte (LSB) of the register. Bits in the upper
byte are unimplemented and have no function. Note
that some registers are instantiated only in Host mode,
while other registers have different bit instantiations
and functions in Device and Host modes.
The registers described in the following sections are
those that have bits with specific control and configuration features. The following registers are used for data
or address values only:
• U1BDTP1: Specifies the 256-word page in data
RAM used for the BDT; 8-bit value with bit 0 fixed
as ‘0’ for boundary alignment.
• U1FRML and U1FRMH: Contain the 11-bit byte
counter for the current data frame.
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19.7.1
USB OTG MODULE CONTROL
REGISTERS
REGISTER 19-3:
U1OTGSTAT: USB OTG STATUS REGISTER (HOST MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R-0, HSC
U-0
R-0, HSC
U-0
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
U-0
R-0, HSC
ID
—
LSTATE
—
SESVD
SESEND
—
VBUSVD
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
ID: ID Pin State Indicator bit
1 = No plug is attached or a Type B cable has been plugged into the USB receptacle
0 = A Type A plug has been plugged into the USB receptacle
bit 6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5
LSTATE: Line State Stable Indicator bit
1 = The USB line state (as defined by SE0 and JSTATE) has been stable for the previous 1 ms
0 = The USB line state has not been stable for the previous 1 ms
bit 4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3
SESVD: Session Valid Indicator bit
1 = The VBUS voltage is above VA_SESS_VLD (as defined in the “USB 2.0 OTG Specification”) on the
A or B-device
0 = The VBUS voltage is below VA_SESS_VLD on the A or B-device
bit 2
SESEND: B Session End Indicator bit
1 = The VBUS voltage is below VB_SESS_END (as defined in the “USB 2.0 OTG Specification”) on the
B-device
0 = The VBUS voltage is above VB_SESS_END on the B-device
bit 1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
VBUSVD: A VBUS Valid Indicator bit
1 = The VBUS voltage is above VA_VBUS_VLD (as defined in the “USB 2.0 OTG Specification”) on the
A-device
0 = The VBUS voltage is below VA_VBUS_VLD on the A-device
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REGISTER 19-4:
U1OTGCON: USB OTG CONTROL REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
DPPULUP
R/W-0
R/W-0
DMPULUP DPPULDWN(1) DMPULDWN(1)
r-0
R/W-0
r-0
R/W-0
—
OTGEN(1)
—
VBUSDIS(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
r = Reserved bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
DPPULUP: D+ Pull-up Enable bit
1 = D+ data line pull-up resistor is enabled
0 = D+ data line pull-up resistor is disabled
bit 6
DMPULUP: D- Pull-up Enable bit
1 = D- data line pull-up resistor is enabled
0 = D- data line pull-up resistor is disabled
bit 5
DPPULDWN: D+ Pull-Down Enable bit(1)
1 = D+ data line pull-down resistor is enabled
0 = D+ data line pull-down resistor is disabled
bit 4
DMPULDWN: D- Pull-Down Enable bit(1)
1 = D- data line pull-down resistor is enabled
0 = D- data line pull-down resistor is disabled
bit 3
Reserved: Maintain as ‘0’
bit 2
OTGEN: OTG Features Enable bit(1)
1 = USB OTG is enabled; all D+/D- pull-up and pull-down bits are enabled
0 = USB OTG is disabled; D+/D- pull-up and pull-down bits are controlled in hardware by the settings
of the HOSTEN and USBEN (U1CON) bits
bit 1
Reserved: Maintain as ‘0’
bit 0
VBUSDIS: VBUS Discharge Enable bit(1)
1 = VBUS line is discharged through a resistor
0 = VBUS line is not discharged
Note 1:
These bits are only used in Host mode; do not use them in Device mode.
DS30009312D-page 284
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REGISTER 19-5:
U1PWRC: USB POWER CONTROL REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R-x, HSC
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0, HC
R/W-0
UACTPND
—
—
USLPGRD
—
—
USUSPND
USBPWR
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HC = Hardware Clearable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
UACTPND: USB Activity Pending bit
1 = Module should not be suspended at the moment (requires the USLPGRD bit to be set)
0 = Module may be suspended or powered down
bit 6-5
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 4
USLPGRD: USB Sleep/Suspend Guard bit
1 = Indicates to the USB module that it is about to be suspended or powered down
0 = No suspend
bit 3-2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 1
USUSPND: USB Suspend Mode Enable bit
1 = USB OTG module is in Suspend mode; USB clock is gated and the transceiver is placed in a
low-power state
0 = Normal USB OTG operation
bit 0
USBPWR: USB Operation Enable bit
1 = USB OTG module is enabled
0 = USB OTG module is disabled(1)
Note 1:
Do not clear this bit unless the HOSTEN, USBEN and OTGEN bits (U1CON and U1OTGCON)
are all cleared.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 19-6:
U1STAT: USB STATUS REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R-0, HSC
ENDPT3
R-0, HSC
ENDPT2
R-0, HSC
ENDPT1
R-0, HSC
ENDPT0
R-0, HSC
DIR
R-0, HSC
(1)
PPBI
U-0
U-0
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7-4
ENDPT: Number of the Last Endpoint Activity bits
(Represents the number of the BDT updated by the last USB transfer.)
1111 = Endpoint 15
1110 = Endpoint 14
•
•
•
0001 = Endpoint 1
0000 = Endpoint 0
bit 3
DIR: Last BD Direction Indicator bit
1 = The last transaction was a transmit transfer (TX)
0 = The last transaction was a receive transfer (RX)
bit 2
PPBI: Ping-Pong BD Pointer Indicator bit(1)
1 = The last transaction was to the odd BD bank
0 = The last transaction was to the even BD bank
bit 1-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
This bit is only valid for endpoints with available even and odd BD registers.
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REGISTER 19-7:
U1CON: USB CONTROL REGISTER (DEVICE MODE)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
R-x, HSC
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
SE0
PKTDIS
—
HOSTEN
RESUME
PPBRST
USBEN
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6
SE0: Live Single-Ended Zero Flag bit
1 = Single-ended zero is active on the USB bus
0 = No single-ended zero is detected
bit 5
PKTDIS: Packet Transfer Disable bit
1 = SIE token and packet processing are disabled; automatically set when a SETUP token is received
0 = SIE token and packet processing are enabled
bit 4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3
HOSTEN: Host Mode Enable bit
1 = USB host capability is enabled; pull-downs on D+ and D- are activated in hardware
0 = USB host capability is disabled
bit 2
RESUME: Resume Signaling Enable bit
1 = Resume signaling is activated
0 = Resume signaling is disabled
bit 1
PPBRST: Ping-Pong Buffers Reset bit
1 = Resets all Ping-Pong Buffer Pointers to the even BD banks
0 = Ping-Pong Buffer Pointers are not reset
bit 0
USBEN: USB Module Enable bit
1 = USB module and supporting circuitry are enabled (device attached); D+ pull-up is activated in hardware
0 = USB module and supporting circuitry are disabled (device detached)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 19-8:
U1CON: USB CONTROL REGISTER (HOST MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R-x, HSC
R-x, HSC
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
JSTATE
SE0
TOKBUSY
USBRST
HOSTEN
RESUME
PPBRST
SOFEN
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
JSTATE: Live Differential Receiver J-State Flag bit
1 = J-state (differential ‘0’ in low speed, differential ‘1’ in full speed) is detected on the USB
0 = No J-state is detected
bit 6
SE0: Live Single-Ended Zero Flag bit
1 = Single-ended zero is active on the USB bus
0 = No single-ended zero is detected
bit 5
TOKBUSY: Token Busy Status bit
1 = Token is being executed by the USB module in On-The-Go state
0 = No token is being executed
bit 4
USBRST: USB Module Reset bit
1 = USB Reset has been generated for a software Reset; application must set this bit for 50 ms, then
clear it
0 = USB Reset is terminated
bit 3
HOSTEN: Host Mode Enable bit
1 = USB host capability is enabled; pull-downs on D+ and D- are activated in hardware
0 = USB host capability is disabled
bit 2
RESUME: Resume Signaling Enable bit
1 = Resume signaling is activated; software must set bit for 10 ms and then clear to enable remote
wake-up
0 = Resume signaling is disabled
bit 1
PPBRST: Ping-Pong Buffers Reset bit
1 = Resets all Ping-Pong Buffer Pointers to the even BD banks
0 = Ping-Pong Buffer Pointers are not reset
bit 0
SOFEN: Start-of-Frame Enable bit
1 = Start-of-Frame token is sent every one 1 ms
0 = Start-of-Frame token is disabled
DS30009312D-page 288
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REGISTER 19-9:
U1ADDR: USB ADDRESS REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
LSPDEN(1)
ADDR6
ADDR5
ADDR4
ADDR3
ADDR2
ADDR1
ADDR0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
LSPDEN: Low-Speed Enable Indicator bit(1)
1 = USB module operates at low speed
0 = USB module operates at full speed
bit 6-0
ADDR: USB Device Address bits
Note 1:
x = Bit is unknown
Host mode only. In Device mode, this bit is unimplemented and read as ‘0’.
REGISTER 19-10: U1TOK: USB TOKEN REGISTER (HOST MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
PID3
PID2
PID1
PID0
EP3
EP2
EP1
EP0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7-4
PID: Token Type Identifier bits
1101 = SETUP (TX) token type transaction(1)
1001 = IN (RX) token type transaction(1)
0001 = OUT (TX) token type transaction(1)
bit 3-0
EP: Token Command Endpoint Address bits
This value must specify a valid endpoint on the attached device.
Note 1:
x = Bit is unknown
All other combinations are reserved and are not to be used.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 19-11:
U1SOF: USB OTG START-OF-TOKEN THRESHOLD REGISTER (HOST MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
CNT
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7-0
CNT: Start-of-Frame Size bits
Value represents 10 + (packet size of n bytes). For example:
0100 1010 = 64-byte packet
0010 1010 = 32-byte packet
0001 0010 = 8-byte packet
DS30009312D-page 290
x = Bit is unknown
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REGISTER 19-12: U1CNFG1: USB CONFIGURATION REGISTER 1
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
UTEYE
R/W-0
(1)
UOEMON
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
USBSIDL
—
—
PPB1
PPB0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
UTEYE: USB Eye Pattern Test Enable bit
1 = Eye pattern test is enabled
0 = Eye pattern test is disabled
bit 6
UOEMON: USB OE Monitor Enable bit(1)
1 = OE signal is active; it indicates intervals during which the D+/D- lines are driving
0 = OE signal is inactive
bit 5
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 4
USBSIDL: USB OTG Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when the device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 3-2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 1-0
PPB: Ping-Pong Buffers Configuration bits
11 = Even/Odd Ping-Pong Buffers are enabled for Endpoints 1 to 15
10 = Even/Odd Ping-Pong Buffers are enabled for all endpoints
01 = Even/Odd Ping-Pong Buffers are enabled for OUT Endpoint 0
00 = Even/Odd Ping-Pong Buffers are disabled
Note 1:
This bit is only active when the UTRDIS bit (U1CNFG2) is set.
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REGISTER 19-13: U1CNFG2: USB CONFIGURATION REGISTER 2
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
—
—
R/W-0
UVCMPSEL
R/W-0
PUVBUS
R/W-0
U-0
EXTI2CEN
R/W-0
R/W-0
(1)
—
UVCMPDIS
UTRDIS(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5
UVCMPSEL: VBUS Comparator External Interface Selection bit
1 = Uses VBUSVLD, SESSVLD and SESSEND as comparator interface pins
0 = Uses VCMPST1 and VCMPST2 as comparator interface pins
bit 4
PUVBUS: VBUS Pull-Up Enable bit
1 = Pull-up on VBUS pin is enabled
0 = Pull-up on VBUS pin is disabled
bit 3
EXTI2CEN: I2C Interface for External Module Control Enable bit
1 = External module(s) is controlled via the I2C interface
0 = External module(s) is controlled via the dedicated pins
bit 2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 1
UVCMPDIS: USB On-Chip VBUS Comparator Disable bit(1)
1 = On-chip charge VBUS comparator is disabled; digital input status interface is enabled
0 = On-chip charge VBUS comparator is active
bit 0
UTRDIS: USB On-Chip Transceiver Disable bit(1)
1 = On-chip transceiver is disabled; digital transceiver interface is enabled
0 = On-chip transceiver is active
Note 1:
Never change these bits while the USBPWR bit is set (U1PWRC = 1).
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19.7.2
USB INTERRUPT REGISTERS
REGISTER 19-14: U1OTGIR: USB OTG INTERRUPT STATUS REGISTER (HOST MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
U-0
R/K-0, HS
IDIF
T1MSECIF
LSTATEIF
ACTVIF
SESVDIF
SESENDIF
—
VBUSVDIF
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
K = Write ‘1’ to Clear bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
IDIF: ID State Change Indicator bit
1 = Change in ID state is detected
0 = No ID state change is detected
bit 6
T1MSECIF: 1 Millisecond Timer bit
1 = The 1 millisecond timer has expired
0 = The 1 millisecond timer has not expired
bit 5
LSTATEIF: Line State Stable Indicator bit
1 = USB line state (as defined by the SE0 and JSTATE bits) has been stable for 1 ms, but different from
the last time
0 = USB line state has not been stable for 1 ms
bit 4
ACTVIF: Bus Activity Indicator bit
1 = Activity on the D+/D- lines or VBUS is detected
0 = No activity on the D+/D- lines or VBUS is detected
bit 3
SESVDIF: Session Valid Change Indicator bit
1 = VBUS has crossed VA_SESS_END (as defined in the “USB 2.0 OTG Specification”)(1)
0 = VBUS has not crossed VA_SESS_END
bit 2
SESENDIF: B-Device VBUS Change Indicator bit
1 = VBUS change on B-device is detected; VBUS has crossed VB_SESS_END (as defined in the “USB
2.0 OTG Specification”)(1)
0 = VBUS has not crossed VA_SESS_END
bit 1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
VBUSVDIF: A-Device VBUS Change Indicator bit
1 = VBUS change on A-device is detected; VBUS has crossed VA_VBUS_VLD (as defined in the “USB
2.0 OTG Specification”)(1)
0 = No VBUS change on A-device is detected
Note 1:
Note:
VBUS threshold crossings may either be rising or falling.
Individual bits can only be cleared by writing a ‘1’ to the bit position as part of a word write operation on the
entire register. Using Boolean instructions or bitwise operations to write to a single bit position will cause
all set bits, at the moment of the write, to become cleared.
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REGISTER 19-15: U1OTGIE: USB OTG INTERRUPT ENABLE REGISTER (HOST MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
IDIE
T1MSECIE
LSTATEIE
ACTVIE
SESVDIE
SESENDIE
—
VBUSVDIE
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
IDIE: ID Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 6
T1MSECIE: 1 Millisecond Timer Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 5
LSTATEIE: Line State Stable Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 4
ACTVIE: Bus Activity Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 3
SESVDIE: Session Valid Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 2
SESENDIE: B-Device Session End Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
VBUSVDIE: A-Device VBUS Valid Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
DS30009312D-page 294
x = Bit is unknown
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 19-16: U1IR: USB INTERRUPT STATUS REGISTER (DEVICE MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/K-0, HS
U-0
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
STALLIF
—
RESUMEIF
IDLEIF
TRNIF
SOFIF
UERRIF
URSTIF
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
K = Write ‘1’ to Clear bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
STALLIF: STALL Handshake Interrupt bit
1 = A STALL handshake was sent by the peripheral during the handshake phase of the transaction in
Device mode
0 = A STALL handshake has not been sent
bit 6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5
RESUMEIF: Resume Interrupt bit
1 = A K-state is observed on the D+ or D- pin for 2.5 s (differential ‘1’ for low speed, differential ‘0’ for
full speed)
0 = No K-state is observed
bit 4
IDLEIF: Idle Detect Interrupt bit
1 = Idle condition is detected (constant Idle state of 3 ms or more)
0 = No Idle condition is detected
bit 3
TRNIF: Token Processing Complete Interrupt bit
1 = Processing of the current token is complete; read the U1STAT register for endpoint information
0 = Processing of the current token is not complete; clear the U1STAT register or load the next token
from STAT (clearing this bit causes the STAT FIFO to advance)
bit 2
SOFIF: Start-of-Frame Token Interrupt bit
1 = A Start-of-Frame token is received by the peripheral or the Start-of-Frame threshold is reached by
the host
0 = No Start-of-Frame token is received or threshold reached
bit 1
UERRIF: USB Error Condition Interrupt bit
1 = An unmasked error condition has occurred; only error states enabled in the U1EIE register can set
this bit
0 = No unmasked error condition has occurred
bit 0
URSTIF: USB Reset Interrupt bit
1 = Valid USB Reset has occurred for at least 2.5 s; Reset state must be cleared before this bit can
be reasserted
0 = No USB Reset has occurred; individual bits can only be cleared by writing a ‘1’ to the bit position
as part of a word write operation on the entire register. Using Boolean instructions or bitwise operations to write to a single bit position will cause all set bits, at the moment of the write, to become
cleared.
Note:
Individual bits can only be cleared by writing a ‘1’ to the bit position as part of a word write operation on the
entire register. Using Boolean instructions or bitwise operations to write to a single bit position will cause
all set bits, at the moment of the write, to become cleared.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 295
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 19-17: U1IR: USB INTERRUPT STATUS REGISTER (HOST MODE ONLY)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
STALLIF
ATTACHIF
RESUMEIF
IDLEIF
TRNIF
SOFIF
UERRIF
DETACHIF
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
K = Write ‘1’ to Clear bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
STALLIF: STALL Handshake Interrupt bit
1 = A STALL handshake was sent by the peripheral device during the handshake phase of the
transaction in Device mode
0 = A STALL handshake has not been sent
bit 6
ATTACHIF: Peripheral Attach Interrupt bit
1 = A peripheral attachment has been detected by the module; it is set if the bus state is not SE0 and
there has been no bus activity for 2.5 s
0 = No peripheral attachment has been detected
bit 5
RESUMEIF: Resume Interrupt bit
1 = A K-state is observed on the D+ or D- pin for 2.5 s (differential ‘1’ for low speed, differential ‘0’ for
full speed)
0 = No K-state is observed
bit 4
IDLEIF: Idle Detect Interrupt bit
1 = Idle condition is detected (constant Idle state of 3 ms or more)
0 = No Idle condition is detected
bit 3
TRNIF: Token Processing Complete Interrupt bit
1 = Processing of the current token is complete; read the U1STAT register for endpoint information
0 = Processing of the current token is not complete; clear the U1STAT register or load the next token
from U1STAT
bit 2
SOFIF: Start-of-Frame Token Interrupt bit
1 = A Start-of-Frame token is received by the peripheral or the Start-of-Frame threshold is reached by the host
0 = No Start-of-Frame token is received or threshold reached
bit 1
UERRIF: USB Error Condition Interrupt bit
1 = An unmasked error condition has occurred; only error states enabled in the U1EIE register can set this bit
0 = No unmasked error condition has occurred
bit 0
DETACHIF: Detach Interrupt bit
1 = A peripheral detachment has been detected by the module; Reset state must be cleared before this
bit can be reasserted
0 = No peripheral detachment is detected. Individual bits can only be cleared by writing a ‘1’ to the bit
position as part of a word write operation on the entire register. Using Boolean instructions or bitwise
operations to write to a single bit position will cause all set bits, at the moment of the write, to become
cleared.
Note:
Individual bits can only be cleared by writing a ‘1’ to the bit position as part of a word write operation on the
entire register. Using Boolean instructions or bitwise operations to write to a single bit position will cause
all set bits, at the moment of the write, to become cleared.
DS30009312D-page 296
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 19-18: U1IE: USB INTERRUPT ENABLE REGISTER (ALL USB MODES)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
STALLIE
(1)
ATTACHIE
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
RESUMEIE
IDLEIE
TRNIE
SOFIE
UERRIE
R/W-0
URSTIE
DETACHIE
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
STALLIE: STALL Handshake Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 6
ATTACHIE: Peripheral Attach Interrupt bit (Host mode only)(1)
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 5
RESUMEIE: Resume Interrupt bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 4
IDLEIE: Idle Detect Interrupt bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 3
TRNIE: Token Processing Complete Interrupt bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 2
SOFIE: Start-of-Frame Token Interrupt bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 1
UERRIE: USB Error Condition Interrupt bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 0
URSTIE or DETACHIE: USB Reset Interrupt (Device mode) or USB Detach Interrupt (Host mode)
Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
Note 1:
This bit is unimplemented in Device mode, read as ‘0’.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 297
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 19-19: U1EIR: USB ERROR INTERRUPT STATUS REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/K-0, HS
U-0
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
R/K-0, HS
BTSEF
—
DMAEF
BTOEF
DFN8EF
CRC16EF
CRC5EF
PIDEF
EOFEF
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
K = Write ‘1’ to Clear bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
BTSEF: Bit Stuff Error Flag bit
1 = Bit stuff error has been detected
0 = No bit stuff error has been detected
bit 6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5
DMAEF: DMA Error Flag bit
1 = A USB DMA error condition is detected; the data size indicated by the BD byte count field is less
than the number of received bytes, the received data is truncated
0 = No DMA error
bit 4
BTOEF: Bus Turnaround Time-out Error Flag bit
1 = Bus turnaround time-out has occurred
0 = No bus turnaround time-out has occurred
bit 3
DFN8EF: Data Field Size Error Flag bit
1 = Data field was not an integral number of bytes
0 = Data field was an integral number of bytes
bit 2
CRC16EF: CRC16 Failure Flag bit
1 = CRC16 failed
0 = CRC16 passed
bit 1
For Device mode:
CRC5EF: CRC5 Host Error Flag bit
1 = Token packet is rejected due to CRC5 error
0 = Token packet is accepted (no CRC5 error)
For Host mode:
EOFEF: End-of-Frame (EOF) Error Flag bit
1 = End-of-Frame error has occurred
0 = End-of-Frame interrupt is disabled
bit 0
PIDEF: PID Check Failure Flag bit
1 = PID check failed
0 = PID check passed
Note:
Individual bits can only be cleared by writing a ‘1’ to the bit position as part of a word write operation on the
entire register. Using Boolean instructions or bitwise operations to write to a single bit position will cause
all set bits, at the moment of the write, to become cleared.
DS30009312D-page 298
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 19-20: U1EIE: USB ERROR INTERRUPT ENABLE REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
BTSEE
—
DMAEE
BTOEE
DFN8EE
CRC16EE
CRC5EE
PIDEE
EOFEE
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
BTSEE: Bit Stuff Error Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5
DMAEE: DMA Error Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 4
BTOEE: Bus Turnaround Time-out Error Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 3
DFN8EE: Data Field Size Error Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 2
CRC16EE: CRC16 Failure Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 1
For Device mode:
CRC5EE: CRC5 Host Error Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
For Host mode:
EOFEE: End-of-Frame (EOF) Error interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
bit 0
PIDEE: PID Check Failure Interrupt Enable bit
1 = Interrupt is enabled
0 = Interrupt is disabled
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
x = Bit is unknown
DS30009312D-page 299
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
19.7.3
USB ENDPOINT MANAGEMENT
REGISTERS
REGISTER 19-21: U1EPn: USB ENDPOINT n CONTROL REGISTERS (n = 0 TO 15)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
LSPD(1)
RETRYDIS(1)
—
EPCONDIS
EPRXEN
EPTXEN
EPSTALL
EPHSHK
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
LSPD: Low-Speed Direct Connection Enable bit (U1EP0 only)(1)
1 = Direct connection to a low-speed device is enabled
0 = Direct connection to a low-speed device is disabled
bit 6
RETRYDIS: Retry Disable bit (U1EP0 only)(1)
1 = Retry NAK transactions are disabled
0 = Retry NAK transactions are enabled; retry is done in hardware
bit 5
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 4
EPCONDIS: Bidirectional Endpoint Control bit
If EPTXEN and EPRXEN = 1:
1 = Disables Endpoint n from control transfers; only TX and RX transfers are allowed
0 = Enables Endpoint n for control (SETUP) transfers; TX and RX transfers are also allowed
For All Other Combinations of EPTXEN and EPRXEN:
This bit is ignored.
bit 3
EPRXEN: Endpoint Receive Enable bit
1 = Endpoint n receive is enabled
0 = Endpoint n receive is disabled
bit 2
EPTXEN: Endpoint Transmit Enable bit
1 = Endpoint n transmit is enabled
0 = Endpoint n transmit is disabled
bit 1
EPSTALL: Endpoint STALL Status bit
1 = Endpoint n was stalled
0 = Endpoint n was not stalled
bit 0
EPHSHK: Endpoint Handshake Enable bit
1 = Endpoint handshake is enabled
0 = Endpoint handshake is disabled (typically used for isochronous endpoints)
Note 1:
These bits are available only for U1EP0 and only in Host mode. For all other U1EPn registers, these bits
are always unimplemented and read as ‘0’.
DS30009312D-page 300
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
20.0
The modulated output signal is generated by performing a logical AND operation of both the carrier and
modulator signals and then it is provided to the MDOUT
pin. Using this method, the DSM can generate the
following types of key modulation schemes:
DATA SIGNAL MODULATOR
Note:
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to
the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference
Manual”, “Data Signal Modulator
(DSM)” (DS39744) which is available
from
the
Microchip
web
site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the
information in the FRM.
• Frequency Shift Keying (FSK)
• Phase-Shift Keying (PSK)
• On-Off Keying (OOK)
Figure 20-1 shows a simplified block diagram of the
Data Signal Modulator peripheral.
The Data Signal Modulator (DSM) allows the user to
mix a digital data stream (the “modulator signal”) with a
carrier signal to produce a modulated output. Both the
carrier and the modulator signals are supplied to the
DSM module, either internally from the output of a
peripheral, or externally through an input pin.
FIGURE 20-1:
SIMPLIFIED BLOCK DIAGRAM OF THE DATA SIGNAL MODULATOR
CH
VSS
MDCIN1
MDCIN2
REFO Clock
OC/PWM1
OC/PWM2
OC/PWM3
OC/PWM4
OC/PWM5
OC/PWM6
OC/PWM7
MDEN
EN
Data Signal
Modulator
MDCARH
CHPOL
D
SYNC
MS
MDBIT
MDMIN
SSP1 (SDOX)
SSP2 (SDOX)
UART1 (TX)
UART2 (TX)
UART3 (TX)
UART4 (TX)
OC/PWM1
OC/PWM2
OC/PWM3
OC/PWM4
OC/PWM5
OC/PWM6
OC/PWM7
Q
1
0
CHSYNC
MDCON
MDOUT
MDOPOL
MDOE
D
SYNC
CL
VSS
MDCIN1
MDCIN2
REFO Clock
OC/PWM1
OC/PWM2
OC/PWM3
OC/PWM4
OC/PWM5
OC/PWM6
OC/PWM7
Q
1
0
MDCARL
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
CLSYNC
CLPOL
DS30009312D-page 301
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 20-1:
MDCON: DATA SIGNAL MODULATOR CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
MDEN
—
MSIDL
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
—
MDOE
MDSLR
MDOPOL
—
—
—
MDBIT(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
MDEN: DSM Module Enable bit
1 = DSM module is enabled and mixing input signals
0 = DSM module is disabled and has no output
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
MSIDL: DSM Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 12-7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6
MDOE: DSM Module Pin Output Enable bit
1 = DSM pin output is enabled
0 = DSM pin output is disabled
bit 5
MDSLR: MDOUT Pin Slew Rate Limiting bit
1 = MDOUT pin slew rate limiting is enabled
0 = MDOUT pin slew rate limiting is disabled
bit 4
MDOPOL: DSM Output Polarity Select bit
1 = DSM output signal is inverted
0 = DSM output signal is not inverted
bit 3-1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
MDBIT: DSM Manual Modulation Input bit(1)
1 = Carrier is modulated
0 = Carrier is not modulated
Note 1:
x = Bit is unknown
The MDBIT must be selected as the modulation source (MDSRC = 0000).
DS30009312D-page 302
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 20-2:
MDSRC: DATA SIGNAL MODULATOR SOURCE CONTROL REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-x
(1)
SODIS
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
—
—
MS3(2)
MS2(2)
MS1(2)
MS0(2)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
SODIS: DSM Modulation Source Output Disable bit(1)
1 = Output signal driving the peripheral output pin (selected by MS) is disabled
0 = Output signal driving the peripheral output pin (selected by MS) is enabled
bit 6-4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3-0
MS: DSM Modulation Source Selection bits(2)
1111 = Unimplemented
1110 = Output Compare/PWM Module 7 output
1101 = Output Compare/PWM Module 6 output
1100 = Output Compare/PWM Module 5 output
1011 = Output Compare/PWM Module 4 output
1010 = Output Compare/PWM Module 3 output
1001 = Output Compare/PWM Module 2 output
1000 = Output Compare/PWM Module 1 output
0111 = UART4 TX output
0110 = UART3 TX output
0101 = UART2 TX output
0100 = UART1 TX output
0011 = SPI2 module output (SDO2)
0010 = SPI1 module output (SDO1)
0001 = Input on MDMIN pin
0000 = Manual modulation using MDBIT (MDCON)
Note 1:
2:
This bit is only affected by a POR.
These bits are not affected by a POR.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 303
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REGISTER 20-3:
MDCAR: DATA SIGNAL MODULATOR CARRIER CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
CHODIS
CHPOL
CHSYNC
—
CH3(1)
CH2(1)
CH1(1)
CH0(1)
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
CLODIS
CLPOL
CLSYNC
—
CL3(1)
CL2(1)
CL1(1)
CL0(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
CHODIS: DSM High Carrier Output Disable bit
1 = Output signal driving the peripheral output pin (selected by CH) is disabled
0 = Output signal driving the peripheral output pin is enabled
bit 14
CHPOL: DSM High Carrier Polarity Select bit
1 = Selected high carrier signal is inverted
0 = Selected high carrier signal is not inverted
bit 13
CHSYNC: DSM High Carrier Synchronization Enable bit
1 = Modulator waits for a falling edge on the high carrier before allowing a switch to the low carrier
0 = Modulator output is not synchronized to the high time carrier signal(1)
bit 12
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 11-8
CH: DSM Data High Carrier Selection bits(1)
1111
. . . = Reserved
1011
1010 = Output Compare/PWM Module 7 output
1001 = Output Compare/PWM Module 6 output
1000 = Output Compare/PWM Module 5 output
0111 = Output Compare/PWM Module 4 output
0110 = Output Compare/PWM Module 3 output
0101 = Output Compare/PWM Module 2 output
0100 = Output Compare/PWM Module 1 output
0011 = Reference Clock Output (REFO)
0010 = Input on MDCIN2 pin
0001 = Input on MDCIN1 pin
0000 = VSS
bit 7
CLODIS: DSM Low Carrier Output Disable bit
1 = Output signal driving the peripheral output pin (selected by CL) is disabled
0 = Output signal driving the peripheral output pin is enabled
bit 6
CLPOL: DSM Low Carrier Polarity Select bit
1 = Selected low carrier signal is inverted
0 = Selected low carrier signal is not inverted
bit 5
CLSYNC: DSM Low Carrier Synchronization Enable bit
1 = Modulator waits for a falling edge on the low carrier before allowing a switch to the high carrier
0 = Modulator output is not synchronized to the low time carrier signal(1)
bit 4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3-0
CL: DSM Data Low Carrier Selection bits(1)
Bit settings are identical to those for CH.
Note 1:
Narrowed carrier pulse widths or spurs may occur in the signal stream if the carrier is not synchronized.
DS30009312D-page 304
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
21.0
Note:
• 4-Bit, 8-Bit or 16-Bit Wide Data Bus
• Programmable Strobe Options (per Chip Select):
- Individual Read and Write Strobes; or
- Read/Write Strobe with Enable Strobe
• Programmable Address/Data Multiplexing
• Programmable Address Wait States
• Programmable Data Wait States (per Chip Select)
• Programmable Polarity on Control Signals
(per Chip Select)
• Legacy Parallel Slave Port (PSP) Support
• Enhanced Parallel Slave Support:
- Address Support
- 4-Byte Deep Auto-Incrementing Buffer
ENHANCED PARALLEL
MASTER PORT (EPMP)
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”, “Enhanced Parallel Master Port
(EPMP)” (DS39730) which is available
from
the
Microchip
web
site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
The Enhanced Parallel Master Port (EPMP) module provides a parallel, 4-bit (Master mode only), 8-bit (Master
and Slave modes) or 16-bit (Master mode only) data bus
interface to communicate with off-chip modules, such as
memories, FIFOs, LCD controllers and other microcontrollers. This module can serve as either the master or
the slave on the communication bus.
21.1
While all PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices implement
the EPMP, I/O pin constraints place some limits on
16-Bit Master mode operations in some package types.
This is reflected in the number of dedicated Chip Select
pins implemented and the number of dedicated
address lines that are available. The differences are
summarized in Table 21-1. All available EPMP pin
functions are summarized in Table 21-2.
For EPMP Master modes, all external addresses are
mapped into the internal Extended Data Space (EDS).
This is done by allocating a region of the EDS for each
Chip Select (CS) and then assigning each Chip Select
to a particular external resource, such as a memory or
external controller. This region should not be assigned
to another device resource, such as RAM or SFRs. To
perform a write or read on an external resource, the
CPU simply performs a write or read within the address
range assigned for the EPMP.
For 64-pin devices, the dedicated Chip Select pins
(PMCS1 and PMCS2) are not implemented. In addition, only 16 address lines (PMA) are available.
If required, PMA14 and PMA15 can be remapped to
function as PMCS1 and PMCS2, respectively.
The memory space addressable by the device
depends on the number of address lines available, as
well as the number of Chip Select signals required for
the application. Devices with lower pin counts are more
affected by Chip Select requirements, as these take
away address lines. Table 21-1 shows the maximum
addressable range for each pin count.
Key features of the EPMP module are:
• Extended Data Space (EDS) Interface Allows
Direct Access from the CPU
• Up to 23 Programmable Address Lines
• Up to 2 Chip Select Lines
• Up to 2 Acknowledgment Lines
(one per Chip Select)
TABLE 21-1:
Specific Package Variations
EPMP FEATURE DIFFERENCES BY DEVICE PIN COUNT
Dedicated Chip Select
CS1
CS2
Address
Lines
PIC24FJXXXGC006 (64-pin)
—
—
16
PIC24FJXXXGC010 (100/121-pin)
X
X
23
Device
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
Address Range (bytes)
No CS
1 CS
2 CS
64K
32K
16K
16M
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TABLE 21-2:
ENHANCED PARALLEL MASTER PORT PIN DESCRIPTIONS
Pin Name
(Alternate Function)
Type
Description
PMA
O
Address Bus bits
PMA
(PMCS2)
O
Address Bus bit 15
I/O
Data Bus bit 15 (16-bit port with Multiplexed Addressing)
O
Chip Select 2 (alternate location)
O
Address Bus bit 14
PMA
(PMCS1)
PMA
I/O
Data Bus bit 14 (16-bit port with Multiplexed Addressing)
O
Chip Select 1 (alternate location)
O
Address Bus bits
I/O
Data Bus bits (16-bit port with Multiplexed Addressing)
PMA
O
Address Bus bits
PMA
(PMALU)
O
Address Bus bit 2
O
Address Latch Upper Strobe for Multiplexed Addressing
PMA
(PMALH)
I/O
Address Bus bit 1
O
Address Latch High Strobe for Multiplexed Addressing
PMA
(PMALL)
I/O
Address Bus bit 0
O
Address Latch Low Strobe for Multiplexed Addressing
PMD
I/O
Data Bus bits (Demultiplexed Addressing)
PMD
I/O
Data Bus bits
O
Address Bus bits (4-bit port with 1-Phase Multiplexed Addressing)
PMD
I/O
Data Bus bits
PMCS1(1)
I/O
Chip Select 1
PMCS2(1)
O
Chip Select 2
PMWR
I/O
Write Strobe(2)
(PMENB)
I/O
Enable Signal(2)
PMRD
I/O
Read Strobe(2)
(PMRD/PMWR)
I/O
Read/Write Signal(2)
PMBE1
O
Byte Indicator
PMBE0
O
Nibble or Byte Indicator
PMACK1
I
Acknowledgment Signal 1
PMACK2
I
Acknowledgment Signal 2
Note 1:
2:
These pins are implemented in 100/121-pin devices only.
Signal function depends on the setting of the MODE and SM bits (PMCON1 and PMCSxCF).
DS30009312D-page 306
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REGISTER 21-1:
PMCON1: EPMP CONTROL REGISTER 1
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
PMPEN
—
PSIDL
ADRMUX1
ADRMUX0
—
MODE1
MODE0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
CSF1
CSF0
R/W-0
ALP
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
ALMODE
—
BUSKEEP
IRQM1
IRQM0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
PMPEN: Parallel Master Port Enable bit
1 = EPMP is enabled
0 = EPMP is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
PSIDL: EPMP Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 12-11
ADRMUX: Address/Data Multiplexing Selection bits
11 = Lower address bits are multiplexed with data bits using 3 address phases
10 = Lower address bits are multiplexed with data bits using 2 address phases
01 = Lower address bits are multiplexed with data bits using 1 address phase
00 = Address and data appear on separate pins
bit 10
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 9-8
MODE: Parallel Port Mode Select bits
11 = Master mode
10 = Enhanced PSP; pins used are PMRD, PMWR, PMCS, PMD and PMA
01 = Buffered PSP; pins used are PMRD, PMWR, PMCS and PMD
00 = Legacy PSP; pins used are PMRD, PMWR, PMCS and PMD
bit 7-6
CSF: Chip Select Function bits
11 = Reserved
10 = PMA15 is used for Chip Select 2, PMA14 is used for Chip Select 1
01 = PMA15 is used for Chip Select 2, PMCS1 is used for Chip Select 1
00 = PMCS2 is used for Chip Select 2, PMCS1 is used for Chip Select 1
bit 5
ALP: Address Latch Polarity bit
1 = Active-high (PMALL, PMALH and PMALU)
0 = Active-low (PMALL, PMALH and PMALU)
bit 4
ALMODE: Address Latch Strobe Mode bit
1 = Enables “smart” address strobes (each address phase is only present if the current access would
cause a different address in the latch than the previous address)
0 = Disables “smart” address strobes
bit 3
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 2
BUSKEEP: Bus Keeper bit
1 = Data bus keeps its last value when not actively being driven
0 = Data bus is in a high-impedance state when not actively being driven
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REGISTER 21-1:
bit 1-0
PMCON1: EPMP CONTROL REGISTER 1 (CONTINUED)
IRQM: Interrupt Request Mode bits
11 = Interrupt is generated when Read Buffer 3 is read or Write Buffer 3 is written (Buffered PSP mode),
or on a read or write operation when PMA = 11 (Addressable PSP mode only)
10 = Reserved
01 = Interrupt is generated at the end of a read/write cycle
00 = No interrupt is generated
REGISTER 21-2:
PMCON2: EPMP CONTROL REGISTER 2
R-0, HSC
U-0
R/C-0, HS
R/C-0, HS
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
BUSY
—
ERROR
TIMEOUT
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
(1)
RADDR23
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
C = Clearable bit
BUSY: Busy bit (Master mode only)
1 = Port is busy
0 = Port is not busy
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
ERROR: Error bit
1 = Transaction error (illegal transaction was requested)
0 = Transaction completed successfully
bit 12
TIMEOUT: Time-out bit
1 = Transaction timed out
0 = Transaction completed successfully
bit 11-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7-0
RADDR: Parallel Master Port Reserved Address Space bits(1)
Note 1:
R/W-0
RADDR22(1) RADDR21(1) RADDR20(1) RADDR19(1) RADDR18(1) RADDR17(1) RADDR16(1)
If RADDR = 00000000, then the last EDS address for Chip Select 2 will be FFFFFFh.
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REGISTER 21-3:
PMCON3: EPMP CONTROL REGISTER 3
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
PTWREN
PTRDEN
PTBE1EN
PTBE0EN
—
AWAITM1
AWAITM0
AWAITE
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
—
R/W-0
PTEN22
(1)
R/W-0
R/W-0
(1)
PTEN21
PTEN20
(1)
R/W-0
PTEN19
R/W-0
(1)
PTEN18
(1)
R/W-0
PTEN17
R/W-0
(1)
PTEN16(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
PTWREN: EPMP Write/Enable Strobe Port Enable bit
1 = PMWR/PMENB port is enabled
0 = PMWR/PMENB port is disabled
bit 14
PTRDEN: EPMP Read/Write Strobe Port Enable bit
1 = PMRD/PMWR port is enabled
0 = PMRD/PMWR port is disabled
bit 13
PTBE1EN: EPMP High Nibble/Byte Enable Port Enable bit
1 = PMBE1 port is enabled
0 = PMBE1 port is disabled
bit 12
PTBE0EN: EPMP Low Nibble/Byte Enable Port Enable bit
1 = PMBE0 port is enabled
0 = PMBE0 port is disabled
bit 11
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 10-9
AWAITM: Address Latch Strobe Wait States bits
11 = Wait of 3½ TCY
10 = Wait of 2½ TCY
01 = Wait of 1½ TCY
00 = Wait of ½ TCY
bit 8
AWAITE: Address Hold After Address Latch Strobe Wait States bit
1 = Wait of 1¼ TCY
0 = Wait of ¼ TCY
bit 7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6-0
PTEN: EPMP Address Port Enable bits(1)
1 = PMA function as EPMP address lines
0 = PMA function as port I/Os
Note 1:
x = Bit is unknown
These bits are not available in 64-pin devices (PIC24FJXXXGC006).
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 21-4:
PMCON4: EPMP CONTROL REGISTER 4
R/W-0
R/W-0
PTEN15
PTEN14
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
PTEN
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
PTEN
R/W-0
R/W-0
PTEN
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
PTEN15: PMA15 Port Enable bit
1 = PMA15 functions as either Address Line 15 or Chip Select 2
0 = PMA15 functions as port I/O
bit 14
PTEN14: PMA14 Port Enable bit
1 = PMA14 functions as either Address Line 14 or Chip Select 1
0 = PMA14 functions as port I/O
bit 13-3
PTEN: EPMP Address Port Enable bits
1 = PMA function as EPMP address lines
0 = PMA function as port I/Os
bit 2-0
PTEN: PMALU/PMALH/PMALL Strobe Enable bits
1 = PMA function as either address lines or address latch strobes
0 = PMA function as port I/Os
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REGISTER 21-5:
PMCSxCF: EPMP CHIP SELECT x CONFIGURATION REGISTER
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
CSDIS
CSP
CSPTEN
BEP
—
WRSP
RDSP
SM
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
ACKP
PTSZ1
PTSZ0
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
CSDIS: Chip Select x Disable bit
1 = Disables the Chip Select x functionality
0 = Enables the Chip Select x functionality
bit 14
CSP: Chip Select x Polarity bit
1 = Active-high (PMCSx)
0 = Active-low (PMCSx)
bit 13
CSPTEN: PMCSx Port Enable bit
1 = PMCSx port is enabled
0 = PMCSx port is disabled
bit 12
BEP: Chip Select x Nibble/Byte Enable Polarity bit
1 = Nibble/byte enable is active-high (PMBE0, PMBE1)
0 = Nibble/byte enable is active-low (PMBE0, PMBE1)
bit 11
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 10
WRSP: Chip Select x Write Strobe Polarity bit
For Slave modes and Master mode when SM = 0:
1 = Write strobe is active-high (PMWR)
0 = Write strobe is active-low (PMWR)
For Master mode when SM = 1:
1 = Enable strobe is active-high (PMENB)
0 = Enable strobe is active-low (PMENB)
bit 9
RDSP: Chip Select x Read Strobe Polarity bit
For Slave modes and Master mode when SM = 0:
1 = Read strobe is active-high (PMRD)
0 = Read strobe is active-low (PMRD)
For Master mode when SM = 1:
1 = Read/write strobe is active-high (PMRD/PMWR)
0 = Read/Write strobe is active-low (PMRD/PMWR)
bit 8
SM: Chip Select x Strobe Mode bit
1 = Read/write and enable strobes (PMRD/PMWR and PMENB)
0 = Read and write strobes (PMRD and PMWR)
bit 7
ACKP: Chip Select x Acknowledge Polarity bit
1 = ACK is active-high (PMACK1)
0 = ACK is active-low (PMACK1)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
x = Bit is unknown
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REGISTER 21-5:
PMCSxCF: EPMP CHIP SELECT x CONFIGURATION REGISTER (CONTINUED)
bit 6-5
PTSZ: Chip Select x Port Size bits
11 = Reserved
10 = 16-bit port size (PMD)
01 = 4-bit port size (PMD)
00 = 8-bit port size (PMD)
bit 4-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
PMCSxBS: EPMP CHIP SELECT x BASE ADDRESS REGISTER(2)
REGISTER 21-6:
R/W(1)
R/W(1)
R/W(1)
R/W(1)
R/W(1)
R/W(1)
R/W(1)
R/W(1)
BASE
bit 15
bit 8
R/W(1)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
BASE15
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-7
BASE: Chip Select x Base Address bits(1)
bit 6-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
2:
x = Bit is unknown
The value at POR is 0080h for PMCS1BS and 0880h for PMCS2BS.
If the whole PMCS2BS register is written together as 0x0000, then the last EDS address for Chip Select 1
will be FFFFFFh. In this case, Chip Select 2 should not be used. PMCS1BS has no such feature.
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REGISTER 21-7:
PMCSxMD: EPMP CHIP SELECT x MODE REGISTER
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
ACKM1
ACKM0
AMWAIT2
AMWAIT1
AMWAIT0
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
DWAITB1
DWAITB0
DWAITM3
DWAITM2
DWAITM1
DWAITM0
DWAITE1
DWAITE0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-14
ACKM: Chip Select x Acknowledge Mode bits
11 = Reserved
10 = PMACKx is used to determine when a read/write operation is complete
01 = PMACKx is used to determine when a read/write operation is complete with time-out (if
DWAITM = 0000, the maximum time-out is 255 TCY or else it is DWAITM cycles)
00 = PMACKx is not used
bit 13-11
AMWAIT: Chip Select x Alternate Master Wait States bits
111 = Wait of 10 alternate master cycles
...
001 = Wait of 4 alternate master cycles
000 = Wait of 3 alternate master cycles
bit 10-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7-6
DWAITB: Chip Select x Data Setup Before Read/Write Strobe Wait States bits
11 = Wait of 3¼ TCY
10 = Wait of 2¼ TCY
01 = Wait of 1¼ TCY
00 = Wait of ¼ TCY
bit 5-2
DWAITM: Chip Select x Data Read/Write Strobe Wait States bits
For Write Operations:
1111 = Wait of 15½ TCY
...
0001 = Wait of 1½ TCY
0000 = Wait of ½ TCY
For Read Operations:
1111 = Wait of 15¾ TCY
...
0001 = Wait of 1¾ TCY
0000 = Wait of ¾ TCY
bit 1-0
DWAITE: Chip Select x Data Hold After Read/Write Strobe Wait States bits
For Write Operations:
11 = Wait of 3¼ TCY
10 = Wait of 2¼ TCY
01 = Wait of 1¼ TCY
00 = Wait of ¼ TCY
For Read Operations:
11 = Wait of 3 TCY
10 = Wait of 2 TCY
01 = Wait of 1 TCY
00 = Wait of 0 TCY
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 21-8:
R-0, HSC
PMSTAT: EPMP STATUS REGISTER (SLAVE MODE ONLY)
R/W-0, HS
U-0
U-0
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
IBOV
—
—
IB3F(1)
IB2F(1)
IB1F(1)
IB0F(1)
IBF
bit 15
bit 8
R-1, HSC
R/W-0, HS
U-0
U-0
R-1, HSC
R-1, HSC
R-1, HSC
R-1, HSC
OBE
OBUF
—
—
OB3E
OB2E
OB1E
OB0E
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
IBF: Input Buffer Full Status bit
1 = All writable Input Buffer registers are full
0 = Some or all of the writable Input Buffer registers are empty
bit 14
IBOV: Input Buffer Overflow Status bit
1 = A write attempt to a full Input register occurred (must be cleared in software)
0 = No overflow occurred
bit 13-12
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 11-8
IB3F:IB0F: Input Buffer x Status Full bits(1)
1 = Input Buffer x contains unread data (reading the buffer will clear this bit)
0 = Input Buffer x does not contain unread data
bit 7
OBE: Output Buffer Empty Status bit
1 = All readable Output Buffer registers are empty
0 = Some or all of the readable Output Buffer registers are full
bit 6
OBUF: Output Buffer Underflow Status bit
1 = A read occurred from an empty Output Buffer register (must be cleared in software)
0 = No underflow occurred
bit 5-4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3-0
OB3E:OB0E: Output Buffer x Status Empty bit
1 = Output Buffer x is empty (writing data to the buffer will clear this bit)
0 = Output Buffer x contains untransmitted data
Note 1:
Even though an individual bit represents the byte in the buffer, the bits corresponding to the word (Byte 0
and 1 or Byte 2 and 3) get cleared, even on byte reading.
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REGISTER 21-9:
PADCFG1: PAD CONFIGURATION CONTROL REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
PMPTTL
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
PMPTTL: EPMP Module TTL Input Buffer Select bit
1 = EPMP module inputs (PMDx, PMCS1) use TTL input buffers
0 = EPMP module inputs use Schmitt Trigger input buffers
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
x = Bit is unknown
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NOTES:
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22.0
The module has these features:
LIQUID CRYSTAL DISPLAY
(LCD) CONTROLLER
Note:
• Direct Driving of LCD Panel
• Three LCD Clock Sources with Selectable
Prescaler
• Up to Eight Commons:
- Static (one common)
- 1/2 multiplex (two commons)
- 1/3 multiplex (three commons)
- 1/8 multiplex (eight commons)
• Ability to Drive from 31 (in 64-pin devices) to
63 (100/121-pin) Segments, Depending on the
Multiplexing mode Selected
• Static, 1/2 or 1/3 LCD Bias
• On-Chip Bias Generator with Dedicated Charge
Pump to Support a Range of Fixed and Variable
Bias Options
• Internal Resistors for Bias Voltage Generation
• Software Contrast Control for LCD Using Internal
Biasing
This data sheet summarizes the features
of the PIC24FJ128GC010 family of
devices. It is not intended to be a comprehensive reference source. To complement
the information in this data sheet, refer to
the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference
Manual”, “Liquid Crystal Display (LCD)”
(DS30009740) which is available from the
Microchip web site (www.microchip.com).
The information in this data sheet
supersedes the information in the FRM.
The Liquid Crystal Display (LCD) controller generates
the data and timing control required to directly drive a
static or multiplexed LCD panel. Higher pin count
devices can drive up to 472 individual pixels
(8 commons x 59 segments).
A simplified block diagram of the module is shown in
Figure 22-1.
FIGURE 22-1:
LCD CONTROLLER MODULE BLOCK DIAGRAM
Data Bus
LCD DATA
32 x 16 (= 8 x 64)
16
LCDDATA31
512
LCDDATA30
.
.
.
to
64
LCDDATA1
MUX
64
SEG
LCDDATA0
Bias
Voltage
To I/O Pins(1)
Timing Control
LCDCON
8
LCDPS
LCDSEx
COM
LCD Bias Generation
LCDREG
LCDREF
Resistor Ladder
FRC Oscillator
LPRC Oscillator
SOSC
(Secondary Oscillator)
Note 1:
LCD Clock
Source Select
LCD
Charge Pump
Not all LCD commons and segments are available. Please check the package information located in Table 1-3.
The maximum number of LCD pixels is 472.
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22.1
Registers
The LCD controller has up to 40 registers:
•
•
•
•
•
LCD Control Register (LCDCON)
LCD Charge Pump Control Register (LCDREG)
LCD Phase Register (LCDPS)
LCD Voltage Ladder Control Register (LCDREF)
Four LCD Segment Enable Registers
(LCDSE3:LCDSE0)
• Up to 32 LCD Data Registers
(LCDDATA31:LCDDATA0)
REGISTER 22-1:
LCDCON: LCD CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
LCDEN
—
LCDSIDL
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
R/W-0
R/C-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
SLPEN
WERR
CS1
CS0
LMUX2
LMUX1
LMUX0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
C = Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
LCDEN: LCD Driver Enable bit
1 = LCD driver module is enabled
0 = LCD driver module is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
LCDSIDL: LCD Stop in CPU Idle Mode Control bit
1 = LCD driver halts in CPU Idle mode
0 = LCD driver continues to operate in CPU Idle mode
bit 12-7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6
SLPEN: LCD Driver Enable in Sleep Mode bit
1 = LCD driver module is disabled in Sleep mode
0 = LCD driver module is enabled in Sleep mode
bit 5
WERR: LCD Write Failed Error bit
1 = LCDDATAx register is written while WA (LCDPS) = 0 (must be cleared in software)
0 = No LCD write error
bit 4-3
CS: Clock Source Select bits
00 = FRC
01 = LPRC
1x = SOSC
DS30009312D-page 318
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REGISTER 22-1:
bit 2-0
LCDCON: LCD CONTROL REGISTER (CONTINUED)
LMUX: LCD Commons Select bits
LMUX
Multiplex
Bias
111
1/8 MUX (COM)
1/3
110
1/7 MUX (COM)
1/3
101
1/6 MUX (COM)
1/3
100
1/5 MUX (COM)
1/3
011
1/4 MUX (COM)
1/3
010
1/3 MUX (COM)
1/2 or 1/3
001
1/2 MUX (COM)
1/2 or 1/3
Static (COM0)
Static
000
Note:
For multiplex above 4 commons, COM4, COM5, COM6 and COM7 also have segment
functionality. Therefore, if the COM is enabled in multiplexing, the segment will not be
available on that pin. Table 1-3 lists the available segments when using more than
4 commons.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 22-2:
LCDREG: LCD CHARGE PUMP CONTROL REGISTER
RW-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
CPEN
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-1
RW-0
RW-0
—
—
BIAS2
BIAS1
BIAS0
MODE13
CKSEL1
CKSEL0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
CPEN: 3.6V Charge Pump Enable bit
1 = The regulator generates the highest (3.6V) voltage
0 = Highest voltage in the system is supplied externally (AVDD)
bit 14-6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5-3
BIAS: Regulator Voltage Output Control bits
111 = 3.60V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0V)
110 = 3.47V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0.13V)
101 = 3.34V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0.26V)
100 = 3.21V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0.39V)
011 = 3.08V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0.52V)
010 = 2.95V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0.65V)
001 = 2.82V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0.78V)
000 = 2.69V peak (offset on LCDBIAS0 of 0.91V)
bit 2
MODE13: 1/3 LCD Bias Enable bit
1 = Regulator output supports 1/3 LCD Bias mode
0 = Regulator output supports Static LCD Bias mode
bit 1-0
CLKSEL: Regulator Clock Select Control bits
11 = SOSC
10 = 8 MHz FRC
01 = 31 kHz LPRC
00 = Disables regulator and floats regulator voltage output
DS30009312D-page 320
x = Bit is unknown
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 22-3:
LCDPS: LCD PHASE REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R-0
R-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
WFT
BIASMD
LCDA
WA
LP3
LP2
LP1
LP0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
WFT: Waveform Type Select bit
1 = Type-B waveform (phase changes on each frame boundary)
0 = Type-A waveform (phase changes within each common type)
bit 6
BIASMD: Bias Mode Select bit
When LMUX = 000 or 011 through 111:
0 = Static Bias mode (do not set this bit to ‘1’)
When LMUX = 001 or 010:
1 = 1/2 Bias mode
0 = 1/3 Bias mode
bit 5
LCDA: LCD Active Status bit
1 = LCD driver module is active
0 = LCD driver module is inactive
bit 4
WA: LCD Write Allow Status bit
1 = Write into the LCDDATAx registers is allowed
0 = Write into the LCDDATAx registers is not allowed
bit 3-0
LP: LCD Prescaler Select bits
1111 = 1:16
1110 = 1:15
1101 = 1:14
1100 = 1:13
1011 = 1:12
1010 = 1:11
1001 = 1:10
1000 = 1:9
0111 = 1:8
0110 = 1:7
0101 = 1:6
0100 = 1:5
0011 = 1:4
0010 = 1:3
0001 = 1:2
0000 = 1:1
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
x = Bit is unknown
DS30009312D-page 321
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REGISTER 22-4:
R/W-0
(1,2)
SE(n+15)
LCDSEx: LCD SEGMENT x ENABLE REGISTER
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
SE(n+14)
SE(n+13)
SE(n+12)
SE(n+11)
SE(n+10)
SE(n+9)
SE(n+8)
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
SE(n+7)
SE(n+6)
SE(n+5)
SE(n+4)
SE(n+3)
SE(n+2)
SE(n+1)
SE(n)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-0
Note 1:
2:
x = Bit is unknown
SE(n+15):SE(n): LCD Segment Enable bits
For LCDSE0: n = 0
For LCDSE1: n = 16
For LCDSE2: n = 32
For LCDSE3: n = 48(1,2)
1 = Segment function of the pin is enabled, digital I/O is disabled
0 = Segment function of the pin is disabled, digital I/O is enabled
SE63 (LCDSE3) is not implemented.
For the SEG49 to work correctly, the JTAG needs to be disabled.
REGISTER 22-5:
LCDDATAx: LCD DATA x REGISTER
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
S(n+15)Cy
S(n+14)Cy
S(n+13)Cy
S(n+12)Cy
S(n+11)Cy
S(n+10)Cy
S(n+9)Cy
S(n+8)Cy
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
S(n+7)Cy
S(n+6)Cy
S(n+5)Cy
S(n+4)Cy
S(n+3)Cy
S(n+2)Cy
S(n+1)Cy
S(n)Cy
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-0
x = Bit is unknown
S(n+15)Cy:S(n)Cy: Pixel On bits
For registers, LCDDATA0 through LCDDATA3: n = (16x), y = 0
For registers, LCDDATA4 through LCDDATA7: n = (16(x – 4)), y = 1
For registers, LCDDATA8 through LCDDATA11: n = (16(x – 8)), y = 2
For registers, LCDDATA12 through LCDDATA15: n = (16(x – 12)), y = 3
For registers, LCDDATA16 through LCDDATA19: n = (16(x – 16)), y = 4
For registers, LCDDATA20 through LCDDATA23: n = (16(x – 20)), y = 5
For registers, LCDDATA24 through LCDDATA27: n = (16(x – 24)), y = 6
For registers, LCDDATA28 through LCDDATA31: n = (16(x – 28)), y = 7
1 = Pixel is on
0 = Pixel is off
DS30009312D-page 322
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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TABLE 22-1:
LCDDATA REGISTERS AND BITS FOR SEGMENT AND COM COMBINATIONS
Segments
COM Lines
0 to 15
16 to 31
32 to 47
48 to 62
0
LCDDATA0
S00C0:S15C0
LCDDATA1
S16C0:S31C0
LCDDATA2
S32C0:S47C0
LCDDATA3
S48C0:S63C0
1
LCDDATA4
S00C1:S15C1
LCDDATA5
S16C1:S31C1
LCDDATA6
S32C1:S47C1
LCDDATA7
S48C1:S63C1
2
LCDDATA8
S00C2:S15C2
LCDDATA9
S16C2:S31C2
LCDDATA10
S32C2:S47C2
LCDDATA11
S48C2:S63C2
3
LCDDATA12
S00C3:S15C3
LCDDATA13
S16C3:S31C3
LCDDATA14
S32C3:S47C3
LCDDATA15
S48C3:S63C3
4
LCDDATA16
S00C4:S15C4
LCDDATA17
S16C4:S31C4
LCDDATA18
S32C4:S47C4
LCDDATA19
S48C4:S59C4
5
LCDDATA20
S00C5:S15C5
LCDDATA21
S16C5:S31C5
LCDDATA22
S32C5:S47C5
LCDDATA23
S48C5:S69C5
6
LCDDATA24
S00C6:S15C6
LCDDATA25
S16C6:S31C6
LCDDATA26
S32C6:S47C6
LCDDATA27
S48C6:S59C6
7
LCDDATA28
S00C7:S15C7
LCDDATA29
S16C7:S31C7
LCDDATA30
S32C7:S47C7
LCDDATA31
S48C7:S59C7
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 22-6:
LCDREF: LCD REFERENCE LADDER CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
LCDIRE
—
LCDCST2
LCDCST1
LCDCST0
VLCD3PE
VLCD2PE
VLCD1PE
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
LRLAP1
LRLAP0
R/W-0
LRLBP1
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
LRLBP0
—
LRLAT2
LRLAT1
LRLAT0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
LCDIRE: LCD Internal Reference Enable bit
1 = Internal LCD reference is enabled and connected to the internal contrast control circuit
0 = Internal LCD reference is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13-11
LCDCST: LCD Contrast Control bits
Selects the resistance of the LCD contrast control resistor ladder:
111 = Resistor ladder is at maximum resistance (minimum contrast)
110 = Resistor ladder is at 6/7th of maximum resistance
101 = Resistor ladder is at 5/7th of maximum resistance
100 = Resistor ladder is at 4/7th of maximum resistance
011 = Resistor ladder is at 3/7th of maximum resistance
010 = Resistor ladder is at 2/7th of maximum resistance
001 = Resistor ladder is at 1/7th of maximum resistance
000 = Minimum resistance (maximum contrast); resistor ladder is shorted
bit 10
VLCD3PE: LCD Bias 3 Pin Enable bit
1 = Bias 3 level is connected to the external pin, LCDBIAS3
0 = Bias 3 level is internal (internal resistor ladder)
bit 9
VLCD2PE: LCD Bias 2 Pin Enable bit
1 = Bias 2 level is connected to the external pin, LCDBIAS2
0 = Bias 2 level is internal (internal resistor ladder)
bit 8
VLCD1PE: LCD Bias 1 Pin Enable bit
1 = Bias 1 level is connected to the external pin, LCDBIAS1
0 = Bias 1 level is internal (internal resistor ladder)
bit 7-6
LRLAP: LCD Reference Ladder A Time Power Control bits
During Time Interval A:
11 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered in High-Power mode
10 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered in Medium Power mode
01 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered in Low-Power mode
00 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered down and unconnected
bit 5-4
LRLBP: LCD Reference Ladder B Time Power Control bits
During Time Interval B:
11 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered in High-Power mode
10 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered in Medium Power mode
01 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered in Low-Power mode
00 = Internal LCD reference ladder is powered down and unconnected
bit 3
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
DS30009312D-page 324
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 22-6:
bit 2-0
LCDREF: LCD REFERENCE LADDER CONTROL REGISTER (CONTINUED)
LRLAT: LCD Reference Ladder A Time Interval Control bits
Sets the number of 32 clock counts when the A Time Interval Power mode is active.
For Type-A Waveforms (WFT = 0):
111 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 7 clocks and B Power mode for 9 clocks
110 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 6 clocks and B Power mode for 10 clocks
101 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 5 clocks and B Power mode for 11 clocks
100 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 4 clocks and B Power mode for 12 clocks
011 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 3 clocks and B Power mode for 13 clocks
010 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 2 clocks and B Power mode for 14 clocks
001 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 1 clock and B Power mode for 15 clocks
000 = Internal LCD reference ladder is always in B Power mode
For Type-B Waveforms (WFT = 1):
111 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 7 clocks and B Power mode for 25 clocks
110 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 6 clocks and B Power mode for 26 clocks
101 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 5 clocks and B Power mode for 27 clocks
100 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 4 clocks and B Power mode for 28 clocks
011 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 3 clocks and B Power mode for 29 clocks
010 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 2 clocks and B Power mode for 30 clocks
001 = Internal LCD reference ladder is in A Power mode for 1 clock and B Power mode for 31 clocks
000 = Internal LCD reference ladder is always in B Power mode
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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NOTES:
DS30009312D-page 326
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23.0
Note:
•
•
•
•
•
•
REAL-TIME CLOCK AND
CALENDAR (RTCC)
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information on the
Real-Time Clock and Calendar, refer to
the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference
Manual”, “RTCC with External Power
Control” (DS39745) which is available
from
the
Microchip
web
site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the
information in the FRM.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
The RTCC provides the user with a Real-Time Clock
and Calendar (RTCC) function that can be calibrated.
Key features of the RTCC module are:
• Operates in Deep Sleep mode
• Selectable Clock Source
• Provides Hours, Minutes and Seconds Using
24-Hour Format
• Visibility of One Half Second Period
• Provides Calendar – Weekday, Date, Month
and Year
• Alarm-Configurable for Half a Second,
One Second, Ten Seconds, One Minute,
Ten Minutes, One Hour, One Day, One Week,
One Month or One Year
FIGURE 23-1:
Input from
SOSC/LPRC
Oscillator or
External Source
Alarm Repeat with Decrementing Counter
Alarm with Indefinite Repeat Chime
Year 2000 to 2099 Leap Year Correction
BCD Format for Smaller Software Overhead
Optimized for Long-Term Battery Operation
User Calibration of the 32.768 kHz Clock
Crystal/32K INTRC Frequency with Periodic
Auto-Adjust
Optimized for Long-Term Battery Operation
Fractional Second Synchronization
Calibration to within ±2.64 Seconds Error per Month
Calibrates up to 260 ppm of Crystal Error
Ability to Periodically Wake-up External Devices
without CPU Intervention (external power control)
Power Control Output for External Circuit Control
Calibration takes Effect Every 15 Seconds
Runs from Any One of the Following:
- External Real-Time Clock (RTC) of 32.768 kHz
- Internal 31.25 kHz LPRC clock
- 50 Hz or 60 Hz external input
23.1
RTCC Source Clock
The user can select between the SOSC crystal
oscillator, LPRC internal oscillator or an external
50 Hz/60 Hz power line input as the clock reference for
the RTCC module. This gives the user an option to trade
off system cost, accuracy and power consumption,
based on the overall system needs.
RTCC BLOCK DIAGRAM
CPU Clock Domain
RTCC Clock Domain
RCFGCAL
RTCC Prescalers
ALCFGRPT
RTCVAL
YEAR
MTHDY
WKDYHR
MINSEC
ALRMVAL
ALMTHDY
ALWDHR
ALMINSEC
0.5 Sec
RTCC Timer
Alarm
Event
Comparator
Alarm Registers with Masks
REPEAT Counter
RTCC Interrupt Logic
Alarm
Pulse
RTCC
Interrupt
RTCOE
RTCOUT
00
1s
Clock Source
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
01
10
RTCC
Pin
DS30009312D-page 327
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23.2
TABLE 23-2:
RTCC Module Registers
The RTCC module registers are organized into three
categories:
• RTCC Control Registers
• RTCC Value Registers
• Alarm Value Registers
23.2.1
00
REGISTER MAPPING
To limit the register interface, the RTCC Timer and
Alarm Time registers are accessed through corresponding register pointers. The RTCC Value register
window (RTCVALH and RTCVALL) uses the
RTCPTR bits (RCFGCAL) to select the
desired Timer register pair (see Table 23-1).
By writing the RTCVALH byte, the RTCC Pointer value,
the RTCPTR bits decrement by one until they
reach ‘00’. Once they reach ‘00’, the MINUTES and
SECONDS value will be accessible through RTCVALH
and RTCVALL until the pointer value is manually
changed.
TABLE 23-1:
ALRMPTR
RTCVAL REGISTER MAPPING
RTCC Value Register Window
RTCPTR
RTCVAL
RTCVAL
00
MINUTES
SECONDS
01
WEEKDAY
HOURS
10
MONTH
DAY
11
—
YEAR
EXAMPLE 23-1:
asm
asm
asm
asm
asm
asm
asm
asm
asm
asm
volatile
volatile
volatile
volatile
volatile
volatile
volatile
volatile
volatile
volatile
DS30009312D-page 328
Alarm Value Register Window
ALRMVAL ALRMVAL
ALRMMIN
ALRMSEC
01
ALRMWD
ALRMHR
10
ALRMMNTH
ALRMDAY
11
—
—
Considering that the 16-bit core does not distinguish
between 8-bit and 16-bit read operations, the user must
be aware that when reading either the ALRMVALH or
ALRMVALL bytes, the ALRMPTR value will be
decremented. The same applies to the RTCVALH or
RTCVALL bytes with the RTCPTR bits being
decremented.
Note:
23.2.2
This only applies to read operations and
not write operations.
WRITE LOCK
In order to perform a write to any of the RTCC Timer
registers, the RTCWREN bit (RCFGCAL) must be
set (see Example 23-1).
Note:
The Alarm Value register window (ALRMVALH and
ALRMVALL) uses the ALRMPTR bits
(ALCFGRPT) to select the desired Alarm
register pair (see Table 23-2).
By writing the ALRMVALH byte, the Alarm Pointer
value, ALRMPTR bits, decrement by one until
they reach ‘00’. Once they reach ‘00’, the ALRMMIN
and ALRMSEC value will be accessible through
ALRMVALH and ALRMVALL until the pointer value is
manually changed.
ALRMVAL REGISTER
MAPPING
23.2.3
To avoid accidental writes to the timer, it is
recommended that the RTCWREN bit
(RCFGCAL) is kept clear at any
other time. For the RTCWREN bit to be
set, there is only one instruction cycle time
window allowed between the 55h/AA
sequence and the setting of RTCWREN;
therefore, it is recommended that code
follow the procedure in Example 23-1.
SELECTING RTCC CLOCK SOURCE
The clock source for the RTCC module can be selected
using the RTCLK bits in the RTCPWC register.
When the bits are set to ‘00’, the Secondary Oscillator
(SOSC) is used as the reference clock and when the bits
are ‘01’, LPRC is used as the reference clock. When
RTCLK = 10 and 11, the external power line
(50 Hz and 60 Hz) is used as the clock source.
SETTING THE RTCWREN BIT
(“push w7”);
(“push w8”);
(“disi #5”);
(“mov #0x55, w7”);
(“mov w7, _NVMKEY”);
(“mov #0xAA, w8”);
(“mov w8, _NVMKEY”);
(“bset _RCFGCAL, #13”);
(“pop w8”);
(“pop w7”);
//set the RTCWREN bit
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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23.3
Registers
23.3.1
RTCC CONTROL REGISTERS
REGISTER 23-1:
RCFGCAL: RTCC CALIBRATION/CONFIGURATION REGISTER(1)
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
RTCEN(2)
—
RTCWREN
RTCSYNC
HALFSEC(3)
RTCOE
RTCPTR1
RTCPTR0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
CAL7
CAL6
CAL5
CAL4
CAL3
CAL2
CAL1
CAL0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
RTCEN: RTCC Enable bit(2)
1 = RTCC module is enabled
0 = RTCC module is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
RTCWREN: RTCC Value Registers Write Enable bit
1 = RTCVALH and RTCVALL registers can be written to by the user
0 = RTCVALH and RTCVALL registers are locked out from being written to by the user
bit 12
RTCSYNC: RTCC Value Registers Read Synchronization bit
1 = RTCVALH, RTCVALL and ALCFGRPT registers can change while reading due to a rollover ripple
resulting in an invalid data read. If the register is read twice and results in the same data, the data
can be assumed to be valid.
0 = RTCVALH, RTCVALL or ALCFGRPT register can be read without concern over a rollover ripple
bit 11
HALFSEC: Half Second Status bit(3)
1 = Second half period of a second
0 = First half period of a second
bit 10
RTCOE: RTCC Output Enable bit
1 = RTCC output is enabled
0 = RTCC output is disabled
bit 9-8
RTCPTR: RTCC Value Register Window Pointer bits
Points to the corresponding RTCC Value registers when reading the RTCVALH and RTCVALL registers.
The RTCPTR value decrements on every read or write of RTCVALH until it reaches ‘00’.
RTCVAL:
11 = Reserved
10 = MONTH
01 = WEEKDAY
00 = MINUTES
RTCVAL:
11 = YEAR
10 = DAY
01 = HOURS
00 = SECONDS
Note 1:
2:
3:
The RCFGCAL register is only affected by a POR.
A write to the RTCEN bit is only allowed when RTCWREN = 1.
This bit is read-only; it is cleared to ‘0’ on a write to the lower half of the MINSEC register.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 23-1:
bit 7-0
Note 1:
2:
3:
RCFGCAL: RTCC CALIBRATION/CONFIGURATION REGISTER(1) (CONTINUED)
CAL: RTC Drift Calibration bits
01111111 = Maximum positive adjustment; adds 127 RTC clock pulses every 15 seconds
•
•
•
01111111 = Minimum positive adjustment; adds 1 RTC clock pulse every 15 seconds
00000000 = No adjustment
11111111 = Minimum negative adjustment; subtracts 1 RTC clock pulse every 15 seconds
•
•
•
10000000 = Maximum negative adjustment; subtracts 128 RTC clock pulses every 15 seconds
The RCFGCAL register is only affected by a POR.
A write to the RTCEN bit is only allowed when RTCWREN = 1.
This bit is read-only; it is cleared to ‘0’ on a write to the lower half of the MINSEC register.
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REGISTER 23-2:
R/W-0
PWCEN
RTCPWC: RTCC POWER CONTROL REGISTER(1)
R/W-0
PWCPOL
R/W-0
PWCPRE
R/W-0
R/W-0
PWSPRE
RTCLK1(2,3)
R/W-0
RTCLK0
(2,3)
R/W-0
R/W-0
RTCOUT1
RTCOUT0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
PWCEN: RTCC Power Control Enable bit
1 = Power control is enabled
0 = Power control is disabled
bit 14
PWCPOL: RTCC Power Control Polarity bit
1 = Power control output is active-high
0 = Power control output is active-low
bit 13
PWCPRE: RTCC Power Control/Stability Prescaler bit
1 = PWC stability window clock is divide-by-2 of the source RTCC clock
0 = PWC stability window clock is divide-by-1 of the source RTCC clock
bit 12
PWSPRE: RTCC Power Control Sample Prescaler bit
1 = PWC sample window clock is divide-by-2 of the source RTCC clock
0 = PWC sample window clock is divide-by-1 of the source RTCC clock
bit 11-10
RTCLK: RTCC Clock Source Select bits(2,3)
11 = External power line source (60 Hz)
10 = External power line source (50 Hz)
01 = Internal LPRC Oscillator
00 = External Secondary Oscillator (SOSC)
bit 9-8
RTCOUT: RTCC Output Source Select bits
11 = Power control
10 = RTCC clock
01 = RTCC seconds clock
00 = RTCC alarm pulse
bit 7-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
2:
3:
x = Bit is unknown
The RTCPWC register is only affected by a POR.
When a new value is written to these register bits, the lower half of the MINSEC register should also be
written to properly reset the clock prescalers in the RTCC.
Connect the external power line source clock to input pin, PWRLCLK. Voltage must not exceed the
electrical specifications shown in Table 37-8.
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REGISTER 23-3:
ALCFGRPT: ALARM CONFIGURATION REGISTER
R/W-0
ALRMEN
bit 15
R/W-0
CHIME
R/W-0
AMASK3
R/W-0
AMASK2
R/W-0
AMASK1
R/W-0
AMASK0
R/W-0
ALRMPTR1
R/W-0
ARPT7
bit 7
R/W-0
ARPT6
R/W-0
ARPT5
R/W-0
ARPT4
R/W-0
ARPT3
R/W-0
ARPT2
R/W-0
ARPT1
Legend:
R = Readable bit
-n = Value at POR
bit 15
bit 14
bit 13-10
bit 9-8
bit 7-0
W = Writable bit
‘1’ = Bit is set
R/W-0
ALRMPTR0
bit 8
R/W-0
ARPT0
bit 0
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
ALRMEN: Alarm Enable bit
1 = Alarm is enabled (cleared automatically after an alarm event whenever ARPT = 00h and
CHIME = 0)
0 = Alarm is disabled
CHIME: Chime Enable bit
1 = Chime is enabled; ARPT bits are allowed to roll over from 00h to FFh
0 = Chime is disabled; ARPT bits stop once they reach 00h
AMASK: Alarm Mask Configuration bits
0000 = Every half second
0001 = Every second
0010 = Every 10 seconds
0011 = Every minute
0100 = Every 10 minutes
0101 = Every hour
0110 = Once a day
0111 = Once a week
1000 = Once a month
1001 = Once a year (except when configured for February 29th, once every 4 years)
101x = Reserved – do not use
11xx = Reserved – do not use
ALRMPTR: Alarm Value Register Window Pointer bits
Points to the corresponding Alarm Value registers when reading the ALRMVALH and ALRMVALL registers.
The ALRMPTR value decrements on every read or write of ALRMVALH until it reaches ‘00’.
ALRMVAL:
00 = ALRMMIN
01 = ALRMWD
10 = ALRMMNTH
11 = Unimplemented
ALRMVAL:
00 = ALRMSEC
01 = ALRMHR
10 = ALRMDAY
11 = Unimplemented
ARPT: Alarm Repeat Counter Value bits
11111111 = Alarm will repeat 255 more times
•
•
•
00000000 = Alarm will not repeat
The counter decrements on any alarm event; it is prevented from rolling over from 00h to FFh unless
CHIME = 1.
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23.3.2
RTCVAL REGISTER MAPPINGS
REGISTER 23-4:
YEAR: YEAR VALUE REGISTER(1)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
YRTEN3
YRTEN2
YRTEN2
YRTEN1
YRONE3
YRONE2
YRONE1
YRONE0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7-4
YRTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Year’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
bit 3-0
YRONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Year’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
Note 1:
A write to the YEAR register is only allowed when RTCWREN = 1.
REGISTER 23-5:
MTHDY: MONTH AND DAY VALUE REGISTER(1)
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
—
—
MTHTEN0
MTHONE3
MTHONE2
MTHONE1
MTHONE0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
—
DAYTEN1
DAYTEN0
DAYONE3
DAYONE2
DAYONE1
DAYONE0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-13
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 12
MTHTEN0: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Month’s Tens Digit bit
Contains a value of ‘0’ or ‘1’.
bit 11-8
MTHONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Month’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
bit 7-6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5-4
DAYTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Day’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 3.
bit 3-0
DAYONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Day’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
Note 1:
x = Bit is unknown
A write to this register is only allowed when RTCWREN = 1.
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WKDYHR: WEEKDAY AND HOURS VALUE REGISTER(1)
REGISTER 23-6:
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
—
—
—
—
WDAY2
WDAY1
WDAY0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
—
HRTEN1
HRTEN0
HRONE3
HRONE2
HRONE1
HRONE0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-11
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 10-8
WDAY: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Weekday Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 6.
bit 7-6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5-4
HRTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Hour’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 2.
bit 3-0
HRONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Hour’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
Note 1:
A write to this register is only allowed when RTCWREN = 1.
REGISTER 23-7:
MINSEC: MINUTES AND SECONDS VALUE REGISTER
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
MINTEN2
MINTEN1
MINTEN0
MINONE3
MINONE2
MINONE1
MINONE0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
SECTEN2
SECTEN1
SECTEN0
SECONE3
SECONE2
SECONE1
SECONE0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 14-12
MINTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Minute’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 5.
bit 11-8
MINONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Minute’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
bit 7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6-4
SECTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Second’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 5.
bit 3-0
SECONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Second’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
23.3.3
ALRMVAL REGISTER MAPPINGS
REGISTER 23-8:
ALMTHDY: ALARM MONTH AND DAY VALUE REGISTER(1)
U-0
—
bit 15
U-0
—
U-0
—
R/W-x
MTHTEN0
R/W-x
MTHONE3
R/W-x
MTHONE2
R/W-x
MTHONE1
R/W-x
MTHONE0
bit 8
U-0
—
U-0
—
R/W-x
DAYTEN1
R/W-x
DAYTEN0
R/W-x
DAYONE3
R/W-x
DAYONE2
R/W-x
DAYONE1
R/W-x
DAYONE0
bit 0
bit 7
Legend:
R = Readable bit
-n = Value at POR
bit 15-13
bit 12
bit 11-8
bit 7-6
bit 5-4
bit 3-0
Note 1:
W = Writable bit
‘1’ = Bit is set
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
MTHTEN0: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Month’s Tens Digit bit
Contains a value of ‘0’ or ‘1’.
MTHONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Month’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
DAYTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Day’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 3.
DAYONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Day’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
A write to this register is only allowed when RTCWREN = 1.
REGISTER 23-9:
ALWDHR: ALARM WEEKDAY AND HOURS VALUE REGISTER(1)
U-0
—
bit 15
U-0
—
U-0
—
U-0
—
U-0
—
R/W-x
WDAY2
R/W-x
WDAY1
R/W-x
WDAY0
bit 8
U-0
—
U-0
—
R/W-x
HRTEN1
R/W-x
HRTEN0
R/W-x
HRONE3
R/W-x
HRONE2
R/W-x
HRONE1
R/W-x
HRONE0
bit 0
bit 7
Legend:
R = Readable bit
-n = Value at POR
bit 15-11
bit 10-8
bit 7-6
bit 5-4
bit 3-0
Note 1:
W = Writable bit
‘1’ = Bit is set
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
WDAY: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Weekday Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 6.
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
HRTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Hour’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 2.
HRONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Hour’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
A write to this register is only allowed when RTCWREN = 1.
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REGISTER 23-10: ALMINSEC: ALARM MINUTES AND SECONDS VALUE REGISTER
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
MINTEN2
MINTEN1
MINTEN0
MINONE3
MINONE2
MINONE1
MINONE0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
R/W-x
—
SECTEN2
SECTEN1
SECTEN0
SECONE3
SECONE2
SECONE1
SECONE0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 14-12
MINTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Minute’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 5.
bit 11-8
MINONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Minute’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
bit 7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6-4
SECTEN: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Second’s Tens Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 5.
bit 3-0
SECONE: Binary Coded Decimal Value of Second’s Ones Digit bits
Contains a value from 0 to 9.
DS30009312D-page 336
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
23.4
Calibration
The real-time crystal input can be calibrated using the
periodic auto-adjust feature. When properly calibrated,
the RTCC can provide an error of less than 3 seconds
per month. This is accomplished by finding the number
of error clock pulses and storing the value into the
lower half of the RCFGCAL register. The 8-bit signed
value loaded into the lower half of RCFGCAL is
multiplied by four and will either be added or subtracted
from the RTCC timer, once every minute. Refer to the
steps below for RTCC calibration:
1.
2.
3.
Using another timer resource on the device, the
user must find the error of the 32.768 kHz crystal.
Once the error is known, it must be converted to
the number of error clock pulses per minute.
a) If the oscillator is faster than ideal (negative
result from Step 2), the RCFGCAL register value
must be negative. This causes the specified
number of clock pulses to be subtracted from
the timer counter, once every minute.
b) If the oscillator is slower than ideal (positive
result from Step 2), the RCFGCAL register value
must be positive. This causes the specified
number of clock pulses to be subtracted from
the timer counter, once every minute.
EQUATION 23-1:
(Ideal Frequency† – Measured Frequency) * 60 =
Clocks per Minute
† Ideal Frequency = 32,768 Hz
Writes to the lower half of the RCFGCAL register
should only occur when the timer is turned off, or
immediately after the rising edge of the seconds pulse,
except when SECONDS = 00, 15, 30 or 45. This is due
to the auto-adjust of the RTCC at 15 second intervals.
Note:
23.5
It is up to the user to include, in the error
value, the initial error of the crystal: drift
due to temperature and drift due to crystal
aging.
Alarm
• Configurable from half second to one year
• Enabled using the ALRMEN bit
(ALCFGRPT)
• One-time alarm and repeat alarm options
available
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
23.5.1
CONFIGURING THE ALARM
The alarm feature is enabled using the ALRMEN bit.
This bit is cleared when an alarm is issued. Writes to
ALRMVAL should only take place when ALRMEN = 0.
As shown in Figure 23-2, the interval selection of the
alarm is configured through the AMASK bits
(ALCFGRPT). These bits determine which,
and how many, digits of the alarm must match the clock
value for the alarm to occur.
The alarm can also be configured to repeat based on a
preconfigured interval. The amount of times this
occurs, once the alarm is enabled, is stored in the
ARPT bits (ALCFGRPT). When the value
of the ARPTx bits equals 00h, and the CHIME bit
(ALCFGRPT) is cleared, the repeat function is
disabled and only a single alarm will occur. The alarm
can be repeated, up to 255 times by loading
ARPT with FFh.
After each alarm is issued, the value of the ARPTx bits
is decremented by one. Once the value has reached
00h, the alarm will be issued one last time, after which,
the ALRMEN bit will be cleared automatically and the
alarm will turn off.
Indefinite repetition of the alarm can occur if the
CHIME bit = 1. Instead of the alarm being disabled
when the value of the ARPTx bits reaches 00h, it rolls
over to FFh and continues counting indefinitely while
CHIME is set.
23.5.2
ALARM INTERRUPT
At every alarm event, an interrupt is generated. In
addition, an alarm pulse output is provided that
operates at half the frequency of the alarm. This output
is completely synchronous to the RTCC clock and can
be used as a trigger clock to other peripherals.
Note:
Changing any of the registers, other than
the RCFGCAL and ALCFGRPT registers,
and the CHIME bit, while the alarm is
enabled (ALRMEN = 1), can result in a
false alarm event leading to a false alarm
interrupt. To avoid a false alarm event, the
timer and alarm values should only be
changed while the alarm is disabled
(ALRMEN = 0). It is recommended that
the ALCFGRPT register and CHIME bit be
changed when RTCSYNC = 0.
DS30009312D-page 337
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 23-2:
ALARM MASK SETTINGS
Alarm Mask Setting
(AMASK)
Day of
the
Week
Month
Day
Hours
Minutes
Seconds
0000 - Every half second
0001 - Every second
0010 - Every 10 seconds
s
0011 - Every minute
s
s
m
s
s
m
m
s
s
0100 - Every 10 minutes
0101 - Every hour
0110 - Every day
0111 - Every week
d
1000 - Every month
1001 - Every year(1)
Note 1:
23.6
m
m
h
h
m
m
s
s
h
h
m
m
s
s
d
d
h
h
m
m
s
s
d
d
h
h
m
m
s
s
Annually, except when configured for February 29.
Power Control
23.7
RTCC VBAT Operation
The RTCC includes a power control feature that allows
the device to periodically wake-up an external device,
wait for the device to be stable before sampling
wake-up events from that device, and then shut down
the external device. This can be done completely
autonomously by the RTCC, without the need to wake
from the current lower power mode (Sleep, Deep
Sleep, etc.).
The RTCC can operate in VBAT mode when there is a
power loss on the VDD pin. The RTCC will continue to
operate if the VBAT pin is powered on (it is usually
connected to the battery).
To use this feature:
The VBAT BOR can be enabled/disabled using the
VBTBOR bit in the CW2 Configuration register
(CW2). If the VBTBOR enable bit is cleared, the
VBAT BOR is always disabled and there will be no
indication of a VBAT BOR. If the VBTBOR bit is set, the
RTCC can receive a Reset and the RTCEN bit will get
cleared; it can happen anywhere between 1.95-1.4V
(typical).
1.
2.
3.
Enable the RTCC (RTCEN = 1).
Set the PWCEN bit (RTCPWC).
Configure the RTCC pin to drive the PWC control
signal (RTCOE = 1 and RTCOUT = 11).
The polarity of the PWC control signal may be chosen
using the PWCPOL bit (RTCPWC). An active-low
or active-high signal may be used with the appropriate
external switch to turn on or off the power to one or
more external devices. The active-low setting may also
be used in conjunction with an open-drain setting on
the RTCC pin, in order to drive the ground pin(s) of the
external device directly (with the appropriate external
VDD pull-up device), without the need for external
switches. Finally, the CHIME bit should be set to enable
the PWC periodicity.
DS30009312D-page 338
Note:
It is recommended to connect the VBAT
pin to VDD if the VBAT mode is not used
(not connected to the battery).
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
24.0
Note:
32-BIT PROGRAMMABLE
CYCLIC REDUNDANCY CHECK
(CRC) GENERATOR
• User-Programmable CRC Polynomial Equation,
up to 32 Bits
• Programmable Shift Direction (little or big-endian)
• Independent Data and Polynomial Lengths
• Configurable Interrupt Output
• Data FIFO
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to
the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference
Manual”,
“32-Bit
Programmable
Cyclic Redundancy Check (CRC)”
(DS30009729) which is available from the
Microchip web site (www.microchip.com).
The information in this data sheet
supersedes the information in the FRM.
FIGURE 24-1:
The 32-bit programmable CRC generator provides a
hardware implemented method of quickly generating
checksums for various networking and security
applications. It offers the following features:
Figure 24-1 displays a simplified block diagram of the
CRC generator. A simple version of the CRC shift
engine is displayed in Figure 24-2.
CRC BLOCK DIAGRAM
CRCDATH
CRCDATL
FIFO Empty
Event
Variable FIFO
(4x32, 8x16 or 16x8)
CRCWDATH
CRCISEL
CRCWDATL
1
LENDIAN
Shift Buffer
0
CRC
Interrupt
1
CRC Shift Engine
0
Shift
Complete
Event
Shifter Clock
2 * FCY
FIGURE 24-2:
CRC SHIFT ENGINE DETAIL
CRC Shift Engine
CRCWDATH
CRCWDATL
Read/Write Bus
X0
Shift Buffer
Data
Note 1:
Xn(1)
X1
Bit 0
Bit 1
Bit n(1)
n = PLEN + 1.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
24.1
24.1.1
24.1.2
User Interface
POLYNOMIAL INTERFACE
The CRC module can be programmed for CRC
polynomials of up to the 32nd order, using up to 32 bits.
Polynomial length, which reflects the highest exponent
in the equation, is selected by the PLEN bits
(CRCCON2).
The CRCXORL and CRCXORH registers control which
exponent terms are included in the equation. Setting a
particular bit includes that exponent term in the equation. Functionally, this includes an XOR operation on
the corresponding bit in the CRC engine. Clearing the
bit disables the XOR.
For example, consider two CRC polynomials, one a
16-bit and the other a 32-bit equation.
EQUATION 24-1:
DATA INTERFACE
The module incorporates a FIFO that works with a
variable data width. Input data width can be configured
to any value, between 1 and 32 bits, using the
DWIDTH bits (CRCCON2). When the
data width is greater than 15, the FIFO is 4 words deep.
When the DWIDTHx bits are between 15 and 8, the
FIFO is 8 words deep. When the DWIDTHx bits are
less than 8, the FIFO is 16 words deep.
The data for which the CRC is to be calculated must
first be written into the FIFO. Even if the data width is
less than 8, the smallest data element that can be
written into the FIFO is 1 byte. For example, if the
DWIDTHx bits are 5, then the size of the data is
DWIDTH + 1 or 6. The data is written as a whole
byte; the two unused upper bits are ignored by the
module.
Once data is written into the MSb of the CRCDAT registers (that is, the MSb as defined by the data width),
the value of the VWORD bits (CRCCON1)
increments by one. For example, if the DWIDTHx bits
are 24, the VWORDx bits will increment when bit 7 of
CRCDATH is written. Therefore, CRCDATL must
always be written to before CRCDATH.
16-BIT, 32-BIT CRC
POLYNOMIALS
X16 + X12 + X5 + 1
and
X32+X26 + X23 + X22 + X16 + X12 + X11 + X10 +
X8 + X7 + X5 + X4 + X2 + X + 1
The CRC engine starts shifting data when the CRCGO
bit is set and the value of the VWORDx bits is greater
than zero.
To program these polynomials into the CRC generator,
set the register bits, as shown in Table 24-1.
Each word is copied out of the FIFO into a buffer register,
which decrements the VWORDx bits. The data is then
shifted out of the buffer. The CRC engine continues shifting at a rate of two bits per instruction cycle, until the
VWORDx bits reach zero. This means that for a given
data width, it takes half that number of instructions for
each word to complete the calculation. For example, it
takes 16 cycles to calculate the CRC for a single word of
32-bit data.
Note that the appropriate positions are set to ‘1’ to indicate that they are used in the equation (for example,
X26 and X23). The ‘0’ bit required by the equation is
always XORed; thus, X0 is a don’t care. For a polynomial of length 32, it is assumed that the 32nd bit will
be used. Therefore, the X bits do not have the
32nd bit.
When the VWORDx bits reach the maximum value for
the configured value of the DWIDTHx bits (4, 8 or 16),
the CRCFUL bit becomes set. When the VWORDx bits
reach zero, the CRCMPT bit becomes set. The FIFO is
emptied and the VWORD bits are set to ‘00000’
whenever CRCEN is ‘0’.
At least one instruction cycle must pass after a write to
CRCWDAT before a read of the VWORDx bits is done.
TABLE 24-1:
CRC SETUP EXAMPLES FOR 16 AND 32-BIT POLYNOMIALS
Bit Values
CRC Control Bits
16-Bit Polynomial
32-Bit Polynomial
PLEN
01111
11111
X
0000 0000 0000 0001
0000 0100 1100 0001
X
0001 0000 0010 000
0001 1101 1011 011
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2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
24.1.3
DATA SHIFT DIRECTION
The LENDIAN bit (CRCCON1) is used to control
the shift direction. By default, the CRC will shift data
through the engine, MSb first. Setting LENDIAN (= 1)
causes the CRC to shift data, LSb first. This setting
allows better integration with various communication
schemes and removes the overhead of reversing the
bit order in software. Note that this only changes the
direction the data is shifted into the engine. The result
of the CRC calculation will still be a normal CRC result,
not a reverse CRC result.
24.1.4
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
INTERRUPT OPERATION
Preload the FIFO by writing to the CRCDATL
and CRCDATH registers until the CRCFUL bit is
set or no data is left.
Clear old results by writing 00h to CRCWDATL
and CRCWDATH. The CRCWDAT registers can
also be left unchanged to resume a previously
halted calculation.
Set the CRCGO bit to start calculation.
Write remaining data into the FIFO as space
becomes available.
When the calculation completes, CRCGO is
automatically cleared. An interrupt will be
generated if CRCISEL = 1.
Read CRCWDATL and CRCWDATH for the
result of the calculation.
The module generates an interrupt that is configurable
by the user for either of two conditions.
8.
If CRCISEL is ‘0’, an interrupt is generated when the
VWORD bits make a transition from a value of ‘1’
to ‘0’. If CRCISEL is ‘1’, an interrupt will be generated
after the CRC operation finishes and the module sets
the CRCGO bit to ‘0’. Manually setting CRCGO to ‘0’
will not generate an interrupt. Note that when an
interrupt occurs, the CRC calculation would not yet be
complete. The module will still need (PLENx + 1)/2
clock cycles after the interrupt is generated until the
CRC calculation is finished.
There are eight registers used to control programmable
CRC operation:
24.1.5
TYPICAL OPERATION
To use the module for a typical CRC calculation:
1.
2.
Set the CRCEN bit to enable the module.
Configure the module for desired operation:
a) Program the desired polynomial using the
CRCXORL and CRCXORH registers, and the
PLEN bits.
b) Configure the data width and shift direction
using the DWIDTHx and LENDIAN bits.
c) Select the desired Interrupt mode using the
CRCISEL bit.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
CRCCON1
CRCCON2
CRCXORL
CRCXORH
CRCDATL
CRCDATH
CRCWDATL
CRCWDATH
The CRCCON1 and CRCCON2 registers (Register 24-1
and Register 24-2) control the operation of the module
and configure the various settings.
The CRCXORL/H registers (Register 24-3 and
Register 24-4) select the polynomial terms to be used in
the CRC equation. The CRCDATL/H and CRCWDATL/H
registers are each register pairs that serve as buffers for
the double-word input data, and CRC processed output,
respectively.
DS30009312D-page 341
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 24-1:
CRCCON1: CRC CONTROL 1 REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
CRCEN
—
CSIDL
VWORD4
VWORD3
VWORD2
VWORD1
VWORD0
bit 15
bit 8
R-0, HSC
R-1, HSC
R/W-0
R/W-0, HC
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
CRCFUL
CRCMPT
CRCISEL
CRCGO
LENDIAN
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HC = Hardware Clearable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
CRCEN: CRC Enable bit
1 = Enables module
0 = Disables module; all state machines, pointers and CRCWDAT/CRCDAT registers are reset; other
SFRs are NOT reset
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
CSIDL: CRC Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when the device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 12-8
VWORD: Pointer Value bits
Indicates the number of valid words in the FIFO. Has a maximum value of 8 when PLEN 7 or 16
when PLEN 7.
bit 7
CRCFUL: CRC FIFO Full bit
1 = FIFO is full
0 = FIFO is not full
bit 6
CRCMPT: CRC FIFO Empty bit
1 = FIFO is empty
0 = FIFO is not empty
bit 5
CRCISEL: CRC Interrupt Selection bit
1 = Interrupt on FIFO is empty; the final word of data is still shifting through the CRC
0 = Interrupt on shift is complete and results are ready
bit 4
CRCGO: Start CRC bit
1 = Starts CRC serial shifter
0 = CRC serial shifter is turned off
bit 3
LENDIAN: Data Shift Direction Select bit
1 = Data word is shifted into the CRC, starting with the LSb (little endian)
0 = Data word is shifted into the CRC, starting with the MSb (big endian)
bit 2-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
DS30009312D-page 342
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 24-2:
CRCCON2: CRC CONTROL 2 REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
DWIDTH4
DWIDTH3
DWIDTH2
DWIDTH1
DWIDTH0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
PLEN4
PLEN3
PLEN2
PLEN1
PLEN0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-13
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 12-8
DWIDTH: Data Word Width Configuration bits
Configures the width of the data word (Data Word Width – 1).
bit 7-5
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 4-0
PLEN: Polynomial Length Configuration bits
Configures the length of the polynomial (Polynomial Length – 1).
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
x = Bit is unknown
DS30009312D-page 343
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 24-3:
R/W-0
CRCXORL: CRC XOR POLYNOMIAL REGISTER, LOW BYTE
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
X
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
—
X
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-1
X: XOR of Polynomial Term xn Enable bits
bit 0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
REGISTER 24-4:
R/W-0
x = Bit is unknown
CRCXORH: CRC XOR POLYNOMIAL REGISTER, HIGH BYTE
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
X
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
X
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-0
x = Bit is unknown
X: XOR of Polynomial Term xn Enable bits
DS30009312D-page 344
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
25.0
OVERVIEW OF ADVANCED
ANALOG FEATURES
The defining feature of PIC24FJ128GC010 family
devices is the collection of analog peripherals, designed
to extend the range of PIC24F microcontrollers into
high-performance analog and mixed-signal applications.
All devices include a set of new advanced modules and
several existing analog peripherals, plus a common
voltage reference for ease of use.
The analog block includes four new modules:
• 12-Bit High-Speed, Pipeline A/D Converter
(described in Section 26.0 “12-Bit High-Speed,
Pipeline A/D Converter”)
• 16-Bit Sigma-Delta A/D (described
in Section 27.0 “16-Bit Sigma-Delta
Analog-to-Digital (A/D) Converter”)
• Dual 10-Bit Digital-to-Analog Converters
(described in Section 28.0 “10-Bit
Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC)”)
• Dual Operational Amplifiers (described in
Section 29.0 “Dual Operational Amplifier
Module”)
It also includes these legacy PIC24F analog modules:
• Triple Comparator module (described in
Section 30.0 “Triple Comparator Module”) with
independent voltage reference (described in
Section 31.0 “Comparator Voltage Reference”)
• CTMU (described in Section 32.0 “Charge Time
Measurement Unit (CTMU)”)
A high-level overview of the analog block and its integrating features is shown in Figure 25-1. For a more
detailed diagram of each module and an explanation of
its operation, please refer to the appropriate chapter.
25.1
Shared Analog Pins
Apart from the reserved differential inputs for the
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter, PIC24FJ128GC010 family
devices may have up to 50 analog input channels (in
100-pin devices). Because of the number of analog
features available on the microcontroller, many of the
inputs and outputs of the other advanced analog
modules share pins with these channels.
Table 25-1 describes how features are multiplexed.
Note that not all of these analog channels and their
shared analog peripherals are available on all devices.
25.2
Internal Band Gap References
As an integrating feature, the analog block of the
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices includes a common
internal voltage reference source. This band gap
provides several functions:
• A single, configurable internal reference source
(BGBUF0) for all on-chip analog consumers
• Two additional and independently programmable
band gap sources that can provide buffered
internal references (BGBUF1 and BGBUF2) to
external pins
• Independent configurability of all sources in Idle,
Sleep and other low-power modes, allowing for
flexibility in power consumption
The reference sources are controlled by three
registers: BUFCON0 for the internal reference
(Register 25-1), and BUFCON1 and BUFCON2
(Register 25-2) for the buffered references.
Additional information for using the analog peripherals
can be found in the following documents:
• AN1607, “PIC24FJ128GC010 Analog Design
Guide” (DS00001607)
• “Migrating to the New PIC24F Pipeline and
Sigma-Delta ADCs” (DS00001668)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 345
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 25-1:
ANALOG BLOCK OVERVIEW
CTMU
12-Bit Pipeline A/D Converter
CTCMP
CTMU Out
CTPLS
Temp Out
BGBUF1
Sigma-Delta A/D Converter
AVREF+
AVDD
CTMU
AN0
+
CH0P
CH1P
AN15
SD A/D
–
CH1N
CH0N
+
12-Bit A/D
–
SVDD
SVSS
Comparators
C1IND
C1INC
C1INB
C1INA
C1
C2IND
C2INC
C2INB
C2INA
C2
AN16
BGBUF0
VBG/2
OA1OUT
OA2OUT
Temp
AVDD
AVSS
AN49
AVREFAVSS
10-Bit DAC Converters
C3IND
C3INC
C3INB
C3INA
DVREF+
AVDD
C3
+
DAC1
DAC1
+
DAC2
DAC2
BGBUF0
BGBUF0
CVREF
Comparator Voltage
Reference
Operational Amplifiers
OA1P4
AVDD
CTMU Out
CVREF+
VSS
OA1P0
OA1
CVREFAVSS
OA1OUT
OA1N4
CVREF
BGBUF1 BGBUF2
BGBUF0
VBG/2
OA1N0
OA2P4
OA2P0
OA2
Internal
Band Gap
BGBUF1
BGBUF2
OA2OUT
OA2N4
OA2N0
Internal Voltage References
DS30009312D-page 346
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 25-1:
SHARED ANALOG PINS
Analog Input
Channel
Op Amp
Comparator
Comparator
Reference
DAC
Band Gap
Other
Analog
AN0
—
—
CVREF+
DVREF+
BGBUF1
AVREF+
AN1
OA2P1
—
CVREF-
—
—
AVREF-
AN2
OA2N2
C2INB
—
—
—
CTCMP
AN3
OA2OUT
C2INA
—
—
—
—
AN4
OA1N0
C1INB
—
—
—
—
AN5
OA1OUT
C1INA
—
—
—
—
AN6
OA1P3
—
—
—
—
—
AN9
OA1N2
—
—
—
—
—
AN10
OA2P2
—
CVREF
—
—
—
AN11
OA2N3
—
—
—
—
—
AN13
OA2P3
—
—
DAC2
—
—
AN14
OA2N4
—
—
—
—
CTPLS
AN17
OA1P1
C1IND
—
—
BGBUF2
—
AN18
OA1N4
C1INC
—
—
—
—
AN19
OA1N2
C2IND
—
—
—
—
AN20
—
C3INA
—
—
—
—
AN25
OA2N1
—
—
—
—
—
AN30
—
—
—
—
—
—
AN34
OA1P2
C3INB
—
—
—
—
AN41
—
C3IND
—
—
—
—
AN42
OA2P0
C3INC
—
—
—
—
AN43
OA2N0
—
—
—
—
—
AN44
OA2P4
—
—
—
—
—
AN47
OA1P4
—
—
—
—
—
AN48
OA1N1
—
—
—
—
—
AN49
OA1P0
C2INC
—
DAC1
—
—
Legend: Shaded cells are analog outputs.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 347
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 25-1:
BUFCON0: INTERNAL VOLTAGE REFERENCE CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
BUFEN
—
BUFSIDL
BUFSLP
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
BUFSTBY
—
—
—
—
R/W-0
R/W-0
BUFREF1(1) BUFREF0(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
BUFEN: Enable Buffer VREF Source bit
1 = Band gap and buffer are enabled
0 = Band gap and buffer are disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
BUFSIDL: Buffer Stop in Idle bit
1 = Buffer is disabled in Idle mode
0 = Buffer works normally in Idle mode
bit 12
BUFSLP: Buffer Sleep Enable bit
1 = Buffer is disabled in Sleep mode
0 = Buffer works normally in Sleep mode
bit 11-7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6
BUFSTBY: Buffer Standby Enable bit
1 = Buffer is in Low-Power Standby mode (output is unknown or weak drive strength; allows quicker
start-up than clearing BUFEN)
0 = Buffer output works normally
bit 5-2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 1-0
BUFREF: Internal Voltage Reference Select bits(1)
11 = Reference output is set at 3.072V
10 = Reference output is set at 2.560V
01 = Reference output is set at 2.048V
00 = Reference output is set at 1.2V
Note 1:
The BGBUF0 cannot “boost” the AVDD voltage to a higher level. Therefore, BUFREF bits settings
higher than the applied AVDD level are considered invalid.
DS30009312D-page 348
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 25-2:
BUFCONx: BAND GAP BUFFERS 1 AND 2 CONTROL REGISTERS
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
BUFEN
—
BUFSIDL
BUFSLP
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
BUFOE
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
BUFSTBY
—
—
—
—
R/W-0
R/W-0
BUFREF1(1) BUFREF0(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
BUFEN: Enable Buffer VREF Source bit
1 = Band gap and buffer are enabled
0 = Band gap and buffer are disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
BUFSIDL: Buffer Stop in Idle bit
1 = Buffer is disabled in Idle mode
0 = Buffer works normally in Idle mode
bit 12
BUFSLP: Buffer Sleep Enable bit
1 = Buffer is disabled in Sleep mode
0 = Buffer works normally in Sleep mode
bit 11-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
BUFOE: Buffer Output Enable bit
1 = Buffer voltage is output to the corresponding pin
0 = Buffer voltage is not output to the pin
bit 6
BUFSTBY: Buffer Standby Enable bit
1 = Buffer is in Low-Power Standby mode (output is unknown or weak drive strength; allows quicker
start-up than clearing BUFEN)
0 = Buffer output works normally
bit 5-2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 1-0
BUFREF: Internal Voltage Reference Select bits(1)
11 = Reference output is set at 3.072V
10 = Reference output is set at 2.560V
01 = Reference output is set at 2.048V
00 = Reference output is set at 1.2V
Note 1:
The band gap buffers cannot “boost” the AVDD voltage to a higher level. Therefore, the BUFREF bits
setting that is higher than the applied AVDD level is considered invalid.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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NOTES:
DS30009312D-page 350
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
26.0
Note:
12-BIT HIGH-SPEED, PIPELINE
A/D CONVERTER
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information on the
Pipeline A/D Converter, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”, “12-Bit, High-Speed Pipeline A/D
Converter” (DS30000686) which is available from the Microchip web site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
The 12-bit Pipeline A/D Converter has the following key
features:
• Conversion Speeds of up to 10 Msps
• Up to 50 Analog Single-Ended Input Channels or
up to 15 Unique Differential Input Channel Pairs
• 12-Bit Conversion Resolution
• Multiple Internal Reference Input Channels
• External Voltage Reference Input Pins
• Automated Threshold Scan and Compare
Operation to Pre-Evaluate Conversion Results
• Extended Automated and Fully Programmable
Sampling Sequences from up to 4 Different Lists
• Conversion Result Accumulation
• Selectable Conversion Trigger Source
• Internal 32-Word, Configurable Conversion
Result Buffer
• Eight Options for Results Alignment
• Configurable Interrupt Generation
• Operation During CPU Sleep and Idle modes
The A/D Converter module is a 12-bit Pipeline A/D
Converter, capable of sampling up to once per A/D
clock cycle. Its operation is enhanced with a wide range
of automatic sampling options, tighter integration with
other analog modules, result accumulation across
many samples and a configurable results buffer.
A simplified block diagram for the module is shown in
Figure 26-1.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
26.1
Basic Operation
To perform a standard A/D conversion:
1.
Configure the module:
a) Configure port pins as analog inputs by
setting the appropriate bits in the ANSx registers (see Section 11.2 “Configuring Analog
Port Pins (ANSx)” for more information).
b) Configure “global” ADCON1, ADCON2 and
ADCON3 control settings, but do not set the
ADON bit until all global settings are
configured:
• Configure A/D clock source/rate
• Select A/D reference sources
• Configure data formatting
• Configure other settings
c) Enable the A/D module by setting the
ADON bit (ADCON1).
d) Wait until the ADREADY bit (ADSTATH)
becomes set, indicating the module is finished
with internal calibration and initialization.
e) Configure Sample List 0 settings, controlled
by the ADL0CONH and ADL0CONL registers, but do not enable the sample list yet
(SLEN):
• Select the desired sample list interrupt
generation settings
• Select a Data Write mode (ex: write all
results to buffer)
• Configure analog sampling time
(SAMC)
• Select a trigger source
• Specify how many entries are in the
sample list (SLSIZE)
• Configure other Sample List 0 specific
settings
f) Initialize the ADTBL0 register (and higher if
SLSIZEx > 0) to select the analog channel(s)
to be included in Sample List 0.
g) Configure and enable A/D interrupts (if
desired):
• Clear the AD1IF and SL0IF bits
• Select an interrupt priority
• Enable AD1IE
h) Enable Sample List 0 by setting the SLEN
bit (ADL0CONL).
i) Generate a trigger event for Sample List 0
(as configured in Step e).
j) Wait for the SL0IF or top level AD1IF interrupt flag to assert, indicating that the A/D
result(s) are now ready.
k) Read the respective result(s) from the appropriate ADRESn register(s) (as configured
based on the BUFORG setting).
DS30009312D-page 351
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
26.2
Registers
The Pipeline A/D Converter uses a total of
116 registers. Of these, sixty-nine registers control the
module’s operations; the remainder are data and result
buffers.
Five “global” registers control overall module operation
and provide module status:
• ADCON1 through ADCON3 (Register 26-1
through Register 26-3)
• ADSTATH and ADSTATL (Register 26-4 and
Register 26-5)
Fifty-two registers control sample list selection,
configuration and execution:
• ADLnCONH and ADLnCONL (0 through 3)
(prototypes, Register 26-6 and Register 26-7)
• ADLnSTAT (0 through 3) (prototype, Register 26-8)
• ADLnPTR (0 through 3) (prototype, Register 26-9)
• ADLTLBn (0 through 31) (prototype, Register 26-10)
• ADLnMSEL0 through ADLnMSEL3 (0 through 3)
(prototypes, Register 26-17 through
Register 26-20)
Twelve registers control accumulator and threshold
detect operations:
• ACCONH and ACCONL (Register 26-11 and
Register 26-12)
• ADCHITH and ADCHITL (Register 26-13 and
Register 26-14)
• ADTHnH and ADTHnL (0 through 3) (prototypes,
Register 26-15 and Register 26-16)
DS30009312D-page 352
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 26-1:
12-BIT PIPELINE A/D CONVERTER BLOCK DIAGRAM
Internal Data Bus
AN0
AN1
16
AN2
AN14
AN15
AN16(1)
Input Channel MUX
VR-
AN47(1)
AN48(1)
VR+
VINH
VINL
12-Bit A/D
ADRES31:
ADRES0
(Result Buffer)
Conversion Logic
Data Formatting
S/H
AN49(1)
VBG/2
VBAT/2
BGBUF0
CTMU
Sample Control
Temp
Input MUX Control
OPA1O
Control Logic
and
Sample List
Sequencing
Threshold Detect
and Compare Data
OPA2O
AVDD
ADLnCONH
ADLnCONL
AVSS
ADLnSTAT
ADLnPTR
ADCON2
ADCON3
ADSTATL
VR+
ADTBLn
ADTHnH
ADSTATH
ACCONL
ADTHnL
ADLnMSEL3
ACCONH
VR-
VREF+
VREF-
VR Select
AVDD
AVSS
ADLnMSEL2
ADLnMSEL1
BGBUF1
ADLnMSEL0
(n = 0-3)
Note 1:
ADCON1
ADCHITL
ADCHITH
16
DMA Data
Bus
Not all external analog inputs are implemented on all devices. See Table 1-3 for a list of implemented channels by
pin count.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-1:
ADCON1: A/D CONTROL REGISTER 1
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
ADON
—
ADSIDL
ADSLP
FORM3
FORM2
FORM1
FORM0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
PUMPEN
(2)
ADCAL
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
—
—
PWRLVL
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
ADON: A/D Module Enable bit
1 = Module is enabled
0 = Module is disabled (registers are still readable and writable)
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
ADSIDL: A/D Stop in Idle Control bit
1 = Halts when CPU is in Idle mode
0 = Continues to operate in CPU Idle mode
bit 12
ADSLP: A/D Suspend in Sleep Control bit
1 = Continues operation in Sleep mode
0 = Ignores triggers and clocks when CPU is in Sleep mode
bit 11-8
FORM: Data Output Format bits
1xxx = Unimplemented, do not use
0111 = Signed Fractional (sddd dddd dddd 0000)
0110 = Fractional (dddd dddd dddd 0000)
0101 = Signed Integer (ssss sddd dddd dddd)
0100 = Integer (0000 dddd dddd dddd )
0011 = Signed Fractional (sddd dddd dddd 0000)
0010 = Fractional (dddd dddd dddd 0000)
0001 = Signed Integer (ssss sddd dddd dddd)
0000 = Integer, Raw Data (0000 dddd dddd dddd)
bit 7
PUMPEN: Analog Channel Switch Charge Pump Enable bit
1 = Charge pump for switches is enabled, reducing switch impedance(1)
0 = Charge pump for switches is disabled
bit 6
ADCAL: A/D Internal Analog Calibration bit(2)
1 = Initiates internal analog calibration
0 = No operation
bit 5-1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
PWRLVL: Power Level Select bit
1 = Full-Power mode; A/D clock rates from 1 MHz to 10 MHz are allowed
0 = Low-Power mode; A/D clock rates from 1 MHz to 2.5 MHz are allowed
Note 1:
2:
Use of the channel switch charge pump is recommended when AVDD < 2.5V.
When set, ADCAL remains set for at least one TAD and is then automatically cleared by hardware.
Manually clearing the bit does not necessarily cancel the calibration routine. Calibration is complete when
ADSTATH = 1.
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REGISTER 26-2:
ADCON2: A/D CONTROL REGISTER 2
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
r-1
r-1
PVCFG1
PVCFG0
—
NVCFG0
—
BUFORG
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
r-0
r-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
r-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
RFPUMP
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
r = Reserved bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-14
PVCFG: Converter Voltage Reference Configuration for ADREF+ bits
10 = BGBUF1 Internal Reference(1)
01 = External VREF+
00 = AVDD
bit 13
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 12
NVCFG0: Converter Voltage Reference Configuration for ADREF- bit
1 = External VREF0 = AVSS
bit 11
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 10
BUFORG: ADRES Result Buffer Organization Control bit
1 = Result buffer is organized as an indexed buffer; ADTBLn conversion result is stored in ADRESn
(where n is the same number between 0-31)
0 = Result buffer is organized as a 32 result deep FIFO-like buffer; results get stored in the sequential
order that they are generated
bit 9-8
Reserved: Always write ‘11’ to these bits for normal A/D operation
bit 7-6
Reserved: Always write ‘00’ to these bits for normal A/D operation
bit 5-2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 1
RFPUMP: Internal Reference Bias Control bit
1 = Internal bias is optimized for operation with small reference voltage (e.g., < (0.65 * AVDD))
0 = Normal operating mode
bit 0
Reserved: Always write ‘0’ to this bit for normal A/D operation
Note 1:
In order to use the BGBUF1 internal reference for the A/D, firmware must also configure and enable the
buffer through the BUFCON1 register.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-3:
R/W-0
(1)
ADRC
ADCON3: A/D CONTROL REGISTER 3
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0, HC
R/W-0, HC
R/W-0, HC
R/W-0, HC
—
—
—
SLEN3
SLEN2
SLEN1
SLEN0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
(2)
ADCS7
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
ADCS6(2)
ADCS5(2)
ADCS4(2)
ADCS3(2)
ADCS2(2)
ADCS1(2)
ADCS0(2)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HC = Hardware Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
ADRC: A/D Conversion Clock Source (TSRC) bit(1)
1 = Conversion clock derived from FRC (TSRC = TFRC)
0 = Conversion clock derived from system clock (TSRC = TSYS)
bit 14-12
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 11
SLEN3: A/D Sample List 3 Enable bit
1 = Sampling for this list is enabled; triggers defined by ADL3CONL are processed
0 = Sampling for this list is disabled
bit 10
SLEN2: A/D Sample List 2 Enable bit
1 = Sampling for this list is enabled; triggers defined by ADL2CONL are processed
0 = Sampling for this list is disabled
bit 9
SLEN1: A/D Sample List 1 Enable bit
1 = Sampling for this list is enabled; triggers defined by ADL1CONL are processed
0 = Sampling for this list is disabled
bit 8
SLEN0: A/D Sample List 0 Enable bit
1 = Sampling for this list is enabled; triggers defined by ADL0CONL are processed
0 = Sampling for this list is disabled
bit 7-0
ADCS: A/D Conversion Clock Prescaler bits(2)
TAD = TSRC • (2 • ADCS)
Except When ADCS = 00h:
TAD = TSRC
Otherwise:
0001 0001 and higher = Reserved
0001 0000 = 32 • TSRC
0000 1111 = 30 • TSRC
···
0000 0011 = 6 • TSRC
0000 0010 = 4 • TSRC
0000 0001 = 2 • TSRC
Note 1:
2:
This bit must be set for Sleep operation.
Final A/D clock frequency (1/TAD) must be at or between 1 MHz and 10 MHz.
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REGISTER 26-4:
ADSTATH: A/D STATUS HIGH REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R-0
R-0
R-0
—
—
—
—
—
PUMPST
ADREADY
ADBUSY
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-3
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 2
PUMPST: A/D Boost Pump Status bit
1 = The A/D boost pump is active
0 = The A/D boost pump is Idle
bit 1
ADREADY: A/D Analog Ready bit
1 = The analog portion of the A/D is warmed up, internally calibrated and ready
0 = The analog portion of the A/D is not ready
bit 0
ADBUSY: A/D Busy bit
1 = A/D conversion is in progress
0 = A/D is Idle
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-5:
ADSTATL: A/D STATUS LOW REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
SLOV
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
r-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
ACCIF
SL3IF(1)
SL2IF(1)
SL1IF(1)
SL0IF(1)
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
r = Reserved bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-9
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 8
SLOV: A/D Sample List Error Event bit
1 = A buffer overflow has occurred and data has been lost
0 = No buffer overflow has occurred
bit 7-6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
x = Bit is unknown
bit 5
Reserved: Maintain as ‘0’ for normal A/D interrupt operation
bit 4
ACCIF: Accumulator Counter Interrupt Event bit
1 = Accumulator counter has counted down to zero
0 = Accumulator counter has not reached zero
bit 3
SL3IF: A/D Sample List 3 Interrupt Event bit(1)
1 = An interrupt event (defined by ADL3CONH) has occurred in Sample List 3
0 = An interrupt event has not occurred
bit 2
SL2IF: A/D Sample List 2 Interrupt Event bit(1)
1 = An interrupt event (defined by ADL2CONH) has occurred in Sample List 2
0 = An interrupt event has not occurred
bit 1
SL1IF: A/D Sample List 1 Interrupt Event bit(1)
1 = An interrupt event (defined by ADL1CONH) has occurred in Sample List 1
0 = An interrupt event has not occurred
bit 0
SL0IF: A/D Sample List 0 Interrupt Event bit(1)
1 = An interrupt event (defined by ADL0CONH) has occurred in Sample List 0
0 = An interrupt event has not occurred
Note 1:
These bits mirror the ADLIF flag bits for the corresponding ADLnSTAT registers. Changes in the ADLIF
bits are simultaneously reflected in the SLxIF bits.
DS30009312D-page 358
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REGISTER 26-6:
ADLnCONH: A/D SAMPLE LIST n CONTROL HIGH REGISTER
(n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
ASEN
SLINT1
SLINT0
WM1
WM0
CM2
CM1
CM0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
(1)
CTMEN
r-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
MULCHEN
SAMC4
SAMC3
SAMC2
SAMC1
SAMC0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
r = Reserved bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
ASEN: A/D Auto-Scan Enable bit
1 = Auto-Scan: Sample and convert all associated inputs sequentially on every trigger event
0 = Sequential Scan: Sample and convert the next associated input on a trigger event
bit 14-13
SLINT: Interrupt Trigger Control bits
When ASEN = 1:
11 = Interrupt after auto-scan completion only if a match occurred
10 = Interrupt after every match
01 = Interrupt after auto-scan completion
00 = No Interrupt
When ASEN = 0:
11 = Reserved
10 = Interrupt after all entries in a sample list have been converted (SLSIZE + 1 samples)
01 = Interrupt after every sample
00 = No interrupt
bit 12-11
WM: Internal Buffer Write Mode bits
11 = Reserved
10 = No conversion results are saved (typically for threshold compare only)
01 = Conversion results are saved when a match occurs (typically for threshold compare only)
00 = All conversion results are saved to the ADRESn register associated with the conversion
bit 10-8
CM: Threshold Compare Match bits
111 = Reserved
110 = Reserved
101 = Reserved
100 = Outside Window Match: A/D Result < Low Threshold Value or A/D Result >Threshold High Value
011 = Inside Window Match: Low Threshold Value < A/D Result < Threshold High Value
010 = Greater Than Match: A/D Result > Threshold Value
001 = Less Than Match: A/D Result < Threshold Value
000 = Matching is disabled
bit 7
CTMEN: A/D CTMU Current Source Enable bit(1)
1 = CTMU is enabled during sampling and used as a current source, driving the selected analog input pin
0 = CTMU current source does not drive the external pin; this mode is also used for measuring the
internal temperature diode
bit 6
Reserved: Maintain as ‘0’ for normal operation
bit 5
MULCHEN: Multiple Channel Enable bit
1 = Channels 15 to n are connected in parallel and scanned together
0 = Channels 15 to n in the scan list are sampled, one at a time, as defined by the ASEN bit
Note 1:
This bit must be set to ‘0’ when measuring the internal temperature diode voltage.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-6:
bit 4-0
Note 1:
ADLnCONH: A/D SAMPLE LIST n CONTROL HIGH REGISTER
(n = 0 to 3) (CONTINUED)
SAMC: Sample/Hold Capacitor Charge Time (Acquisition Time) bits
11111 = 31 TAD
11110 = 30 TAD
···
00001 = 1 TAD
00000 = 0.5 TAD
This bit must be set to ‘0’ when measuring the internal temperature diode voltage.
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REGISTER 26-7:
R/W-0
ADLnCONL: A/D SAMPLE LIST n CONTROL LOW REGISTER
(n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0
(1)
SLEN
SAMP
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
SLENCLR
SLTSRC4
SLTSRC3
SLTSRC2
SLTSRC1
SLTSRC0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
THSRC
—
—
SLSIZE4
SLSIZE3
SLSIZE2
SLSIZE1
SLSIZE0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
SLEN: A/D Trigger Control Enable bit
1 = Enabled: Selected trigger causes sampling of associated analog inputs
0 = Disabled: Selected trigger does NOT cause sampling of associated analog inputs
bit 14
SAMP: A/D Manual Conversion Trigger bit(1)
1 = Prepares to generate a trigger event (no generation yet)
0 = See SLTSRC = 00000, 00001 and 00010 descriptions
bit 13
SLENCLR: A/D Trigger Clear bit
1 = SLEN is cleared by hardware after a trigger is generated by this sample list
0 = SLEN is only cleared by software
bit 12-8
SLTSRC: Trigger Source Select bits
11111
= Unimplemented, do not use
...
10001
10000 = Timer1 A/D trigger
01111 = Comparator 3
01110 = Comparator 2
01101 = Comparator 1
01100 = Input Capture 4
01011 = Input Capture 1
01010 = Output Compare 3
01001 = Output Compare 2
01000 = Output Compare 1
00111 = Internal periodic trigger event; interval defined by the ADTMRPR register
00110 = CTMU
00101 = Timer2
00100 = Timer1 sync
00011 = INT0
00010 = Manual Trigger Event: Triggers are generated on every A/D clock when SAMP = 0
00001 = Manual Trigger Event: Triggers are generated on every A/D clock when SAMP = 0 and
ACCONH = 1
00000 = Manual Trigger Event: A single trigger is generated when SAMP is manually cleared in
firmware, creating a ‘1’ to ‘0’ transition
}
bit 7
THSRC: Threshold List Select bit
1 = Source used for threshold compare is the Sample List Threshold register
0 = Source used for threshold compare is the Buffer register
bit 6-5
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
Applicable only with Manual Trigger modes (SLTSRC = 00010, 00001 or 00000).
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-7:
bit 4-0
Note 1:
ADLnCONL: A/D SAMPLE LIST n CONTROL LOW REGISTER
(n = 0 to 3) (CONTINUED)
SLSIZE: Sample List Size Select bits
Number of ADTBLn Registers (+ 1) Associated with this Sample List:
11111 = 32 ADTBLn registers associated with this sample list
11110 = 31 ADTBLn registers associated with this sample list
···
00010 = 3 ADTBLn registers associated with this sample list
00001 = 2 ADTBLn registers associated with this sample list
00000 = 1 ADTBLn register associated with this sample list
Applicable only with Manual Trigger modes (SLTSRC = 00010, 00001 or 00000).
DS30009312D-page 362
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REGISTER 26-8:
ADLnSTAT: A/D SAMPLE LIST n STATUS REGISTER (n = 0 to 3)
R-0
R-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
ADTACT
LBUSY
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R-0
U-0
R/W-0, HS
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
ADTDLY
—
ADLIF(1)
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
ADTACT: A/D Trigger Event Active bit
1 = A trigger event is asserted
0 = A trigger event is not asserted
bit 14
LBUSY: Trigger Control Busy bit
1 = The A/D is converting a sample entry associated with this list’s trigger
0 = The A/D is not busy with this trigger
bit 13-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
ADTDLY: A/D Trigger Delayed Flag bit
1 = This trigger was delayed by a higher priority trigger
0 = This trigger was not delayed by a higher priority trigger
bit 6
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 5
ADLIF: A/D Sample List Interrupt Event Flag bit(1)
1 = An interrupt event (defined by ADLnCONH) has occurred in Sample List n
0 = No interrupt event has occurred
bit 4-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
ADLIF is mirrored by the corresponding SLxIF flag bit in the ADSTATL register. Setting or clearing this bit
simultaneously changes the SLxIF.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-9:
U-0
ADLnPTR: A/D SAMPLE LIST n POINTER REGISTER (n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
—
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
ADNEXT
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 14-8
ADNEXT: Pointer to Next Entry on A/D Sample List to be Converted bits
This value is added to the start of the sample list to determine the ADTBLn register to be used for the
next trigger event.
bit 7-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
REGISTER 26-10: ADTBLn: A/D SAMPLE TABLE ENTRY n REGISTER (n = 0 to 31)
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
UCTMU
DIFF
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
ADCH6
ADCH5
ADCH4
ADCH3
ADCH2
ADCH1
ADCH0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
UCTMU: Enable CTMU During Entry Conversion bit
1 = CTMU is enabled during channel conversion for this entry
0 = CTMU is disabled during channel conversion for this entry
bit 14
DIFF: Differential Inputs Select bit
1 = Analog inputs are sampled as differential pairs for this entry
0 = Analog inputs are sampled as single-ended for this entry
bit 13-7
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 6-0
ADCH: A/D Channel Entry Select bits
See Table 26-1 for a complete description.
DS30009312D-page 364
x = Bit is unknown
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TABLE 26-1:
ADCH
CHANNEL ENTRY SELECT VALUES FOR ADCH
Single-Ended
(DIFF = 0)
AIN+(1)
AIN-
1111111(2)
VREF+
1111110(3)
VREF+
1111101(4)
1111100(2)
1110111
Differential
(DIFF = 1)(5)
AIN+(1)
AIN-(1)
VREF+
VREF+
VREF+
VREF-
VREF+
VREF-
VREF-
VREF+
VREF-
VREF-
VREF-
VREF-
CTMU (Time)
Differential
(DIFF = 1)
AIN-
AIN+(1)
AIN-
0100001
AN33
VREF-
AN33
AN14
0100000
AN32
VREF-
AN32
AN14
VREF+
0011111
AN31
VREF-
AN31
AN14
VREF-
0011110
AN30
VREF-
AN30
AN14
0011101
AN29
VREF-
AN29
AN14
0011100
AN28
VREF-
AN28
AN14
0011011
AN27
VREF-
AN27
AN14
0011010
AN26
VREF-
AN26
AN14
0011001
AN25
VREF-
AN25
AN14
CTMU (Time)
Unimplemented
0111101
Reserved
0111100
Single-Ended
(DIFF = 0)
AIN+(1)
1110110
...
ADCH
0111011
OPA2
VREF-
OPA2
VREF-
0011000
AN24
VREF-
AN24
AN14
0111010
OPA1
VREF-
OPA1
VREF-
0010111
AN23
VREF-
AN23
AN14
0010110
AN22
VREF-
AN22
AN14
0111000
VBG/2(6)
VREF-
VBG/2
VREF-
0010101
AN21
VREF-
AN21
AN14
0110111
VBAT/2
VREF-
VBAT/2
VREF-
0010100
AN20
VREF-
AN20
AN14
0110110
AVDD
VREF-
AVDD
VREF-
0010011
AN19
VREF-
AN19
AN14
0110101
AVSS
VREF-
AVSS
VREF-
0010010
AN18
VREF-
AN18
AN14
0110100
BGBUF0
VREF-
BGBUF0
VREF-
0010001
AN17
VREF-
AN17
AN14
0010000
AN16
VREF-
AN16
AN14
0001111
AN15
VREF-
AN15
AN14
Reserved
0111001
Unimplemented
0110011
0110010
CTMU (Temp) VREF-
—
0110001
AN49
VREF-
AN49
AN14
0001110
AN14
VREF-
AN15
AN14
0110000
AN48
VREF-
AN48
AN14
0001101
AN13
VREF-
AN13
AN12
0101111
AN47
VREF-
AN47
AN14
0001100
AN12
VREF-
AN13
AN12
0101110
AN46
VREF-
AN46
AN14
0001011
AN11
VREF-
AN11
AN10
0101101
AN45
VREF-
AN45
AN14
0001010
AN10
VREF-
AN11
AN10
0101100
AN44
VREF-
AN44
AN14
0001001
AN9
VREF-
AN9
AN8
0101011
AN43
VREF-
AN43
AN14
0001000
AN8
VREF-
AN9
AN8
0101010
AN42
VREF-
AN42
AN14
0000111
AN7
VREF-
AN7
AN6
0101001
AN41
VREF-
AN41
AN14
0000110
AN6
VREF-
AN7
AN6
0101000
AN40
VREF-
AN40
AN14
0000101
AN5
VREF-
AN5
AN4
0100111
AN39
VREF-
AN39
AN14
0000100
AN4
VREF-
AN5
AN4
0100110
AN38
VREF-
AN38
AN14
0000011
AN3
VREF-
AN3
AN2
0100101
AN37
VREF-
AN37
AN14
0000010
AN2
VREF-
AN3
AN2
0100100
AN36
VREF-
AN36
AN14
0000001
AN1
VREF-
AN1
AN0
0100011
AN35
VREF-
AN35
AN14
0000000
AN0
VREF-
AN1
AN0
0100010
AN34
VREF-
AN34
AN14
Note 1:
2:
3:
4:
5:
6:
Not all external analog channels are available on all devices. See Table 1-3 for more information. For 64-pin devices, do
not use the values of ADCH associated with unimplemented channels.
Single-ended and differential conversion returns 000h + offset error.
Single-ended and differential conversion returns 7FFh + offset and gain error.
Single-ended conversion returns 000h and differential conversion returns F800h + offset and gain error.
Channels 124-127 (0x7C-0x7F) should be measured differentially for best results.
Reading VBG/2 requires the previous channel in the sample list to be AVSS. VBG/2 must also be enabled in the SFR,
ANCFG.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-11: ACCONH: A/D ACCUMULATOR CONTROL HIGH REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0, HC
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
ACIE
—
—
—
—
—
—
(1)
ACEN
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HC = Hardware Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
ACEN: Accumulator Enable bit(1)
1 = Accumulation is enabled; sample and convert the current sample list entry on the trigger event and
add to the contents of ACRESH/L
0 = The accumulation process has not started or is complete (cleared in hardware when accumulation
COUNTx bits decrement to zero)
bit 6
ACIE: Accumulator Interrupt Enable bit
1 = An interrupt event is generated when the accumulator decrements to zero
0 = Accumulator interrupt events are disabled
bit 5-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
To avoid unexpected or erroneous results, do not write to ACCONH or ACCONL while ACEN is set.
REGISTER 26-12: ACCONL: A/D ACCUMULATOR CONTROL LOW REGISTER
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
—
TBLSEL5
TBLSEL4
TBLSEL3
TBLSEL2
TBLSEL1
TBLSEL0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
R/W-0, HSC
COUNT7
COUNT6
COUNT5
COUNT4
COUNT3
COUNT2
COUNT1
COUNT0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13-8
TBLSEL: Pointer to ADTBLn Used to Select ANx Channel to be Accumulated bits
The ANx channel is designated by the ADTBLn register (where n = TBLSEL value).
bit 7-0
COUNT: Accumulations to be Completed Counter bits
Decrements on each accumulated sample. Before starting the accumulation process, preload the
COUNTx bits field with the number of samples to accumulate (ex: To get a 9 sample sum, load COUNT
with 9). Starting with a COUNT value of 0 will result in 256 samples being accumulated.
DS30009312D-page 366
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 26-13: ADCHITH: A/D MATCH HIT HIGH REGISTER
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
CHH
bit 15
R/W-0, HS
bit 8
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
CHH
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 31-0
x = Bit is unknown
CHH: A/D Conversion Match Hit bits
1 = A threshold compare match has occurred on the corresponding sample list entry
0 = No match has occurred
REGISTER 26-14: ADCHITL: A/D MATCH HIT LOW REGISTER
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
CHH
bit 15
R/W-0, HS
bit 8
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
R/W-0, HS
CHH
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 31-0
x = Bit is unknown
CHH: A/D Conversion Match Hit bits
1 = A threshold compare match has occurred on the corresponding sample list entry
0 = No match has occurred
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-15: ADTHnH: A/D SAMPLE TABLE n THRESHOLD VALUE HIGH REGISTER
(n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
TH
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
TH
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-0
x = Bit is unknown
TH: High Threshold Value for Windowed Compare Operations bits (Sample Table n)
The value in 12-bit unsigned integer format only.
REGISTER 26-16: ADTHnL: A/D SAMPLE TABLE n THRESHOLD VALUE LOW REGISTER
(n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
TH
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
TH
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-0
x = Bit is unknown
TH: Low Threshold Value for Windowed Compare Operations bits (Sample Table n)
Also serves as the comparison value for non-windowed threshold compare operations. The value in
12-bit unsigned integer format only.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 26-17: ADLnMSEL3: A/D SAMPLE LIST n MULTICHANNEL SELECT REGISTER 3
(n = 0 to 3)
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
R/W-0
R/W-0
MSEL
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 1-0
MSEL: A/D Channel Select bits
1 = Corresponding channel participates in multichannel operations for Sample List n
0 = Channel does not participate in multichannel operations
REGISTER 26-18: ADLnMSEL2: A/D SAMPLE LIST n MULTICHANNEL SELECT REGISTER 2
(n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
MSEL
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
MSEL
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-0
x = Bit is unknown
MSEL: A/D Channel Select bits
1 = Corresponding channel participates in multichannel operations for Sample List n
0 = Channel does not participate in multichannel operations
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 26-19: ADLnMSEL1: A/D SAMPLE LIST n MULTICHANNEL SELECT REGISTER 1
(n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
MSEL
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
MSEL
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-0
x = Bit is unknown
MSEL: A/D Channel Select bits
1 = Corresponding channel participates in multichannel operations for Sample List n
0 = Channel does not participate in multichannel operations
REGISTER 26-20: ADLnMSEL0: A/D SAMPLE LIST n MULTICHANNEL SELECT REGISTER 0
(n = 0 to 3)
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
MSEL15
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
MSEL15: A/D Channel Select bit
1 = Corresponding channel participates in multichannel operations for Sample List n
0 = Channel does not participate in multichannel operations
bit 14-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 26-2:
12-BIT A/D CONVERTER SINGLE-ENDED ANALOG INPUT MODEL
RIC 250
Rs
VA
ANx
CPIN(1)
Sampling
Switch
RSS
ILEAKAGE
50 nA typ.
CHOLD
= 2 pF
VSS
Legend: CIN
= Pin Capacitance + Channel MUX Capacitance(1,2)
VT
= Threshold Voltage
ILEAKAGE = Leakage Current at the pin due to
various junctions
RIC
= Interconnect Resistance
RSS
= Sampling Switch Resistance
CHOLD
= Sample/Hold Capacitance (from DAC)
Note 1: The CIN value depends on the device package and is not tested. The effect of CPIN is negligible if Rs 1.5 k.
2: The input channel multiplexer will add capacitance based on the input channel selected. Selecting
Channels AN0-AN14 will add Old Result
bit 11-10
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 9-8
SDWM: S/D Output Result Register Write bits
11 = Reserved; do not use
10 = SD1RESH/SD1RESL are never updated (used for threshold compare operations)
01 = SD1RESH/SD1RESL are updated on every interrupt
00 = SD1RESH/SD1RESL are updated on every interrupt when SDRDY = 0
bit 7-5
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 4-3
RNDRES: Round Data Control bits
11 = Round result to 8 bits
10 = Round result to 16 bits
01 = Round result to 24 bits
00 = No rounding
bit 2-1
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 0
SDRDY: S/D Filter Data Ready bit (set by hardware)
1 = Sync filter delay is satisfied (clear this bit in software)
0 = Sync filter delay is not satisfied yet
DS30009312D-page 376
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 27-3:
SD1CON3: S/D CONTROL REGISTER 3
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
SDDIV2(1)
SDDIV1(1)
SDDIV0(1)
SDOSR2
SDOSR1
SDOSR0
SDCS1
SDCS0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
—
—
SDCH2
SDCH1
SDCH0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-13
SDDIV: S/D Input Clock Divider/Postscaler Ratio bits(1)
111 = Reserved
110 = 64
101 = 32
100 = 16
011 = 8
010 = 4
001 = 2
000 = 1 (No divider, clock selected by SDCS is provided directly to A/D.)
bit 12-10
SDOSR: S/D Oversampling Ratio (OSR) Selection bits
111 = Reserved
110 = 16 (fastest result, lowest quality)
101 = 32
100 = 64
011 = 128
010 = 256
001 = 512
000 = 1024 (slowest result, best quality)
bit 9-8
SDCS: S/D A/D Module Clock Source Select bits
11 = Reserved
10 = Primary Oscillator (OSCI/CLKI)
01 = FRC (8 MHz)(2)
00 = System clock (FOSC/2)
bit 7-3
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 2-0
SDCH: S/D Analog Channel Input Select bits (positive input/negative input)
1xx = Reserved
011 = Measures the reference selected by SDREFP/SDREFN (used for gain error measurements)
010 = CH1SE/SVSS (single-ended measurement of CH1SE)
001 = CH1+/CH1- (Differential Channel 1)
000 = CH0+/CH0- (Differential Channel 0)
Note 1:
2:
To avoid overclocking or underclocking the module, set SDDIV to obtain an A/D clock frequency
(input frequency selected by SDCS source, divided by selected SDDIVx ratio) at or between 1 MHz
and 4 MHz.
Eight MHz FRC output is used directly, prior to the FRCDIV postscaler.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
NOTES:
DS30009312D-page 378
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
28.0
Note:
The DAC generates an analog output voltage based on
the digital input code, according to the formula:
10-BIT DIGITAL-TO-ANALOG
CONVERTER (DAC)
VDAC =
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to
the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference
Manual”, “10-Bit Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC)” (DS39615) which is
available from the Microchip web site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
where VDAC is the analog output voltage and VDACREF
is the reference voltage selected by DACREF.
Each DAC includes these features:
• Precision 10-Bit Resistor Ladder for High Accuracy
• Fast Settling Time, supporting 1 Msps Effective
Sampling Rates
• Buffered Output Voltage
• Three User-Selectable Voltage Reference Options
• Multiple Conversion Trigger Options, plus a
Manual Convert-on-Write Option
• Left and Right Justified Input Data Options
• User-Selectable Sleep and Idle mode Operation
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices include two 10-bit
Digital-to-Analog Converters (DACs) for generating
analog outputs from digital data. A simplified block
diagram for a single DAC is shown in Figure 28-1. Both
of the DACs are identical.
FIGURE 28-1:
VDACREF DACxDAT
1024
When using the DAC, it is required to set the ANSx and
TRISx bits for the DACx output pin to configure it as an
analog output. See Section 11.2 “Configuring Analog
Port Pins (ANSx)” for more information.
SINGLE DAC SIMPLIFIED BLOCK DIAGRAM
DACSIDL
Idle Mode
DACSLP
Sleep Mode
DACEN
DVREF+
AVDD
BGBUF0
2x Gain Buffer
DACREF
DACxCON
10
10-Bit
DACxDAT
Resistor
Ladder
CMIF
Unity Gain
Buffer
DACx Output
Pin
INT1
TMR2 Trigger
Trigger and
TMR1 Trigger
Interrupt Logic
Pipeline A/D Trigger
S/D A/D Trigger
DACTRIG
DACTSEL
DACxIF
AVss
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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REGISTER 28-1:
DACxCON: DACx CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
DACEN
—
DACSIDL
DACSLP
DACFM
—
—
DACTRIG
bit 15
bit 8
U-1
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
DACTSEL4
DACTSEL3
DACTSEL2
DACTSEL1
DACTSEL0
DACREF1
DACREF0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
DACEN: DAC Enable bit
1 = Module is enabled
0 = Module is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
DACSIDL: DAC Peripheral Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 12
DACSLP: DAC Enable Peripheral During Sleep bit
1 = DAC continues to output the most recent value of DACxDAT during Sleep mode
0 = DAC is powered down in Sleep mode; DACx output pin is controlled by the TRISx and LATx bits
bit 11
DACFM: DAC Data Format Select bit
1 = Data is left justified (data stored in DACxDAT)
0 = Data is right justified (data stored in DACxDAT)
bit 10-9
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 8
DACTRIG: DAC Trigger Input Enable bit
1 = Analog output value updates when the selected (by DACTSEL) event occurs
0 = Analog output value updates as soon as DACxDAT is written (DAC trigger is ignored)
bit 7
Unimplemented: Recommended to write as ‘1’ for code compatibility across device families
bit 6-2
DACTSEL: DAC Trigger Source Select bits
11x = Unimplemented
101 = S/D A/D interrupt
100 = Pipeline A/D interrupt
011 = Timer1 interrupt
010 = Timer2 interrupt
001 = INT1
000 = Comparator 1 interrupt
bit 1-0
DACREF: DAC Reference Source Select bits
11 = 2.4V Internal Band Gap (2 • BGBUF0)(1,2)
10 = AVDD
01 = DVREF+
00 = Reference is not connected (lowest power but no DAC functionality)
Note 1:
2:
User must also enable Band Gap Buffer 0 and set BUFCON0 to ‘00’ to obtain this voltage. See
Register 25-1 for details.
The output voltage will be ~3.2% lower than expected in this mode. The error may not be identical for the
two DAC output channels.
DS30009312D-page 380
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
29.0
The two op amps are functionally identical; the block
diagram for a single amplifier is shown in Figure 29-1.
Each op amp has these features:
DUAL OPERATIONAL
AMPLIFIER MODULE
Note:
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”, “Operational Amplifier (Op Amp)”
(DS30505) which is available from the
Microchip web site (www.microchip.com).
The information in this data sheet
supersedes the information in the FRM.
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices include two operational amplifiers to complement the microcontroller’s
other analog features. They may be used to provide
analog signal conditioning, either as stand-alone
devices or in addition to other analog peripherals. They
may also be configured to operate as digital comparators in addition to the triple comparator module (see
Section 30.0 “Triple Comparator Module” for more
information).
FIGURE 29-1:
• Configurable as either an Operational Amplifier or
a Comparator
• Internal Unity-Gain Buffer Option
• Six Input Options each on the Inverting and
Non-Inverting Amplifier Inputs
• Rail-to-Rail Input and Output Capabilities
• User-Configurable Interrupt with Comparator
Operation, including Four Interrupt Options
• User-Selectable Option for Regular or
Low-Power Operation
• User-Selectable Operation in Idle and Sleep
modes
When using the op amps, it is recommended to set the
ANSx and TRISx bits of both the input and output pins
to configure them as analog pins. See Section 11.2
“Configuring Analog Port Pins (ANSx)” for more
information.
SINGLE OPERATIONAL AMPLIFIER BLOCK DIAGRAM
NINSEL
OAxN0
OAxN1
OAxN2
AMPSLP
OAxN3
AMPSIDL
OAxN4
AMPOE
Vss
CMPSEL
OAxP0
–
OAxP1
OAxP2
+
OAxP3
OAxOUT
OAxP4
INTPOL
Vss
CTMU/A/D
Interrupt
Logic
PINSEL
SPDSEL
AMPEN
CMPSEL
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
AMPxIF
CMOUT
DS30009312D-page 381
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 29-1:
AMPxCON: OP AMP x CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R-0
R-x
R/W-0
AMPEN
—
AMPSIDL
AMPSLP
INTPOL1
INTPOL0
CMOUT
CMPSEL
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
SPDSEL
AMPOE
NINSEL2
NINSEL1
NINSEL0
PINSEL2
PINSEL1
PINSEL0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
AMPEN: Op Amp Control Module Enable bit
1 = Module is enabled
0 = Module is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
AMPSIDL: Op Amp Peripheral Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 12
AMPSLP: Op Amp Peripheral Enabled in Sleep Mode bit
1 = Continues module operation when device enters Sleep mode
0 = Discontinues module operation in Sleep mode
bit 11-10
INTPOL: Interrupt Mode Select bits
When CMPSEL = 1:
11 = Interrupt occurs on any change
10 = Interrupt occurs on negative edge
01 = Interrupt occurs on positive edge
00 = Interrupts are disabled
When CMPSEL = 0:
Op amp interrupts are not generated.
bit 9
CMOUT: Comparator Mode Output State bit
When CMPSEL = 1:
1 = Non-inverting input is greater than the inverting input
0 = Non-inverting input is less than the inverting input
When CMPSEL = 0:
Op Amp mode (no digital state information is generated).
bit 8
CMPSEL: Op Amp Mode Select bit
1 = Configured as a comparator
0 = Configured as an op amp
bit 7
SPDSEL: Op Amp/Comparator Power/Speed Select bit
1 = Higher power and bandwidth (faster response time)
0 = Lower power and bandwidth (slower response time)
bit 6
AMPOE: Amplifier Output Enable bit
1 = Amplifier or comparator output is sent to OAxOUT pin
0 = Amplifier or comparator output is not sent to OAxOUT (pin is controlled by TRISx and LATx bits)
DS30009312D-page 382
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 29-1:
AMPxCON: OP AMP x CONTROL REGISTER (CONTINUED)
bit 5-3
NINSEL: Op Amp Inverting Input Select bits
111 = Reserved; do not use
110 = Op Amp output (voltage follower configuration)
101 = OAxN4
100 = OAxN3
011 = OAxN2
010 = OAxN1
001 = OAxN0
000 = VSS
bit 2-0
PINSEL: Op Amp Non-Inverting Input Select bits
111 = Reserved; do not use
110 = Connected between CTMU output and Pipeline A/D
101 = OAxP4
100 = OAxP3
011 = OAxP2
010 = OAxP1
001 = OAxP0
000 = VSS
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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NOTES:
DS30009312D-page 384
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30.0
voltage reference input from one of the internal band
gap references or the comparator voltage reference
generator (VBG, VBG/2, VBG/6 and CVREF).
TRIPLE COMPARATOR
MODULE
Note:
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to
the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference
Manual”, “Scalable Comparator Module”
(DS39734) which is available from the
Microchip web site (www.microchip.com).
The information in this data sheet
supersedes the information in the FRM.
The triple comparator module provides three dual input
comparators. The inputs to the comparator can be
configured to use any one of five external analog inputs
(CxINA, CxINB, CxINC, CxIND and VREF+) and a
FIGURE 30-1:
The comparator outputs may be directly connected to
the CxOUT pins. When the respective COE equals ‘1’,
the I/O pad logic makes the unsynchronized output of
the comparator available on the pin.
A simplified block diagram of the module in shown in
Figure 30-1. Diagrams of the possible individual
comparator configurations are shown in Figure 30-2.
Each comparator has its own control register,
CMxCON (Register 30-1), for enabling and configuring
its operation. The output and event status of all three
comparators is provided in the CMSTAT register
(Register 30-2).
TRIPLE COMPARATOR MODULE BLOCK DIAGRAM
EVPOL
CCH
Input
Select
Logic
CXINB
00
CXINC
01
CXIND
10
VBG
00
VBG/2
01
CVREF+
11
CPOL
VINVIN+
Trigger/Interrupt
Logic
CEVT
COE
C1
COUT
11
EVPOL
CPOL
Trigger/Interrupt
Logic
CEVT
COE
VINVIN+
C2
COUT
CVREFM(1)
0
CXINA
CVREF+
1
CVREF
0
C1OUT
Pin
C2OUT
Pin
EVPOL
+
1
VIN+
CVREFP(1)
CPOL
VIN-
Trigger/Interrupt
Logic
CEVT
COE
C3
COUT
C3OUT
Pin
CREF
Note 1:
Refer to the CVRCON register (Register 31-1) for bit details.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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FIGURE 30-2:
INDIVIDUAL COMPARATOR CONFIGURATIONS WHEN CREF = 0
Comparator Off
CEN = 0, CREF = x, CCH = xx
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
Off (Read as ‘0’)
CxOUT
Pin
Comparator CxINB > CxINA Compare
Comparator CxINC > CxINA Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 00, CVREFM = xx
CEN = 1, CCH = 01, CVREFM = xx
CXINB
CXINA
COE
VINVIN+
CXINC
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
CXINA
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
Comparator CxIND > CxINA Compare
Comparator VBG > CxINA Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 10, CVREFM = xx
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 00
CXIND
CXINA
COE
VINVIN+
VBG
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
CXINA
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
Comparator VBG > CxINA Compare
Comparator CxIND > CxINA Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 01
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 11
VBG/2
CXINA
COE
VINVIN+
DS30009312D-page 386
VREF+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
CXINA
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 30-3:
INDIVIDUAL COMPARATOR CONFIGURATIONS WHEN CREF = 1 AND CVREFP = 0
Comparator CxINB > CVREF Compare
Comparator CxINC > CVREF Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 00, CVREFM = xx
CEN = 1, CCH = 01, CVREFM = xx
CXINB
CVREF
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
COE
VIN-
CXINC
VIN+
CVREF
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
Comparator CxIND > CVREF Compare
Comparator VBG > CVREF Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 10, CVREFM = xx
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 00
CXIND
CVREF
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
COE
VIN-
VBG
VIN+
CVREF
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
Comparator VBG > CVREF Compare
Comparator CxIND > CVREF Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 01
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 11
VBG/2
CVREF
COE
VIN-
Cx
VIN+
CxOUT
Pin
FIGURE 30-4:
COE
VIN-
VREF+
VIN+
CVREF
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
INDIVIDUAL COMPARATOR CONFIGURATIONS WHEN CREF = 1 AND CVREFP = 1
Comparator CxINB > CVREF Compare
Comparator CxINC > CVREF Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 00, CVREFM = xx
CEN = 1, CCH = 01, CVREFM = xx
CXINB
VREF+
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
COE
VIN-
CXINC
VIN+
VREF+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
Comparator CxIND > CVREF Compare
Comparator VBG > CVREF Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 10, CVREFM = xx
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 00
CXIND
VREF+
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
COE
VIN-
VBG
VIN+
VREF+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
Comparator VBG > CVREF Compare
CEN = 1, CCH = 11, CVREFM = 01
VBG/2
VREF+
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
COE
VINVIN+
Cx
CxOUT
Pin
DS30009312D-page 387
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 30-1:
CMxCON: COMPARATOR x CONTROL REGISTERS
(COMPARATORS 1 THROUGH 3)
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0, HS
R-0, HSC
CON
COE
CPOL
—
—
—
CEVT
COUT
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
EVPOL1(1)
EVPOL0(1)
—
CREF
—
—
CCH1
CCH0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HS = Hardware Settable bit
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
CON: Comparator Enable bit
1 = Comparator is enabled
0 = Comparator is disabled
bit 14
COE: Comparator Output Enable bit
1 = Comparator output is present on the CxOUT pin
0 = Comparator output is internal only
bit 13
CPOL: Comparator Output Polarity Select bit
1 = Comparator output is inverted
0 = Comparator output is not inverted
bit 12-10
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 9
CEVT: Comparator Event bit
1 = Comparator event that is defined by EVPOL has occurred; subsequent triggers and interrupts
are disabled until the bit is cleared
0 = Comparator event has not occurred
bit 8
COUT: Comparator Output bit
When CPOL = 0:
1 = VIN+ > VIN0 = VIN+ < VINWhen CPOL = 1:
1 = VIN+ < VIN0 = VIN+ > VIN-
bit 7-6
EVPOL: Trigger/Event/Interrupt Polarity Select bits(1)
11 = Trigger/event/interrupt is generated on any change of the comparator output (while CEVT = 0)
10 = Trigger/event/interrupt is generated on the high-to-low transition of the comparator output
01 = Trigger/event/interrupt is generated on the low-to-high transition of the comparator output
00 = Trigger/event/interrupt generation is disabled
bit 5
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 4
CREF: Comparator Reference Select bits (non-inverting input)
1 = Non-inverting input connects to the internal CVREF voltage
0 = Non-inverting input connects to the CxINA pin
bit 3-2
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
If the EVPOL bits are set to a value other than ‘00’, the first interrupt generated will occur on any
transition of COUT. Subsequent interrupts will occur based on the EVPOLx bits setting.
DS30009312D-page 388
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 30-1:
bit 1-0
Note 1:
CMxCON: COMPARATOR x CONTROL REGISTERS
(COMPARATORS 1 THROUGH 3) (CONTINUED)
CCH: Comparator Channel Select bits
11 = Inverting input of the comparator connects to the internal selectable reference voltage specified
by the CVREFM bits in the CVRCON register
10 = Inverting input of the comparator connects to the CxIND pin
01 = Inverting input of the comparator connects to the CxINC pin
00 = Inverting input of the comparator connects to the CxINB pin
If the EVPOL bits are set to a value other than ‘00’, the first interrupt generated will occur on any
transition of COUT. Subsequent interrupts will occur based on the EVPOLx bits setting.
REGISTER 30-2:
CMSTAT: COMPARATOR MODULE STATUS REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
CMIDL
—
—
—
—
C3EVT
C2EVT
C1EVT
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
R-0, HSC
—
—
—
—
—
C3OUT
C2OUT
C1OUT
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
HSC = Hardware Settable/Clearable bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
CMIDL: Comparator Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues operation of all comparators when device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues operation of all enabled comparators in Idle mode
bit 14-11
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 10
C3EVT: Comparator 3 Event Status bit (read-only)
Shows the current event status of Comparator 3 (CM3CON).
bit 9
C2EVT: Comparator 2 Event Status bit (read-only)
Shows the current event status of Comparator 2 (CM2CON).
bit 8
C1EVT: Comparator 1 Event Status bit (read-only)
Shows the current event status of Comparator 1 (CM1CON).
bit 7-3
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 2
C3OUT: Comparator 3 Output Status bit (read-only)
Shows the current output of Comparator 3 (CM3CON).
bit 1
C2OUT: Comparator 2 Output Status bit (read-only)
Shows the current output of Comparator 2 (CM2CON).
bit 0
C1OUT: Comparator 1 Output Status bit (read-only)
Shows the current output of Comparator 1 (CM1CON).
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
NOTES:
DS30009312D-page 390
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
31.0
Note:
COMPARATOR VOLTAGE
REFERENCE
31.1
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”, “Comparator Voltage Reference
Module” (DS39709) which is available
from
the
Microchip
web
site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
FIGURE 31-1:
CVREF+
AVDD
Configuring the Comparator
Voltage Reference
The voltage reference module is controlled through the
CVRCON register (Register 31-1). The comparator
voltage reference provides a range of output voltages,
with 32 distinct levels. The comparator reference supply voltage can come from either VDD and VSS, or the
external CVREF+ and CVREF- pins. The voltage source
is selected by the CVRSS bit (CVRCON).
The settling time of the comparator voltage reference
must be considered when changing the CVREF
output.
COMPARATOR VOLTAGE REFERENCE BLOCK DIAGRAM
CVRSS = 1
CVRSS = 0
CVR
R
CVREN
R
R
32 Steps
32-to-1 MUX
R
CVREF
CVROE
R
R
R
CVREF-
CVREF
Pin
CVRSS = 1
CVRSS = 0
AVSS
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 391
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 31-1:
CVRCON: COMPARATOR VOLTAGE REFERENCE CONTROL REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
—
—
—
—
—
CVREFP
CVREFM1
CVREFM0
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
CVREN
CVROE
CVRSS
CVR4
CVR3
CVR2
CVR1
CVR0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15-11
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 10
CVREFP: Comparator Voltage Reference Select bit (valid only when CREF is ‘1’)
1 = VREF+ is used as a reference voltage to the comparators
0 = The CVRx (5-bit DAC) within this module provides the reference voltage to the comparators
bit 9-8
CVREFM: Comparator Voltage Band Gap Reference Source Select bits
(valid only when CCH = 11)
00 = Band gap voltage is provided as an input to the comparators
01 = Band gap voltage, divided by two, is provided as an input to the comparators
10 = Reserved
11 = VREF+ pin is provided as an input to the comparators
bit 7
CVREN: Comparator Voltage Reference Enable bit
1 = CVREF circuit is powered on
0 = CVREF circuit is powered down
bit 6
CVROE: Comparator VREF Output Enable bit
1 = CVREF voltage level is output on the CVREF pin
0 = CVREF voltage level is disconnected from the CVREF pin
bit 5
CVRSS: Comparator VREF Source Selection bit
1 = Comparator reference source, CVRSRC = VREF+ – VREF0 = Comparator reference source, CVRSRC = AVDD – AVSS
bit 4-0
CVR: Comparator VREF Value Selection bits
CVREF = (CVR/32) (CVRSRC)
DS30009312D-page 392
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
32.0
Note:
CHARGE TIME
MEASUREMENT UNIT (CTMU)
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information on the
Charge Measurement Unit, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”, “Charge Time Measurement Unit
(CTMU) and CTMU Operation with
Threshold Detect” (DS30009743) which
is available from the Microchip web site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
The Charge Time Measurement Unit (CTMU) is a flexible
analog module that provides charge measurement,
accurate differential time measurement between pulse
sources and asynchronous pulse generation. Its key
features include:
•
•
•
•
Thirteen External Edge Input Trigger Sources
Polarity Control for each Edge Source
Control of Edge Sequence
Control of Response to Edge Levels or
Edge Transitions
• Time Measurement Resolution of
One Nanosecond
• Accurate Current Source suitable for Capacitive
Measurement
Together with other on-chip analog modules, the CTMU
can be used to precisely measure time, measure
capacitance, measure relative changes in capacitance
or generate output pulses that are independent of the
system clock. The CTMU module is ideal for interfacing
with capacitive-based touch sensors.
The CTMU is controlled through three registers:
CTMUCON1, CTMUCON2 and CTMUICON.
CTMUCON1 enables the module and controls the
mode of operation of the CTMU, as well as controlling
edge sequencing. CTMUCON2 controls edge source
selection and edge source polarity selection. The
CTMUICON register selects the current range of
current source and trims the current.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
32.1
Measuring Capacitance
The CTMU module measures capacitance by
generating an output pulse with a width equal to the
time between edge events on two separate input
channels. The pulse edge events to both input
channels can be selected from four sources: two
internal peripheral modules (OC1 and Timer1) and up
to 13 external pins (CTEDG1 through CTEDG13). This
pulse is used with the module’s precision current
source to calculate capacitance according to the
relationship:
EQUATION 32-1:
dV
I = C ------dT
For capacitance measurements, the A/D Converter
samples an external Capacitor (CAPP) on one of its input
channels after the CTMU output’s pulse. A Precision
Resistor (RPR) provides current source calibration on a
second A/D channel. After the pulse ends, the converter
determines the voltage on the capacitor. The actual
calculation of capacitance is performed in software by
the application.
Figure 32-1 illustrates the external connections used
for capacitance measurements, and how the CTMU
and A/D modules are related in this application. This
example also shows the edge events coming from
Timer1, but other configurations using external edge
sources are possible. A detailed discussion on
measuring capacitance and time with the CTMU
module is provided in the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family Reference Manual”, “Charge Time Measurement Unit
(CTMU) and CTMU Operation with Threshold
Detect” (DS30009743).
Note:
Only odd numbered ANx channels (AN1,
AN3 to AN15) are connected to the CTMU
during single-ended measurements.
DS30009312D-page 393
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 32-1:
TYPICAL CONNECTIONS AND INTERNAL CONFIGURATION FOR
CAPACITANCE MEASUREMENT
PIC24F Device
Timer1
CTMU
EDG1STAT Current Source
EDG2STAT
Output Pulse
A/D Converter
ANx
ANy
CAPP
32.2
RPR
Measuring Time
Time measurements on the pulse width can be similarly
performed using the A/D module’s internal Capacitor
(CAD) and a precision resistor for current calibration.
Figure 32-3 displays the external connections used for
time measurements, and how the CTMU and A/D
modules are related in this application. This example
also shows both edge events coming from the external
CTEDGx pins, but other configurations using internal
edge sources are possible.
32.3
Pulse Generation and Delay
The CTMU module can also generate an output pulse
with edges that are not synchronous with the device’s
system clock. More specifically, it can generate a pulse
with a programmable delay from an edge event input to
the module.
DS30009312D-page 394
When the module is configured for pulse generation
delay by setting the TGEN bit (CTMUCON1), the
internal current source is connected to the B input of
Comparator 2. A Capacitor (CDELAY) is connected to
the Comparator 2 pin, C2INB, and the Comparator
Voltage Reference, CVREF, is connected to C2INA.
CVREF is then configured for a specific trip point. The
module begins to charge CDELAY when an edge event
is detected. When CDELAY charges above the CVREF
trip point, a pulse is output on CTPLS. The length of the
pulse delay is determined by the value of CDELAY and
the CVREF trip point.
Figure 32-4 illustrates the external connections for
pulse generation, as well as the relationship of the
different analog modules required. While CTED1 is
shown as the input pulse source, other options are
available. A detailed discussion on pulse generation
with the CTMU module is provided in the “dsPIC33/
PIC24 Family Reference Manual”.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
32.4
Measuring Die Temperature
The CTMU can be configured to use the 12-bit Pipeline
A/D to measure the die temperature using dedicated
A/D Channel 50. Perform the following steps to
measure the diode voltage:
• The internal current source must be set for either
5.5 µA (IRNG = 0x2) or 55 µA
(IRNG = 0x3).
• In order to route the current source to the diode,
the EDG1STAT and EDG2STAT bits must be
equal (either both ‘0’ or both ‘1’).
• The CTMEN bit in the A/D sample list
(ADLnCONH) must be set to ‘0’.
• Due to the high noise floor of the Pipeline A/D, it is
recommended to average at least 8 readings of
the diode voltage before calculating the
temperature.
• The A/D Channel Select bits must be 50 (‘0x32’)
using a single-ended measurement.
The voltage of the diode will vary over temperature
according to the graphs shown below. Note that the
graphs are different, based on the magnitude of the
current source selected. The slopes are nearly linear
over the range of -40ºC to +100ºC and the temperature
can be calculated as follows:
EQUATION 32-2:
For 5.5 µA Current Source:
Tdie =
710 mV – Vdiode
1.8
where Vdiode is in mV, Tdie is in ºC
For 55 µA Current Source:
Tdie =
760 mV – Vdiode
1.55
where Vdiode is in mV, Tdie is in ºC
Diode Voltage (mV)
FIGURE 32-2:
DIODE VOLTAGE (mV) vs. DIE TEMPERATURE (TYPICAL)
850
825
800
775
750
725
700
675
650
625
600
575
550
525
500
475
450
5.5
µA
5.5UA
55
µA
55UA
-40
-20
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
Die Temperature (°C)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 395
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
FIGURE 32-3:
TYPICAL CONNECTIONS AND INTERNAL CONFIGURATION FOR
TIME MEASUREMENT
PIC24F Device
CTMU
CTEDx
EDG1STAT Current Source
CTEDx
EDG2STAT
Output Pulse
A/D Converter
ANx
CAD
RPR
FIGURE 32-4:
TYPICAL CONNECTIONS AND INTERNAL CONFIGURATION FOR PULSE
DELAY GENERATION
PIC24F Device
CTEDx
CTMU
EDG1STAT
CTPLS
Current Source
Comparator
DS30009312D-page 396
C2INB
–
CDELAY
CVREF
C2
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 32-1:
CTMUCON1: CTMU CONTROL REGISTER 1
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
CTMUEN
—
CTMUSIDL
TGEN
EDGEN
EDGSEQEN
IDISSEN
CTTRIG
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15
CTMUEN: CTMU Enable bit
1 = Module is enabled
0 = Module is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
CTMUSIDL: CTMU Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 12
TGEN: Time Generation Enable bit
1 = Enables edge delay generation
0 = Disables edge delay generation
bit 11
EDGEN: Edge Enable bit
1 = Edges are not blocked
0 = Edges are blocked
bit 10
EDGSEQEN: Edge Sequence Enable bit
1 = Edge 1 event must occur before Edge 2 event can occur
0 = No edge sequence is needed
bit 9
IDISSEN: Analog Current Source Control bit
1 = Analog current source output is grounded
0 = Analog current source output is not grounded
bit 8
CTTRIG: CTMU Trigger Control bit
1 = Trigger output is enabled
0 = Trigger output is disabled
bit 7-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
x = Bit is unknown
DS30009312D-page 397
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 32-2:
CTMUCON2: CTMU CONTROL REGISTER 2
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
EDG1MOD
EDG1POL
EDG1SEL3
EDG1SEL2
EDG1SEL1
EDG1SEL0
EDG2STAT
EDG1STAT
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
EDG2MOD
EDG2POL
R/W-0
EDG2SEL3
R/W-0
EDG2SEL2
R/W-0
EDG2SEL1
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
EDG2SEL0
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
EDG1MOD: Edge 1 Edge-Sensitive Select bit
1 = Input is edge-sensitive
0 = Input is level-sensitive
bit 14
EDG1POL: Edge 1 Polarity Select bit
1 = Edge 1 is programmed for a positive edge response
0 = Edge 1 is programmed for a negative edge response
bit 13-10
EDG1SEL: Edge 1 Source Select bits
1111 = Edge 1 source is the Comparator 3 output
1110 = Edge 1 source is the Comparator 2 output
1101 = Edge 1 source is the Comparator 1 output
1100 = Edge 1 source is IC3
1011 = Edge 1 source is IC2
1010 = Edge 1 source is IC1
1001 = Edge 1 source is CTED8
1000 = Edge 1 source is CTED7(1)
0111 = Edge 1 source is CTED6
0110 = Edge 1 source is CTED5
0101 = Edge 1 source is CTED4
0100 = Edge 1 source is CTED3(1)
0011 = Edge 1 source is CTED1
0010 = Edge 1 source is CTED2
0001 = Edge 1 source is OC1
0000 = Edge 1 source is Timer1
bit 9
EDG2STAT: Edge 2 Status bit
Indicates the status of Edge 2 and can be written to control the current source.
1 = Edge 2 has occurred
0 = Edge 2 has not occurred
bit 8
EDG1STAT: Edge 1 Status bit
Indicates the status of Edge 1 and can be written to control the current source.
1 = Edge 1 has occurred
0 = Edge 1 has not occurred
bit 7
EDG2MOD: Edge 2 Edge-Sensitive Select bit
1 = Input is edge-sensitive
0 = Input is level-sensitive
bit 6
EDG2POL: Edge 2 Polarity Select bit
1 = Edge 2 is programmed for a positive edge
0 = Edge 2 is programmed for a positive edge
Note 1:
Edge sources, CTED3, CTED7, CTED10 and CTED11, are available in 100-pin devices only.
DS30009312D-page 398
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 32-2:
CTMUCON2: CTMU CONTROL REGISTER 2 (CONTINUED)
bit 5-2
EDG2SEL: Edge 2 Source Select bits
1111 = Edge 2 source is the Comparator 3 output
1110 = Edge 2 source is the Comparator 2 output
1101 = Edge 2 source is the Comparator 1 output
1100 = Unimplemented, do not use
1011 = Edge 2 source is IC3
1010 = Edge 2 source is IC2
1001 = Edge 2 source is IC1
1000 = Edge 2 source is CTED13
0111 = Edge 2 source is CTED12
0110 = Edge 2 source is CTED11(1)
0101 = Edge 2 source is CTED10(1)
0100 = Edge 2 source is CTED9
0011 = Edge 2 source is CTED1
0010 = Edge 2 source is CTED2
0001 = Edge 2 source is OC1
0000 = Edge 2 source is Timer1
bit 1-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
Note 1:
Edge sources, CTED3, CTED7, CTED10 and CTED11, are available in 100-pin devices only.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 32-3:
CTMUICON: CTMU CURRENT CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
ITRIM5
ITRIM4
ITRIM3
ITRIM2
ITRIM1
ITRIM0
IRNG1
IRNG0
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
bit 15-10
ITRIM: Current Source Trim bits
011111 = Maximum positive change from nominal current
011110
•
•
•
000001 = Minimum positive change from nominal current
000000 = Nominal current output specified by IRNG
111111 = Minimum negative change from nominal current
•
•
•
100010
100001 = Maximum negative change from nominal current
bit 9-8
IRNG: Current Source Range Select bits
11 = 100 × Base Current
10 = 10 × Base Current
01 = Base current level (0.55 A nominal)
00 = 1000 × Base Current
bit 7-0
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
DS30009312D-page 400
x = Bit is unknown
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
33.0
The High/Low-Voltage Detect (HLVD) module is a
programmable circuit that allows the user to specify
both the device voltage trip point and the direction of
change.
HIGH/LOW-VOLTAGE DETECT
(HLVD)
Note:
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information on the
High/Low-Voltage Detect, refer to the
“dsPIC33/PIC24
Family
Reference
Manual”, “High-Level Integration with
Programmable High/Low-Voltage Detect
(HLVD)” (DS39725) which is available
from
the
Microchip
web
site
(www.microchip.com). The information in
this data sheet supersedes the information
in the FRM.
FIGURE 33-1:
VDD
An interrupt flag is set if the device experiences an
excursion past the trip point in the direction of change.
If the interrupt is enabled, the program execution will
branch to the interrupt vector address and the software
can then respond to the interrupt.
The HLVD Control register (see Register 33-1)
completely controls the operation of the HLVD module.
This allows the circuitry to be “turned off” by the user
under software control, which minimizes the current
consumption for the device.
HIGH/LOW-VOLTAGE DETECT (HLVD) MODULE BLOCK DIAGRAM
Externally Generated
Trip Point
VDD
HLVDIN
HLVDL
16-to-1 MUX
HLVDEN
VDIR
Set
HLVDIF
Internal Voltage
Reference
1.20V Typical
HLVDEN
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 401
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 33-1:
HLVDCON: HIGH/LOW-VOLTAGE DETECT CONTROL REGISTER
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
HLVDEN
—
LSIDL
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
U-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
R/W-0
VDIR
BGVST
IRVST
—
HLVDL3
HLVDL2
HLVDL1
HLVDL0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 15
HLVDEN: High/Low-Voltage Detect Power Enable bit
1 = HLVD is enabled
0 = HLVD is disabled
bit 14
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 13
LSIDL: HLVD Stop in Idle Mode bit
1 = Discontinues module operation when device enters Idle mode
0 = Continues module operation in Idle mode
bit 12-8
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 7
VDIR: Voltage Change Direction Select bit
1 = Event occurs when voltage equals or exceeds the trip point (HLVDL)
0 = Event occurs when voltage equals or falls below the trip point (HLVDL)
bit 6
BGVST: Band Gap Voltage Stable Flag bit
1 = Indicates that the band gap voltage is stable
0 = Indicates that the band gap voltage is unstable
bit 5
IRVST: Internal Reference Voltage Stable Flag bit
1 = Internal reference voltage is stable; the High-Voltage Detect logic generates the interrupt flag at the
specified voltage range
0 = Internal reference voltage is unstable; the High-Voltage Detect logic will not generate the interrupt
flag at the specified voltage range and the HLVD interrupt should not be enabled
bit 4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3-0
HLVDL: High/Low-Voltage Detection Limit bits
1111 = External analog input is used (input comes from the HLVDIN pin)
1110 = Trip Point 1(1)
1101 = Trip Point 2(1)
1100 = Trip Point 3(1)
•
•
•
0100 = Trip Point 11(1)
00xx = Unused
Note 1:
For the actual trip point, see Section 37.0 “Electrical Characteristics”.
DS30009312D-page 402
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
34.0
Note:
34.1.1
SPECIAL FEATURES
This data sheet summarizes the features of
this group of PIC24F devices. It is not
intended to be a comprehensive reference
source. For more information, refer to the
following sections of the “dsPIC33/PIC24
Family Reference Manual”.
In PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices, the Configuration bytes are implemented as volatile memory. This
means that configuration data must be programmed
each time the device is powered up. Configuration data
is stored in the four words at the top of the on-chip
program memory space, known as the Flash Configuration Words. Their specific locations are shown in
Table 34-1. These are packed representations of the
actual device Configuration bits, whose actual
locations are distributed among several locations in
configuration space. The configuration data is automatically loaded from the Flash Configuration Words to the
proper Configuration registers during device Resets.
• “Watchdog Timer (WDT)”
(DS39697)
• “High-Level Device Integration”
(DS39719)
• “Programming and Diagnostics”
(DS39716)
which are available from the Microchip
web site (www.microchip.com). The
information in this data sheet
supersedes the information in the
FRMs.
Note:
Flexible Configuration
Watchdog Timer (WDT)
Code Protection
JTAG Boundary Scan Interface
In-Circuit Serial Programming™
In-Circuit Emulation
34.1
Configuration data is reloaded on every
device Reset.
When creating applications for these devices, users
should always specifically allocate the location of the
Flash Configuration Word for configuration data. This is
to make certain that program code is not stored in this
address when the code is compiled.
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices include several
features intended to maximize application flexibility and
reliability, and minimize cost through elimination of
external components. These are:
•
•
•
•
•
•
CONSIDERATIONS FOR
CONFIGURING PIC24FJ128GC010
FAMILY DEVICES
The upper byte of all Flash Configuration Words in
program memory should always be ‘0000 0000’. This
makes them appear to be NOP instructions in the
remote event that their locations are ever executed by
accident. Since Configuration bits are not implemented
in the corresponding locations, writing ‘0’s to these
locations has no effect on device operation.
Configuration Bits
Note:
The Configuration bits can be programmed (read as ‘0’),
or left unprogrammed (read as ‘1’), to select various
device configurations. These bits are mapped, starting
at program memory location, F80000h. A detailed explanation of the various bit functions is provided in
Register 34-1 through Register 34-6.
Performing a page erase operation on the
last page of program memory clears the
Flash Configuration Words, enabling code
protection as a result. Therefore, users
should avoid performing page erase
operations on the last page of program
memory.
Note that address, F80000h, is beyond the user program
memory space. In fact, it belongs to the configuration
memory space (800000h-FFFFFFh), which can only be
accessed using Table Reads and Table Writes.
TABLE 34-1:
FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD LOCATIONS FOR
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY DEVICES
Configuration Word Addresses
Device
1
2
3
4
PIC24FJ64GC0XX
ABFEh
ABFCh
ABFAh
ABF8h
PIC24FJ128GC0XX
157FEh
157FCh
157FAh
157F8h
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-1:
CW1: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 23
bit 16
r-x
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
—
JTAGEN
GCP
GWRP
DEBUG
LPCFG
ICS1
ICS0
bit 15
bit 8
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
FWDTEN1
FWDTEN0
WINDIS
FWPSA
WDTPS3
WDTPS2
WDTPS1
WDTPS0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
r = Reserved bit
PO = Program Once bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 23-16
Unimplemented: Read as ‘1’
bit 15
Reserved: The value is unknown; program as ‘0’
bit 14
JTAGEN: JTAG Port Enable bit
1 = JTAG port is enabled
0 = JTAG port is disabled
bit 13
GCP: General Segment Program Memory Code Protection bit
1 = Code protection is disabled
0 = Code protection is enabled for the entire program memory space
bit 12
GWRP: General Segment Code Flash Write Protection bit
1 = Writes to program memory are allowed
0 = Writes to program memory are not allowed
bit 11
DEBUG: Background Debugger Enable bit
1 = Device resets into Operational mode
0 = Device resets into Debug mode
bit 10
LPCFG: Low-Voltage/Retention Regulator Configuration bit
1 = Low-voltage/retention regulator is always disabled
0 = Low-power, low-voltage/retention regulator is enabled and controlled in firmware by the RETEN bit
bit 9-8
ICS: Emulator Pin Placement Select bits
11 = Emulator functions are shared with PGEC1/PGED1
10 = Emulator functions are shared with PGEC2/PGED2
01 = Emulator functions are shared with PGEC3/PGED3
00 = Reserved; do not use
bit 7-6
FWDTEN: Watchdog Timer Configuration bits
11 = WDT is always enabled; SWDTEN bit has no effect
10 = WDT is enabled and controlled in firmware by the SWDTEN bit
01 = WDT is enabled only in Run mode and is disabled in Sleep modes; SWDTEN bit is disabled
00 = WDT is disabled; SWDTEN bit is disabled
bit 5
WINDIS: Windowed Watchdog Timer Disable bit
1 = Standard Watchdog Timer is enabled
0 = Windowed Watchdog Timer is enabled (FWDTEN must not be ‘00’)
DS30009312D-page 404
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-1:
CW1: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 1 (CONTINUED)
bit 4
FWPSA: WDT Prescaler Ratio Select bit
1 = Prescaler ratio of 1:128
0 = Prescaler ratio of 1:32
bit 3-0
WDTPS: Watchdog Timer Postscaler Select bits
1111 = 1:32,768
1110 = 1:16,384
1101 = 1:8,192
1100 = 1:4,096
1011 = 1:2,048
1010 = 1:1,024
1001 = 1:512
1000 = 1:256
0111 = 1:128
0110 = 1:64
0101 = 1:32
0100 = 1:16
0011 = 1:8
0010 = 1:4
0001 = 1:2
0000 = 1:1
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 405
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-2:
CW2: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 2
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 23
bit 16
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
IESO
VBTBOR
WDTCMX
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
ALTCVREF(1,3) ALTADREF(1,3)
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
FNOSC2
FNOSC1
FNOSC0
bit 15
bit 8
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
r-0
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
FCKSM1
FCKSM0
OSCIOFCN
WDTCLK1
WDTCLK0
—
POSCMD1
POSCMD0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
r = Reserved bit
PO = Program Once bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 23-16
Unimplemented: Read as ‘1’
bit 15
IESO: Internal External Switchover bit
1 = IESO mode (Two-Speed Start-up) is enabled
0 = IESO mode (Two-Speed Start-up) is disabled
bit 14
VBTBOR: VBAT BOR Enable bit
1 = VBAT BOR is enabled
0 = VBAT BOR is disabled
bit 13
WDTCMX: WDT Clock Multiplex Control bit
1 = Enables WDT clock multiplexing
0 = Disables clock multiplexing
bit 12
ALTCVREF: External CVREF+/CVREF- Location Select bit(1,3)
1 = CVREF+/CVREF- are mapped to RA9/RA10, respectively
0 = CVREF+/CVREF- are mapped to RB0/RB1, respectively
bit 11
ALTADREF: External AVREF+/AVREF- Location Select bit(1,3)
1 = AVREF+/AVREF- are mapped to RA9/RA10, respectively
0 = AVREF+/AVREF- are mapped to RB0/RB1, respectively
bit 10-8
FNOSC: Initial Oscillator Select bits
111 = Fast RC Oscillator with Postscaler (FRCDIV)
110 = Reserved
101 = Low-Power RC Oscillator (LPRC)
100 = Secondary Oscillator (SOSC)
011 = Primary Oscillator with PLL module (XTPLL, HSPLL, ECPLL)
010 = Primary Oscillator (XT, HS, EC)
001 = Fast RC Oscillator with Postscaler and PLL module (FRCPLL)
000 = Fast RC Oscillator (FRC)
Note 1:
2:
3:
These bits should be treated as reserved on the 64-pin devices (PIC24FJ64GC006 and
PIC24FJ128GC006) and should always be programmed to ‘0’. The AVREF+/CVREF+ and AVREF-/CVREFfunctions are located on RB0 and RB1 on these devices.
The 31 kHz FRC source is used when a Windowed WDT mode is selected and the LPRC is not being
used as the system clock. The LPRC is used when the device is in Sleep mode and in all other cases.
The ALTCVREF bit controls both the DAC and comparator reference. The ALTADREF bit controls only the
A/D reference.
DS30009312D-page 406
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-2:
CW2: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 2 (CONTINUED)
bit 7-6
FCKSM: Clock Switching and Fail-Safe Clock Monitor Configuration bits
1x = Clock switching and Fail-Safe Clock Monitor are disabled
01 = Clock switching is enabled, Fail-Safe Clock Monitor is disabled
00 = Clock switching is enabled, Fail-Safe Clock Monitor is enabled
bit 5
OSCIOFCN: OSCO Pin Configuration bit
If POSCMD = 11 or 00:
1 = OSCO/CLKO/RC15 functions as CLKO (FOSC/2)
0 = OSCO/CLKO/RC15 functions as port I/O (RC15)
If POSCMD = 10 or 01:
OSCIOFCN has no effect on OSCO/CLKO/RC15.
bit 4-3
WDTCLK: WDT Clock Source Select bits
When WDTCMX = 1:
11 = LPRC
10 = Either the 31 kHz FRC source or LPRC, depending on device configuration(2)
01 = SOSC input
00 = System clock when active, LPRC while in Sleep mode
When WDTCMX = 0:
LPRC is always the WDT clock source.
bit 2
Reserved: Configure as ‘0’
bit 1-0
POSCMD: Primary Oscillator Configuration bits
11 = Primary Oscillator mode is disabled
10 = HS Oscillator mode is selected (HS mode is used if crystal 10 MHz)
01 = XT Oscillator mode is selected (XT mode is used if crystal < 10 MHz)
00 = EC Oscillator mode is selected
Note 1:
2:
3:
These bits should be treated as reserved on the 64-pin devices (PIC24FJ64GC006 and
PIC24FJ128GC006) and should always be programmed to ‘0’. The AVREF+/CVREF+ and AVREF-/CVREFfunctions are located on RB0 and RB1 on these devices.
The 31 kHz FRC source is used when a Windowed WDT mode is selected and the LPRC is not being
used as the system clock. The LPRC is used when the device is in Sleep mode and in all other cases.
The ALTCVREF bit controls both the DAC and comparator reference. The ALTADREF bit controls only the
A/D reference.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-3:
CW3: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 3
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 23
bit 16
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
r-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
WPEND
WPCFG
WPDIS
BOREN
—
WDTWIN1
WDTWIN0
SOSCSEL
bit 15
bit 8
r-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
—
WPFP6(3)
WPFP5
WPFP4
WPFP3
WPFP2
WPFP1
WPFP0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
PO = Program Once bit
r = Reserved bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 23-16
Unimplemented: Read as ‘1’
bit 15
WPEND: Segment Write Protection End Page Select bit
1 = Protected program memory segment upper boundary is at the last page of program memory; the
lower boundary is the code page specified by WPFP
0 = Protected program memory segment lower boundary is at the bottom of the program memory
(000000h); upper boundary is the code page specified by WPFP
bit 14
WPCFG: Configuration Word Code Page Write Protection Select bit
1 = Last page (at the top of program memory) and Flash Configuration Words are not write-protected(1)
0 = Last page and Flash Configuration Words are write-protected provided WPDIS = 0
bit 13
WPDIS: Segment Write Protection Disable bit
1 = Segmented program memory write protection is disabled
0 = Segmented program memory write protection is enabled; protected segment is defined by the
WPEND, WPCFG and WPFPx Configuration bits
bit 12
BOREN: Brown-out Reset Enable bit
1 = BOR is enabled (all modes except Deep Sleep)
0 = BOR is disabled
bit 11
Reserved: Always maintain as ‘1’
bit 10-9
WDTWIN: Watchdog Timer Window Width Select bits
11 = 25%
10 = 37.5%
01 = 50%
00 = 75%
bit 8
SOSCSEL: SOSC Selection bit
1 = SOSC circuit is selected
0 = Digital (SCLKI) mode(2)
bit 7
Reserved: Always maintain as ‘1’
Note 1:
2:
3:
Regardless of WPCFG status, if WPEND = 1 or if the WPFP bits correspond to the Configuration
Word page, the Configuration Word page is protected.
Ensure that the SCLKI pin is made a digital input while using this configuration (see Table 11-1).
For the 64K devices (PIC24FJ64GC0XX), maintain WPFP6 as ‘0’.
DS30009312D-page 408
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-3:
CW3: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 3 (CONTINUED)
WPFP: Write-Protected Code Segment Boundary Page bits(3)
Designates the 512 instruction words page boundary of the protected Code Segment.
If WPEND = 1:
Specifies the lower page boundary of the code-protected segment; the last page being the last
implemented page in the device.
If WPEND = 0:
Specifies the upper page boundary of the code-protected segment; Page 0 being the lower boundary.
bit 6-0
Note 1:
2:
3:
Regardless of WPCFG status, if WPEND = 1 or if the WPFP bits correspond to the Configuration
Word page, the Configuration Word page is protected.
Ensure that the SCLKI pin is made a digital input while using this configuration (see Table 11-1).
For the 64K devices (PIC24FJ64GC0XX), maintain WPFP6 as ‘0’.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 409
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-4:
CW4: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 4
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 23
bit 16
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
IOL1WAY
I2C2SEL
PLLDIV3
PLLDIV2
PLLDIV1
PLLDIV0
RTCBAT
DSSWEN
bit 15
bit 8
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
R/PO-1
DSWDTEN
DSBOREN
DSWDTOSC
DSWDPS4
DSWDPS3
DSWDPS2
DSWDPS1
DSWDPS0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend:
PO = Program Once bit
R = Readable bit
W = Writable bit
U = Unimplemented bit, read as ‘0’
-n = Value at POR
‘1’ = Bit is set
‘0’ = Bit is cleared
x = Bit is unknown
bit 23-16
Unimplemented: Read as ‘1’
bit 15
IOL1WAY: IOLOCK One-Way Set Enable bit
1 = The IOLOCK bit (OSCCON) can be set once, provided the unlock sequence has been
completed. Once set, the Peripheral Pin Select registers cannot be written to a second time.
0 = The IOLOCK bit can be set and cleared as needed, provided the unlock sequence has been
completed
bit 14
I2C2SEL: Alternate I2C2 Location Select bit
For PIC24FJXXXGC010 Devices:
1 = I2C2 functions; SCL2 and SDA2 are mapped to RA2 and RA3, respectively
0 = I2C2 functions; SCL2 and SDA2 are mapped to RF5 and RF4, respectively
For PIC24FJXXXGC006 Devices:
Reserved, maintain as ‘1’.
bit 13-10
PLLDIV USB 96 MHz PLL Prescaler Select bits
1111 = PLL is disabled
1110
.... = Reserved, do not use
1000
0111 = Oscillator input divided by 12 (48 MHz input)
0110 = Oscillator input divided by 8 (32 MHz input)
0101 = Oscillator input divided by 6 (24 MHz input)
0100 = Oscillator input divided by 5 (20 MHz input)
0011 = Oscillator input divided by 4 (16 MHz input)
0010 = Oscillator input divided by 3 (12 MHz input)
0001 = Oscillator input divided by 2 (8 MHz input)
0000 = Oscillator input is used directly (4 MHz input)
bit 9
RTCBAT: VBAT RTCC Operation Select bit
1 = RTCC operation continues when the device is in VBAT mode
0 = RTCC operation stops when the device is in VBAT mode
bit 8
DSSWEN: Deep Sleep Software Control Select bit
1 = Deep Sleep operation is enabled and controlled by the DSEN bit
0 = Deep Sleep operation is disabled
bit 7
DSWDTEN: Deep Sleep Watchdog Timer Enable bit
1 = Deep Sleep WDT is enabled
0 = Deep Sleep WDT is disabled
DS30009312D-page 410
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-4:
CW4: FLASH CONFIGURATION WORD 4 (CONTINUED)
bit 6
DSBOREN: Deep Sleep Brown-out Reset Enable bit
1 = BOR is enabled in Deep Sleep mode
0 = BOR is disabled in Deep Sleep mode (remains active in other Sleep modes)
bit 5
DSWDTOSC: Deep Sleep Watchdog Timer Clock Select bit
1 = Clock source is LPRC
0 = Clock source is SOSC
bit 4-0
DSWDPS: Deep Sleep Watchdog Timer Postscaler Select bits
11111 = 1:68,719,476,736 (25.7 days)
11110 = 1:34,359,738,368(12.8 days)
11101 = 1:17,179,869,184 (6.4 days)
11100 = 1:8,589,934592 (77.0 hours)
11011 = 1:4,294,967,296 (38.5 hours)
11010 = 1:2,147,483,648 (19.2 hours)
11001 = 1:1,073,741,824 (9.6 hours)
11000 = 1:536,870,912 (4.8 hours)
10111 = 1:268,435,456 (2.4 hours)
10110 = 1:134,217,728 (72.2 minutes)
10101 = 1:67,108,864 (36.1 minutes)
10100 = 1:33,554,432 (18.0 minutes)
10011 = 1:16,777,216 (9.0 minutes)
10010 = 1:8,388,608 (4.5 minutes)
10001 = 1:4,194,304 (135.3s)
10000 = 1:2,097,152 (67.7s)
01111 = 1:1,048,576 (33.825s)
01110 = 1:524,288 (16.912s)
01101 = 1:262,114 (8.456s)
01100 = 1:131,072 (4.228s)
01011 = 1:65,536 (2.114s)
01010 = 1:32,768 (1.057s)
01001 = 1:16,384 (528.5 ms)
01000 = 1:8,192 (264.3 ms)
00111 = 1:4,096 (132.1 ms)
00110 = 1:2,048 (66.1 ms)
00101 = 1:1,024 (33 ms)
00100 = 1:512 (16.5 ms)
00011 = 1:256 (8.3 ms)
00010 = 1:128 (4.1 ms)
00001 = 1:64 (2.1 ms)
00000 = 1:32 (1 ms)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 411
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
REGISTER 34-5:
DEVID: DEVICE ID REGISTER
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
U-1
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 23
bit 16
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
FAMID7
FAMID6
FAMID5
FAMID4
FAMID3
FAMID2
FAMID1
FAMID0
bit 15
bit 8
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
R
DEV7
DEV6
DEV5
DEV4
DEV3
DEV2
DEV1
DEV0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend: R = Readable bit
U = Unimplemented bit
bit 23-16
Unimplemented: Read as ‘1’
bit 15-8
FAMID: Device Family Identifier bits
0100 1000 = PIC24FJ128GC010 family
bit 7-0
DEV: Individual Device Identifier bits
1000 1000 = PIC24FJ64GC006
1000 1001 = PIC24FJ128GC006
1000 0100 = PIC24FJ64GC010
1000 0101 = PIC24FJ128GC010
REGISTER 34-6:
DEVREV: DEVICE REVISION REGISTER
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 23
bit 16
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
—
bit 15
bit 8
U-0
U-0
U-0
U-0
R
R
R
R
—
—
—
—
REV3
REV2
REV1
REV0
bit 7
bit 0
Legend: R = Readable bit
bit 23-4
Unimplemented: Read as ‘0’
bit 3-0
REV: Device Revision Identifier bits
DS30009312D-page 412
U = Unimplemented bit
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
34.2
On-Chip Voltage Regulator
All PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices power their core
digital logic at a nominal 1.8V. To simplify system
design, all devices in the PIC24FJ128GC010 family
incorporate an on-chip regulator that allows the device
to run its core logic from VDD.
This regulator is always enabled. It provides a constant
voltage (1.8V nominal) to the digital core logic, from a
VDD of 2.0V, all the way up to the device’s VDDMAX. It
does not have the capability to boost VDD levels. In
order to prevent “brown-out” conditions when the voltage drops too low for the regulator, the Brown-out
Reset occurs. Then the regulator output follows VDD
with a typical voltage drop of 300 mV.
A low-ESR capacitor (such as ceramic) must be
connected to the VCAP pin (Figure 34-1). This helps to
maintain the stability of the regulator. The recommended
value for the filter capacitor (CEFC) is provided in
Section 2.4 “Voltage Regulator Pin (VCAP)”.
FIGURE 34-1:
CONNECTIONS FOR THE
ON-CHIP REGULATOR
3.3V(1)
PIC24FJXXXGC0XX
VDD
VCAP
CEFC
(10 F typ)
Note 1:
VSS
This is a typical operating voltage. Refer to
Section 37.0 “Electrical Characteristics”
for the full operating ranges of VDD.
34.2.1
ON-CHIP REGULATOR AND POR
The voltage regulator requires a small amount of time
to transition from a disabled or standby state into normal operating mode. During this time, designated as
TVREG, code execution is disabled. TVREG is applied
every time the device resumes operation after any
power-down, including Sleep mode. TVREG is determined by the status of the PMSLP bit (RCON).
Refer to Section 37.0 “Electrical Characteristics” for
more information on TVREG.
Note:
34.2.2
For more information, see Section 37.0
“Electrical Characteristics”. The Information in this data sheet supersedes the
information in the “dsPIC33/PIC24 Family
Reference Manual”.
VOLTAGE REGULATOR STANDBY
MODE
The on-chip regulator always consumes a small incremental amount of current over IDD/IPD, including when
the device is in Sleep mode, even though the core
digital logic does not require power. To provide additional savings in applications where power resources
are critical, the regulator can be made to enter Standby
mode on its own whenever the device goes into Sleep
mode. This feature is controlled by the PMSLP bit
(RCON). Clearing the PMSLP bit enables the
Standby mode. When waking up from Standby mode,
the regulator needs to wait for TVREG to expire before
wake-up.
34.2.3
LOW-VOLTAGE/RETENTION
REGULATOR
When power-saving modes, such as Sleep and Deep
Sleep are used, PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices
may use a separate low-power, low-voltage/retention
regulator to power critical circuits. This regulator, which
operates at 1.2V nominal, maintains power to data
RAM and the RTCC while all other core digital logic is
powered down. It operates only in Sleep, Deep Sleep
and VBAT modes.
The low-voltage/retention regulator is described in
more detail in Section 10.1.3 “Low-Voltage/Retention
Regulator”.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 413
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
34.3
Watchdog Timer (WDT)
For PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices, the WDT is
driven by the LPRC Oscillator. When the WDT is
enabled, the clock source is automatically enabled.
The nominal WDT clock source is the LPRC (31 kHz).
This feeds a prescaler that can be configured for either
5-bit (divide-by-32) or 7-bit (divide-by-128) operation.
The prescaler is set by the FWPSA Configuration bit.
With a 31 kHz input, the prescaler yields a nominal
WDT Time-out period (TWDT) of 1 ms in 5-bit mode or
4 ms in 7-bit mode.
A variable postscaler divides down the WDT prescaler
output and allows for a wide range of time-out periods.
The postscaler is controlled by the WDTPS Configuration bits (CW1), which allows the selection
of a total of 16 settings, from 1:1 to 1:32,768. Using the
prescaler and postscaler time-out periods, ranges from
1 ms to 131 seconds can be achieved.
The WDT Flag bit, WDTO (RCON), is not automatically cleared following a WDT time-out. To detect
subsequent WDT events, the flag must be cleared in
software.
Note:
34.3.1
The CLRWDT and PWRSAV instructions
clear the prescaler and postscaler counts
when executed.
WINDOWED OPERATION
The Watchdog Timer has an optional Fixed Window
mode of operation. In this Windowed mode, CLRWDT
instructions can only reset the WDT during the last 1/4
of the programmed WDT period. A CLRWDT instruction
executed before that window causes a WDT Reset,
similar to a WDT time-out.
Windowed WDT mode is enabled by programming the
WINDIS Configuration bit (CW1) to ‘0’.
The WDT, prescaler and postscaler are reset:
34.3.2
• On any device Reset
• On the completion of a clock switch, whether
invoked by software (i.e., setting the OSWEN bit
after changing the NOSCx bits) or by hardware
(i.e., Fail-Safe Clock Monitor)
• When a PWRSAV instruction is executed
(i.e., Sleep or Idle mode is entered)
• When the device exits Sleep or Idle mode to
resume normal operation
• By a CLRWDT instruction during normal execution
The WDT is enabled or disabled by the FWDTEN
Configuration bits. When the Configuration bits,
FWDTEN = 11, the WDT is always enabled.
If the WDT is enabled, it will continue to run during
Sleep or Idle modes. When the WDT time-out occurs,
the device will wake the device and code execution will
continue from where the PWRSAV instruction was
executed. The corresponding SLEEP or IDLE
(RCON) bit will need to be cleared in software
after the device wakes up.
FIGURE 34-2:
CONTROL REGISTER
The WDT can be optionally controlled in software when
the Configuration bits, FWDTEN = 10. When
FWDTEN = 00, the Watchdog Timer is always
disabled. The WDT is enabled in software by setting
the SWDTEN control bit (RCON). The SWDTEN
control bit is cleared on any device Reset. The software
WDT option allows the user to enable the WDT for
critical Code Segments and disable the WDT during
non-critical segments for maximum power savings.
WDT BLOCK DIAGRAM
SWDTEN
FWDTEN
LPRC Control
FWPSA
WDTPS
Prescaler
(5-bit/7-bit)
LPRC Input
31 kHz
Wake from Sleep
WDT
Counter
Postscaler
1:1 to 1:32.768
WDT Overflow
Reset
1 ms/4 ms
All Device Resets
Transition to
New Clock Source
Exit Sleep or
Idle Mode
CLRWDT Instr.
PWRSAV Instr.
Sleep or Idle Mode
DS30009312D-page 414
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
34.4
Program Verification and
Code Protection
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices provide two complimentary methods to protect application code from
overwrites and erasures. These also help to protect the
device from inadvertent configuration changes during
run time.
34.4.1
GENERAL SEGMENT PROTECTION
For all devices in the PIC24FJ128GC010 family, the
on-chip program memory space is treated as a single
block, known as the General Segment (GS). Code protection for this block is controlled by one Configuration
bit, GCP. This bit inhibits external reads and writes to
the program memory space. It has no direct effect in
normal execution mode.
Write protection is controlled by the GWRP bit in the
Configuration Word. When GWRP is programmed to
‘0’, internal write and erase operations to program
memory are blocked.
34.4.2
CODE SEGMENT PROTECTION
In addition to global General Segment protection, a
separate subrange of the program memory space can
be individually protected against writes and erases.
This area can be used for many purposes where a
separate block of write and erase-protected code is
needed, such as bootloader applications. Unlike
common boot block implementations, the specially
protected segment in the PIC24FJ128GC010 family
devices can be located by the user anywhere in the
program space and configured in a wide range of sizes.
Code Segment (CS) protection provides an added level
of protection to a designated area of program memory
by disabling the NVM safety interlock whenever a write
or erase address falls within a specified range. It does
not override General Segment protection, controlled by
the GCP or GWRP bit. For example, if GCP and GWRP
are enabled, enabling segmented code protection for
the bottom half of program memory does not undo
General Segment protection for the top half.
The size and type of protection for the segmented code
range are configured by the WPFPx, WPEND, WPCFG
and WPDIS bits in Configuration Word 3. Code Segment protection is enabled by programming the WPDIS
bit (= 0). The WPFPx bits specify the size of the
segment to be protected by specifying the 512-word
code page that is the start or end of the protected
segment. The specified region is inclusive, therefore,
this page will also be protected.
The WPEND bit determines if the protected segment
uses the top or bottom of the program space as a
boundary. Programming WPEND (= 0) sets the bottom
of program memory (000000h) as the lower boundary
of the protected segment. Leaving WPEND unprogrammed (= 1) protects the specified page through the
last page of implemented program memory, including
the Configuration Word locations.
A separate bit, WPCFG, is used to protect the last page
of program space, including the Flash Configuration
Words. Programming WPCFG (= 0) protects the last
page in addition to the pages selected by the WPEND
and WPFP bits’ setting. This is useful in circumstances where write protection is needed for both the
Code Segment in the bottom of the memory and the
Flash Configuration Words.
The various options for Code Segment protection are
shown in Table 34-2.
TABLE 34-2:
CODE SEGMENT PROTECTION CONFIGURATION OPTIONS
Segment Configuration Bits
Write/Erase Protection of Code Segment
WPDIS
WPEND
WPCFG
1
x
x
No additional protection is enabled; all program memory protection is configured
by GCP and GWRP.
0
1
x
Addresses from the first address of the code page are defined by WPFP
through the end of implemented program memory (inclusive);
erase/write-protected, including Flash Configuration Words.
0
0
1
Address, 000000h, through the last address of the code page is defined by
WPFP (inclusive); erase/write-protected.
0
0
0
Address, 000000h, through the last address of the code page is defined by
WPFP (inclusive); erase/write-protected and the last page, including Flash
Configuration Words, are erase/write-protected.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 415
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
34.4.3
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
PROTECTION
The Configuration registers are protected against
inadvertent or unwanted changes or reads in two ways.
The primary protection method is the same as that of
the RPn/RPIn registers – shadow registers contain a
complimentary value which is constantly compared
with the actual value.
To safeguard against unpredictable events, Configuration bit changes resulting from individual cell-level
disruptions (such as ESD events) will cause a parity
error and trigger a device Reset.
The data for the Configuration registers is derived from
the Flash Configuration Words in program memory.
When the GCP bit is set, the source data for device
configuration is also protected as a consequence. Even
if General Segment protection is not enabled, the
device configuration can be protected by using the
appropriate Code Segment protection setting.
34.5
JTAG Interface
PIC24FJ128GC010 family devices implement a JTAG
interface, which supports boundary scan device
testing.
DS30009312D-page 416
34.6
In-Circuit Serial Programming™
PIC24FJ128GC010 family microcontrollers can be
serially programmed while in the end application circuit.
This is simply done with two lines for clock (PGECx)
and data (PGEDx), and three other lines for power
(VDD), ground (VSS) and MCLR. This allows customers
to manufacture boards with unprogrammed devices
and then program the microcontroller just before
shipping the product. This also allows the most recent
firmware or a custom firmware to be programmed.
34.7
In-Circuit Debugger
When MPLAB® ICD 3 is selected as a debugger, the
in-circuit debugging functionality is enabled. This function allows simple debugging functions when used with
MPLAB X IDE. Debugging functionality is controlled
through the PGECx (Emulation/Debug Clock) and
PGEDx (Emulation/Debug Data) pins.
To use the in-circuit debugger function of the device,
the design must implement ICSP™ connections to
MCLR, VDD, VSS and the PGECx/PGEDx pin pair,
designated by the ICSx Configuration bits. In addition,
when the feature is enabled, some of the resources are
not available for general use. These resources include
the first 80 bytes of data RAM and two I/O pins.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
35.0
DEVELOPMENT SUPPORT
The PIC® microcontrollers (MCU) and dsPIC® digital
signal controllers (DSC) are supported with a full range
of software and hardware development tools:
• Integrated Development Environment
- MPLAB® X IDE Software
• Compilers/Assemblers/Linkers
- MPLAB XC Compiler
- MPASMTM Assembler
- MPLINKTM Object Linker/
MPLIBTM Object Librarian
- MPLAB Assembler/Linker/Librarian for
Various Device Families
• Simulators
- MPLAB X SIM Software Simulator
• Emulators
- MPLAB REAL ICE™ In-Circuit Emulator
• In-Circuit Debuggers/Programmers
- MPLAB ICD 3
- PICkit™ 3
• Device Programmers
- MPLAB PM3 Device Programmer
• Low-Cost Demonstration/Development Boards,
Evaluation Kits and Starter Kits
• Third-party development tools
35.1
MPLAB X Integrated Development
Environment Software
The MPLAB X IDE is a single, unified graphical user
interface for Microchip and third-party software, and
hardware development tool that runs on Windows®,
Linux and Mac OS® X. Based on the NetBeans IDE,
MPLAB X IDE is an entirely new IDE with a host of free
software components and plug-ins for highperformance application development and debugging.
Moving between tools and upgrading from software
simulators to hardware debugging and programming
tools is simple with the seamless user interface.
With complete project management, visual call graphs,
a configurable watch window and a feature-rich editor
that includes code completion and context menus,
MPLAB X IDE is flexible and friendly enough for new
users. With the ability to support multiple tools on
multiple projects with simultaneous debugging, MPLAB
X IDE is also suitable for the needs of experienced
users.
Feature-Rich Editor:
• Color syntax highlighting
• Smart code completion makes suggestions and
provides hints as you type
• Automatic code formatting based on user-defined
rules
• Live parsing
User-Friendly, Customizable Interface:
• Fully customizable interface: toolbars, toolbar
buttons, windows, window placement, etc.
• Call graph window
Project-Based Workspaces:
•
•
•
•
Multiple projects
Multiple tools
Multiple configurations
Simultaneous debugging sessions
File History and Bug Tracking:
• Local file history feature
• Built-in support for Bugzilla issue tracker
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 417
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
35.2
MPLAB XC Compilers
The MPLAB XC Compilers are complete ANSI C
compilers for all of Microchip’s 8, 16, and 32-bit MCU
and DSC devices. These compilers provide powerful
integration capabilities, superior code optimization and
ease of use. MPLAB XC Compilers run on Windows,
Linux or MAC OS X.
For easy source level debugging, the compilers provide
debug information that is optimized to the MPLAB X
IDE.
The free MPLAB XC Compiler editions support all
devices and commands, with no time or memory
restrictions, and offer sufficient code optimization for
most applications.
MPLAB XC Compilers include an assembler, linker and
utilities. The assembler generates relocatable object
files that can then be archived or linked with other relocatable object files and archives to create an executable file. MPLAB XC Compiler uses the assembler to
produce its object file. Notable features of the assembler include:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Support for the entire device instruction set
Support for fixed-point and floating-point data
Command-line interface
Rich directive set
Flexible macro language
MPLAB X IDE compatibility
35.3
MPASM Assembler
The MPASM Assembler is a full-featured, universal
macro assembler for PIC10/12/16/18 MCUs.
The MPASM Assembler generates relocatable object
files for the MPLINK Object Linker, Intel® standard HEX
files, MAP files to detail memory usage and symbol
reference, absolute LST files that contain source lines
and generated machine code, and COFF files for
debugging.
The MPASM Assembler features include:
35.4
MPLINK Object Linker/
MPLIB Object Librarian
The MPLINK Object Linker combines relocatable
objects created by the MPASM Assembler. It can link
relocatable objects from precompiled libraries, using
directives from a linker script.
The MPLIB Object Librarian manages the creation and
modification of library files of precompiled code. When
a routine from a library is called from a source file, only
the modules that contain that routine will be linked in
with the application. This allows large libraries to be
used efficiently in many different applications.
The object linker/library features include:
• Efficient linking of single libraries instead of many
smaller files
• Enhanced code maintainability by grouping
related modules together
• Flexible creation of libraries with easy module
listing, replacement, deletion and extraction
35.5
MPLAB Assembler, Linker and
Librarian for Various Device
Families
MPLAB Assembler produces relocatable machine
code from symbolic assembly language for PIC24,
PIC32 and dsPIC DSC devices. MPLAB XC Compiler
uses the assembler to produce its object file. The
assembler generates relocatable object files that can
then be archived or linked with other relocatable object
files and archives to create an executable file. Notable
features of the assembler include:
•
•
•
•
•
•
Support for the entire device instruction set
Support for fixed-point and floating-point data
Command-line interface
Rich directive set
Flexible macro language
MPLAB X IDE compatibility
• Integration into MPLAB X IDE projects
• User-defined macros to streamline
assembly code
• Conditional assembly for multipurpose
source files
• Directives that allow complete control over the
assembly process
DS30009312D-page 418
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
35.6
MPLAB X SIM Software Simulator
The MPLAB X SIM Software Simulator allows code
development in a PC-hosted environment by simulating the PIC MCUs and dsPIC DSCs on an instruction
level. On any given instruction, the data areas can be
examined or modified and stimuli can be applied from
a comprehensive stimulus controller. Registers can be
logged to files for further run-time analysis. The trace
buffer and logic analyzer display extend the power of
the simulator to record and track program execution,
actions on I/O, most peripherals and internal registers.
The MPLAB X SIM Software Simulator fully supports
symbolic debugging using the MPLAB XC Compilers,
and the MPASM and MPLAB Assemblers. The software simulator offers the flexibility to develop and
debug code outside of the hardware laboratory environment, making it an excellent, economical software
development tool.
35.7
MPLAB REAL ICE In-Circuit
Emulator System
The MPLAB REAL ICE In-Circuit Emulator System is
Microchip’s next generation high-speed emulator for
Microchip Flash DSC and MCU devices. It debugs and
programs all 8, 16 and 32-bit MCU, and DSC devices
with the easy-to-use, powerful graphical user interface of
the MPLAB X IDE.
The emulator is connected to the design engineer’s
PC using a high-speed USB 2.0 interface and is
connected to the target with either a connector
compatible with in-circuit debugger systems (RJ-11)
or with the new high-speed, noise tolerant, LowVoltage Differential Signal (LVDS) interconnection
(CAT5).
The emulator is field upgradable through future firmware
downloads in MPLAB X IDE. MPLAB REAL ICE offers
significant advantages over competitive emulators
including full-speed emulation, run-time variable
watches, trace analysis, complex breakpoints, logic
probes, a ruggedized probe interface and long (up to
three meters) interconnection cables.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
35.8
MPLAB ICD 3 In-Circuit Debugger
System
The MPLAB ICD 3 In-Circuit Debugger System is
Microchip’s most cost-effective, high-speed hardware
debugger/programmer for Microchip Flash DSC and
MCU devices. It debugs and programs PIC Flash
microcontrollers and dsPIC DSCs with the powerful,
yet easy-to-use graphical user interface of the MPLAB
IDE.
The MPLAB ICD 3 In-Circuit Debugger probe is
connected to the design engineer’s PC using a highspeed USB 2.0 interface and is connected to the target
with a connector compatible with the MPLAB ICD 2 or
MPLAB REAL ICE systems (RJ-11). MPLAB ICD 3
supports all MPLAB ICD 2 headers.
35.9
PICkit 3 In-Circuit Debugger/
Programmer
The MPLAB PICkit 3 allows debugging and programming of PIC and dsPIC Flash microcontrollers at a most
affordable price point using the powerful graphical user
interface of the MPLAB IDE. The MPLAB PICkit 3 is
connected to the design engineer’s PC using a fullspeed USB interface and can be connected to the target via a Microchip debug (RJ-11) connector (compatible with MPLAB ICD 3 and MPLAB REAL ICE). The
connector uses two device I/O pins and the Reset line
to implement in-circuit debugging and In-Circuit Serial
Programming™ (ICSP™).
35.10 MPLAB PM3 Device Programmer
The MPLAB PM3 Device Programmer is a universal,
CE compliant device programmer with programmable
voltage verification at VDDMIN and VDDMAX for
maximum reliability. It features a large LCD display
(128 x 64) for menus and error messages, and a modular, detachable socket assembly to support various
package types. The ICSP cable assembly is included
as a standard item. In Stand-Alone mode, the MPLAB
PM3 Device Programmer can read, verify and program
PIC devices without a PC connection. It can also set
code protection in this mode. The MPLAB PM3
connects to the host PC via an RS-232 or USB cable.
The MPLAB PM3 has high-speed communications and
optimized algorithms for quick programming of large
memory devices, and incorporates an MMC card for file
storage and data applications.
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35.11 Demonstration/Development
Boards, Evaluation Kits, and
Starter Kits
A wide variety of demonstration, development and
evaluation boards for various PIC MCUs and dsPIC
DSCs allows quick application development on fully
functional systems. Most boards include prototyping
areas for adding custom circuitry and provide application firmware and source code for examination and
modification.
The boards support a variety of features, including LEDs,
temperature sensors, switches, speakers, RS-232
interfaces, LCD displays, potentiometers and additional
EEPROM memory.
35.12 Third-Party Development Tools
Microchip also offers a great collection of tools from
third-party vendors. These tools are carefully selected
to offer good value and unique functionality.
• Device Programmers and Gang Programmers
from companies, such as SoftLog and CCS
• Software Tools from companies, such as Gimpel
and Trace Systems
• Protocol Analyzers from companies, such as
Saleae and Total Phase
• Demonstration Boards from companies, such as
MikroElektronika, Digilent® and Olimex
• Embedded Ethernet Solutions from companies,
such as EZ Web Lynx, WIZnet and IPLogika®
The demonstration and development boards can be
used in teaching environments, for prototyping custom
circuits and for learning about various microcontroller
applications.
In addition to the PICDEM™ and dsPICDEM™
demonstration/development board series of circuits,
Microchip has a line of evaluation kits and demonstration software for analog filter design, KEELOQ® security
ICs, CAN, IrDA®, PowerSmart battery management,
SEEVAL® evaluation system, Sigma-Delta A/D, flow
rate sensing, plus many more.
Also available are starter kits that contain everything
needed to experience the specified device. This usually
includes a single application and debug capability, all
on one board.
Check the Microchip web page (www.microchip.com)
for the complete list of demonstration, development
and evaluation kits.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
36.0
Note:
INSTRUCTION SET SUMMARY
This chapter is a brief summary of the
PIC24F Instruction Set Architecture (ISA)
and is not intended to be a comprehensive
reference source.
The PIC24F instruction set adds many enhancements
to the previous PIC® MCU instruction sets, while maintaining an easy migration from previous PIC MCU
instruction sets. Most instructions are a single program
memory word. Only three instructions require two
program memory locations.
Each single-word instruction is a 24-bit word divided
into an 8-bit opcode, which specifies the instruction
type and one or more operands, which further specify
the operation of the instruction. The instruction set is
highly orthogonal and is grouped into four basic
categories:
•
•
•
•
• A literal value to be loaded into a W register or file
register (specified by the value of ‘k’)
• The W register or file register where the literal
value is to be loaded (specified by ‘Wb’ or ‘f’)
However, literal instructions that involve arithmetic or
logical operations use some of the following operands:
• The first source operand, which is a register, ‘Wb’,
without any address modifier
• The second source operand, which is a literal
value
• The destination of the result (only if not the same
as the first source operand), which is typically a
register, ‘Wd’, with or without an address modifier
The control instructions may use some of the following
operands:
• A program memory address
• The mode of the Table Read and Table Write
instructions
Word or byte-oriented operations
Bit-oriented operations
Literal operations
Control operations
Table 36-1 shows the general symbols used in
describing the instructions. The PIC24F instruction set
summary in Table 36-2 lists all the instructions, along
with the status flags affected by each instruction.
Most word or byte-oriented W register instructions
(including barrel shift instructions) have three
operands:
• The first source operand, which is typically a
register, ‘Wb’, without any address modifier
• The second source operand, which is typically a
register, ‘Ws’, with or without an address modifier
• The destination of the result, which is typically a
register, ‘Wd’, with or without an address modifier
However, word or byte-oriented file register instructions
have two operands:
• The file register specified by the value, ‘f’
• The destination, which could either be the file
register, ‘f’, or the W0 register, which is denoted
as ‘WREG’
Most bit-oriented instructions (including
rotate/shift instructions) have two operands:
The literal instructions that involve data movement may
use some of the following operands:
All instructions are a single word, except for certain
double-word instructions, which were made
double-word instructions so that all the required information is available in these 48 bits. In the second word,
the 8 MSbs are ‘0’s. If this second word is executed as
an instruction (by itself), it will execute as a NOP.
Most single-word instructions are executed in a single
instruction cycle, unless a conditional test is true or the
Program Counter is changed as a result of the instruction.
In these cases, the execution takes two instruction cycles,
with the additional instruction cycle(s) executed as a NOP.
Notable exceptions are the BRA (unconditional/computed
branch), indirect CALL/GOTO, all Table Reads and Writes,
and RETURN/RETFIE instructions, which are single-word
instructions but take two or three cycles.
Certain instructions that involve skipping over the subsequent instruction require either two or three cycles if
the skip is performed, depending on whether the
instruction being skipped is a single-word or two-word
instruction. Moreover, double-word moves require
two cycles. The double-word instructions execute in
two instruction cycles.
simple
• The W register (with or without an address
modifier) or file register (specified by the value of
‘Ws’ or ‘f’)
• The bit in the W register or file register
(specified by a literal value or indirectly by the
contents of register, ‘Wb’)
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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TABLE 36-1:
SYMBOLS USED IN OPCODE DESCRIPTIONS
Field
Description
#text
Means literal defined by “text”
(text)
Means “content of text”
[text]
Means “the location addressed by text”
{ }
Optional field or operation
Register bit field
.b
Byte mode selection
.d
Double-Word mode selection
.S
Shadow register select
.w
Word mode selection (default)
bit4
4-bit Bit Selection field (used in word addressed instructions) {0...15}
C, DC, N, OV, Z
MCU Status bits: Carry, Digit Carry, Negative, Overflow, Sticky Zero
Expr
Absolute address, label or expression (resolved by the linker)
f
File register address {0000h...1FFFh}
lit1
1-bit unsigned literal {0,1}
lit4
4-bit unsigned literal {0...15}
lit5
5-bit unsigned literal {0...31}
lit8
8-bit unsigned literal {0...255}
lit10
10-bit unsigned literal {0...255} for Byte mode, {0:1023} for Word mode
lit14
14-bit unsigned literal {0...16383}
lit16
16-bit unsigned literal {0...65535}
lit23
23-bit unsigned literal {0...8388607}; LSB must be ‘0’
None
Field does not require an entry, may be blank
PC
Program Counter
Slit10
10-bit signed literal {-512...511}
Slit16
16-bit signed literal {-32768...32767}
Slit6
6-bit signed literal {-16...16}
Wb
Base W register {W0..W15}
Wd
Destination W register { Wd, [Wd], [Wd++], [Wd--], [++Wd], [--Wd] }
Wdo
Destination W register
{ Wnd, [Wnd], [Wnd++], [Wnd--], [++Wnd], [--Wnd], [Wnd+Wb] }
Wm,Wn
Dividend, Divisor Working register pair (direct addressing)
Wn
One of 16 Working registers {W0..W15}
Wnd
One of 16 destination Working registers {W0..W15}
Wns
One of 16 source Working registers {W0..W15}
WREG
W0 (Working register used in file register instructions)
Ws
Source W register { Ws, [Ws], [Ws++], [Ws--], [++Ws], [--Ws] }
Wso
Source W register { Wns, [Wns], [Wns++], [Wns--], [++Wns], [--Wns], [Wns+Wb] }
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TABLE 36-2:
INSTRUCTION SET OVERVIEW
Assembly
Mnemonic
Assembly Syntax
Description
# of
Words
# of
Cycles
Status Flags
Affected
ADD
f
f = f + WREG
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADD
f,WREG
WREG = f + WREG
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADD
#lit10,Wn
Wd = lit10 + Wd
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADD
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Wb + Ws
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADD
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = Wb + lit5
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADDC
f
f = f + WREG + (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADDC
f,WREG
WREG = f + WREG + (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADDC
#lit10,Wn
Wd = lit10 + Wd + (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADDC
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Wb + Ws + (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
ADDC
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = Wb + lit5 + (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
AND
f
f = f .AND. WREG
1
1
N, Z
AND
f,WREG
WREG = f .AND. WREG
1
1
N, Z
AND
#lit10,Wn
Wd = lit10 .AND. Wd
1
1
N, Z
AND
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Wb .AND. Ws
1
1
N, Z
AND
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = Wb .AND. lit5
1
1
N, Z
ASR
f
f = Arithmetic Right Shift f
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
ASR
f,WREG
WREG = Arithmetic Right Shift f
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
ASR
Ws,Wd
Wd = Arithmetic Right Shift Ws
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
ASR
Wb,Wns,Wnd
Wnd = Arithmetic Right Shift Wb by Wns
1
1
N, Z
ASR
Wb,#lit5,Wnd
Wnd = Arithmetic Right Shift Wb by lit5
1
1
N, Z
BCLR
BCLR
f,#bit4
Bit Clear f
1
1
None
BCLR
Ws,#bit4
Bit Clear Ws
1
1
None
BRA
BRA
C,Expr
Branch if Carry
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
GE,Expr
Branch if Greater than or Equal
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
GEU,Expr
Branch if Unsigned Greater than or Equal
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
GT,Expr
Branch if Greater than
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
GTU,Expr
Branch if Unsigned Greater than
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
LE,Expr
Branch if Less than or Equal
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
LEU,Expr
Branch if Unsigned Less than or Equal
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
LT,Expr
Branch if Less than
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
LTU,Expr
Branch if Unsigned Less than
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
N,Expr
Branch if Negative
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
NC,Expr
Branch if Not Carry
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
NN,Expr
Branch if Not Negative
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
NOV,Expr
Branch if Not Overflow
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
NZ,Expr
Branch if Not Zero
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
OV,Expr
Branch if Overflow
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
Expr
Branch Unconditionally
1
2
None
BRA
Z,Expr
Branch if Zero
1
1 (2)
None
BRA
Wn
Computed Branch
1
2
None
BSET
f,#bit4
Bit Set f
1
1
None
BSET
Ws,#bit4
Bit Set Ws
1
1
None
BSW.C
Ws,Wb
Write C bit to Ws
1
1
None
BSW.Z
Ws,Wb
Write Z bit to Ws
1
1
None
BTG
BTG
f,#bit4
Bit Toggle f
1
1
None
BTG
Ws,#bit4
Bit Toggle Ws
1
1
None
BTSC
BTSC
f,#bit4
Bit Test f, Skip if Clear
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
BTSC
Ws,#bit4
Bit Test Ws, Skip if Clear
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
ADD
ADDC
AND
ASR
BSET
BSW
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TABLE 36-2:
INSTRUCTION SET OVERVIEW (CONTINUED)
Assembly
Mnemonic
BTSS
BTST
BTSTS
CALL
CLR
Assembly Syntax
# of
Words
Description
# of
Cycles
Status Flags
Affected
BTSS
f,#bit4
Bit Test f, Skip if Set
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
BTSS
Ws,#bit4
Bit Test Ws, Skip if Set
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
BTST
f,#bit4
Bit Test f
1
1
Z
BTST.C
Ws,#bit4
Bit Test Ws to C
1
1
C
BTST.Z
Ws,#bit4
Bit Test Ws to Z
1
1
Z
BTST.C
Ws,Wb
Bit Test Ws to C
1
1
C
BTST.Z
Ws,Wb
Bit Test Ws to Z
1
1
Z
BTSTS
f,#bit4
Bit Test then Set f
1
1
Z
BTSTS.C
Ws,#bit4
Bit Test Ws to C, then Set
1
1
C
BTSTS.Z
Ws,#bit4
Bit Test Ws to Z, then Set
1
1
Z
CALL
lit23
Call Subroutine
2
2
None
CALL
Wn
Call Indirect Subroutine
1
2
None
CLR
f
f = 0x0000
1
1
None
CLR
WREG
WREG = 0x0000
1
1
None
CLR
Ws
Ws = 0x0000
1
1
None
Clear Watchdog Timer
1
1
WDTO, Sleep
CLRWDT
CLRWDT
COM
COM
f
f=f
1
1
N, Z
COM
f,WREG
WREG = f
1
1
N, Z
COM
Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws
1
1
N, Z
CP
f
Compare f with WREG
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CP
Wb,#lit5
Compare Wb with lit5
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CP
Wb,Ws
Compare Wb with Ws (Wb – Ws)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CP0
f
Compare f with 0x0000
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CP0
Ws
Compare Ws with 0x0000
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CPB
f
Compare f with WREG, with Borrow
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CPB
Wb,#lit5
Compare Wb with lit5, with Borrow
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CPB
Wb,Ws
Compare Wb with Ws, with Borrow
(Wb – Ws – C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
CPSEQ
CPSEQ
Wb,Wn
Compare Wb with Wn, Skip if =
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
CPSGT
CPSGT
Wb,Wn
Compare Wb with Wn, Skip if >
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
CPSLT
CPSLT
Wb,Wn
Compare Wb with Wn, Skip if <
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
CPSNE
CPSNE
Wb,Wn
Compare Wb with Wn, Skip if
1
1
None
(2 or 3)
DAW
DAW.B
Wn
Wn = Decimal Adjust Wn
1
1
C
DEC
DEC
f
f = f –1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
DEC
f,WREG
WREG = f –1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
DEC
Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws – 1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
DEC2
f
f=f–2
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
DEC2
f,WREG
WREG = f – 2
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
DEC2
Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws – 2
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
DISI
DISI
#lit14
Disable Interrupts for k Instruction Cycles
1
1
None
DIV
DIV.SW
Wm,Wn
Signed 16/16-bit Integer Divide
1
18
N, Z, C, OV
DIV.SD
Wm,Wn
Signed 32/16-bit Integer Divide
1
18
N, Z, C, OV
DIV.UW
Wm,Wn
Unsigned 16/16-bit Integer Divide
1
18
N, Z, C, OV
DIV.UD
Wm,Wn
Unsigned 32/16-bit Integer Divide
1
18
N, Z, C, OV
EXCH
EXCH
Wns,Wnd
Swap Wns with Wnd
1
1
None
FF1L
FF1L
Ws,Wnd
Find First One from Left (MSb) Side
1
1
C
FF1R
FF1R
Ws,Wnd
Find First One from Right (LSb) Side
1
1
C
CP
CP0
CPB
DEC2
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TABLE 36-2:
INSTRUCTION SET OVERVIEW (CONTINUED)
Assembly
Mnemonic
Assembly Syntax
Description
# of
Words
# of
Cycles
Status Flags
Affected
GOTO
Expr
Go to Address
2
2
None
GOTO
Wn
Go to Indirect
1
2
None
INC
f
f=f+1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
INC
f,WREG
WREG = f + 1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
INC
Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws + 1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
INC2
f
f=f+2
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
INC2
f,WREG
WREG = f + 2
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
INC2
Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws + 2
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
IOR
f
f = f .IOR. WREG
1
1
N, Z
IOR
f,WREG
WREG = f .IOR. WREG
1
1
N, Z
IOR
#lit10,Wn
Wd = lit10 .IOR. Wd
1
1
N, Z
IOR
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Wb .IOR. Ws
1
1
N, Z
IOR
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = Wb .IOR. lit5
1
1
N, Z
LNK
LNK
#lit14
Link Frame Pointer
1
1
None
LSR
LSR
f
f = Logical Right Shift f
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
LSR
f,WREG
WREG = Logical Right Shift f
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
LSR
Ws,Wd
Wd = Logical Right Shift Ws
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
LSR
Wb,Wns,Wnd
Wnd = Logical Right Shift Wb by Wns
1
1
N, Z
LSR
Wb,#lit5,Wnd
Wnd = Logical Right Shift Wb by lit5
1
1
N, Z
MOV
f,Wn
Move f to Wn
1
1
None
MOV
[Wns+Slit10],Wnd
Move [Wns+Slit10] to Wnd
1
1
None
MOV
f
Move f to f
1
1
N, Z
MOV
f,WREG
Move f to WREG
1
1
N, Z
MOV
#lit16,Wn
Move 16-bit Literal to Wn
1
1
None
MOV.b
#lit8,Wn
Move 8-bit Literal to Wn
1
1
None
MOV
Wn,f
Move Wn to f
1
1
None
MOV
Wns,[Wns+Slit10]
Move Wns to [Wns+Slit10]
1
1
MOV
Wso,Wdo
Move Ws to Wd
1
1
MOV
WREG,f
Move WREG to f
1
1
N, Z
MOV.D
Wns,Wd
Move Double from W(ns):W(ns+1) to Wd
1
2
None
GOTO
INC
INC2
IOR
MOV
MUL
NEG
NOP
POP
MOV.D
Ws,Wnd
Move Double from Ws to W(nd+1):W(nd)
1
2
None
MUL.SS
Wb,Ws,Wnd
{Wnd+1, Wnd} = Signed(Wb) * Signed(Ws)
1
1
None
MUL.SU
Wb,Ws,Wnd
{Wnd+1, Wnd} = Signed(Wb) * Unsigned(Ws)
1
1
None
MUL.US
Wb,Ws,Wnd
{Wnd+1, Wnd} = Unsigned(Wb) * Signed(Ws)
1
1
None
MUL.UU
Wb,Ws,Wnd
{Wnd+1, Wnd} = Unsigned(Wb) * Unsigned(Ws)
1
1
None
MUL.SU
Wb,#lit5,Wnd
{Wnd+1, Wnd} = Signed(Wb) * Unsigned(lit5)
1
1
None
MUL.UU
Wb,#lit5,Wnd
{Wnd+1, Wnd} = Unsigned(Wb) * Unsigned(lit5)
1
1
None
None
MUL
f
W3:W2 = f * WREG
1
1
NEG
f
f=f+1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
NEG
f,WREG
WREG = f + 1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
NEG
Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws + 1
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
NOP
No Operation
1
1
None
NOPR
No Operation
1
1
None
None
POP
f
Pop f from Top-of-Stack (TOS)
1
1
POP
Wdo
Pop from Top-of-Stack (TOS) to Wdo
1
1
None
POP.D
Wnd
Pop from Top-of-Stack (TOS) to W(nd):W(nd+1)
1
2
None
Pop Shadow Registers
1
1
All
PUSH
f
Push f to Top-of-Stack (TOS)
1
1
None
PUSH
Wso
Push Wso to Top-of-Stack (TOS)
1
1
None
PUSH.D
Wns
Push W(ns):W(ns+1) to Top-of-Stack (TOS)
1
2
None
Push Shadow Registers
1
1
None
POP.S
PUSH
None
PUSH.S
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
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PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 36-2:
INSTRUCTION SET OVERVIEW (CONTINUED)
Assembly
Mnemonic
Assembly Syntax
Description
# of
Words
# of
Cycles
Status Flags
Affected
PWRSAV
PWRSAV
#lit1
Go into Sleep or Idle mode
1
1
WDTO, Sleep
RCALL
RCALL
Expr
Relative Call
1
2
None
RCALL
Wn
Computed Call
1
2
None
REPEAT
REPEAT
#lit14
Repeat Next Instruction lit14 + 1 times
1
1
None
REPEAT
Wn
Repeat Next Instruction (Wn) + 1 times
1
1
None
RESET
RESET
Software Device Reset
1
1
None
RETFIE
RETFIE
Return from Interrupt
1
3 (2)
None
Return with Literal in Wn
1
3 (2)
None
Return from Subroutine
1
3 (2)
None
RETLW
RETLW
RETURN
RETURN
RLC
RLC
f
f = Rotate Left through Carry f
1
1
C, N, Z
RLC
f,WREG
WREG = Rotate Left through Carry f
1
1
C, N, Z
RLC
Ws,Wd
Wd = Rotate Left through Carry Ws
1
1
C, N, Z
RLNC
f
f = Rotate Left (No Carry) f
1
1
N, Z
RLNC
f,WREG
WREG = Rotate Left (No Carry) f
1
1
N, Z
RLNC
Ws,Wd
Wd = Rotate Left (No Carry) Ws
1
1
N, Z
RRC
f
f = Rotate Right through Carry f
1
1
C, N, Z
RRC
f,WREG
WREG = Rotate Right through Carry f
1
1
C, N, Z
RRC
Ws,Wd
Wd = Rotate Right through Carry Ws
1
1
C, N, Z
RRNC
f
f = Rotate Right (No Carry) f
1
1
N, Z
RRNC
f,WREG
WREG = Rotate Right (No Carry) f
1
1
N, Z
RRNC
Ws,Wd
Wd = Rotate Right (No Carry) Ws
1
1
N, Z
RLNC
RRC
RRNC
#lit10,Wn
SE
SE
Ws,Wnd
Wnd = Sign-Extended Ws
1
1
C, N, Z
SETM
SETM
f
f = FFFFh
1
1
None
SETM
WREG
WREG = FFFFh
1
1
None
SETM
Ws
Ws = FFFFh
1
1
None
SL
f
f = Left Shift f
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
SL
f,WREG
WREG = Left Shift f
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
SL
Ws,Wd
Wd = Left Shift Ws
1
1
C, N, OV, Z
SL
Wb,Wns,Wnd
Wnd = Left Shift Wb by Wns
1
1
N, Z
SL
Wb,#lit5,Wnd
Wnd = Left Shift Wb by lit5
1
1
N, Z
SUB
f
f = f – WREG
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUB
f,WREG
WREG = f – WREG
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUB
#lit10,Wn
Wn = Wn – lit10
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUB
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Wb – Ws
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUB
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = Wb – lit5
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBB
f
f = f – WREG – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBB
f,WREG
WREG = f – WREG – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBB
#lit10,Wn
Wn = Wn – lit10 – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBB
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Wb – Ws – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBB
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = Wb – lit5 – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBR
f
f = WREG – f
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBR
f,WREG
WREG = WREG – f
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBR
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws – Wb
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SL
SUB
SUBB
SUBR
SUBBR
SWAP
SUBR
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = lit5 – Wb
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBBR
f
f = WREG – f – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBBR
f,WREG
WREG = WREG – f – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBBR
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Ws – Wb – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SUBBR
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = lit5 – Wb – (C)
1
1
C, DC, N, OV, Z
SWAP.b
Wn
Wn = Nibble Swap Wn
1
1
None
SWAP
Wn
Wn = Byte Swap Wn
1
1
None
DS30009312D-page 426
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 36-2:
INSTRUCTION SET OVERVIEW (CONTINUED)
Assembly
Mnemonic
Assembly Syntax
Description
# of
Words
# of
Cycles
Status Flags
Affected
TBLRDH
TBLRDH
Ws,Wd
Read Prog to Wd
1
2
TBLRDL
TBLRDL
Ws,Wd
Read Prog to Wd
1
2
None
TBLWTH
TBLWTH
Ws,Wd
Write Ws to Prog
1
2
None
TBLWTL
TBLWTL
Ws,Wd
Write Ws to Prog
1
2
None
ULNK
ULNK
Unlink Frame Pointer
1
1
None
XOR
XOR
f
f = f .XOR. WREG
1
1
N, Z
XOR
f,WREG
WREG = f .XOR. WREG
1
1
N, Z
XOR
#lit10,Wn
Wd = lit10 .XOR. Wd
1
1
N, Z
XOR
Wb,Ws,Wd
Wd = Wb .XOR. Ws
1
1
N, Z
XOR
Wb,#lit5,Wd
Wd = Wb .XOR. lit5
1
1
N, Z
ZE
Ws,Wnd
Wnd = Zero-Extend Ws
1
1
C, Z, N
ZE
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
None
DS30009312D-page 427
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
NOTES:
DS30009312D-page 428
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
37.0
ELECTRICAL CHARACTERISTICS
This section provides an overview of the PIC24FJ128GC010 family electrical characteristics. Additional information will
be provided in future revisions of this document as it becomes available.
Absolute maximum ratings for the PIC24FJ128GC010 family are listed below. Exposure to these maximum rating
conditions for extended periods may affect device reliability. Functional operation of the device at these, or any other
conditions above the parameters indicated in the operation listings of this specification, is not implied.
Absolute Maximum Ratings(†)
Ambient temperature under bias.............................................................................................................-40°C to +100°C
Storage temperature .............................................................................................................................. -65°C to +150°C
Voltage on VDD with respect to VSS ......................................................................................................... -0.3V to +4.0V
Voltage on any general purpose digital or analog pin (not 5.5V tolerant) with respect to VSS ....... -0.3V to (VDD + 0.3V)
Voltage on any general purpose digital or analog pin (5.5V tolerant, including MCLR) with respect to VSS:
When VDD = 0V: ......................................................................................................................... -0.3V to + 4.0V
When VDD 2.0V: ....................................................................................................................... -0.3V to +6.0V
Voltage on AVDD and SVDD with respect to VSS ..................................(VDD – 0.3V) to (lesser of: 4.0V or (VDD + 0.3V))
Voltage on AVSS and SVSS with respect to VSS ........................................................................................ -0.3V to +0.3V
Voltage on CH0+, CH0-, CH1+ and CH1- with respect to SVSS ................................................. -0.3V to (SVDD + 0.3V)
Voltage on VBAT with respect to VSS ........................................................................................................ . -0.3V to +4.0V
Voltage on VUSB3V3 with respect to VSS ..................................................................................... (VCAP – 0.3V) to +4.0V
Voltage on VBUS with respect to VSS ....................................................................................................... -0.3V to +6.0V
Voltage on D+ or D- with respect to VSS:
(0 source impedance) (Note 1) ..............................................................................-0.5V to (VUSB3V3 + 0.5V)
(source impedance 28, VUSB3V3 3.0V) ............................................................................... -1.0V to +4.6V
Maximum current out of VSS pin ...........................................................................................................................300 mA
Maximum current into VDD pin (Note 2)................................................................................................................250 mA
Maximum output current sunk by any I/O pin..........................................................................................................25 mA
Maximum output current sourced by any I/O pin ....................................................................................................25 mA
Maximum current sunk by all ports .......................................................................................................................200 mA
Maximum current sourced by all ports (Note 2)....................................................................................................200 mA
Note 1:
2:
The original “USB 2.0 Specification” indicated that USB devices should withstand 24-hour short circuits of
D+ or D- to VBUS voltages. This requirement was later removed in an Engineering Change Notice (ECN)
supplement to the USB specifications, which supersedes the original specifications. PIC24FJ128GC010
family devices will typically be able to survive this short-circuit test, but it is recommended to adhere to the
absolute maximum specified here to avoid damaging the device.
Maximum allowable current is a function of device maximum power dissipation (see Table 37-1).
† 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 operation listings of this specification is not implied. Exposure to maximum rating conditions
for extended periods may affect device reliability.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 429
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
37.1
DC Characteristics
FIGURE 37-1:
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY VOLTAGE-FREQUENCY GRAPH (INDUSTRIAL)
3.6V
3.6V
Voltage (VDD)
PIC24FJXXXGC0XX
(Note 1)
(Note 1)
32 MHz
Frequency
Note 1:
TABLE 37-1:
Lower recommended operating boundary is 2.0V or VBOR (when BOR is enabled). For best
analog performance, operation above 2.2V is suggested, but not required.
THERMAL OPERATING CONDITIONS
Rating
Symbol
Min
Typ
Max
Unit
Operating Junction Temperature Range
TJ
-40
—
+100
°C
Operating Ambient Temperature Range
TA
-40
—
+85
°C
PIC24FJ128GC010 Family:
Power Dissipation:
Internal Chip Power Dissipation: PINT = VDD x (IDD – IOH)
PD
PINT + PI/O
W
PDMAX
(TJMAX – TA)/JA
W
I/O Pin Power Dissipation:
PI/O = ({VDD – VOH} x IOH) + (VOL x IOL)
Maximum Allowed Power Dissipation
TABLE 37-2:
THERMAL PACKAGING CHARACTERISTICS
Characteristic
Symbol
Typ
Max
Unit
Note
Package Thermal Resistance, 12x12x1 mm 100-pin TQFP
JA
45.0
—
°C/W
(Note 1)
Package Thermal Resistance, 10x10x1 mm 64-pin TQFP
JA
48.3
—
°C/W
(Note 1)
Package Thermal Resistance, 9x9x0.9 mm 64-pin QFN
JA
28.0
—
°C/W
(Note 1)
Package Thermal Resistance, 10x10x1.1 mm 121-pin BGA
JA
40.2
—
°C/W
(Note 1)
Note 1:
Junction to ambient thermal resistance, Theta-JA (JA) numbers are achieved by package simulations.
DS30009312D-page 430
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 37-3:
DC CHARACTERISTICS: TEMPERATURE AND VOLTAGE SPECIFICATIONS
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Param
Symbol
No.
Characteristic
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
Min
Typ
Max
Units
2.0
—
3.6
V
Conditions
Operating Voltage
BOR disabled
DC10
VDD
Supply Voltage
VBOR
—
3.6
DC12
VDR
RAM Data Retention
Voltage(1)
Greater of:
VPORREL or
VBOR
—
—
V
VBOR used only if BOR is
enabled (BOREN = 1)
DC16
VPOR
VDD Start Voltage
to Ensure Internal
Power-on Reset Signal
VSS
—
—
V
(Note 2)
DC16a VPORREL VDD Power-on Reset
Release Voltage
1.80
1.88
1.95
V
(Note 3)
DC17a SRVDD
Recommended
VDD Rise Slew Rate
to Ensure Internal
Power-on Reset Signal
0.05
—
—
V/ms
DC17b VBOR
Brown-out Reset
Voltage on VDD Transition,
High-to-Low
2.0
2.1
2.2
V
(Note 3)
DC17c VBATBOR VBAT BOR Threshold on
VBAT High-to-Low
—
1.68
—
V
Applies when
VBTBOR = 1
Note 1:
2:
3:
BOR enabled
0-3.3V in 66 ms
0-2.5V in 50 ms
(Note 2)
This is the limit to which VDD may be lowered and the RAM contents will always be retained.
If the VPOR or SRVDD parameters are not met, or the application experiences slow power-down VDD ramp
rates, it is recommended to enable and use the BOR.
On a rising VDD power-up sequence, application firmware execution begins at the higher of the VPORREL or
VBOR level (when BOREN = 1).
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 431
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 37-4:
DC CHARACTERISTICS: OPERATING CURRENT (IDD)
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Parameter
No.
Typical(1)
Max
Units
Operating
Temperature
VDD
Conditions
Operating Current (IDD)(2)
DC19
DC20
0.20
0.28
mA
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.21
0.28
mA
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
0.38
0.52
mA
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.39
0.52
mA
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
1.5
2.0
mA
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
1.5
2.0
mA
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
5.6
7.6
mA
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
5.7
7.6
mA
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
23
78
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
25
80
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
DC23
DC24
DC31
Note 1:
2:
0.5 MIPS,
FOSC = 1 MHz
1 MIPS,
FOSC = 2 MHz
4 MIPS,
FOSC = 8 MHz
16 MIPS,
FOSC = 32 MHz
LPRC (15.5 KIPS),
FOSC = 31 kHz
Data in the “Typical” column is at 3.3V, +25°C unless otherwise stated. Typical parameters are for design
guidance only and are not tested.
The supply current is mainly a function of the operating voltage and frequency. Other factors, such as I/O
pin loading and switching rate, oscillator type, internal code execution pattern and temperature, also have
an impact on the current consumption. No peripheral modules are operating and all of the Peripheral
Module Disable (PMD) bits are set.
TABLE 37-5:
DC CHARACTERISTICS: IDLE CURRENT (IIDLE)
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Parameter
No.
Typical(1)
Max
Units
Operating
Temperature
VDD
Conditions
Idle Current (IIDLE)
DC40
DC43
DC47
DC50
DC51
Note 1:
116
150
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
123
160
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
0.39
0.50
mA
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.41
0.54
mA
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
1.5
1.9
mA
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
1.6
2.0
mA
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
0.54
0.61
mA
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.54
0.64
mA
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
17
78
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
18
80
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
1 MIPS,
FOSC = 2 MHz
4 MIPS,
FOSC = 8 MHz
16 MIPS,
FOSC = 32 MHz
4 MIPS (FRC),
FOSC = 8 MHz
LPRC (15.5 KIPS),
FOSC = 31 kHz
Data in the “Typical” column is at 3.3V, +25°C unless otherwise stated. Parameters are for design
guidance only and are not tested.
DS30009312D-page 432
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 37-6:
DC CHARACTERISTICS: POWER-DOWN CURRENT (IPD)
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Parameter
Typical(1)
No.
Max
Units
Operating
Temperature
Conditions
VDD
Power-Down Current (IPD)
DC60
DC61
DC70
DC74
Note 1:
2:
3:
4:
2.9
—
A
-40°C
4.3
17
A
+25°C
8.3
—
A
+60°C
20
27.5
A
+85°C
2.9
—
A
-40°C
4.3
18
A
+25°C
8.4
—
A
+60°C
20.5
28
A
+85°C
0.07
—
A
-40°C
0.38
—
A
+25°C
2.6
—
A
+60°C
9.0
—
A
+85°C
0.09
—
A
-40°C
0.42
—
A
+25°C
2.75
—
A
+60°C
9.0
—
A
+85°C
0.1
—
nA
-40°C
18
700
nA
+25°C
230
—
nA
+60°C
1.8
3
A
+85°C
5
—
nA
-40°C
75
900
nA
+25°C
540
—
nA
+60°C
1.5
6.0
A
+85°C
0.4
2.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
Sleep(2)
3.3V
2.0V
Low-Voltage Sleep(3)
3.3V
2.0V
3.3V
0V
Deep Sleep, capacitor on VCAP is
fully discharged
RTCC with VBAT mode (LPRC/SOSC)(4)
Data in the “Typical” column is at 3.3V, +25°C unless otherwise stated. Parameters are for design
guidance only and are not tested.
The retention low-voltage regulator is disabled; RETEN (RCON) = 0, LPCFG (CW1) = 1.
The retention low-voltage regulator is enabled; RETEN (RCON) = 1, LPCFG (CW1) = 0.
The VBAT pin is connected to the battery and RTCC is running with VDD = 0.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 433
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 37-7:
DC CHARACTERISTICS: CURRENT (BOR, WDT, DSBOR, DSWDT, LCD)
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Parameter
No.
Typical(1)
Max
Units
Operating
Temperature
VDD
Conditions
Incremental Current Brown-out Reset (BOR)(2)
DC25
3.1
5.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
4.3
6.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
BOR(2)
Incremental Current Watchdog Timer (WDT)(2)
DC71
0.8
1.5
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.8
1.5
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
WDT (with LPRC selected)(2)
Incremental Current HLVD (HLVD)(2)
DC75
4.2
15
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
4.2
15
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
HLVD(2)
Incremental Current Real-Time Clock and Calendar (RTCC)(2)
DC77
DC77a
0.30
1.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.35
1.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
0.30
1.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.35
1.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
RTCC (with SOSC)(2)
RTCC (with LPRC)(2)
Incremental Current Deep Sleep BOR (DSBOR)(2)
DC81
0.11
0.40
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.12
0.40
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
Deep Sleep BOR(2)
Incremental Current Deep Sleep Watchdog Timer Reset (DSWDT)(2)
DC80
0.24
0.40
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
0.24
0.40
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
Deep Sleep WDT(2)
Incremental Current LCD (LCD)(2)
DC82
0.8
3.0
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
LCD external/internal;(2,3)
1/8 MUX, 1/3 Bias
DC90
20
—
A
-40°C to +85°C
2.0V
24
—
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
LCD charge pump;(2,4)
1/8 MUX, 1/3 Bias
1.5
—
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
VBAT = 2V
4.0
—
A
-40°C to +85°C
3.3V
VBAT = 3.3V
VBAT A/D
DC91
Note 1:
2:
3:
4:
5:
Monitor(5)
Data in the “Typical” column is at 3.3V, +25°C unless otherwise stated. Parameters are for design
guidance only and are not tested.
Incremental current while the module is enabled and running.
LCD is enabled and running, no glass is connected; the resistor ladder current is not included.
LCD is enabled and running, no glass is connected.
The A/D channel is connected to the VBAT pin internally; this is the current during A/D VBAT operation.
DS30009312D-page 434
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 37-8:
DC CHARACTERISTICS: I/O PIN INPUT SPECIFICATIONS
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Param
No.
Sym
VIL
Characteristic
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
Min
Typ(1)
Max
Units
Input Low Voltage(3)
DI10
I/O Pins with ST Buffer
VSS
—
0.2 VDD
V
DI11
I/O Pins with TTL Buffer
VSS
—
0.15 VDD
V
DI15
MCLR
VSS
—
0.2 VDD
V
DI16
OSCI (XT mode)
VSS
—
0.2 VDD
V
DI17
OSCI (HS mode)
VSS
—
0.2 VDD
V
DI18
I/O Pins with I2C Buffer
VSS
—
0.3 VDD
V
I/O Pins with SMBus Buffer
VSS
—
0.8
V
I/O Pins with ST Buffer:
without 5V Tolerance
with 5V Tolerance
0.65 VDD
0.65 VDD
—
—
VDD
5.5
V
V
I/O Pins with TTL Buffer:
without 5V Tolerance
with 5V Tolerance
0.25 VDD + 0.8
0.25 VDD + 0.8
—
—
VDD
5.5
V
V
DI19
VIH
DI20
DI21
MCLR
0.8 VDD
—
VDD
V
DI26
OSCI (XT mode)
0.7 VDD
—
VDD
V
DI27
OSCI (HS mode)
0.7 VDD
—
VDD
V
DI28
I/O Pins with I2C Buffer
0.7 VDD
—
5.5
V
DI30
ICNPU
DI30a ICNPD
IIL
SMBus enabled
Input High Voltage(3)
DI25
DI29
Conditions
I/O Pins with SMBus Buffer
2.1
—
5.5
V
SMBus enabled
CNx Pull-up Current
150
290
550
A
VDD = 3.3V, VPIN = VSS
CNx Pull-Down Current
150
260
550
A
VDD = 3.3V, VPIN = VDD
Input Leakage Current(2)
DI50
I/O Ports
—
—
±1
A
VSS VPIN VDD,
pin at high-impedance
DI51
Analog Input Pins
—
—
±1
A
VSS VPIN VDD,
pin at high-impedance
DI55
MCLR
—
—
±1
A
VSS VPIN VDD
DI56
OSCI/CLKI
—
—
±1
A
VSS VPIN VDD,
EC, XT and HS modes
Note 1:
2:
3:
Data in the “Typ” column is at 3.3V, +25°C unless otherwise stated. Parameters are for design guidance
only and are not tested.
Negative current is defined as current sourced by the pin.
Refer to Table 1-3 for I/O pin buffer types.
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS30009312D-page 435
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 37-9:
DC CHARACTERISTICS: I/O PIN OUTPUT SPECIFICATIONS
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Param
Symbol
No.
VOL
DO10
OSCO/CLKO
VOH
DO20
Typ(1)
Max
Units
Conditions
—
—
0.4
V
IOL = 6.6 mA, VDD = 3.6V
—
—
0.4
V
IOL = 5.0 mA, VDD = 2V
—
—
0.4
V
IOL = 6.6 mA, VDD = 3.6V
—
—
0.4
V
IOL = 5.0 mA, VDD = 2V
3.0
—
—
V
IOH = -3.0 mA, VDD = 3.6V
Output High Voltage
I/O Ports
DO26
Min
Output Low Voltage
I/O Ports
DO16
Note 1:
Characteristic
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
OSCO/CLKO
2.4
—
—
V
IOH = -6.0 mA, VDD = 3.6V
1.65
—
—
V
IOH = -1.0 mA, VDD = 2V
1.4
—
—
V
IOH = -3.0 mA, VDD = 2V
2.4
—
—
V
IOH = -6.0 mA, VDD = 3.6V
1.4
—
—
V
IOH = -1.0 mA, VDD = 2V
Data in the “Typ” column is at 3.3V, +25°C unless otherwise stated.
TABLE 37-10: DC CHARACTERISTICS: PROGRAM MEMORY
DC CHARACTERISTICS
Param
Symbol
No.
Characteristic
Standard Operating Conditions: 2.0V to 3.6V (unless otherwise stated)
Operating temperature
-40°C TA +85°C for Industrial
Min
Typ(1)
Max
Units
Conditions
Program Flash Memory
D130
EP
Cell Endurance
20000
—
—
E/W
D131
VPR
VDD for Read
VMIN
—
3.6
V
VMIN = Minimum operating voltage
D132B
VDD for Self-Timed Write
VMIN
—
3.6
V
VMIN = Minimum operating voltage
D133A TIW
Self-Timed Word Write
Cycle Time
—
20
—
s
Self-Timed Row Write
Cycle Time
—
1.5
—
ms
D133B TIE
Self-Timed Page Erase
Time
20
—
40
ms
D134
TRETD
Characteristic Retention
20
—
—
Year
D135
IDDP
Supply Current During
Programming
—
5
—
mA
Note 1:
-40C to +85C
If no other specifications are violated
Data in the “Typ” column is at 3.3V, +25°C unless otherwise stated.
DS30009312D-page 436
2012-2016 Microchip Technology Inc.
PIC24FJ128GC010 FAMILY
TABLE 37-11: INTERNAL VOLTAGE REGULATOR SPECIFICATIONS
Operating Conditions: -40°C < TA < +85°C (unless otherwise stated)
Param
No.
Symbol
Characteristics
Min
Typ
Max
Units
Comments
DVR10 VBG
Internal Band Gap Reference
—
1.2
—
V
DVR11 TBG
Band Gap Reference Start-up
Time
—
1
—
ms
DVR20 VRGOUT
Regulator Output Voltage
—
1.8
—
V
VDD > 2.0V
DVR21 CEFC
External Filter Capacitor Value
4.7
10
—
F
Series Resistance < 3
recommended; < 5 required
DVR25 TVREG
Start-up Time
—
10
—
s
PMSLP = 1 with any POR or BOR
DVR30 VLVR
Low-Voltage Regulator Output
Voltage
—
1.2
—
V
RETEN = 1, LPCFG = 0
TABLE 37-12: BAND GAP REFERENCE (BGBUFn) SPECIFICATIONS
Operating Conditions: -40°C < TA < +85°C, 2.0V < (A)VDD < 3.6V(1)
Param
No.
Sym
Characteristics
Min
Typ
Max
Units
—
—
22
µF
BGBUF1 or BGBUF2
1.140
1.200
1.260
V
BUFREF = 00,
2.0V < AVDD < 3.6V
DBG03
1.945
2.048
2.151
V
BUFREF = 01(2)
DBG04
2.432
2.560
2.688
V
BUFREF = 10(2)
DBG05
2.918
3.072
3.226
V
BUFREF = 11(2)
20
—
—
Ω
BUFREF = 00,
2.0V < AVDD 2.5V
DBG08
20
—
—
Ω
BUFREF = 00,
2.5V < AVDD < 3.6V
DBG09
20
—
—
Ω
BUFREF = 01, 10 or 11(2)
DBG01
Recommended Output
Capacitance for Optimal
Transient Response
DBG02
Output Voltage
DBG07
DC Output Resistance
Comments
DBG10
Maximum Continuous DC
Output Current Rating
—
—
1
mA
This value is not tested in
production(3)
DBG11
Module Start-up Time from
Disabled State
—
5
—
ms
Time from BUFEN and
BUFOE = 1 to output stable,
CLOAD = 20 µF
DBG12
Module Start-up Time from
Standby Mode
—
100
—
µs
Time from BUFSTBY = 0 to
output stable
AVDD Active Current
—
100
—
µA
Module enabled, BUFOE = 1
DBG14
Note 1:
2:
3:
No DC loading on module unless otherwise stated.
For BUFREF 00, (Reference Output Max + 100 mV) < AVDD < 3.6V.
To minimize voltage error, the DC loading on the BGBUFn output pins should be