SST26WF064C
1.8V, 64 Mbit Serial Quad I/O (SQI) Flash Memory
Features
• Single Voltage Read and Write Operations
- 1.65-1.95V
• Serial Interface Architecture
- Mode 0 and Mode 3
- Nibble-wide multiplexed I/O’s with SPI-like serial
command structure
- x1/x2/x4 Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) Protocol
- Dual-Transfer Rate (DTR) Operation
• High Speed Clock Frequency
- 104 MHz max
- 50 MHz max (DTR)
• Burst Modes
- Continuous linear burst
- 8/16/32/64 Byte linear burst with wrap-around
• Superior Reliability
- Endurance: 100,000 Cycles (min)
- Greater than 100 years Data Retention
• Low Power Consumption:
- Active Read current: 15 mA (typical @ 104 MHz)
- Standby current: 10 µA (typical)
- Deep Power-Down current: 2.5 µA (typical)
• Fast Erase Time
- Sector/Block Erase: 18 ms (typ), 25 ms (max)
- Chip Erase: 35 ms (typ), 50 ms (max)
• Page-Program
- 256 Bytes per page in x1 or x4 mode
• End-of-Write Detection
- Software polling the BUSY bit in status register
• Flexible Erase Capability
- Uniform 4 KByte sectors
- Four 8 KByte top and bottom parameter overlay
blocks
- One 32 KByte top and bottom overlay block
- Uniform 64 KByte overlay blocks
• Write-Suspend
- Suspend Program or Erase operation to access
another block/sector
• Software Reset (RST) mode
• Hardware Reset Pin
• Supports JEDEC-compliant Serial Flash Discoverable Parameter (SFDP) table
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
• Software Protection
- Individual-Block Write Protection with permanent
lock-down capability
- 64 KByte blocks, two 32 KByte blocks, and
eight 8 KByte parameter blocks
- Read Protection on top and bottom 8 KByte
parameter blocks
• Security ID
- One-Time Programmable (OTP) 2 KByte,
Secure ID
- 64 bit unique, factory pre-programmed identifier
- User-programmable area
• Temperature Range
- Industrial: -40°C to +85°C
• Packages Available
- 8-contact WDFN (6mm x 5mm)
- 8-lead SOIJ (5.28 mm)
- 16-lead SOIC (7.50 mm)
- 24-ball TBGA (8mm x 6mm)
• All devices are RoHS compliant
Product Description
The Serial Quad I/O™ (SQI™) family of flash-memory
devices features a six-wire, 4-bit I/O interface that
allows for low-power, high-performance operation in a
low pin-count package. The SST26WF064C also supports full command-set compatibility to traditional Serial
Peripheral Interface (SPI) protocol. System designs
using SQI flash devices occupy less board space and
ultimately lower system costs.
All members of the 26 Series, SQI family are manufactured with proprietary, high-performance CMOS SuperFlash® technology. The split-gate cell design and thickoxide tunneling injector attain better reliability and manufacturability compared with alternate approaches.
The SST26WF064C significantly improves performance
and reliability, while lowering power consumption. These
devices write (Program or Erase) with a single power supply of 1.65-1.95V. The total energy consumed is a function
of the applied voltage, current, and time of application. For
any given voltage range, the SuperFlash technology uses
less current to program and has a shorter erase time.
Therefore, the total energy consumed during any Erase or
Program operation is less than alternative flash memory
technologies.
DS20005430C-page 1
SST26WF064C
The SST26WF064C is offered in 8-contact WDFN
(6 mm x 5 mm), 8-lead SOIJ (5.28 mm), 16-lead SOIC
(7.50 mm), and 24-ball TBGA (8mm x 6mm) packages.
See Figure 2-1 for pin assignments.
See “I/O Configuration (IOC)” on page 13 for more
information about configuring the WP#, RESET/
HOLD#, SIO2, and SIO3 pins.
The following configuration is available upon order:
• SST26WF064C default at power-up has the WP#
and RESET#/HOLD# pins enabled, with the SIO2
and SIO3 pins disabled, to initiate SPI-protocol.
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Most Current Data Sheet
To obtain the most up-to-date version of this data sheet, please register at our Worldwide Web site at:
http://www.microchip.com
You can determine the version of a data sheet by examining its literature number found on the bottom outside corner of any page.
The last character of the literature number is the version number, (e.g., DS30000000A is version A of document DS30000000).
Errata
An errata sheet, describing minor operational differences from the data sheet and recommended workarounds, may exist for current
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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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DS20005430C-page 2
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
1.0
BLOCK DIAGRAM
FIGURE 1-1:
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM
OTP
Address
Buffers
and
Latches
X - Decoder
SuperFlash
Memory
Y - Decoder
Page Buffer,
I/O Buffers
and
Data Latches
Control Logic
Serial Interface
WP# HOLD# SCK
CE#
SIO [3:0]
RESET#
20005430 B1.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 3
SST26WF064C
2.0
PIN DESCRIPTION
FIGURE 2-1:
PIN DESCRIPTIONS
CE#
1
8
VDD
SO/SIO1
2
7
RESET#
/HOLD#/SIO3
Top View
WP#/SIO2
3
6
SCK
VSS
4
5
SI/SIO0
8-Lead SOIJ
08-soic S2A P1.0
CE#
1
8
VDD
SO/SIO1
2
7
RESET#
/HOLD#/SIO3
Top View
8-Contact WDFN
WP#/SIO2
3
6
SCK
VSS
4
5
SI/SIO0
08-wson QA P1.0
RESET#/
HOLD#/SIO3
VDD
SCK
SI/SIO0
Top View
RESET#
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
16-lead SOIC
VSS
CE#
WP#/SIO2
SO/SIO1
16-SOIC P1.0
Top View
4
RESET# VDD
WP#/
SIO2
RESET#/
HOLD#/
SIO3
NC
NC
3
NC
VSS
NC
SI/
SIO0
NC
NC
NC
SCK
CE#
S0/
SIO1
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
NC
A
B
C
D
E
F
24-Ball TBGA
2
1
DS20005430C-page 4
T4D-P1.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
TABLE 2-1:
PIN DESCRIPTION
Symbol
Pin Name
Functions
SCK
Serial Clock
Provide the timing of the serial interface.
Commands, addresses, or input data are latched on the rising edge of the clock
input, while output data is shifted out on the falling edge of the clock input.
SIO[3:0]
Serial Data
Input/Output
Transfer commands, addresses, or data serially into the device or data out of
the device. Inputs are latched on the rising edge of the serial clock. Data is
shifted out on the falling edge of the serial clock. The Enable Quad I/O (EQIO)
command instruction configures these pins for Quad I/O mode.
SI
Serial Data Input
for SPI mode
Transfer commands, addresses or data serially into the device. Inputs are
latched on the rising edge of the serial clock. SI is the default state after a power
on reset or hardware reset.
SO
Serial Data Output
for SPI mode
Transfer data serially out of the device. Data is shifted out on the falling edge of
the serial clock. SO is the default state after a power on reset or hardware reset.
CE#
Chip Enable
The device is enabled by a high to low transition on CE#. CE# must remain low
for the duration of any command sequence; or in the case of Write operations,
for the command/data input sequence.
WP#
Write Protect
The WP# pin is used in conjunction with the WPEN and IOC bits in the configuration register to prohibit Write operations to the Block-Protection register. This
pin only works in SPI, single-bit and dual-bit Read mode.
HOLD#
Hold
Temporarily stops serial communication with the SPI Flash memory while the
device is selected. This pin only works in SPI, single-bit and dual-bit Read
mode and must be tied high when not in use.
RESET#
Reset
Reset the operation and internal logic of the device.
VDD
Power Supply
Provide power supply voltage.
VSS
Ground
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 5
SST26WF064C
3.0
MEMORY ORGANIZATION
The SST26WF064C SQI memory array is organized in
uniform, 4 KByte erasable sectors with the following
erasable blocks: eight 8 KByte parameters, two 32
KByte overlays, and one hundred twenty-six 64 KByte
overlay blocks. See Figure 3-1.
FIGURE 3-1:
MEMORY MAP
Top of Memory Block
8 KByte
8 KByte
8 KByte
8 KByte
32 KByte
...
64 KByte
2 Sectors for 8 KByte blocks
8 Sectors for 32 KByte blocks
16 Sectors for 64 KByte blocks
64 KByte
...
4 KByte
4 KByte
4 KByte
4 KByte
64 KByte
32 KByte
8 KByte
8 KByte
8 KByte
8 KByte
Bottom of Memory Block
20005430 F41.0
DS20005430C-page 6
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
4.0
DEVICE OPERATION
signal is high for Mode 3. For both modes, the Serial
Data I/O (SIO[3:0]) is sampled at the rising edge of the
SCK clock signal for input, and driven after the falling
edge of the SCK clock signal for output. The traditional
SPI protocol uses separate input (SI) and output (SO)
data signals as shown in Figure 4-1. The SQI protocol
uses four multiplexed signals, SIO[3:0], for both data in
and data out, as shown in Figure 4-2. This means the
SQI protocol quadruples the traditional bus transfer
speed at the same clock frequency, without the need
for more pins on the package.
The SST26WF064C supports both Serial Peripheral
Interface (SPI) bus protocol and a 4-bit multiplexed SQI
bus protocol. To provide backward compatibility to traditional SPI Serial Flash devices, the device’s initial
state after a power-on reset is SPI mode which supports multi-I/O (x1/x2/x4) Read/Write commands. A
command instruction configures the device to SQI
mode. The dataflow in the SQI mode is similar to the
SPI mode, except it uses four multiplexed I/O signals
for command, address, and data sequence.
The SST26WF064C also supports Dual-Transfer Rate
(DTR) SPI and SQI commands, during which data is
sampled on both the rising and the falling edge of the
clock, and data is driven out on both the rising and falling edge of the clock.
SQI Flash Memory supports both Mode 0 (0,0) and
Mode 3 (1,1) bus operations. The difference between
the two modes is the state of the SCK signal when the
bus master is in stand-by mode and no data is being
transferred. The SCK signal is low for Mode 0 and SCK
FIGURE 4-1:
SPI PROTOCOL (TRADITIONAL 25 SERIES SPI DEVICE)
CE#
SCK
MODE 3
MODE 3
MODE 0
MODE 0
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0
SI
MSB
SO
HIGH IMPEDANCE
DON'T CARE
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0
20005430 F03.0
MSB
FIGURE 4-2:
SQI SERIAL QUAD I/O PROTOCOL
CE#
MODE 3
MODE 3
MODE 0
MODE 0
CLK
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
H0
L0
H1
L1
H2
L2
H3
L3
MSB
1432 F04.0
4.1
Device Protection
The SST26WF064C offers a flexible memory protection
scheme that allows the protection state of each individual block to be controlled separately. In addition, the
Write-Protection Lock-Down register prevents any
change of the lock status during device operation. To
avoid inadvertent writes during power-up, the device is
write-protected by default after a power-on reset cycle. A
Global Block-Protection Unlock command offers a single
command cycle that unlocks the entire memory array for
faster manufacturing throughput.
For extra protection, there is an additional non-volatile
register that can permanently write-protect the BlockProtection register bits for each individual block. Each
of the corresponding lock-down bits are one time programmable (OTP)—once written, they cannot be
erased. Data that had been previously programmed
into these blocks cannot be altered by programming or
erase and is not reversible
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
4.1.1
INDIVIDUAL BLOCK PROTECTION
The SST26WF064C has a Block-Protection register
which provides a software mechanism to write-lock the
individual memory blocks and write-lock, and/or readlock, the individual parameter blocks. The Block-Protection register is 144 bits wide: two bits each for the
eight 8 KByte parameter blocks (write-lock and readlock), and one bit each for the remaining 32 KByte and
64 KByte overlay blocks (write-lock). See Table 5-6 for
address range protected per register bit.
Each bit in the Block-Protection register (BPR) can be
written to a ‘1’ (protected) or ‘0’ (unprotected). For the
parameter blocks, the most significant bit is for read-lock,
and the least significant bit is for write-lock. Read-locking
the parameter blocks provides additional security for sensitive data after retrieval (e.g., after initial boot). If a block
is read-locked all reads to the block return data 00H.
DS20005430C-page 7
SST26WF064C
The Write Block-Protection Register command is a twocycle command which requires that Write-Enable (WREN)
is executed prior to the Write Block-Protection Register command. The Global Block-Protection Unlock command clears
all write protection bits in the Block-Protection register.
4.1.2
WRITE-PROTECTION LOCK-DOWN
(VOLATILE)
To prevent changes to the Block-Protection register,
use the Lock-Down Block-Protection Register (LBPR)
command to enable Write-Protection Lock-Down.
Once Write-Protection Lock-Down is enabled, the
Block-Protection register can not be changed. To avoid
inadvertent lock down, the WREN command must be
executed prior to the LBPR command.
To reset Write-Protection Lock-Down, performing a
power cycle or hardware reset on the device is
required. The Write-Protection Lock-Down status may
be read from the Status register.
4.1.3
WRITE-LOCK LOCK-DOWN (NONVOLATILE)
The non-Volatile Write-Lock Lock-Down register is an
alternate register that permanently prevents changes
to the block-protect bits. The non-Volatile Write-Lock
Lock-Down register (nVWLDR) is 136 bits wide per
device: one bit each for the eight 8-KByte parameter
blocks, and one bit each for the remaining 32 KByte
and 64 KByte overlay blocks. See Table 5-6 for address
range protected per register bit.
Writing ‘1’ to any or all of the nVWLDR bits disables the
change mechanism for the corresponding Write-Lock
bit in the BPR, and permanently sets this bit to a ‘1’
(protected) state. After this change, both bits will be set
to ‘1’, regardless of the data entered in subsequent
writes to either the nVWLDR or the BPR. Subsequent
writes to the nVWLDR can only alter available locations
that have not been previously written to a ‘1’. This
method provides write-protection for the corresponding
memory-array block by protecting it from future program or erase operations.
TABLE 4-1:
WP#
L
L
L
L
H
H
X
X
Writing a ‘0’ in any location in the nVWLDR has no
effect on either the nVWLDR or the corresponding
Write-Lock bit in the BPR.
Note that if the Block-Protection register had been previously locked down, see “Write-Protection Lock-Down
(Volatile)”, the device must be power cycled before
using the nVWLDR. If the Block-Protection Register is
locked down and the Write nVWLDR command is
accessed, the command will be ignored.
4.2
Hardware Write Protection
The hardware Write Protection pin (WP#) is used in conjunction with the WPEN and IOC bits in the configuration
register to prohibit write operations to the Block-Protection and Configuration registers. The WP# pin function
only works in SPI single-bit and dual-bit read mode when
the IOC bit in the configuration register is set to ‘0’.
The WP# pin function is disabled when the WPEN bit in
the configuration register is ‘0’. This allows installation of
the SST26WF064C in a system with a grounded WP# pin
while still enabling Write to the Block-Protection register.
The Lock-Down function of the Block-Protection Register
supersedes the WP# pin, see Table 4-1 for Write Protection Lock-Down states.
The factory default setting at power-up of the WPEN bit
is ‘0’, disabling the Write Protect function of the WP#
after power-up. WPEN is a non-volatile bit; once the bit
is set to ‘1’, the Write Protect function of the WP# pin
continues to be enabled after power-up. The WP# pin
only protects the Block-Protection Register and Configuration Register from changes. Therefore, if the WP#
pin is set to low before or after a Program or Erase
command, or while an internal Write is in progress, it
will have no effect on the Write command.
The IOC bit takes priority over the WPEN bit in the configuration register. When the IOC bit is ‘1’, the function
of the WP# pin is disabled and the WPEN bit serves no
function. When the IOC bit is ‘0’ and WPEN is ‘1’, setting the WP# pin active low prohibits Write operations
to the Block Protection Register.
WRITE PROTECTION LOCK-DOWN STATES
IOC
0
0
0
01
0
0
1
1
WPEN
1
0
1
02
X
X
X
02
WPLD
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
0
Block Protection Register
Protected
Protected
Protected
Writable
Protected
Writable
Protected
Writable
Configuration Register
Protected
Writable
Protected
Writable
Writable
Writable
Writable
Writable
1. Default at power-up Register settings for SST26WF064C
2. Factory default setting is ‘0’. This is a non-volatile bit; default at power-up is the value set prior to power-down.
DS20005430C-page 8
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
4.3
Security ID
The SST26WF064C offers a 2 KByte Security ID (Sec
ID) feature. The Security ID space is divided into two
parts – one factory-programmed, 64-bit segment and
one user-programmable segment. The factory-programmed segment is programmed during manufacturing with a unique number and cannot be changed. The
user-programmable segment is left unprogrammed for
the customer to program as desired.
Use the Program Security ID (PSID) command to program the Security ID using the address shown in Table
5-5. The Security ID can be locked using the Lockout
Security ID (LSID) command. This prevents any future
write operations to the Security ID.
The factory-programmed portion of the Security ID
can’t be programmed by the user; neither the factoryprogrammed nor user-programmable areas can be
erased.
4.4
Hold Operation
The HOLD# pin pauses active serial sequences without
resetting the clocking sequence. The RESET#/HOLD#/
SIO3 pin provides HOLD capability when configured as
a HOLD pin. One factory configuration is available: The
FIGURE 4-3:
SST26WF064C ships with the IOC bit set to ‘0’ and the
HOLD# pin function enabled. The HOLD# pin is always
disabled in SQI mode and only works in SPI single-bit
and dual-bit read mode.
To activate the Hold mode, CE# must be in active low
state. The Hold mode begins when the SCK active low
state coincides with the falling edge of the HOLD# signal. The Hold mode ends when the HOLD# signal’s rising edge coincides with the SCK active low state.
If the falling edge of the HOLD# signal does not coincide with the SCK active low state, then the device
enters Hold mode when the SCK next reaches the
active low state. Similarly, if the rising edge of the
HOLD# signal does not coincide with the SCK active
low state, then the device exits Hold mode when the
SCK next reaches the active low state. See Figure 4-3.
Once the device enters Hold mode, SO will be in high
impedance state while SI and SCK can be VIL or VIH.
If CE# is driven active high during a Hold condition, it
resets the internal logic of the device. As long as
HOLD# signal is low, the memory remains in the Hold
condition. To resume communication with the device,
HOLD# must be driven active high, and CE# must be
driven active low.
HOLD CONDITION WAVEFORM.
SCK
HOLD#
Active
Hold
Active
Hold
Active
20005430 F46.0
4.5
Reset Operation
4.5.1
HARDWARE RESET OPERATION
The SST26WF064C supports both hardware and software reset operations. Hardware reset is only allowed
using SPI x1 and x2 protocol in 8-pin SOIC and 8-contact WDFN packages. 16-lead SOIC and 24-ball TBGA
packages have a dedicated Hardware Reset pin which
is allowed in all modes of operations. Software reset
commands 66H and 99H are supported in all package
options and protocols. See Table 4-2 on page 10 for
hardware and software reset functionality.
To configure the RESET#/HOLD#/SIO3 pin as a
RESET# pin in 8-pin SOIC and 8-contact WDFN packages, bit 6 of the configuration register must be set to
‘1’. The factory default setting of bit 6 is ‘0’–HOLD# pin
enabled. This is a non-volatile bit, so the register value
at power-up will be the value prior to power-down. Any
pin marked with only RESET# (16-lead SOIC and 24ball TFBGA packages) is a dedicated RESET# pin and
has the same functionality as the multiplex I/O pins.
A device reset during an active Program or Erase operation aborts the operation, which can cause the data of
the targeted address range to be corrupted or lost.
Depending on the prior operation, the reset timing may
vary. Recovery from a Write operation requires more
latency time than recovery from other operations.
Driving the RESET# pin high puts the device in normal
operating mode. The RESET# pin must be driven low
for a minimum of TRST time to reset the device. The
SIO1 pin (SO) is in high impedance state while the
device is in reset. A successful Reset operation will
reset the protocol to SPI mode, clear status register bits
(BUSY=0, WEL=0, WSE=0, WSP=0 and WPLD=0)
except SEC bit, reset the burst length to 8 Bytes, and
write-protect Block-Protection Register bits. A device
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 9
SST26WF064C
reset during an active Program or Erase operation
aborts the operation, and data of the targeted address
range may be corrupted or lost due to the aborted
Erase or Program operation
4.5.2
Once the Reset-Enable and Reset commands are successfully executed, the device returns to normal operation Read mode and then does the following: resets the
protocol to SPI mode, resets the burst length to 8
Bytes, clears all the bits, except for bit 4 (WPLD) and
bit 5 (SEC), in the Status register to their default states,
and clears bit 1 (IOC) in the configuration register to its
default state.
SOFTWARE RESET OPERATION
The Reset operation requires the Reset-Enable command followed by the Reset command. Any command
other than the Reset command after the Reset-Enable
command will disable the Reset-Enable.
TABLE 4-2:
HARDWARE AND SOFTWARE FUNCTIONALITY
Situation
After Power Cycle
After Hardware Reset
After Software Reset
Write Protection bits in protection register
are set to 1
are set to 1
are not affected
Read Protection bits in protection register
are set to 0
are set to 0
are not affected
If the device was in SQI mode and was in a
Read mode with configuration bits M[7:0] =
AXH, then it will enter SPI mode
Yes
Yes
Mode Read has to be
exited before Reset command will be accepted
If the device was in SQI mode and was not
in a Read mode with configuration bits
M[7:0] = AXH, then it will enter SPI mode
Yes
Yes
Yes
Read Burst length is reset to 8 bytes
Yes
Yes
Yes
Status register:
Busy=0, WEL=0, WSE=0, WSP=0
Yes
Yes
Yes
equal to 0
equal to 0
is not affected
is not affected.
is not affected.
is not affected.
If the device was in SQI mode and was in a
Read mode with configuration bits M[7:0] =
AXH, then the IOC bit
will equal to 0
will equal to 0
Mode Read has to be
exited before Reset command will be accepted
If the device was in SQI mode and was not
in a Read mode with configuration bits
M[7:0] = AXH, then the IOC bit
will equal to 0
will equal to 0
will equal to 0
BPNV bit, RSTHLD bit and WPEN bit
is not affected.
is not affected.
is not affected.
WPLD in status register
SEC bit
Configuration register:
DS20005430C-page 10
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
4.6
Status Register
The Status register is a read-only register that provides
the following status information: whether the flash
memory array is available for any Read or Write operation, if the device is write-enabled, whether an erase
or program operation is suspended, and if the Block-
TABLE 4-3:
Protection register and/or Security ID are locked down.
During an internal Erase or Program operation, the Status register may be read to determine the completion of
an operation in progress. Table 4-3 describes the function of each bit in the Status register.
STATUS REGISTER
Default at
Power-up
Read/Write (R/
W)
Write operation status
1 = Internal Write operation is in progress
0 = No internal Write operation is in progress
0
R
WEL
Write-Enable Latch status
1 = Device is write-enabled
0 = Device is not write-enabled
0
R
2
WSE
Write Suspend-Erase status
1 = Erase suspended
0 = Erase is not suspended
0
R
3
WSP
Write Suspend-Program status
1 = Program suspended
0 = Program is not suspended
0
R
4
WPLD
Write Protection Lock-Down status
1 = Write Protection Lock-Down enabled
0 = Write Protection Lock-Down disabled
0
R
5
SEC1
Security ID status
1 = Security ID space locked
0 = Security ID space not locked
01
R
6
RES
Reserved for future use
0
R
7
BUSY
Write operation status
1 = Internal Write operation is in progress
0 = No internal Write operation is in progress
0
R
Bit
Name
Function
0
BUSY
1
1. The Security ID status will always be ‘1’ at power-up after a successful execution of the Lockout Security ID instruction,
otherwise default at power-up is ‘0’.
4.6.1
WRITE-ENABLE LATCH (WEL)
The Write-Enable Latch (WEL) bit indicates the status
of the internal memory’s Write-Enable Latch. If the
WEL bit is set to ‘1’, the device is write enabled. If the
bit is set to ‘0’ (reset), the device is not write enabled
and does not accept any memory Program or Erase,
Protection Register Write, or Lock-Down commands.
The Write-Enable Latch bit is automatically reset under
the following conditions:
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
Power-up
Reset
Write-Disable (WRDI) instruction
Page-Program instruction completion
Sector-Erase instruction completion
Block-Erase instruction completion
Chip-Erase instruction completion
Write-Block-Protection register instruction
Lock-Down Block-Protection register instruction
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
•
•
•
•
•
Program Security ID instruction completion
Lockout Security ID instruction completion
Write-Suspend instruction
SPI Quad Page Program
Write Status Register
4.6.2
WRITE SUSPEND ERASE STATUS
(WSE)
The Write Suspend-Erase status (WSE) indicates
when an Erase operation has been suspended. The
WSE bit is ‘1’ after the host issues a suspend command
during an Erase operation. Once the suspended Erase
resumes, the WSE bit is reset to ‘0’.
DS20005430C-page 11
SST26WF064C
4.6.3
WRITE SUSPEND PROGRAM
STATUS (WSP)
The Write Suspend-Program status (WSP) bit indicates
when a Program operation has been suspended. The
WSP is ‘1’ after the host issues a suspend command
during the Program operation. Once the suspended
Program resumes, the WSP bit is reset to ‘0’.
4.6.4
WRITE PROTECTION LOCK-DOWN
STATUS (WPLD)
The Write Protection Lock-Down status (WPLD) bit
indicates when the Block-Protection register is lockeddown to prevent changes to the protection settings.
The WPLD is ‘1’ after the host issues a Lock-Down
Block-Protection command. After a power cycle, the
WPLD bit is reset to ‘0’.
4.6.5
SECURITY ID STATUS (SEC)
The Security ID Status (SEC) bit indicates when the
Security ID space is locked to prevent a Write command. The SEC is ‘1’ after the host issues a Lockout
SID command. Once the host issues a Lockout SID
command, the SEC bit can never be reset to ‘0.’
4.6.6
BUSY
The Busy bit determines whether there is an internal
Erase or Program operation in progress. If the BUSY
bit is ‘1’, the device is busy with an internal Erase or
Program operation. If the bit is ‘0’, no Erase or Program
operation is in progress.
DS20005430C-page 12
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
4.7
Configuration Register
The Configuration register is a Read/Write register that
stores a variety of configuration information. See Table
4-4 for the function of each bit in the register.
TABLE 4-4:
Bit
0
CONFIGURATION REGISTER
Name
Function
Default at Power-up
Read/Write (R/W)
RES
Reserved
0
R
IOC
I/O Configuration
1 = WP# and RESET# or HOLD# pins disabled
0 = WP# and RESET# or HOLD# pins enabled
01
R/W
RES
Reserved
0
R
BPNV
Block-Protection Volatility State
1 = No memory block has been permanently locked
0 = Any block has been permanently locked
1
R
1
2
3
4
RES
Reserved
0
R
5
RES
Reserved
0
R
RSTHLD
RESET# pin or HOLD# pin Enable
1 = RESET# pin enabled
0 = HOLD# pin enabled
02
R/W
Write-Protection Pin (WP#) Enable
1 = WP# enabled
0 = WP# disabled
02
R/W
6
WPEN
7
1. SST26WF064C default at Power-up is ‘0’
2. Factory default setting. This is a non-volatile bit; default at power-up will be the setting prior to power-down.
4.7.1
I/O CONFIGURATION (IOC)
The I/O Configuration (IOC) bit re-configures the I/O
pins. The IOC bit is set by writing a ‘1’ to Bit 1 of the
Configuration register. When IOC bit is ‘0’ the WP# pin
and HOLD# pin are enabled (SPI or Dual Configuration
setup). When IOC bit is set to ‘1’ the SIO2 pin and SIO3
pin are enabled (SPI Quad I/O Configuration setup).
The IOC bit must be set to ‘1’ before issuing the following SPI commands: SQOR (6BH), SQIOR (EBH),
RBSPI (ECH), SPI Quad page program (32H), SQORDTR (6DH), and SQIOR-DTR (EDH). Without setting
the IOC bit to ‘1’, those SPI commands are not valid.
The I/O configuration bit does not apply when in SQI
mode. The default at power-up for the SST26WF064C
is ‘0’.
4.7.2
BLOCK-PROTECTION VOLATILITY
STATE (BPNV)
The Block-Protection Volatility State bit indicates
whether any block has been permanently locked with
the non-Volatile Write-Lock Lock-Down register
(nVWLDR). When no bits in the nVWLDR have been
set (the default state from the factory) the BPNV bit is
`1'; when one or more bits in the nVWLDR are set to `1'
the BPNV bit will also be `0' from that point forward,
even after power-up.
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
4.7.3
RESET/HOLD ENABLE (RSTHLD)
The Reset/Hold Enable (RSTHLD) bit is a non-volatile
bit that configures RESET#/HOLD#/SIO3 pin to be
either Reset# pin or Hold# pin.
4.7.4
WRITE-PROTECT ENABLE (WPEN)
The Write-Protect Enable (WPEN) bit is a non-volatile
bit that enables the WP# pin.
The Write-Protect (WP#) pin and the Write-Protect
Enable (WPEN) bit control the programmable hardware write-protect feature. Setting the WP# pin to low,
and the WPEN bit to ‘1’, enables Hardware write-protection. To disable Hardware write protection, set either
the WP# pin to high or the WPEN bit to ‘0’. There is
latency associated with writing to the WPEN bit. Poll
the BUSY bit in the Status register, or wait TWPEN, for
the completion of the internal, self-timed Write operation. When the chip is hardware write protected, only
Write operations to Block-Protection and Configuration
registers are disabled.See “Hardware Write Protection”
on page 8 and Table 4-1 for more information about the
functionality of the WPEN bit.
DS20005430C-page 13
SST26WF064C
5.0
INSTRUCTIONS
Instructions are used to read, write (erase and program), and configure the SST26WF064C. The complete list of the instructions is provided in Table 5-1.
TABLE 5-1:
Instruction
DEVICE OPERATION INSTRUCTIONS FOR SST26WF064C (1 OF 2)
Description
Command
Cycle1
Configuration
NOP
No Operation
RSTEN
Reset Enable
4
RST
Reset Memory
EQIO
Enable Quad I/O
RSTQIO5
Reset Quad I/O
00H
66H
99H
38H
FFH
RDSR
Read Status Register
05H
WRSR
Write Status Register
01H
RDCR
Read Configuration
Register
35H
Read Memory
03H
Read
Read
High-Speed
Read
Read Memory at
Higher Speed
SQOR6
SQIOR7
SDOR8
SDIOR9
SB
SPI Quad Output Read
SPI Quad I/O Read
SPI Dual Output Read
SPI Dual I/O Read
Set Burst Length
SQI nB Burst with
Wrap
SPI nB Burst with
Wrap
RBSQI
RBSPI7
High-Speed
Read Memory at
Read - DTR10 Higher Speed - DTR
SQOR DTR10,11
SQIOR DTR10,11
SDOR DTR10
SDIOR DTR10
0BH
6BH
EBH
3BH
BBH
C0H
Mode
0DH
Dummy
Cycle(s)3
Data
Cycle(s)3
Max
Freq
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
0
0
1
0
0
0
0
0
1 to
1 to
2
1 to
1 to
104
MHz
0
3
1
1
3
1
1
0
1 to
1 to
1 to
1 to
1 to
1 to
1 to
1
40 MHz
X
3
3
3
3
3
3
3
0
X
3
3
n to
104
MHz
3
3
n to
12
3
6
6
1 to
1 to
SQI
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
0CH
ECH
Address
Cycle(s)2, 3
SPI
X
X
X
SPI Quad Output Read DTR
6DH
X
12
6
1 to
SPI Quad I/O Read - DTR
EDH
X
3
6
1 to
SPI Dual-Output Read DTR
3DH
X
12
6
1 to
SPI Dual-I/O Read - DTR
BDH
X
6
6
1 to
9FH
AFH
X
0
0
0
1
3 to
3 to
5AH
X
3
1
1 to
Identification
JEDEC-ID Read
JEDEC-ID
Quad J-ID
Quad I/O J-ID Read
Serial Flash DiscoverSFDP
able Parameters
DS20005430C-page 14
X
104
MHz
80 MHz
50 MHz
104
MHz
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
TABLE 5-1:
Instruction
Write
WREN
WRDI
SE12
13
BE
CE
PP
SPI Quad
PP7
WRSU
WRRE
DEVICE OPERATION INSTRUCTIONS FOR SST26WF064C (CONTINUED) (2 OF 2)
Description
Write Enable
Write Disable
Erase 4 KBytes of
Memory Array
Erase 64, 32 or 8
KBytes of Memory
Array
Erase Full Array
Page Program
SPI Quad Page
Program
Suspends Program/
Erase
Resumes Program/
Erase
Mode
Command
Cycle1
SPI
SQI
Address
Cycle(s)2, 3
Dummy
Cycle(s)3
Data
Cycle(s)3
06H
04H
X
X
X
X
0
0
0
0
0
0
20H
X
X
3
0
0
D8H
X
X
3
0
0
C7H
02H
X
X
X
X
0
3
0
0
0
1 to 256
32H
X
3
0
1 to 256
B0H
X
X
0
0
0
30H
X
X
0
0
0
X
0
0
0
1
1 to18
1 to18
Max
Freq
104
MHz
104
MHz
Protection
RBPR
WBPR
LBPR
nVWLDR
ULBPR
RSID
PSID
LSID
Read Block-Protection
Register
Write Block-Protection
Register
Lock Down BlockProtection Register
non-Volatile Write
Lock-Down Register
Global Block Protection Unlock
Read Security ID
Program User
Security ID area
Lockout Security ID
Programming
Power Saving
Deep Power-down Mode
DPD
Release from Deep
RDPD
Power-down and Read ID
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
11.
12.
13.
72H
X
42H
X
X
0
0
1 to 18
8DH
X
X
0
0
0
E8H
X
X
0
0
1 to 18
98H
X
X
0
0
0
X
2
2
1
3
1 to 2048
1 to 2048
88H
X
A5H
X
X
2
0
1 to 256
85H
X
X
0
0
0
B9H
X
X
0
0
0
ABH
X
X
3
0
1 to
104
MHz
104
MHz
Command cycle is two clock periods in SQI mode and eight clock periods in SPI mode.
Address bits above the most significant bit of each density can be VIL or VIH.
Address, Dummy/Mode bits, and Data cycles are two clock periods in SQI and eight clock periods in SPI mode.
RST command only executed if RSTEN command is executed first. Any intervening command will disable Reset.
Device accepts eight-clock command in SPI mode, or two-clock command in SQI mode.
Data cycles are two clock periods. IOC bit must be set to ‘1’ before issuing the command.
Address, Dummy/Mode bits, and data cycles are two clock periods. IOC bit must be set to ‘1’ before issuing the command.
Data cycles are four clock periods.
Address, Dummy/Mode bits, and Data cycles are four clock periods.
For DTR commands, the number of clocks is listed for address and dummy.
IOC bit must be set to ‘1’ before issuing the command.
Sector Addresses: Use AMS - A12, remaining address are don’t care, but must be set to VIL or VIH.
Blocks are 64 KByte, 32 KByte, or 8KByte, depending on location. Block Erase Address: AMS - A16 for 64 KByte; AMS - A15
for 32 KByte; AMS - A13 for 8 KByte. Remaining addresses are don’t care, but must be set to VIL or VIH.
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 15
SST26WF064C
5.1
No Operation (NOP)
To reset the SST26WF064C, the host drives CE# low,
sends the Reset-Enable command (66H), and drives
CE# high. Next, the host drives CE# low again, sends
the Reset command (99H), and drives CE# high, see
Figure 5-1.
The No Operation command only cancels a ResetEnable command. NOP has no impact on any other
command.
5.2
A device reset during an active Program or Erase operation aborts the operation, which can cause the data of
the targeted address range to be corrupted or lost.
Depending on the prior operation, the reset timing may
vary. Recovery from a Write operation requires more
latency time than recovery from other operations. See
Table 8-3 on page 54 for Rest timing parameters.
Reset-Enable (RSTEN) and Reset
(RST)
The Reset operation is used as a system (software)
reset that puts the device in normal operating Ready
mode. This operation consists of two commands:
Reset-Enable (RSTEN) followed by Reset (RST).
FIGURE 5-1:
RESET SEQUENCE
TCPH
CE#
MODE 3
MODE 3
MODE 3
MODE 0
MODE 0
MODE 0
CLK
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0
C3 C2
20005430 F05.0
Note: C[1:0] = 66H; C[3:2] = 99H
5.3
Read (40 MHz)
will automatically increment until the highest memory
address is reached. Once the highest memory address
is reached, the address pointer will automatically return
to the beginning (wrap-around) of the address space.
The Read instruction, 03H, is supported in SPI bus protocol only with clock frequencies up to 40 MHz. This
command is not supported in SQI bus protocol. The
device outputs the data starting from the specified
address location, then continuously streams the data
output through all addresses until terminated by a lowto-high transition on CE#. The internal address pointer
FIGURE 5-2:
Initiate the Read instruction by executing an 8-bit command, 03H, followed by address bits A[23:0]. CE# must
remain active low for the duration of the Read cycle.
See Figure 5-2 for Read Sequence.
READ SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
31 32
39 40
47 48
55 56
63 64
70
MODE 0
03
SI
MSB
ADD.
ADD.
MSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
SO
ADD.
N
DOUT
N+1
DOUT
N+2
DOUT
N+3
DOUT
N+4
DOUT
MSB
5.4
Enable Quad I/O (EQIO)
The Enable Quad I/O (EQIO) instruction, 38H, enables
the flash device for SQI bus operation. Upon completion of the instruction, all instructions thereafter are
expected to be 4-bit multiplexed input/output (SQI
mode) until a power cycle or a “Reset Quad I/O instruction” is executed. See Figure 5-3.
DS20005430C-page 16
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
FIGURE 5-3:
ENABLE QUAD I/O SEQUENCE
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
2
1
3
4
5
6
7
MODE 0
SIO0
38
SIO[3:1]
20005430 F43.0
Note: SIO[3:1] must be driven VIH
5.5
Reset Quad I/O (RSTQIO)
where it can accept new SQI command instruction. An
additional RSTQIO is required to reset the device to
SPI mode.
The Reset Quad I/O instruction, FFH, resets the device
to 1-bit SPI protocol operation or exits the Set Mode
configuration during a read sequence. This command
allows the flash device to return to the default I/O state
(SPI) without a power cycle, and executes in either 1bit or 4-bit mode. If the device is in the Set Mode configuration, while in SQI High-Speed Read mode, the
RSTQIO command will only return the device to a state
FIGURE 5-4:
To execute a Reset Quad I/O operation, the host drives
CE# low, sends the Reset Quad I/O command cycle
(FFH) then, drives CE# high. Execute the instruction in
either SPI (8 clocks) or SQI (2 clocks) command
cycles. For SPI, SIO[3:1] are don’t care for this command, but should be driven to VIH or VIL. See Figures
5-4 and 5-5.
RESET QUAD I/O SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
MODE 0
FF
SIO0
SIO[3:1]
20005430 F73.0
Note: SIO[3:1]
FIGURE 5-5:
RESET QUAD I/O SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
SIO(3:0)
0
1
F
F
MODE 0
20005430 F74.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 17
SST26WF064C
5.6
High-Speed Read (104 MHz)
Initiate High-Speed Read by executing an 8-bit command, 0BH, followed by address bits A[23-0] and a
dummy byte. CE# must remain active low for the duration of the High-Speed Read cycle. See Figure 5-6 for
the High-Speed Read sequence for SPI bus protocol.
The High-Speed Read instruction, 0BH, is supported in
both SPI bus protocol and SQI protocol. On power-up,
the device is set to use SPI.
FIGURE 5-6:
HIGH-SPEED READ SEQUENCE (SPI) (C[1:0] = 0BH)
CE#
MODE 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
23 24
15 16
31 32
39 40
47 48
55 56
63 64
80
71 72
SCK MODE 0
0B
SI/SIO0
ADD.
ADD.
ADD.
X
N+1
DOUT
N
DOUT
MSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
SO/SIO1
N+2
DOUT
N+3
DOUT
N+4
DOUT
20005430 F31.0
In SQI protocol, the host drives CE# low then sends the
Read command cycle command, 0BH, followed by
three address cycles, a Set Mode Configuration cycle,
and two dummy cycles. Each cycle is two nibbles
(clocks) long, most significant nibble first.
mand, 0BH, and does not require the op-code to be
entered again. The host may initiate the next Read
cycle by driving CE# low, then sending the four-bits
input for address A[23:0], followed by the Set Mode
configuration bits M[7:0], and two dummy cycles. After
the two dummy cycles, the device outputs the data
starting from the specified address location. There are
no restrictions on address location access.
After the dummy cycles, the device outputs data on the
falling edge of the SCK signal starting from the specified address location. The device continually streams
data output through all addresses until terminated by a
low-to-high transition on CE#. The internal address
pointer automatically increments until the highest memory address is reached, at which point the address
pointer returns to address location 000000H. During
this operation, blocks that are Read-locked will output
data 00H.
When M[7:0] is any value other than AXH, the device
expects the next instruction initiated to be a command
instruction. To reset/exit the Set Mode configuration,
execute the Reset Quad I/O command, FFH. While in
the Set Mode configuration, the RSTQIO command will
only return the device to a state where it can accept
new SQI command instruction. An additional RSTQIO
is required to reset the device to SPI mode. See Figure
5-10 for the SPI Quad I/O Mode Read sequence when
M[7:0] = AXH.
The Set Mode Configuration bits M[7:0] indicates if the
next instruction cycle is another SQI High-Speed Read
command. When M[7:0] = AXH, the device expects the
next continuous instruction to be another Read com-
FIGURE 5-7:
HIGH-SPEED READ SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
0
1
MODE 0 MSN
LSN
C0
C1
MODE 3
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
A5
A4
A3
A2
A1
A0
M1
M0
10
11
12
13
14
15
20
21
SCK
SIO(3:0)
Command
Address
Mode
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
Hx = High Data Nibble, Lx = Low Data Nibble C[1:0] = 0BH
DS20005430C-page 18
X
X
X
Dummy
X
H0
L0
Data Byte 0
H8
L8
Data Byte 7
20005430 F47.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.7
SPI Quad-Output Read
Following the dummy byte, the device outputs data
from SIO[3:0] starting from the specified address location. The device continually streams data output
through all addresses until terminated by a low-to-high
transition on CE#. The internal address pointer automatically increments until the highest memory address
is reached, at which point the address pointer returns
to the beginning of the address space.
The SPI Quad-Output Read instruction supports up to
104 MHz frequency. The SST26WF064C requires the
IOC bit in the configuration register to be set to ‘1’ prior
to executing the command. Initiate SPI Quad-Output
Read by executing an 8-bit command, 6BH, followed
by address bits A[23-0] and a dummy byte. CE# must
remain active low for the duration of the SPI Quad Output Read. See Figure 5-8 for the SPI Quad Output
Read sequence.
FIGURE 5-8:
SPI QUAD OUTPUT READ
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
31 32
39 40 41
MODE 0
6BH
SIO0
OP Code
A[23:16]
A[15:8]
Address
A[7:0]
X
b4 b0
b4 b0
Dummy
Data
Byte 0
Data
Byte N
SIO1
b5 b1
b5 b1
SIO2
b6 b2
b6 b2
SIO3
b7 b3
b7 b3
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
20005430 F48.3
DS20005430C-page 19
SST26WF064C
5.8
SPI Quad I/O Read
The Set Mode Configuration bits M[7:0] indicates if the
next instruction cycle is another SPI Quad I/O Read
command. When M[7:0] = AXH, the device expects the
next continuous instruction to be another Read command, EBH, and does not require the op-code to be
entered again. The host may set the next SQIOR cycle
by driving CE# low, then sending the four-bit wide input
for address A[23:0], followed by the Set Mode configuration bits M[7:0], and two dummy cycles. After the two
dummy cycles, the device outputs the data starting
from the specified address location. There are no
restrictions on address location access.
The SPI Quad I/O Read (SQIOR) instruction supports up
to 104 MHz frequency. The SST26WF064C requires the
IOC bit in the configuration register to be set to ‘1’ prior to
executing the command. Initiate SQIOR by executing an
8-bit command, EBH. The device then switches to 4-bit I/
O mode for address bits A[23-0], followed by the Set
Mode configuration bits M[7:0], and two dummy
bytes.CE# must remain active low for the duration of the
SPI Quad I/O Read. See Figure 5-9 for the SPI Quad I/
O Read sequence.
Following the dummy bytes, the device outputs data
from the specified address location. The device continually streams data output through all addresses until
terminated by a low-to-high transition on CE#. The
internal address pointer automatically increments until
the highest memory address is reached, at which point
the address pointer returns to the beginning of the
address space.
FIGURE 5-9:
When M[7:0] is any value other than AXH, the device
expects the next instruction initiated to be a command
instruction. To reset/exit the Set Mode configuration,
execute the Reset Quad I/O command, FFH. See Figure 5-10 for the SPI Quad I/O Mode Read sequence
when M[7:0] = AXH.
SPI QUAD I/O READ SEQUENCE
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
SIO0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
MODE 0
EBH
A20 A16 A12 A8 A4 A0 M4 M0 X X X X b4 b0 b4 b0
SIO1
A21 A17 A13 A9 A5 A1 M5 M1 X X X X b5 b1 b5 b1
SIO2
A22 A18 A14 A10 A6 A2 M6 M2 X X X X b6 b2 b6 b2
MSN LSN
SIO3
A23 A19 A15 A11 A7 A3 M7 M3 X X X X b7 b3 b7 b3
Address
Set
Mode
Dummy
Data Data
Byte 0 Byte 1
20005430 F49.2
Note: MSN
DS20005430C-page 20
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
FIGURE 5-10:
BACK-TO-BACK SPI QUAD I/O READ SEQUENCES WHEN M[7:0] = AXH
CE#
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13
SCK
SIO0
b4 b0 b4 b0
A20 A16 A12 A8 A4 A0 M4 M0 X X X X b4 b0
SIO1
b5 b1 b5 b1
A21 A17 A13 A9 A5 A1 M5 M1 X X X X b5 b1
SIO2
b6 b2 b6 b2
A22 A18 A14 A10 A6 A2 M6 M2 X X X X b6 b2
MSN LSN
SIO3
b7 b3 b7 b3
A23 A19 A15 A11 A7 A3 M7 M3 X X X X b7 b3
Data Data
Byte Byte
N+1
N
Set
Mode
Address
Dummy
Data
Byte 0
20005430 F50.2
Note: MSN= Most Sig-
5.9
Set Burst
sends the Set Burst command cycle (C0H) and one
data cycle, then drives CE# high. After power-up or
reset, the burst length is set to eight Bytes (00H). See
Table 5-2 for burst length data and Figures 5-11 and 512 for the sequences.
The Set Burst command specifies the number of bytes
to be output during a Read Burst command before the
device wraps around. It supports both SPI and SQI protocols. To set the burst length the host drives CE# low,
TABLE 5-2:
BURST LENGTH DATA
Burst Length
8 Bytes
16 Bytes
32 Bytes
64 Bytes
FIGURE 5-11:
High Nibble (H0)
0h
0h
0h
0h
Low Nibble (L0)
0h
1h
2h
3h
SET BURST LENGTH SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
1
2
3
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0 H0 L0
MSN LSN
20005430 F32.0
Note: MSN = Most Significant Nibble,
LSN = Least Significant Nibble, C[1:0] = C0H
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 21
SST26WF064C
FIGURE 5-12:
SET BURST LENGTH SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
MODE 0
C0
SIO0
DIN
SIO[3:1]
20005430 F51.0
Note: SIO[3:1] must be
5.10
SQI Read Burst with Wrap (RBSQI)
SQI Read Burst with wrap is similar to High Speed
Read in SQI mode, except data will output continuously
within the burst length until a low-to-high transition on
CE#. To execute a SQI Read Burst operation, drive
CE# low then send the Read Burst command cycle
(0CH), followed by three address cycles, and then
three dummy cycles. Each cycle is two nibbles (clocks)
long, most significant nibble first.
After the dummy cycles, the device outputs data on the
falling edge of the SCK signal starting from the specified address location. The data output stream is continuous through all addresses until terminated by a low-tohigh transition on CE#.
During RBSQI, the internal address pointer automatically increments until the last byte of the burst is
reached, then it wraps around to the first byte of the
burst. All bursts are aligned to addresses within the
burst length, see Table 5-3. For example, if the burst
length is eight Bytes, and the start address is 06h, the
burst sequence would be: 06h, 07h, 00h, 01h, 02h,
03h, 04h, 05h, 06h, etc. The pattern repeats until the
command is terminated by a low-to-high transition on
CE#.
During this operation, blocks that are Read-locked will
output data 00H.
TABLE 5-3:
5.11
SPI Read Burst with Wrap (RBSPI)
SPI Read Burst with Wrap (RBSPI) is similar to SPI
Quad I/O Read except the data will output continuously
within the burst length until a low-to-high transition on
CE#. To execute a SPI Read Burst with Wrap operation, drive CE# low, then send the Read Burst command cycle (ECH), followed by three address cycles,
and then three dummy cycles.
After the dummy cycle, the device outputs data on the
falling edge of the SCK signal starting from the specified address location. The data output stream is continuous through all addresses until terminated by a low-tohigh transition on CE#.
During RBSPI, the internal address pointer automatically increments until the last byte of the burst is
reached, then it wraps around to the first byte of the
burst. All bursts are aligned to addresses within the
burst length, see Table 5-3. For example, if the burst
length is eight Bytes, and the start address is 06h, the
burst sequence would be: 06h, 07h, 00h, 01h, 02h,
03h, 04h, 05h, 06h, etc. The pattern repeats until the
command is terminated by a low-to-high transition on
CE#.
During this operation, blocks that are Read-locked will
output data 00H.
BURST ADDRESS RANGES
Burst Length
Burst Address Ranges
8 Bytes
00-07H, 08-0FH, 10-17H, 18-1FH...
16 Bytes
00-0FH, 10-1FH, 20-2FH, 30-3FH...
32 Bytes
00-1FH, 20-3FH, 40-5FH, 60-7FH...
64 Bytes
00-3FH, 40-7FH, 80-BFH, C0-FFH
DS20005430C-page 22
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.12
SPI Dual-Output Read
Following the dummy byte, the SST26WF064C outputs
data from SIO[1:0] starting from the specified address
location. The device continually streams data output
through all addresses until terminated by a low-to-high
transition on CE#. The internal address pointer automatically increments until the highest memory address
is reached, at which point the address pointer returns
to the beginning of the address space.
The SPI Dual-Output Read instruction supports up to
104 MHz frequency. Initiate SPI Dual-Output Read by
executing an 8-bit command, 3BH, followed by address
bits A[23-0] and a dummy byte. CE# must remain
active low for the duration of the SPI Dual-Output Read
operation. See Figure 5-13 for the SPI Quad Output
Read sequence.
FIGURE 5-13:
FAST READ, DUAL-OUTPUT SEQUENCE
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
SIO0
3BH
A[23:16]
A[15:8]
SIO1
OP Code
Note: MSB = Most Significant Bit.
5.13
39 40 41
31 32
MODE 0
SPI Dual I/O Read
The SPI Dual I/O Read (SDIOR) instruction supports
up to 80 MHz frequency. Initiate SDIOR by executing
an 8-bit command, BBH. The device then switches to
2-bit I/O mode for address bits A[23-0], followed by the
Set Mode configuration bits M[7:0]. CE# must remain
active low for the duration of the SPI Dual I/O Read.
See Figure 5-14 for the SPI Dual I/O Read sequence.
Address
A[7:0]
b6 b5 b3 b1
b6 b5 b3 b1
MSB
b7 b4 b2 b0
b7 b4 b2 b0
X
Dummy
Data
Byte 0
Data
Byte N
20005430 F52.3
execute the Reset Quad I/O command, FFH. See Figure 5-15 for the SPI Dual I/O Read sequence when
M[7:0] = AXH.
Following the Set Mode configuration bits M[7:0], the
SST26WF064C outputs data from the specified
address location. The device continually streams data
output through all addresses until terminated by a lowto-high transition on CE#. The internal address pointer
automatically increments until the highest memory
address is reached, at which point the address pointer
returns to the beginning of the address space.
The Set Mode Configuration bit M[7:0] indicates if the
next instruction cycle is another SPI Dual I/O Read
command. When M[7:0] = AXH, the device expects the
next continuous instruction to be another SDIOR command, BBH, and does not require the op-code to be
entered again. The host may set the next SDIOR cycle
by driving CE# low, then sending the two-bit wide input
for address A[23:0], followed by the Set Mode configuration bits M[7:0]. After the Set Mode configuration bits,
the device outputs the data starting from the specified
address location. There are no restrictions on address
location access.
When M[7:0] is any value other than AXH, the device
expects the next instruction initiated to be a command
instruction. To reset/exit the Set Mode configuration,
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 23
SST26WF064C
FIGURE 5-14:
SPI DUAL I/O READ SEQUENCE
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
MODE 0
SIO0
6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4
BBH
SIO1
7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5
A[23:16]
A[7:0]
A[15:8]
M[7:0]
CE#(cont’)
23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39
SCK(cont’)
I/O Switches from Input to Output
SIO0(cont’)
6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6
MSB
SIO1(cont’)
MSB
MSB
MSB
7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7
Byte 0
Byte 2
Byte 1
Byte 3
20005430 F53.1
Note: MSN=
FIGURE 5-15:
BACK-TO-BACK SPI DUAL I/O READ SEQUENCES WHEN M[7:0] = AXH
CE#
MODE 3
0 1 2
3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15
MODE 0
SCK
I/O Switch
SIO0 6 4
MSB
SIO1 7 5
6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4
6 4 2 0
MSB
7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5
7 5 3 1
A[23:16]
A[15:8]
A[7:0]
M[7:0]
CE#(cont’)
15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
SCK(cont’)
I/O Switches from Input to Output
SIO0(cont’)
6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6 4 2 0 6
MSB
SIO1(cont’)
MSB
MSB
MSB
7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7 5 3 1 7
Byte 0
Byte 1
Byte 2
Byte 3
20005430 F54.1
Note: MSN= Most
DS20005430C-page 24
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.14
Dual-Transfer Rate (DTR)
The Set Mode Configuration bits M[7:0] indicate if the
next instruction cycle is another DTR Read command.
When M[7:0] = AXH, the device expects the next continuous instruction to be another DTR Read command,
and does not require the op-code to be entered again.
Set the next DTR cycle by driving CE# low, then sending the address A[23:0], followed by the Set Mode configuration bits M[7:0], and dummy clock cycles. After
the dummy cycles, the device outputs the data starting
from the specified address location. There are no
restrictions on address location access.
Initiate all Dual-Transfer Rate read modes by executing
an 8-bit DTR Read command. The device then
switches to dual-data rate for the address, set mode
configuration bits M[7:0], and dummy clock cycles. Following the dummy bytes, the device outputs data from
the specified address location. The device continually
streams data output through all addresses until terminated by a low-to-high transition on CE#. The internal
address pointer automatically increments until the highest memory address is reached, at which point the
address pointer returns to the beginning of the address
space.
CE#
MODE 3
0
7
8
9
10
11
12
16
17
18
SCK MODE 0
A20 A16 A12 A8 A4 A0 M4 M0
X
X
b4 b0 b4 b0
SIO1
A21 A17 A13 A9 A5 A1 M5 M1
X
X
b5 b1 b5 b1
SIO2
A22 A18 A14 A10 A6 A2 M6 M2
X
X
b6 b2 b6 b2
SIO3
A23 A19 A15 A11 A7 A3 M7 M3
X
X
b7 b3 b7 b3
SIO0
EDH
MSN LSN
Address
Set
Mode
Dummy
Data Data
Byte0 Byte1
20005430 DTR 1.1
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
FIGURE 5-16:
SPI QUAD I/O READ – DTR
CE#
MODE 3
0
7
8
18
19
20
25
26
27
SCK MODE 0
SIO0
3D
A1 A0
A23 A22 A21
Address
X
X
b6 b4 b2 b0
Dummy
b7 b5 b3 b1
SIO1
MSN
LSN
Data Byte0
20005430 DTR 2.0
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
FIGURE 5-17:
SPI DUAL OUTPUT READ – DTR
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 25
SST26WF064C
CE#
MODE 3
0
7
8
18
19
20
25
26
27
SCK MODE 0
SIO0
A1 A0
A23 A22 A21
6D
X
Address
b4 b0 b4 b0
X
Dummy
SIO1
b5 b1 b5 b1
SIO2
b6 b2 b6 b2
SIO3
b7 b3 b7 b3
MSN LSN
Data Data
Byte0 Byte1
20005430 DTR 3.0
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
FIGURE 5-18:
SPI QUAD OUTPUT READ – DTR
CE#
MODE 3
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
10
11
12
SCK MODE 0
Command = 0DH
SIO0
0
1
A20 A16 A12 A8 A4 A0 M4 M0
X
X
b4 b0 b4 b0
SIO1
0
0
A21 A17 A13 A9 A5 A1 M5 M1
X
X
b5 b1 b5 b1
SIO2
0
1
A22 A18 A14 A10 A6 A2 M6 M2
X
X
b6 b2 b6 b2
SIO3
0
1
A23 A19 A15 A11 A7 A3 M7 M3
X
X
b7 b3 b7 b3
MSN LSN
Address
Set
Mode
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
FIGURE 5-19:
DS20005430C-page 26
Dummy
Data Data
Byte0 Byte1
20005430 DTR 4.0
SQI HIGH-SPEED READ – DTR
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
7
8
13
14
15
16
19
20
21
MODE 0
SIO0
BDH
SIO1
A22 A20
A2 A0 M6 M4 M2 M0
X
X
b6 b4 b2 b0
A23 A21
A3 A1 M7 M5 M3 M1
X
X
b7 b5 b3 b1
MSN
Set
Mode
Address
Dummy
LSN
Data Byte0
20005430 DTR 5.0
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
FIGURE 5-20:
SPI DUAL I/O READ – DTR
CE#
MODE 3
0
7
8
18
19
20
25
26
27
28
29
SCK MODE 0
SIO0
0D
A1 A0
A23 A22 A21
Address
X
Dummy
b7 b6 b5 b4 b3 b2 b1 b0
SIO1
MSN
Data Byte0
LSN
20005430 DTR 6.0
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
FIGURE 5-21:
SPI HIGH-SPEED READ – DTR
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 27
SST26WF064C
5.15
JEDEC-ID Read (SPI Protocol)
Immediately
following
the
command
cycle,
SST26WF064C outputs data on the falling edge of the
SCK signal. The data output stream is continuous until
terminated by a low-to-high transition on CE#. The
device outputs three bytes of data: manufacturer,
device type, and device ID, see Table 5-4. See Figure
5-22 for instruction sequence.
Using traditional SPI protocol, the JEDEC-ID Read
instruction identifies the device as SST26WF064C and
the manufacturer as Microchip. To execute a JECECID operation the host drives CE# low then sends the
JEDEC-ID command cycle (9FH).
TABLE 5-4:
DEVICE ID DATA OUTPUT
Device ID
Product
Manufacturer ID (Byte 1)
Device Type (Byte 2)
Device ID (Byte 3)
SST26WF064C
BFH
26H
53H
FIGURE 5-22:
JEDEC-ID SEQUENCE (SPI MODE)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34
MODE 0
SI
SO
9F
HIGH IMPEDANCE
26
BF
MSB
Device ID
MSB
2005430 F38.0
5.16
Read Quad J-ID Read (SQI
Protocol)
Immediately following the command cycle, and one
dummy cycle, SST26WF064C outputs data on the falling edge of the SCK signal. The data output stream is
continuous until terminated by a low-to-high transition
of CE#. The device outputs three bytes of data: manufacturer, device type, and device ID, see Table 5-4. See
Figure 5-23 for instruction sequence.
The Read Quad J-ID Read instruction identifies the
device as SST26WF064C and manufacturer as Microchip. To execute a Quad J-ID operation the host drives
CE# low and then sends the Quad J-ID command cycle
(AFH). Each cycle is two nibbles (clocks) long, most
significant nibble first.
FIGURE 5-23:
QUAD J-ID READ SEQUENCE
CE#
MODE 3
0
1
2
C0
C1
X
3
4
5
MSN
LSN
H0
L0
7
6
8
9
H2
L2
10
11
12
13
N
SCK
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
X
Dummy
BFH
H1
L1
26H
Device ID
H0
L0
BFH
H1
L1
26H
HN
LN
N
2005430 F55.0
Note: MSN = Most significant Nibble; LSN= Least Significant Nibble, C[1:0]=AFH
DS20005430C-page 28
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.17
Serial Flash Discoverable
Parameters (SFDP)
ware support for all future Serial Flash device families.
See Table 11-1 on page 72 for address and data values.
The Serial Flash Discoverable Parameters (SFDP)
contain information describing the characteristics of the
device. This allows device-independent, JEDEC IDindependent, and forward/backward compatible soft-
FIGURE 5-24:
Initiate SFDP by executing an 8-bit command, 5AH, followed by address bits A[23-0] and a dummy byte. CE#
must remain active low for the duration of the SFDP
cycle. For the SFDP sequence, see Figure 5-24.
SERIAL FLASH DISCOVERABLE PARAMETERS SEQUENCE
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
31 32
39 40
47 48
55 56
63 64
71 72
80
MODE 0
5A
SI
ADD.
ADD.
ADD.
X
N
DOUT
MSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
SO
N+1
DOUT
N+2
DOUT
N+3
DOUT
N+4
DOUT
2005430 F56.0
5.18
Sector-Erase
To execute a Sector-Erase operation, the host drives
CE# low, then sends the Sector Erase command cycle
(20H) and three address cycles, and then drives CE#
high. Address bits [AMS:A12] (AMS = Most Significant
Address) determine the sector address (SAX); the
remaining address bits can be VIL or VIH. To identify the
completion of the internal, self-timed, Write operation,
poll the BUSY bit in the Status register, or wait TSE. See
Figures 5-25 and 5-26 for the Sector-Erase sequence.
The Sector-Erase instruction clears all bits in the
selected 4 KByte sector to ‘1,’ but it does not change a
protected memory area. Prior to any write operation,
the Write-Enable (WREN) instruction must be executed.
FIGURE 5-25:
4 KBYTE SECTOR-ERASE SEQUENCE– SQI MODE (C[1:0] = 20 H)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
2
1
4
6
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0
MSN LSN
2005430 F07.0
Note: MSN = Most Significant Nibble LSN = Least Significant Nibble C[1:0]=20H
FIGURE 5-26:
4 KBYTE SECTOR-ERASE SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
31
MODE 0
20
SI
MSB
SO
ADD.
ADD.
ADD.
MSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
20005430 F57.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 29
SST26WF064C
5.19
Block-Erase
To execute a Block-Erase operation, the host drives
CE# low then sends the Block-Erase command cycle
(D8H), three address cycles, then drives CE# high.
Address bits AMS-A13 determine the block address
(BAX); the remaining address bits can be VIL or VIH. For
32 KByte blocks, A14:A13 can be VIL or VIH; for 64
KByte blocks, A15:A13 can be VIL or VIH. Poll the BUSY
bit in the Status register, or wait TBE, for the completion
of the internal, self-timed, Block-Erase operation. See
Figures 5-27 and 5-28 for the Block-Erase sequence.
The Block-Erase instruction clears all bits in the
selected block to ‘1’. Block sizes can be 8 KByte, 32
KByte or 64 KByte depending on address, see Figure
3-1, Memory Map, for details. A Block-Erase instruction
applied to a protected memory area will be ignored.
Prior to any write operation, execute the WREN instruction. Keep CE# active low for the duration of any command sequence.
FIGURE 5-27:
BLOCK-ERASE SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
1
2
4
6
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0
MSN LSN
20005430 F08.0
Note: MSN = Most Significant Nibble,
LSN = Least Significant Nibble
C[1:0] = D8H
FIGURE 5-28:
BLOCK-ERASE SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
D8
SI
MSB
SO
15 16
23 24
31
MODE 0
ADDR
ADDR
ADDR
MSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
20005430 F58.0
DS20005430C-page 30
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.20
Chip-Erase
To execute a Chip-Erase operation, the host drives
CE# low, sends the Chip-Erase command cycle (C7H),
then drives CE# high. Wait TSCE, for the completion of
the internal, self-timed, Write operation. Alternatively,
wait 20 µs and then poll the BUSY bit in the status register. See Figures 5-29 and 5-30 for the Chip Erase
sequence.
The Chip-Erase instruction clears all bits in the device
to ‘1.’ The Chip-Erase instruction is ignored if any of the
memory area is protected. Prior to any write operation,
execute the WREN instruction.
FIGURE 5-29:
CHIP-ERASE SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
1
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C10
20005430 F09.1
Note: C[1:0] = C7H
FIGURE 5-30:
CHIP-ERASE SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
MODE 0
C7
SI
MSB
SO
HIGH IMPEDANCE
20005430 F59.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 31
SST26WF064C
5.21
Page-Program
partial Byte to be ignored. Poll the BUSY bit in the Status register, or wait TPP, for the completion of the internal, self-timed, Block-Erase operation. See Figures 531 and 5-32 for the Page-Program sequence.
The Page-Program instruction programs up to 256
Bytes of data in the memory, and supports both SPI
and SQI protocols. The data for the selected page
address must be in the erased state (FFH) before initiating the Page-Program operation. A Page-Program
applied to a protected memory area will be ignored.
Prior to the program operation, execute the WREN
instruction.
When executing Page-Program, the memory range for
the SST26WF064C is divided into 256 Byte page
boundaries. The device handles shifting of more than
256 Bytes of data by maintaining the last 256 Bytes of
data as the correct data to be programmed. If the target
address for the Page-Program instruction is not the
beginning of the page boundary (A[7:0] are not all
zero), and the number of bytes of data input exceeds or
overlaps the end of the address of the page boundary,
the excess data inputs wrap around and will be programmed at the start of that target page.
To execute a Page-Program operation, the host drives
CE# low then sends the Page Program command cycle
(02H), three address cycles followed by the data to be
programmed, then drives CE# high. The programmed
data must be between 1 to 256 Bytes and in whole Byte
increments; sending less than a full Byte will cause the
FIGURE 5-31:
PAGE-PROGRAM SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 H0 L0 H1 L1 H2 L2
HN LN
MSN LSN
Data Byte 0 Data Byte 1 Data Byte 2
Data Byte 255
20005430 F10.1
Note:
MSN = Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble, C[1:0] = 02H
FIGURE 5-32:
PAGE-PROGRAM SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
23 24
15 16
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
31 32
39
MODE 0
SI
ADD.
02
MSB
SO
ADD.
ADD.
Data Byte 0
LSB MSB
LSB MSB
LSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
2079
2078
2077
2076
2075
2074
2073
40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55
2072
CE#(cont’)
SCK(cont’)
SI(cont’)
Data Byte 1
MSB
SO(cont’)
Data Byte 255
Data Byte 2
LSB MSB
LSB
MSB
LSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
20005430 F60.1
Note: C[1:0] =
02H
DS20005430C-page 32
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.22
SPI Quad Page-Program
The SPI Quad Page-Program instruction programs up
to 256 Bytes of data in the memory. The data for the
selected page address must be in the erased state
(FFH) before initiating the SPI Quad Page-Program
operation. A SPI Quad Page-Program applied to a protected memory area will be ignored. The
SST26WF064C requires the ICO bit in the configuration register to be set to ‘1’ prior to executing the command.Prior to the program operation, execute the
WREN instruction.
To execute a SPI Quad Page-Program operation, the
host drives CE# low then sends the SPI Quad PageProgram command cycle (32H), three address cycles
followed by the data to be programmed, then drives
CE# high. The programmed data must be between 1 to
256 Bytes and in whole Byte increments. The com-
FIGURE 5-33:
mand cycle is eight clocks long, the address and data
cycles are each two clocks long, most significant bit
first. Poll the BUSY bit in the Status register, or wait TPP,
for the completion of the internal, self-timed, Write
operation.See Figure 5-33.
When executing SPI Quad Page-Program, the memory
range for the SST26WF064C is divided into 256 Byte
page boundaries. The device handles shifting of more
than 256 Bytes of data by maintaining the last 256
Bytes of data as the correct data to be programmed. If
the target address for the SPI Quad Page-Program
instruction is not the beginning of the page boundary
(A[7:0] are not all zero), and the of bytes of data input
exceeds or overlaps the end of the address of the page
boundary, the excess data inputs wrap around and will
be programmed at the start of that target page.
SPI QUAD PAGE-PROGRAM SEQUENCE
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
MODE 0
SIO0
32H
A20A16A12 A8 A4 A0 b4 b0 b4 b0
b4 b0
SIO1
A21 A17A13 A9 A5 A1 b5 b1 b5 b1
b5 b1
SIO2
A22 A18A14A10 A6 A2 b6 b2 b6 b2
b6 b2
MSN LSN
SIO3
A23 A19 A15 A11 A7 A3 b7 b3 b7 b3
b7 b3
Data Data
Byte 0 Byte 1
Data
Byte
255
Address
20005430 F61.1
5.23
Write-Suspend and Write-Resume
Write-Suspend allows the interruption of Sector-Erase,
Block-Erase, SPI Quad Page-Program, or Page-Program operations in order to erase, program, or read
data in another portion of memory. The original operation can be continued with the Write-Resume command. This operation is supported in both SQI and SPI
protocols.
Only one write operation can be suspended at a time;
if an operation is already suspended, the device will
ignore the Write-Suspend command. Write-Suspend
during Chip-Erase is ignored; Chip-Erase is not a valid
command while a write is suspended. The WriteResume command is ignored until any write operation
(Program or Erase) initiated during the Write-Suspend
is complete. The device requires a minimum of 500 µs
between each Write-Suspend command.
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
5.24
Write-Suspend During SectorErase or Block-Erase
Issuing a Write-Suspend instruction during SectorErase or Block-Erase allows the host to program or
read any sector that was not being erased. The device
will ignore any programming commands pointing to the
suspended sector(s). Any attempt to read from the suspended sector(s) will output unknown data because the
Sector- or Block-Erase will be incomplete.
To execute a Write-Suspend operation, the host drives
CE# low, sends the Write Suspend command cycle
(B0H), then drives CE# high. The Status register indicates that the erase has been suspended by changing
the WSE bit from ‘0’ to ‘1,’ but the device will not accept
another command until it is ready. To determine when
the device will accept a new command, poll the BUSY
bit in the Status register or wait TWS.
DS20005430C-page 33
SST26WF064C
5.25
Write Suspend During Page
Programming or SPI Quad Page
Programming
Issuing a Write-Suspend instruction during Page Programming allows the host to erase or read any sector
that is not being programmed. Erase commands pointing to the suspended sector(s) will be ignored. Any
attempt to read from the suspended page will output
unknown data because the program will be incomplete.
To execute a Write Suspend operation, the host drives
CE# low, sends the Write Suspend command cycle
(B0H), then drives CE# high. The Status register indicates that the programming has been suspended by
changing the WSP bit from ‘0’ to ‘1,’ but the device will
not accept another command until it is ready. To determine when the device will accept a new command, poll
the BUSY bit in the Status register or wait TWS.
5.26
Write-Resume
Write-Resume restarts a Write command that was suspended, and changes the suspend status bit in the Status register (WSE or WSP) back to ‘0’.
To execute a Write-Resume operation, the host drives
CE# low, sends the Write Resume command cycle
(30H), then drives CE# high. To determine if the internal, self-timed Write operation completed, poll the
BUSY bit in the Status register, or wait the specified
time TSE, TBE, or TPP for Sector-Erase, Block-Erase, or
Page-Programming, respectively. The total write time
before suspend and after resume will not exceed the
uninterrupted write times TSE, TBE, or TPP.
5.27
Read Security ID
The Read Security ID operation is supported in both
SPI and SQI modes. To execute a Read Security ID
(SID) operation in SPI mode, the host drives CE# low,
sends the Read Security ID command cycle (88H), two
address cycles, and then one dummy cycle. To execute
TABLE 5-5:
a Read Security ID operation in SQI mode, the host
drives CE# low and then sends the Read Security ID
command, two address cycles, and three dummy
cycles.
After the dummy cycles, the device outputs data on the
falling edge of the SCK signal, starting from the specified address location. The data output stream is continuous through all SID addresses until terminated by a
low-to-high transition on CE#. See Table 5-5 for the
Security ID address range.
5.28
Program Security ID
The Program Security ID instruction programs one to
2040 Bytes of data in the user-programmable, Security
ID space. This Security ID space is one-time programmable (OTP). The device ignores a Program Security
ID instruction pointing to an invalid or protected
address, see Table 5-5. Prior to the program operation,
execute WREN.
To execute a Program SID operation, the host drives
CE# low, sends the Program Security ID command
cycle (A5H), two address cycles, the data to be programmed, then drives CE# high. The programmed data
must be between 1 to 256 Bytes and in whole Byte
increments.
The device handles shifting of more than 256 Bytes of
data by maintaining the last 256 Bytes of data as the
correct data to be programmed. If the target address for
the Program Security ID instruction is not the beginning
of the page boundary, and the number of data input
exceeds or overlaps the end of the address of the page
boundary, the excess data inputs wrap around and will
be programmed at the start of that target page.
The Program Security ID operation is supported in both
SPI and SQI mode. To determine the completion of the
internal, self-timed Program SID operation, poll the
BUSY bit in the software status register, or wait TPSID
for the completion of the internal self-timed Program
Security ID operation.
PROGRAM SECURITY ID
Program Security ID
Address Range
Unique ID Pre-Programmed at factory
0000 – 0007H
User Programmable
0008H – 07FFH
5.29
Lockout Security ID
The Lockout Security ID instruction prevents any future
changes to the Security ID, and is supported in both
SPI and SQI modes. Prior to the operation, execute
WREN.
DS20005430C-page 34
To execute a Lockout SID, the host drives CE# low,
sends the Lockout Security ID command cycle (85H),
then drives CE# high. Poll the BUSY bit in the software
status register, or wait TPSID, for the completion of the
Lockout Security ID operation.
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.30
Read-Status Register (RDSR) and
Read-Configuration Register
(RDCR)
bit before sending any new commands to assure that
the new commands are properly received by the
device.
To Read the Status or Configuration registers, the host
drives CE# low, then sends the Read-Status-Register
command cycle (05H) or the Read Configuration Register command (35H). A dummy cycle is required in
SQI mode. Immediately after the command cycle, the
device outputs data on the falling edge of the SCK signal. The data output stream continues until terminated
by a low-to-high transition on CE#. See Figures 5-34
and 5-35 for the RDSR instruction sequence.
The Read-Status Register (RDSR) and Read Configuration Register (RDCR) commands output the contents
of the Status and Configuration registers. These commands function in both SPI and SQI modes. The Status
register may be read at any time, even during a Write
operation. When a Write is in progress, poll the BUSY
FIGURE 5-34:
READ-STATUS-REGISTER AND READ CONFIGURATION REGISTER
SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
0
2
4
6
8
SCK MODE 0
MSN LSN
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0 X
X H0 L0 H0 L0
Dummy
H0 L0
Status Byte Status Byte
Status Byte
20005430 F11.0
Note: MSN = Most Significant Nibble; LSN = Least Significant Nibble, C[1:0]=05H or 35H
FIGURE 5-35:
READ-STATUS-REGISTER AND READ CONFIGURATION REGISTER
SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
MODE 0
05 or 35H
SI
MSB
SO
HIGH IMPEDANCE
Bit 7 Bit 6 Bit 5 Bit 4 Bit 3 Bit 2 Bit 1 Bit 0
MSB
Status or Configuration
Register Out
20005430 F62.1
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 35
SST26WF064C
5.31
Write-Status Register (WRSR)
(01H), two cycles of data, and then drives CE# high.
The first cycle of data points to the Status register, the
second points to the Configuration register. See Figures 5-36 and 5-37.
The Write-Status Register (WRSR) command writes
new values to the Status register. To execute a WriteStatus Register operation, the host drives CE# low,
then sends the Write-Status Register command cycle
FIGURE 5-36:
WRITE-STATUS-REGISTER AND WRITE CONFIGURATION REGISTER
SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
3
2
1
4
5
MODE 0
MSN LSN
SIO[3:0]
C1 C0 H0 L0 H0 L0
Command Status
Byte
Configuration
20005430 F63.1
Note: MSN = Most Significant
Nibble; LSN = Least
FIGURE 5-37:
WRITE-STATUS-REGISTER AND WRITE CONFIGURATION REGISTER
SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
MODE 0
MODE 3
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23
MODE 0
01
06
SI
MSB
SO
MSB
STATUS
STATUS
REGISTER 0 IN
REGISTER 1 IN
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
MSB
MSB
HIGH IMPEDANCE
20005430 F64.0
Note: XX = Don’t Care
DS20005430C-page 36
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.32
Write-Enable (WREN)
5.33
The Write Enable (WREN) instruction sets the WriteEnable-Latch bit in the Status register to ‘1,’ allowing
Write operations to occur. The WREN instruction must
be executed prior to any of the following operations:
Sector Erase, Block Erase, Chip Erase, Page Program,
Program Security ID, Lockout Security ID, Write BlockProtection Register, Lock-Down Block-Protection Register, and Non-Volatile Write-Lock Lock-Down Register,
SPI Quad Page Program, and Write Status Register. To
execute a Write Enable the host drives CE# low then
sends the Write Enable command cycle (06H) then
drives CE# high. See Figures 5-38 and 5-39 for the
WREN instruction sequence. See Figures 5-38 and 539 for the WREN instruction sequence.
FIGURE 5-38:
Write-Disable (WRDI)
The Write-Disable (WRDI) instruction sets the WriteEnable-Latch bit in the Status register to ‘0,’ preventing
Write operations. The WRDI instruction is ignored
during any internal write operations. Any Write operation started before executing WRDI will complete. Drive
CE# high before executing WRDI.
To execute a Write-Disable, the host drives CE# low,
sends the Write Disable command cycle (04H), then
drives CE# high. See Figures 5-40 and 5-41.
FIGURE 5-40:
WRITE-DISABLE (WRDI)
SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
WRITE-ENABLE
SEQUENCE (SQI)
SCK
SIO(3:0)
CE#
0
1
0
4
MODE 0
20005430 F33.1
MODE 3
SCK
0
1
0
6
MODE 0
SIO[3:0]
FIGURE 5-41:
20005430 F12.1
WRITE-DISABLE (WRDI)
SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
FIGURE 5-39:
WRITE-ENABLE
SEQUENCE (SPI)
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
MODE 0
CE#
04
SI
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
MODE 0
MSB
SO
HIGH IMPEDANCE
20005430 F19.0
06
SI
MSB
SO
HIGH IMPEDANCE
20005430 F18.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 37
SST26WF064C
5.34
Read Block-Protection Register
(RBPR)
After the command cycle, the device outputs data on
the falling edge of the SCK signal starting with the most
significant nibble, see Table 5-6 for definitions of each
bit in the Block-Protection register. The RBPR command does not wrap around. After all data has been
output, the device will output 0H until terminated by a
low-to-high transition on CE#. Figures 5-42 and 5-43.
The Read Block-Protection Register instruction outputs
the Block-Protection register data which determines
the protection status. To execute a Read Block-Protection Register operation, the host drives CE# low, and
then sends the Read Block-Protection Register command cycle (72H). A dummy cycle is required in SQI
mode.
FIGURE 5-42:
READ BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
SCK
SIO[3:0]
C1 C0 X
X H0 L0 H1 L1 H2 L2 H3 L3 H4 L4
HN LN
MSN LSN
BPR [m:m-7]
BPR [7:0]
20005430 F34.2
Note: MSN = Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
Block-Protection Register (BPR) m = 143 for SST26WF064C
C[1:0]=72H
FIGURE 5-43:
READ BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
SIO0
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
32 33
MODE 0
72H
OP Code
SIO
Data Byte 0
Data Byte 1 Data Byte 2
Data Byte N
20005430 F65.1
DS20005430C-page 38
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.35
Write Block-Protection Register
(WBPR)
To execute a Write Block-Protection Register operation
the host drives CE# low, sends the Write Block-Protection Register command cycle (42H), sends six cycles of
data, and finally drives CE# high. Data input must be
most significant nibble first. See Table 5-6 for definitions of each bit in the Block-Protection register. See
Figures 5-44 and 5-45.
The Write Block-Protection Register (WBPR) command changes the Block-Protection register data to
indicate the protection status. Execute WREN before
executing WBPR.
FIGURE 5-44:
WRITE BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0 H0 L0 H1 L1 H2 L2 H3 L3 H4 L4 H5 L5
HN LN
MSN LSN
BPR [143:136]
BPR [7:0]
20005430 F35.1
Note: MS
N = Most Significant Nibble, LSN = Least Significant Nibble
Block-Protection Register (BPR) m = 143 for SST26WF064C
FIGURE 5-45:
WRITE BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
31 32
MODE 0
OP Code
SI
42H
Data Byte0
Data Byte1 Data Byte2
Data ByteN
SO
20005430 F66.1
Note: C[1:0]=42H
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 39
SST26WF064C
5.36
Lock-Down Block-Protection
Register (LBPR)
FIGURE 5-46:
The Lock-Down Block-Protection Register instruction
prevents changes to the Block-Protection register
during device operation. Lock-Down resets after power
cycling or hardware reset; this allows the Block-Protection register to be changed. Execute WREN before initiating the Lock-Down Block-Protection Register
instruction.
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
1
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0
20005430 F30.1
To execute a Lock-Down Block-Protection Register, the
host drives CE# low, then sends the Lock-Down BlockProtection Register command cycle (8DH), then drives
CE# high.
FIGURE 5-47:
LOCK-DOWN BLOCKPROTECTION REGISTER
(SQI)
N t
C[1 0] 8DH
LOCK-DOWN BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
SIO0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
MODE 0
8D
SIO[3:1]
20005430 F67.0
DS20005430C-page 40
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.37
Non-Volatile Write-Lock LockDown Register (nVWLDR)
18 cycles of data, and then drives CE# high.
After CE# goes high, the non-volatile bits are programmed and the programming time-out must complete before any additional commands, other than
Read Status Register, can be entered. Poll the BUSY
bit in the Status register, or wait TPP, for the completion
of the internal, self-timed, Write operation. Data inputs
must be most significant bit(s) first.
The Non-Volatile Write-Lock Lock-Down Register
(nVWLDR) instruction controls the ability to change the
Write-Lock bits in the Block-Protection register. Execute WREN before initiating the nVWLDR instruction.
To execute nVWLDR, the host drives CE# low, then
sends the nVWLDR command cycle (E8H), followed by
FIGURE 5-48:
WRITE-LOCK LOCK-DOWN REGISTER SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
E
8 H0 L0 H1 L1 H2 L2 H3 L3 H4 L4 H5 L5
HN LN
MSN LSN
nVWLDR[m:m-7]
BPR [7:0]
20005430 F36.0
Note:
MSN= Most Significant Nibble; LSN = Least Significant Nibble
Write Lock Lock Down Register (nVWLDR) m = 143
FIGURE 5-49:
WRITE-LOCK LOCK-DOWN REGISTER SEQUENCE (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
15 16
23 24
31 32
MODE 0
OP Code
SI
E8H
Data Byte0
Data Byte1 Data Byte2
Data ByteN
SO
20005430 F69.1
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 41
SST26WF064C
5.38
Global Block-Protection Unlock
(ULBPR)
FIGURE 5-50:
The Global Block-Protection Unlock (ULBPR) instruction clears all write-protection bits in the Block-Protection register, except for those bits that have been
locked down with the nVWLDR command. Execute
WREN before initiating the ULBPR instruction.
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
To execute a ULBPR instruction, the host drives CE#
low, then sends the ULBPR command cycle (98H), and
then drives CE# high.
FIGURE 5-51:
GLOBAL BLOCKPROTECTION UNLOCK
(SQI)
0
1
MODE 0
SIO(3:0)
C1 C0
20005430 F20.1
Note: C[1:0]=98H
GLOBAL BLOCK-PROTECTION UNLOCK (SPI)
CE#
MODE 3
SCK
SIO0
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
MODE 0
98
SIO[3:1]
20005430 F68.0
DS20005430C-page 42
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
TABLE 5-6:
BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER FOR SST26WF064C (1 OF 4)1
BPR Bits
Read Lock
Write Lock/
nVWLDR2
Address Range
Protected Block
Size
143
142
7FE000H - 7FFFFFH
8 KByte
141
140
7FC000H - 7FDFFFH
8 KByte
139
138
7FA000H - 7FBFFFH
8 KByte
137
136
7F8000H - 7F9FFFH
8 KByte
135
134
006000H - 007FFFH
8 KByte
133
132
004000H - 005FFFH
8 KByte
131
130
002000H - 003FFFH
8 KByte
129
128
000000H - 001FFFH
8 KByte
127
7F0000H - 7F7FFFH
32 KByte
126
008000H - 00FFFFH
32 KByte
125
7E0000H - 7EFFFFH
64 KByte
124
7D0000H - 7DFFFFH
64 KByte
123
7C0000H - 7CFFFFH
64 KByte
122
7B0000H - 7BFFFFH
64 KByte
121
7A0000H - 7AFFFFH
64 KByte
120
790000H - 79FFFFH
64 KByte
119
780000H - 78FFFFH
64 KByte
118
770000H - 77FFFFH
64 KByte
117
760000H - 76FFFFH
64 KByte
116
750000H - 75FFFFH
64 KByte
115
740000H - 74FFFFH
64 KByte
114
730000H - 73FFFFH
64 KByte
113
720000H - 72FFFFH
64 KByte
112
710000H - 71FFFFH
64 KByte
111
700000H - 70FFFFH
64 KByte
110
6F0000H - 6FFFFFH
64 KByte
109
6E0000H - 6EFFFFH
64 KByte
108
6D0000H - 6DFFFFH
64 KByte
107
6C0000H - 6CFFFFH
64 KByte
106
6B0000H - 6BFFFFH
64 KByte
105
6A0000H - 6AFFFFH
64 KByte
104
690000H - 69FFFFH
64 KByte
103
680000H - 68FFFFH
64 KByte
102
670000H - 67FFFFH
64 KByte
101
660000H - 66FFFFH
64 KByte
100
650000H - 65FFFFH
64 KByte
99
640000H - 64FFFFH
64 KByte
98
630000H - 63FFFFH
64 KByte
97
620000H - 62FFFFH
64 KByte
96
610000H - 61FFFFH
64 KByte
95
600000H - 60FFFFH
64 KByte
94
5F0000H - 5FFFFFH
64 KByte
93
5E0000H - 5EFFFFH
64 KByte
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 43
SST26WF064C
TABLE 5-6:
BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER FOR SST26WF064C (CONTINUED) (2 OF 4)1
BPR Bits
Read Lock
DS20005430C-page 44
Write Lock/
nVWLDR2
Address Range
Protected Block
Size
92
5D0000H - 5DFFFFH
64 KByte
91
5C0000H - 5CFFFFH
64 KByte
90
5B0000H - 5BFFFFH
64 KByte
89
5A0000H - 5AFFFFH
64 KByte
88
590000H - 59FFFFH
64 KByte
87
580000H - 58FFFFH
64 KByte
86
570000H - 57FFFFH
64 KByte
85
560000H - 56FFFFH
64 KByte
84
550000H - 55FFFFH
64 KByte
83
540000H - 54FFFFH
64 KByte
82
530000H - 53FFFFH
64 KByte
81
520000H - 52FFFFH
64 KByte
80
510000H - 51FFFFH
64 KByte
79
500000H - 50FFFFH
64 KByte
78
4F0000H - 4FFFFFH
64 KByte
77
4E0000H - 4EFFFFH
64 KByte
76
4D0000H - 4DFFFFH
64 KByte
75
4C0000H - 4CFFFFH
64 KByte
74
4B0000H - 4BFFFFH
64 KByte
73
4A0000H - 4AFFFFH
64 KByte
72
490000H - 49FFFFH
64 KByte
71
480000H - 48FFFFH
64 KByte
70
470000H - 47FFFFH
64 KByte
69
460000H - 46FFFFH
64 KByte
68
450000H - 45FFFFH
64 KByte
67
440000H - 44FFFFH
64 KByte
66
430000H - 43FFFFH
64 KByte
65
420000H - 42FFFFH
64 KByte
64
410000H - 41FFFFH
64 KByte
63
400000H - 40FFFFH
64 KByte
62
3F0000H - 3FFFFFH
64 KByte
61
3E0000H - 3EFFFFH
64 KByte
60
3D0000H - 3DFFFFH
64 KByte
59
3C0000H - 3CFFFFH
64 KByte
58
3B0000H - 3BFFFFH
64 KByte
57
3A0000H - 3AFFFFH
64 KByte
56
390000H - 39FFFFH
64 KByte
55
380000H - 38FFFFH
64 KByte
54
370000H - 37FFFFH
64 KByte
53
360000H - 36FFFFH
64 KByte
52
350000H - 35FFFFH
64 KByte
51
340000H - 34FFFFH
64 KByte
50
330000H - 33FFFFH
64 KByte
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
TABLE 5-6:
BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER FOR SST26WF064C (CONTINUED) (3 OF 4)1
BPR Bits
Read Lock
Write Lock/
nVWLDR2
Address Range
Protected Block
Size
49
320000H - 32FFFFH
64 KByte
48
310000H - 31FFFFH
64 KByte
47
300000H - 30FFFFH
64 KByte
46
2F0000H - 2FFFFFH
64 KByte
45
2E0000H - 2EFFFFH
64 KByte
44
2D0000H - 2DFFFFH
64 KByte
43
2C0000H - 2CFFFFH
64 KByte
42
2B0000H - 2BFFFFH
64 KByte
41
2A0000H - 2AFFFFH
64 KByte
40
290000H - 29FFFFH
64 KByte
39
280000H - 28FFFFH
64 KByte
38
270000H - 27FFFFH
64 KByte
37
260000H - 26FFFFH
64 KByte
36
250000H - 25FFFFH
64 KByte
35
240000H - 24FFFFH
64 KByte
34
230000H - 23FFFFH
64 KByte
33
220000H - 22FFFFH
64 KByte
32
210000H - 21FFFFH
64 KByte
31
200000H - 20FFFFH
64 KByte
30
1F0000H - 1FFFFFH
64 KByte
29
1E0000H - 1EFFFFH
64 KByte
28
1D0000H - 1DFFFFH
64 KByte
27
1C0000H - 1CFFFFH
64 KByte
26
1B0000H - 1BFFFFH
64 KByte
25
1A0000H - 1AFFFFH
64 KByte
24
190000H - 19FFFFH
64 KByte
23
180000H - 18FFFFH
64 KByte
22
170000H - 17FFFFH
64 KByte
21
160000H - 16FFFFH
64 KByte
20
150000H - 15FFFFH
64 KByte
19
140000H - 14FFFFH
64 KByte
18
130000H - 13FFFFH
64 KByte
17
120000H - 12FFFFH
64 KByte
16
110000H - 11FFFFH
64 KByte
15
100000H - 10FFFFH
64 KByte
14
0F0000H - 0FFFFFH
64 KByte
13
0E0000H - 0EFFFFH
64 KByte
12
0D0000H - 0DFFFFH
64 KByte
11
0C0000H - 0CFFFFH
64 KByte
10
0B0000H - 0BFFFFH
64 KByte
9
0A0000H - 0AFFFFH
64 KByte
8
090000H - 09FFFFH
64 KByte
7
080000H - 08FFFFH
64 KByte
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 45
SST26WF064C
TABLE 5-6:
BLOCK-PROTECTION REGISTER FOR SST26WF064C (CONTINUED) (4 OF 4)1
BPR Bits
Read Lock
Write Lock/
nVWLDR2
Address Range
Protected Block
Size
6
070000H - 07FFFFH
64 KByte
5
060000H - 06FFFFH
64 KByte
4
050000H - 05FFFFH
64 KByte
3
040000H - 04FFFFH
64 KByte
2
030000H - 03FFFFH
64 KByte
1
020000H - 02FFFFH
64 KByte
0
010000H - 01FFFFH
64 KByte
1. The default state after a power-on reset or hardware reset is write-protected BPR[143:0] = 5555 FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF FFFFFFFF
FFFFFFFF
2. nVWLDR bits are one-time-programmable. Once a nVWLDR bit is set, the protection state of that particular block is permanently write-locked.
DS20005430C-page 46
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
5.39
Deep Power-Down
Enter Deep Power-down mode by initiating the Deep
Power-down (DPD) instruction (B9H) while driving CE#
low. CE# must be driven high before executing the
DPD instruction. After CE# is driven high, it requires a
delay of TDPD before the standby current ISB is reduced
to deep power-down current IDPD. See Table 5-7 for
Deep Power-down timing. If the device is busy performing an internal erase or program operation, initiating a
Deep Power-down instruction will not placed the device
in Deep Power-down mode. See Figures 5-52 and 5-53
for the DPD instruction sequence.
The Deep Power-down (DPD) instruction puts the
device in the lowest power consumption mode–the
Deep Power-down mode. The Deep Power-down
instruction is ignored during an internal write operation.
While the device is in Deep Power-down mode, all
instructions will be ignored except for the Release
Deep Power-down instruction.
TABLE 5-7:
Symbol
DEEP POWER-DOWN
Parameter
Min
Max
Units
TDPD
CE# High to Deep Power-down
3
µs
TSBR
CE# High to Standby Mode
10
µs
FIGURE 5-52:
DEEP POWER-DOWN (DPD) SEQUENCE (SQI)
CE#
TDPD
MODE 3
SCK
1
0
MODE 0
B
9
MSN
LSN
SIO(3:0)
Standby Mode Deep Power-Down Mode
20005430 F100.0
Note: MSN= Most Significant Nibble; LSN = Least Significant Nibble
FIGURE 5-53:
DEEP POWER-DOWN (DPD) (SPI)
CE#
TDPD
MODE 3
SCK
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
MODE 0
B9
SI
MSB
SO
HIGH IMPEDANCE
Standby Mode Deep Power-Down Mode
20005430 F101.0
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
DS20005430C-page 47
SST26WF064C
5.40
Release from Deep Power-Down
and Read ID
To execute RDPD and read the Device ID, the host
drives CE# low then sends the Deep Power-Down
command cycle (ABH), three dummy clock cycles, and
then drives CE# high. The device outputs the Device ID
on the falling edge of the SCK signal following the
dummy cycles. The data output stream is continuous
until terminated by a low-to-high transition on CE, and
will return to Standby mode and be ready for the next
instruction after TSBR. See Figures 5-54 and 5-55 for
the command sequence.
Release from Deep Power-Down (RDPD) and Read ID
instruction exits Deep Power-down mode. To exit Deep
Power down mode, execute the RDPD. During this
command, the host drives CE# low, then sends the
Deep Power-Down command cycle (ABH), and then
drives CE# high. The device will return to Standby
mode and be ready for the next instruction after TSBR.
FIGURE 5-54:
RELEASE FROM DEEP POWER-DOWN (RDPD) AND READ ID SEQUENCE (SQI)
TSBR
CE#
MODE 3
0
1
SCK MODE 0
Op Code
SIO[3:0]
C1
C0
MSN
LSN
X
X
X
X
X
X
D1 D0
Device ID
Deep Power-Down Mode Standby Mode
20005430 F102.0
Note: C[1:0]=ABH
FIGURE 5-55:
RELEASE FROM DEEP POWER-DOWN (RDPD) AND READ ID SEQUENCE (SPI)
TSBR
CE#
MODE 3
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
15 16
23 24
32 33
40
SCK MODE 0
Op Code
SIO[3:0]
AB
XX
XX
XX
Device ID
Deep Power-Down Mode Standby Mode
20005430 F103.0
DS20005430C-page 48
2016-2018 Microchip Technology Inc.
SST26WF064C
6.0
ELECTRICAL SPECIFICATIONS
Applied conditions greater than those listed under “Absolute Maximum Stress Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress rating only and functional operation of the device at these conditions or conditions greater than those defined in the operational sections of this data sheet is not implied.
Exposure to absolute maximum stress rating conditions may affect device reliability.)
Temperature Under Bias . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -55°C to +125°C
Storage Temperature . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . -65°C to +150°C
D. C. Voltage on Any Pin to Ground Potential . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .-0.5V to VDD+0.5V
Transient Voltage (