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BCM20730A1KFBGT

BCM20730A1KFBGT

  • 厂商:

    CYPRESS(赛普拉斯)

  • 封装:

    VFBGA64

  • 描述:

    IC RF TxRx + MCU Bluetooth Bluetooth v3.0 2.4GHz 64-VFBGA

  • 数据手册
  • 价格&库存
BCM20730A1KFBGT 数据手册
Please note that Cypress is an Infineon Technologies Company. The document following this cover page is marked as “Cypress” document as this is the company that originally developed the product. Please note that Infineon will continue to offer the product to new and existing customers as part of the Infineon product portfolio. Continuity of document content The fact that Infineon offers the following product as part of the Infineon product portfolio does not lead to any changes to this document. Future revisions will occur when appropriate, and any changes will be set out on the document history page. Continuity of ordering part numbers Infineon continues to support existing part numbers. Please continue to use the ordering part numbers listed in the datasheet for ordering. www.infineon.com  CYW20730 Single-Chip Bluetooth Transceiver for Wireless Input Devices The Cypress® CYW20730 is a Bluetooth 5.1-compliant, stand-alone baseband processor with an integrated 2.4 GHz transceiver. It is ideal for wireless input device applications including game controllers, keyboards, 3D glasses, remote controls, gestural input devices, and sensor devices. Built-in firmware adheres to the Bluetooth Human Interface Device (HID) profile and Bluetooth Device ID profile specifications. The CYW20730 radio has been designed to provide low power, low cost, and robust communications for applications operating in the globally available 2.4 GHz unlicensed ISM band. It is fully compliant with Bluetooth Radio Specification 5.1. The single-chip Bluetooth transceiver is a monolithic component implemented in a standard digital CMOS process and requires minimal external components to make a fully compliant Bluetooth device. The CYW20730 is available in three package options: a 32pin, 5 mm × 5 mm QFN, a 40-pin, 6 mm × 6 mm QFN, and a 64-pin, 7 mm × 7 mm BGA. Features ■ On-chip support for common keyboard and mouse interfaces eliminates external processor ■ On-chip support for serial peripheral interface (master and slave modes) ■ Programmable keyscan matrix interface, up to 8 × 20 keyscanning matrix ■ Serial Communications interface (compatible with Philips® (now NXP) I2C slaves) ■ 3-axis quadrature signal decoder ■ ■ Shutter control for 3D glasses Programmable output power control meets Class 2 or Class 3 requirements ■ Infrared modulator ■ Class 1 operation supported with external PA and T/R switch ■ Triac control ■ Integrated ARM Cortex™-M3 based microprocessor core ■ Triggered bluetooth Fast Connect (Only supported on CYW20730A1) ■ On-chip power-on reset (POR) ■ Support for EEPROM and serial flash interfaces ■ Supports Adaptive Frequency Hopping ■ Integrated low-dropout regulator (LDO) ■ Excellent receiver sensitivity ■ On-chip software controlled power management unit ■ Bluetooth specification 5.1 compatible ■ ■ Bluetooth HID profile version 1.1 compliant ■ Bluetooth Device ID profile version 1.3 compliant Three package types are available: ❐ 32-pin QFN package (5 mm × 5 mm) ❐ 40-pin QFN package (6 mm × 6 mm) ❐ 64-pin BGA package (7 mm × 7 mm) ■ Bluetooth AVRCP-CT profile version 1.3 compliant ■ RoHS compliant ■ 10-bit auxiliary ADC with 28 analog channels Applications ■ Wireless pointing devices: mice, trackballs, gestural controls ■ Point-of-sale (POS) input devices ■ Wireless keyboards ■ Remote sensors ■ 3D glasses ■ Home automation ■ Remote controls ■ Personal health and fitness monitoring ■ Game controllers Cypress Semiconductor Corporation Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K • 198 Champion Court • San Jose, CA 95134-1709 • 408-943-2600 Revised June 8, 2020 PRELIMINARY CYW20730 Figure 1. Functional Block Diagram Muxed on GPIO RTS_N RX TX CTS_N UART_TXD SCL/ SCK SDA/ MISO MOSI UART_RXD 1.2V VDD_CORE 1.2V 28 ADC Inputs Serial control/SPI Master Interface (SC is I2C compatible) 1.2V VDD_CORE Domain WDT Test UART Processing Unit (Arm - CM3) Periph UART 320K ROM 60K RAM VSS, VDDO, VDDC 1.2V POR CT ‫ﺨ‬ ADC 1.2V LDO 1.425V to 3.6V MIA POR System Bus 32 kHz LPCLK Peripheral Interface Block hclk (24 MHz to 1 MHz) Volt. Trans 1.62V to 3.6V VDD_IO Domain I/O Ring Control Registers I/O Ring Bus RF Control and Data 2.4 GHz Radio Bluetooth Baseband Core GPIO Control/ Status Registers IR Mod SPI M/S Keyboard Matrix Scanner w/FIFO 3-Axis Mouse Signal Controller 24 MHz RF I/O Frequency Synthesizer PMU WAKE 40 GPIO T/R Switch 3-D Glasses and Triac IR I/O 8 x 20 Scan 6 Quadrature Matrix Inputs (3 pair) + High Current Driver Controls Power 32 kHz LPCLK 128 kHz LPO AutoCal 28 ADC Inputs 1.2V VDD_RF Domain 24 MHz Ref Xtal Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K 40 GPIO on the 64-pin BGA (22 GPIO on the 40-pin QFN) (14 GPIO on the 32-pin QFN) 128 kHz LPCLK PWM 1.62V to 3.6V VDD_IO ÷4 32 kHz Xtal (optional) Page 2 of 47 CYW20730 Contents 1. Functional Description ................................................. 4 1.1 Keyboard Scanner ................................................. 4 1.2 Mouse Quadrature Signal Decoder ....................... 5 1.3 Shutter Control for 3D Glasses ............................. 5 1.4 Infrared Modulator ................................................. 6 1.5 Triac Control .......................................................... 6 1.6 Broadcom Proprietary Control Signaling and Triggered Bluetooth Fast Connect (Only supported on CYW20730A1) ........................................................... 6 1.7 Bluetooth Baseband Core ..................................... 7 1.8 ADC Port ............................................................... 8 1.9 Serial Peripheral Interface ..................................... 9 1.10 Microprocessor Unit .......................................... 11 1.11 Integrated Radio Transceiver ............................ 13 1.12 Peripheral Transport Unit .................................. 14 1.13 Clock Frequencies ............................................. 14 1.14 GPIO Port .......................................................... 16 1.15 PWM .................................................................. 17 Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K 1.16 Power Management Unit ................................... 18 2. Pin Assignments ........................................................ 19 2.1 Pin Descriptions .................................................. 19 2.2 Ball Maps ............................................................. 27 3. Specifications ............................................................. 30 3.1 Electrical Characteristics ..................................... 30 3.2 RF Specifications ................................................ 33 3.3 Timing and AC Characteristics ............................ 35 4. Mechanical Information ............................................. 40 4.1 Tape Reel and Packaging Specifications ............ 43 5. Ordering Information .................................................. 44 6. Additional Information ............................................... 44 6.1 Acronyms and Abbreviations ............................... 44 6.2 References .......................................................... 44 6.3 IoT Resources ..................................................... 44 Document History .......................................................... 45 Sales, Solutions, and Legal Information ..................... 47 Page 3 of 47 CYW20730 1. Functional Description 1.1 Keyboard Scanner The keyboard scanner is designed to autonomously sample keys and store them into buffer registers without the need for the host microcontroller to intervene. The scanner has the following features: ■ Ability to turn off its clock if no keys pressed. ■ Sequential scanning of up to 160 keys in an 8 x 20 matrix. ■ Programmable number of columns from 1 to 20. ■ Programmable number of rows from 1 to 8. ■ 16-byte key-code buffer (can be augmented by firmware). ■ 128 kHz clock – allows scanning of full 160-key matrix in about 1.2 ms. ■ N-key rollover with selective 2-key lockout if ghost is detected. ■ Keys are buffered until host microcontroller has a chance to read it, or until overflow occurs. ■ Hardware debouncing and noise/glitch filtering. ■ Low-power consumption. Single-digit µA-level sleep current. 1.1.1 Theory of Operation The key scan block is controlled by a state machine with the following states: Idle The state machine begins in the idle state. In this state, all column outputs are driven high. If any key is pressed, a transition occurs on one of the row inputs. This transition causes the 128 kHz clock to be enabled (if it is not already enabled by another peripheral) and the state machine to enter the scan state. Also in this state, an 8-bit row-hit register and an 8-bit key-index counter is reset to 0. Scan In the scan state, a row counter counts from 0 up to a programmable number of rows minus 1. Once the last row is reached, the row counter is reset and the column counter is incremented. This cycle repeats until the row and column counters are both at their respective terminal count values. At that point, the state machine moves into the Scan-End state. As the keys are being scanned, the key-index counter is incremented. This counter is the value compared to the modifier key codes stored, or in the key-code buffer if the key is not a modifier key. It can be used by the microprocessor as an index into a lookup table of usage codes. Also, as the n-th row is scanned, the row-hit register is ORed with the current 8-bit row input values if the current column contains two or more row hits. During the scan of any column, if a key is detected at the current row, and the row-hit register indicates that a hit was detected in that same row on a previous column, then a ghost condition may have occurred, and a bit in the status register is set to indicate this. Scan End This state determines whether any keys were detected while in the scan state. If yes, the state machine returns to the scan state. If no, the state machine returns to the idle state, and the 128 kHz clock request signal is made inactive. The microcontroller can poll the key status register. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 4 of 47 CYW20730 1.2 Mouse Quadrature Signal Decoder The mouse signal decoder is designed to autonomously sample two quadrature signals commonly generated by optomechanical mouse apparatus. The decoder has the following features: ■ Three pairs of inputs for X, Y, and Z (typical scroll wheel) axis signals. Each axis has two options: For the X axis, choose P2 or P32 as X0 and P3 or P33 as X1. ❐ For the Y axis, choose P4 or P34 as Y0 and P5 or P35 as Y1. ❐ For the Z axis, choose P6 or P36 as Z0 and P7 or P37 as Z1. ❐ ■ Control of up to four external high current GPIOs to power external optoelectronics: Turn-on and turn-off time can be staggered for each HC-GPIO to avoid simultaneous switching of high currents and having multiple high-current devices on at the same time. ❐ Sample time can be staggered for each axis. ❐ Sense of the control signal can be active high or active low. ❐ Control signal can be tristated for off condition or driven high or low, as appropriate. ❐ 1.2.1 Theory of Operation The mouse decoder block has four 16-bit PWMs for controlling external quadrature devices and sampling the quadrature inputs at its core. The GPIO signals may be used to control such items as LEDs, external ICs that may emulate quadrature signals, photodiodes, and photodetectors. 1.3 Shutter Control for 3D Glasses The CYW20730, combined with the CYW20702, provides full system support for 3D glasses on televisions. The CYW20702 gets frame synchronization signals from the TV, converts them into proprietary timing control messages, then passes these messages to the CYW20730. The CYW20730 uses these messages to synchronize the shutter control for the 3D glasses with the television frames. The CYW20730 can provide up to four synchronized control signals for left and right eye shutter control. These four lines can output pulses with microsecond resolution for on and off timing. The total cycle time can be set for any period up to 65535 msec. The pulses are synchronized to each other for left and right eye shutters. The CYW20730 seamlessly adjusts the timing of the control signals based on control messages from the CYW20702, ensuring that the 3D glasses remain synchronized to the TV display frame. 3D hardware control on the CYW20730 works independently of the rest of the system. The CYW20730 negotiates sniff with the CYW20702 and, except for sniff resynchronization periods, most of the CYW20730 circuitry remains in a low power state while the 3D glasses subsystem continues to provide shutter timing and control pulses. This significantly reduces total system power consumption. The CYW20730A2 has the new BT SIG 3DG profile, as well as legacy mode 3DG, included in ROM. This allows it to support a smaller and lower cost external memory of 4 KB. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 5 of 47 CYW20730 1.4 Infrared Modulator The CYW20730 includes hardware support for infrared TX. The hardware can transmit both modulated and unmodulated waveforms. For modulated waveforms, hardware inserts the desired carrier frequency into all IR transmissions. IR TX can be sourced from firmware-supplied descriptors, a programmable bit, or the peripheral UART transmitter. If descriptors are used, they include IR on/off state and the duration between 1–32767 µsec. The CYW20730 IR TX firmware driver inserts this information in a hardware FIFO and makes sure that all descriptors are played out without a glitch due to underrun. See Figure 2. Figure 2. Infrared TX 1.5 Triac Control The CYW20730 includes hardware support for zero-crossing detection and trigger control for up to four triacs. The CYW20730 detects zero-crossing on the AC zero detection line and uses that to provide a pulse that is offset from the zero-crossing. This allows the CYW20730 to be used in dimmer applications, as well as any other applications that require a control signal that is offset from an input event. 1.6 Broadcom Proprietary Control Signaling and Triggered Bluetooth Fast Connect (Only supported on CYW20730A1) Bluetooth Proprietary Control Signaling and Triggered Bluetooth Fast Connect (TBFC) are bluetooth proprietary baseband (ACL) suspension and low latency reconnection mechanisms that reestablish the baseband connection with the peer controller that also supports BPCS/TBFC. The CYW20730 uses BPCS primitives to allow a Human Interface Device (HID) to suspend all RF traffic after a configurable idle period with no reportable activity. To conserve power, it can then enter one of its low power states while still logically remaining connected at the L2CAP and HID layers with the peer device. When an event requires the HID to deliver a report to the peer device, the CYW20730 uses the TBFC and BPCS mechanisms to reestablish the baseband connection and can immediately resume L2CAP traffic, greatly reducing latency between the event and delivery of the report to the peer device. Certain applications may make use of the CYW20730 Baseband Fast Connect (BFC) mechanism for power savings and lower latencies not achievable by using even long sniff intervals by completely eliminating the need to maintain an RF link, while still being able to establish ACL and L2CAP connections much faster than regular methods. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 6 of 47 CYW20730 1.7 Bluetooth Baseband Core The Bluetooth Baseband Core (BBC) implements all of the time-critical functions required for high performance Bluetooth operation. The BBC manages the buffering, segmentation, and data routing for all connections. It also buffers data that passes through it, handles data flow control, schedules ACL TX/RX transactions, monitors Bluetooth slot usage, optimally segments and packages data into baseband packets, manages connection status indicators, and composes and decodes HCI packets. In addition to these functions, it independently handles HCI event types and HCI command types. The following transmit and receive functions are also implemented in the BBC hardware to increase TX/RX data reliability and security before sending over the air: ■ Receive Functions: symbol timing recovery, data deframing, forward error correction (FEC), header error control (HEC), cyclic redundancy check (CRC), data decryption, and data dewhitening. ■ Transmit Functions: data framing, FEC generation, HEC generation, CRC generation, link key generation, data encryption, and data whitening. 1.7.1 Frequency Hopping Generator The frequency hopping sequence generator selects the correct hopping channel number depending on the link controller state, Bluetooth clock, and device address. 1.7.2 E0 Encryption The encryption key and the encryption engine are implemented using dedicated hardware to reduce software complexity and provide minimal processor intervention. 1.7.3 Link Control Layer The link control layer is part of the Bluetooth link control functions that are implemented in dedicated logic in the Link Control Unit (LCU). This layer consists of the Command Controller, which takes software commands, and other controllers that are activated or configured by the Command Controller to perform the link control tasks. Each task performs a different Bluetooth link controller state. STANDBY and CONNECTION are the two major states. In addition, there are five substates: page, page scan, inquiry, inquiry scan, and sniff. 1.7.4 Adaptive Frequency Hopping The CYW20730 gathers link quality statistics on a channel-by-channel basis to facilitate channel assessment and channel map selection. The link quality is determined by using both RF and baseband signal processing to provide a more accurate frequency hop map. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 7 of 47 CYW20730 1.7.5 Bluetooth Version 5.1 Features The CYW20730 supports Bluetooth 5.1, including the following options: ■ Enhanced Power Control ■ Unicast Connectionless Data ■ HCI Read Encryption Key Size command The CYW20730 also supports the following Bluetooth version 2.1 features: ■ Extended Inquiry Response ■ Sniff Subrating ■ Encryption Pause and Resume ■ Secure Simple Pairing ■ Link Supervision Timeout Changed Event ■ Erroneous Data Reporting ■ Non-Automatically-Flushable Packet Boundary Flag ■ Security Mode 4 1.7.6 Test Mode Support The CYW20730 fully supports Bluetooth Test mode, as described in Part 1 of the Bluetooth 5.1 specification. This includes the transmitter tests, normal and delayed loopback tests, and the reduced hopping sequence. In addition to the standard Bluetooth Test mode, the device supports enhanced testing features to simplify RF debugging and qualification as well as type-approval testing. 1.8 ADC Port The CYW20730 contains a 16-bit ADC (effective number of bits is 10). Additionally: ■ There are 28 analog input channels in the 64-pin package, 12 analog input channels in the 40-pin package, and 9 analog input channels in the 32-pin package. All channels are multiplexed on various GPIOs. ■ The conversion time is 10 s. ■ There is a built-in reference with supply- or band-gap based reference modes. ■ The maximum conversion rate is 187 kHz. ■ There is a rail-to-rail input swing. The ADC consists of an analog ADC core that performs the actual analog-to-digital conversion and digital hardware that processes the output of the ADC core into valid ADC output samples. Directed by the firmware, the digital hardware also controls the input multiplexers that select the ADC input signal Vinp and the ADC reference signals Vref. Table 2. ADC Modes Mode ENOB (Typical) Maximum Sampling Rate (kHz) Latency[1](s) 0 13 5.859 171 1 12.6 11.7 85 2 12 46.875 21 3 11.5 93.75 11 4 10 187 5 Note 1. Settling time after switching channels. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 8 of 47 CYW20730 1.9 Serial Peripheral Interface The CYW20730 has two independent SPI interfaces. One is a master-only interface and the other can be either a master or a slave. Each interface has a 16-byte transmit buffer and a 16-byte receive buffer. To support more flexibility for user applications, the CYW20730 has optional I/O ports that can be configured individually and separately for each functional pin, as shown in Table 5. The CYW20730 acts as an SPI master device that supports 1.8V or 3.3V SPI slaves, as shown in Table 5. The CYW20730 can also act as an SPI slave device that supports a 1.8V or 3.3V SPI master, as shown in Table 5. Table 3. CYW20730 First SPI Set (Master Mode) SPI_CLK SPI_MOSI SPI_MISO SPI_CS[2] Configuration set 1 SCL SDA P24 – Configuration set 2 SCL SDA P26 – Configuration set 3 (Default for serial flash) SCL SDA P32 P33 Configuration set 4 SCL SDA P39 – Pin Name Note 2. Any GPIO can be used as SPI_CS when SPI is in master mode Table 4. CYW20730 Second SPI Set (Master Mode) SPI_CLK SPI_MOSI SPI_MISO SPI_CS[3] Configuration set 1 P3 P0 P1 – Configuration set 2 P3 P0 P5 – Configuration set 3 P3 P2 P1 – Configuration set 4 P3 P2 P5 – Configuration set 5 P3 P4 P1 – Configuration set 6 P3 P4 P5 – Configuration set 7 P3 P27 P1 – Configuration set 8 P3 P27 P5 – Configuration set 9 P3 P38 P1 – Configuration set 10 P3 P38 P5 – Configuration set 11 P7 P0 P1 – Configuration set 12 P7 P0 P5 – Configuration set 13 P7 P2 P1 – Configuration set 14 P7 P2 P5 – Configuration set 15 P7 P4 P1 – Configuration set 16 P7 P4 P5 – Configuration set 17 P7 P27 P1 – Configuration set 18 P7 P27 P5 – Configuration set 19 P7 P38 P1 – Configuration set 20 P7 P38 P5 – Configuration set 21 P24 P0 P25 – Configuration set 22 P24 P2 P25 – Configuration set 23 P24 P4 P25 – Pin Name Note 3. Any GPIO can be used as SPI_CS when SPI is in master mode. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 9 of 47 CYW20730 Table 4. CYW20730 Second SPI Set (Master Mode) (Cont.) SPI_CLK SPI_MOSI SPI_MISO SPI_CS[3] Configuration set 24 P24 P27 P25 – Configuration set 25 P24 P38 P25 – Configuration set 26 P36 P0 P25 – Configuration set 27 P36 P2 P25 – Configuration set 28 P36 P4 P25 – Configuration set 29 P36 P27 P25 – Configuration set 30 P36 P38 P25 – SPI_CLK SPI_MOSI SPI_MISO SPI_CS Configuration set 1 P3 P0 P1 P2 Configuration set 2 P3 P0 P5 P2 Configuration set 3 P3 P4 P1 P2 Configuration set 4 P3 P4 P5 P2 Configuration set 5 P7 P0 P1 P2 Configuration set 6 P7 P0 P5 P2 Configuration set 7 P7 P4 P1 P2 Configuration set 8 P7 P4 P5 P2 Configuration set 9 P3 P0 P1 P6 Configuration set 10 P3 P0 P5 P6 Configuration set 11 P3 P4 P1 P6 Configuration set 12 P3 P4 P5 P6 Configuration set 13 P7 P0 P1 P6 Configuration set 14 P7 P0 P5 P6 Configuration set 15 P7 P4 P1 P6 Configuration set 16 P7 P4 P5 P6 Configuration set 17 P24 P27 P25 P26 Configuration set 18 P24 P33 P25 P26 Configuration set 19 P24 P38 P25 P26 Configuration set 20 P36 P27 P25 P26 Configuration set 21 P36 P33 P25 P26 Configuration set 22 P36 P38 P25 P26 Configuration set 23 P24 P27 P25 P32 Configuration set 24 P24 P33 P25 P32 Configuration set 25 P24 P38 P25 P32 Pin Name Note 3. Any GPIO can be used as SPI_CS when SPI is in master mode. Table 5. CYW20730 Second SPI Set (Slave Mode)[4] Pin Name Note 4. Additional configuration sets are available upon request. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 10 of 47 CYW20730 Table 5. CYW20730 Second SPI Set (Slave Mode)[4] SPI_CLK SPI_MOSI SPI_MISO SPI_CS Configuration set 26 Pin Name P36 P27 P25 P32 Configuration set 27 P36 P33 P25 P32 Configuration set 28 P36 P38 P25 P32 Configuration set 29 P24 P27 P25 P39 Configuration set 30 P24 P33 P25 P39 Configuration set 31 P24 P38 P25 P39 Configuration set 32 P36 P27 P25 P39 Configuration set 33 P36 P33 P25 P39 Configuration set 34 P36 P38 P25 P39 Note 4. Additional configuration sets are available upon request. 1.10 Microprocessor Unit The CYW20730 microprocessor unit (µPU) executes software from the link control (LC) layer up to the application layer components that ensure adherence to the Bluetooth Human Interface Device (HID) profile and Audio/Video Remote Control Profile (AVRCP). The microprocessor is based on an ARM Cortex™-M3, 32-bit RISC processor with embedded ICE-RT debug and JTAG interface units. The µPU has 320 KB of ROM for program storage and boot-up, 60 KB of RAM for scratch-pad data, and patch RAM code. The internal boot ROM provides power-on reset flexibility, which enables the same device to be used in different HID applications with an external serial EEPROM or with an external serial flash memory. At power-up, the lowest layer of the protocol stack is executed from the internal ROM memory. External patches may be applied to the ROM-based firmware to provide flexibility for bug fixes and feature additions. The device can also support the integration of user applications. 1.10.1 EEPROM Interface The CYW20730 provides a Serial Control master interface. The BSC is programmed by the CPU to generate four types of BSC bus transfers: read-only, write-only, combined read/write, and combined write/read. BSC supports both low-speed and fast mode devices. The BSC is compatible with a Philips® (now NXP) I2C slave device, except that master arbitration (multiple I2C masters contending for the bus) is not supported. The EEPROM can contain customer application configuration information including: application code, configuration data, patches, pairing information, BD_ADDR, baud rate, SDP service record, and file system information used for code. Native support for the Microchip® 24LC128, Microchip 24AA128, and ST Micro® M24128-BR is included. 1.10.2 Serial Flash Interface The CYW20730 includes an SPI master controller that can be used to access serial flash memory. The SPI master contains an AHB slave interface, transmit and receive FIFOs, and the SPI core PHY logic. Devices natively supported include the following: ■ Atmel® AT25BCM512B ■ MXIC® MX25V512ZUI-20G Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 11 of 47 CYW20730 1.10.3 Internal Reset Figure 3. Internal Reset Timing VDDO POR delay ~ 2 ms VDDO VDDO POR threshold VDDO POR VDDC POR threshold VDDC VDDC POR delay ~ 2 ms VDDC POR Crystal  warm‐up  delay:  ~ 5 ms Baseband Reset Start reading EEPROM and  firmware boot Crystal Enable 1.10.4 External Reset The CYW20730 has an integrated power-on reset circuit that completely resets all circuits to a known power-on state. An external active low reset signal, RESET_N, can be used to put the CYW20730 in the reset state. The RESET_N pin has an internal pull-up resistor and, in most applications, it does not require that anything be connected to it. RESET_N should only be released after the VDDO supply voltage level has been stabilized. Figure 4. External Reset Timing Pulse width >50 µs RESET_N Crystal  warm‐up  delay:  ~ 5 ms Baseband Reset Start reading EEPROM and  firmware boot Crystal Enable Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 12 of 47 CYW20730 1.11 Integrated Radio Transceiver The CYW20730 has an integrated radio transceiver that is optimized for 2.4 GHz Bluetooth® wireless systems. It has been designed to provide low power, low cost, and robust communications for applications operating in the globally available 2.4 GHz unlicensed ISM band. It is fully compliant with Bluetooth Radio Specification 5.1 and meets or exceeds the requirements to provide the highest communication link quality of service. 1.11.1 Transmitter Path The CYW20730 features a fully integrated transmitter. The baseband transmit data is GFSK modulated in the 2.4 GHz ISM band. Digital Modulator The digital modulator performs the data modulation and filtering required for the GFSK signal. The fully digital modulator minimizes any frequency drift or anomalies in the modulation characteristics of the transmitted signal. Power Amplifier The CYW20730 has an integrated power amplifier (PA) that can transmit up to +4 dBm for class 2 operation. 1.11.2 Receiver Path The receiver path uses a low IF scheme to downconvert the received signal for demodulation in the digital demodulator and bit synchronizer. The receiver path provides a high degree of linearity, an extended dynamic range, and high-order, on-chip channel filtering to ensure reliable operation in the noisy 2.4 GHz ISM band. The front-end topology, which has built-in out-of-band attenuation, enables the CYW20730 to be used in most applications without off-chip filtering. Digital Demodulator and Bit Synchronizer The digital demodulator and bit synchronizer take the low-IF received signal and perform an optimal frequency tracking and bit synchronization algorithm. Receiver Signal Strength Indicator The radio portion of the CYW20730 provides a receiver signal strength indicator (RSSI) to the baseband. This enables the controller to take part in a Bluetooth power-controlled link by providing a metric of its own receiver signal strength to determine whether the transmitter should increase or decrease its output power. 1.11.3 Local Oscillator The local oscillator (LO) provides fast frequency hopping (1600 hops/second) across the 79 maximum available channels. The CYW20730 uses an internal loop filter. 1.11.4 Calibration The CYW20730 radio transceiver features a self-contained automated calibration scheme. No user interaction is required during normal operation or during manufacturing to provide optimal performance. Calibration compensates for filter, matching network, and amplifier gain and phase characteristics to yield radio performance within 2% of what is optimal. Calibration takes process and temperature variations into account, and it takes place transparently during normal operation and hop setting times. 1.11.5 Internal LDO Regulator The CYW20730 has an integrated 1.2V LDO regulator that provides power to the digital and RF circuits. The 1.2V LDO regulator operates from a 1.425V to 3.63V input supply with a 30 mA maximum load current. Note: Always place the decoupling capacitors near the pins as closely together as possible. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 13 of 47 CYW20730 1.12 Peripheral Transport Unit 1.12.1 Serial Communications Interface The CYW20730 provides a 2-pin master interface, which can be used to retrieve configuration information from an external EEPROM or to communicate with peripherals such as track-ball or touch-pad modules, and motion tracking ICs used in mouse devices. The BSC interface is compatible with I2C slave devices. The BSC does not support multimaster capability or flexible wait-state insertion by either master or slave devices. The following transfer clock rates are supported are: ■ 100 kHz ■ 400 kHz ■ 800 kHz (Not a standard I2C-compatible speed.) ■ 1 MHz (Compatibility with high-speed I2C-compatible devices is not guaranteed.) The following transfer types are supported by the BSC: ■ Read (Up to 16 bytes can be read.) ■ Write (Up to 16 bytes can be written.) ■ Read-then-Write (Up to 16 bytes can be read and up to 16 bytes can be written.) ■ Write-then-Read (Up to 16 bytes can be written and up to 16 bytes can be read.) Hardware controls the transfers, requiring minimal firmware setup and supervision. The clock pin (SCL) and data pin (SDA) are both open-drain I/O pins. Pull-up resistors external to the CYW20730 are required on both the SCL and SDA pins for proper operation. 1.12.2 UART Interface The UART is a standard 2-wire interface (RX and TX) and has adjustable baud rates from 9600 bps to 1.5 Mbps. The baud rate can be selected via a vendor-specific UART HCI command. The interface supports the Bluetooth 5.1 UART HCI (H5) specification. The default baud rate for H5 is 115.2 kbaud. Both high and low baud rates can be supported by running the UART clock at 24 MHz. The CYW20730 UART operates correctly with the host UART as long as the combined baud rate error of the two devices is within ±5%. 1.13 Clock Frequencies The CYW20730 is set with crystal frequency of 24 MHz. 1.13.1 Crystal Oscillator The crystal oscillator requires a crystal with an accuracy of ±20 ppm as defined by the Bluetooth specification. Two external load capacitors in the range of 5 pF to 30 pF are required to work with the crystal oscillator. The selection of the load capacitors is crystal dependent. Table 6 on page 15 shows the recommended crystal specification. Figure 5. Recommended Oscillator Configuration — 12 pF Load Crystal 22 pF XIN Crystal XOUT 20 pF Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 14 of 47 CYW20730 Table 6. Reference Crystal Electrical Specifications Conditions Minimum Typical Maximum Unit Nominal frequency Parameter – – 24.000 – MHz Oscillation mode – Fundamental @25°C – ±10 Tolerance stability over temp @0°C to +70°C – Equivalent series resistance – – Load capacitance – Operating temperature range – – ppm ±10 – ppm – 50 W – 12 – pF – 0 – +70 °C Storage temperature range – –40 – +125 °C Drive level – – – 200 W Aging – – – ±10 ppm/year Shunt capacitance – – – 2 pF Frequency tolerance HID Peripheral Block The peripheral blocks of the CYW20730 all run from a single 128 kHz low-power RC oscillator. The oscillator can be turned on at the request of any of the peripherals. If the peripheral is not enabled, it shall not assert its clock request line. The keyboard scanner is a special case in that it may drop its clock request line even when enabled and then reassert the clock request line if a keypress is detected. 32 kHz Crystal Oscillator Figure 6 shows the 32 kHz crystal (XTAL) oscillator with external components and Table 7 on page 16 lists the oscillator’s characteristics. It is a standard Pierce oscillator using a comparator with hysteresis on the output to create a single-ended digital output. The hysteresis was added to eliminate any chatter when the input is around the threshold of the comparator and is ~100 mV. This circuit can be operated with a 32 kHz or 32.768 kHz crystal oscillator or be driven with a clock input at similar frequency. The default component values are: R1 = 10 M, C1 = C2 = ~10 pF. The values of C1 and C2 are used to fine-tune the oscillator. Figure 6. 32 kHz Oscillator Block Diagram C2 R1 32.768 kHz XTAL C1 Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 15 of 47 CYW20730 Table 7. XTAL Oscillator Characteristics Parameter Symbol Conditions Minimum Typical Maximum Unit Output frequency Foscout – – 32.768 – kHz – Crystal dependent – 100 – ppm Tstartup – – – 500 ms Pdrv For crystal selection 0.5 – – W XTAL series resistance Rseries For crystal selection – – 70 k XTAL shunt capacitance Cshunt For crystal selection – – 1.3 pF Frequency tolerance Start-up time XTAL drive level 1.14 GPIO Port The CYW20730 has 14 general-purpose I/Os (GPIOs) in the 32-pin package, 22 GPIOs in the 40-pin package, and 40 GPIOs in the 64-pin package. All GPIOs support programmable pull-up and pull-down resistors, and all support a 2 mA drive strength except P26, P27, P28, and P29, which provide a 16 mA drive strength at 3.3V supply. 1.14.1 Port 0–Port 1, Port 8–Port 23, and Port 28–Port 38 All of these pins can be programmed as ADC inputs. 1.14.2 Port 26–Port 29 P[26:29] consists of four pins. All pins are capable of sinking up to 16 mA for LED. These pins also have the PWM function, which can be used for LED dimming. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 16 of 47 CYW20730 1.15 PWM The CYW20730 has four internal PWM channels. The PWM module consists of the following: ■ ■ PWM1–4 Each of the four PWM channels, PWM1–4, contains the following registers: 10-bit initial value register (read/write) ❐ 10-bit toggle register (read/write) ❐ 10-bit PWM counter value register (read) ❐ The PWM configuration register is shared among PWM1–4 (read/write). This 12-bit register is used: To configure each PWM channel. ❐ To select the clock of each PWM channel ❐ To change the phase of each PWM channel Figure 7 shows the structure of one PWM channel. ■ ❐ Figure 7. PWM Channel Block Diagram pwm_cfg_adr register pwm#_init_val_adr register pwm#_togg_val_adr register enable clk_sel o_flip 10 10 pwm#_cntr_adr 10 cntr value is CM3 readable pwm_out Example: PWM cntr w/ pwm#_init_val = 0 (dashed line) PWM cntr w/ pwm#_init_val = x (solid line)                   10'H3FF pwm_togg_val_adr 10'Hx 10'H000 pwm_out Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 17 of 47 CYW20730 1.16 Power Management Unit The Power Management Unit (PMU) provides power management features that can be invoked by software through power management registers or packet-handling in the baseband core. 1.16.1 RF Power Management The BBC generates power-down control signals for the transmit path, receive path, PLL, and power amplifier to the 2.4 GHz transceiver, which then processes the power-down functions accordingly. 1.16.2 Host Controller Power Management Power is automatically managed by the firmware based on input device activity. As a power-saving task, the firmware controls the disabling of the on-chip regulator when in deep Sleep mode. 1.16.3 BBC Power Management There are several low-power operations for the BBC: ■ Physical layer packet handling turns RF on and off dynamically within packet TX and RX. ■ Bluetooth-specified low-power connection sniff mode. While in these low-power connection modes, the CYW20730 runs on the Low Power Oscillator and wakes up after a predefined time period. The CYW20730 automatically adjusts its power dissipation based on user activity. The following power modes are supported: ■ Active mode ■ Idle mode ■ Sleep mode ■ HIDOFF mode The CYW20730 transitions to the next lower state after a programmable period of user inactivity. Busy mode is immediately entered when user activity resumes. In HIDOFF mode, the CYW20730 baseband and core are powered off by disabling power to LDOOUT. The VDDO domain remains powered up and will turn the remainder of the chip on when it detects user events. This mode minimizes chip power consumption and is intended for long periods of inactivity. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 18 of 47 CYW20730 2. Pin Assignments 2.1 Pin Descriptions Table 8. Pin Descriptions Pin Number Pin Name I/O Power Domain F1 RF I/O VDD_RF RF antenna port 6 D1 VDDIF I VDD_RF IFPLL power supply 5 7 E1 VDDFE I VDD_RF RF front-end supply 7 9 H1 VDDVCO I VDD_RF VCO, LOGEN supply 8 10 H2 VDDPLL I VDD_RF RFPLL and crystal oscillator supply 11 13 H6 VDDC I N/A Baseband core supply – – D4, E2, E5, F2, G1, G2 VSS I N/A Ground 28 34 A6, D7 VDDO I VDDO I/O pad and core supply 14 16 – VDDM I VDDM I/O pad supply 32-Pin QFN 40-pin QFN 64-pin BGA 8 4 Description Radio I/O 6 RF Power Supplies Power Supplies Clock Generator and Crystal Interface 9 11 H3 XTALI I VDD_RF Crystal oscillator input. See “Crystal Oscillator” on page 14 for options. 10 12 G3 XTALO O VDD_RF Crystal oscillator output. Low-power oscillator (LPO) input is used. Alternative Function: 1 40 A3 XTALI32K I VDDO ■ P11 and P27 in 32-QFN only ■ P11 in 40-QFN only ■ P39 in 64-BGA only Low-power oscillator (LPO) output. Alternative Function: 32 39 B3 XTALO32K O VDDO ■ P12 and P26 in 32-QFN only ■ P12 in 40-QFN only ■ P38 in 64-BGA only Core 18 20 G8 RESET_N I/O PU VDDO Active-low system reset with open-drain output & internal pull-up resistor 17 19 G7 TMC I VDDO Test mode control High: test mode Connect to GND if not used. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 19 of 47 CYW20730 Table 8. Pin Descriptions (Cont.) Pin Number 32-Pin QFN 40-pin QFN 64-pin BGA Pin Name I/O Power Domain Description UART 12 14 H5 UART_RXD I VDDM[5] UART serial input – Serial data input for the HCI UART interface. Leave unconnected if not used. Alternative function: ■ 13 15 G5 UART_TXD O, PU VDDM[5] GPIO3 UART serial output – Serial data output for the HCI UART interface. Leave unconnected if not used. Alternative Function: ■ GPIO2 Serial Control Data signal for an external I2C device. Alternative function: 15 17 F7 SDA I/O, PU VDDM[5] ■ SPI_1: MOSI (master only) ■ GPIO0 ■ CTS Clock signal for an external I2C device. Alternative function: 16 18 E8 SCL I/O, PU VDDM[5] ■ SPI_1: SPI_CLK (master only) ■ GPIO1 ■ RTS LDO Regulator Power Supplies 2 4 B1 LDOIN I LDO Battery input supply for the LDO 3 5 C1 LDOOUT O LDO LDO output Note 5. VDDO for 64-pin package. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 20 of 47 CYW20730 Table 9. GPIO Pin Descriptions[6] Pin Number 32-Pin QFN 19 20 22 21 23 40-pin QFN 21 22 24 23 25 64-pin BGA F6 G6 H8 F8 H7 Pin Name P0 P1 P2 P3 P4 Default Direction Input Input Input Input Input After POR Floating Floating Floating Floating Floating Power Domain VDDO VDDO VDDO VDDO VDDO Alternate Function Description ■ GPIO: P0 ■ Keyboard scan input (row): KSI0 ■ A/D converter input ■ Peripheral UART: puart_tx ■ SPI_2: MOSI (master and slave) ■ IR_RX ■ 60 Hz_main ■ Not available during TMC=1 ■ GPIO: P1 ■ Keyboard scan input (row): KSI1 ■ A/D converter input ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rts ■ SPI_2: MISO (master and slave) ■ IR_TX ■ GPIO: P2 ■ Keyboard scan input (row): KSI2 ■ Quadrature: QDX0 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rx ■ Triac control 2 ■ SPI_2: SPI_CS (slave only) ■ SPI_2: SPI_MOSI (master only) ■ GPIO: P3 ■ Keyboard scan input (row): KSI3 ■ Quadrature: QDX1 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_cts ■ SPI_2: SPI_CLK (master and slave) ■ GPIO: P4 ■ Keyboard scan input (row): KSI4 ■ Quadrature: QDY0 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rx ■ SPI_2: MOSI (master and slave) ■ IR_TX Note 6. During Power-On Reset, all inputs are disabled. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 21 of 47 CYW20730 Table 9. GPIO Pin Descriptions[6] Pin Number 32-Pin QFN 40-pin QFN 64-pin BGA Pin Name Default Direction After POR Power Domain Alternate Function Description GPIO: P5 ■ Keyboard scan input (row): KSI5 ■ Quadrature: QDY1 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_tx ■ SPI_2: MISO (master and slave) ■ – 26 E6 P5 Input Floating VDDO GPIO: P6 Keyboard scan input (row): KSI6 ■ Quadrature: QDZ0 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rts ■ SPI_2: SPI_CS (slave only) ■ 60Hz_main ■ Triac control 1 ■ ■ – 27 F5 P6 PWM2 Input Floating VDDO VDDO GPIO: P7 ■ Keyboard scan input (row): KSI7 ■ Quadrature: QDZ1 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_cts ■ SPI_2: SPI_CLK (master and slave) VDDO GPIO: P8 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO0 ■ A/D converter input ■ External T/R switch control: ~tx_pd Alternative Function: ■ P33 in 32-QFN only ■ – 28 C5 P7 Input Floating ■ ■ 24 29 F4 P8 Input Floating GPIO: P9 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO1 ■ A/D converter input ■ External T/R switch control: tx_pd ■ – 3 A1 P9 D2 P10 PWM3 Input Floating VDDO ■ GPIO: P10 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO2 ■ A/D converter input ■ – 2 Input Floating VDDO ■ VDDO GPIO: P11 ■ Keyboard scan output (column): KSO3 ■ A/D converter input ■ XTALI32K (32-QFN and 40-QFN only) Alternative Function: ■ P27 in 32-QFN only VDDO GPIO: P12 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO4 ■ A/D converter input ■ XTALO32K (32-QFN and 40-QFN only) Alternative Function: ■ P26 in 32-QFN only ■ 1 40 C2 P11 Input Floating ■ ■ 32 39 B2 P12 Input Floating Note 6. During Power-On Reset, all inputs are disabled. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 22 of 47 CYW20730 Table 9. GPIO Pin Descriptions[6] Pin Number 32-Pin QFN 40-pin QFN 64-pin BGA Pin Name Default Direction After POR Power Domain Alternate Function Description VDDO GPIO: P13 ■ Keyboard scan output (column): KSO5 ■ A/D converter input ■ Triac control 3 Alternative Function:P28 in 32-QFN only VDDO GPIO: P14 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO6 ■ A/D converter input ■ Triac control 4 Alternative Function ■ P38 in 32-QFN only ■ 29 35 F3 P13 PWM3 Input Floating ■ ■ 30 36 D3 P14 PWM2 Input Floating GPIO: P15 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO7 ■ A/D converter input ■ IR_RX ■ 60Hz_main ■ ■ 31 37 A2 P15 Input Floating VDDO – – C8 P16 Input Floating VDDO – – H4 P17 Input Floating VDDO ■ ■ GPIO: P16 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO8 GPIO: P17 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO9 ■ A/D converter input ■ ■ GPIO: P18 ■ Keyboard scan output (column): KSO10 ■ A/D converter input ■ – – C7 P18 Input Floating VDDO – – B8 P19 Input Floating VDDO – – A8 P20 Input Floating VDDO GPIO: P19 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO11 ■ A/D converter input ■ ■ GPIO: P20 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO12 ■ A/D converter input ■ ■ GPIO: P21 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO13 ■ A/D converter input ■ Triac control 3 ■ – – C6 P21 Input Floating VDDO ■ GPIO: P22 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO14 ■ A/D converter input ■ Triac control 4 ■ – – G4 P22 Input Floating VDDO – – E3 P23 Input Floating VDDO ■ GPIO: P23 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO15 ■ A/D converter input ■ ■ Note 6. During Power-On Reset, all inputs are disabled. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 23 of 47 CYW20730 Table 9. GPIO Pin Descriptions[6] Pin Number 32-Pin QFN 40-pin QFN 64-pin BGA Pin Name Default Direction After POR Power Domain Alternate Function Description GPIO: P24 ■ Keyboard scan output (column): KSO16 ■ SPI_2: SPI_CLK (master and slave) ■ SPI_1: MISO (master only) ■ Peripheral UART: puart_tx ■ 27 33 A7 P24 Input Floating VDDO GPIO: P25 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO17 ■ SPI_2: MISO (master and slave) ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rx ■ 26 32 B7 P25 Input Floating VDDO ■ VDDO GPIO: P26 Keyboard scan output (column): KSO18 ■ SPI_2: SPI_CS (slave only) ■ SPI_1: MISO (master only) ■ Optical control output: QOC0 ■ Triac control 1 Alternative Function: ■ P12 in 32-QFN only Current: 16 mA VDDO GPIO: P27 ■ Keyboard scan output (column): KSO19 ■ SPI_2: MOSI (master and slave) ■ Optical control output: QOC1 ■ Triac control 2 Alternative Function: ■ P11 in 32-QFN only Current: 16 mA VDDO GPIO: P28 Optical control output: QOC2 ■ A/D converter input ■ LED1 ■ IR_TX Alternative Function: ■ P13 in 32-QFN only Current: 16 mA VDDO GPIO: P29 ■ Optical control output: QOC3 ■ A/D converter input ■ LED2 ■ IR_RX Current: 16 mA ■ ■ 32 38 A4 P26 PWM0 Input Floating ■ 1 1 B4 P27 PWM1 Input Floating ■ ■ 29 – B5 P28 PWM2 Input Floating ■ – – A5 P29 PWM3 Input Floating GPIO: P30 A/D converter input ■ Pairing button pin in default FW ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rts ■ – – E4 P30 Input Floating VDDO ■ Note 6. During Power-On Reset, all inputs are disabled. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 24 of 47 CYW20730 Table 9. GPIO Pin Descriptions[6] Pin Number 32-Pin QFN 40-pin QFN 64-pin BGA Pin Name Default Direction After POR Power Domain Alternate Function Description GPIO: P31 ■ A/D converter input ■ EEPROM WP pin in default FW ■ Peripheral UART: puart_tx ■ – – E7 P31 Input Floating VDDO VDDO GPIO: P32 A/D converter input ■ Quadrature: QDX0 ■ SPI_2: SPI_CS (slave only) ■ SPI_1: MISO (master only) ■ Auxiliary clock output: ACLK0 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_tx VDDO GPIO: P33 A/D converter input ■ Quadrature: QDX1 ■ SPI_2: MOSI (slave only) ■ Auxiliary clock output: ACLK1 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rx Alternative Function: ■ P8 in 32-QFN only ■ ■ 25 31 D6 P32 Input Floating ■ ■ 24 30 D8 P33 Input Floating GPIO: P34 A/D converter input ■ Quadrature: QDY0 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_rx ■ External T/R switch control: tx_pd ■ ■ – – B6 P34 Input Floating VDDO GPIO: P35 A/D converter input ■ Quadrature: QDY1 ■ Peripheral UART: puart_cts ■ – – D5 P35 Input Floating VDDO ■ GPIO: P36 ■ A/D converter input ■ Quadrature: QDZ0 ■ SPI_2: SPI_CLK (master and slave) ■ Auxiliary Clock Output: ACLK0 ■ Battery detect pin in default FW ■ External T/R switch control: ~tx_pd ■ – – C4 P36 Input Floating VDDO GPIO: P37 A/D converter input ■ Quadrature: QDZ1 ■ SPI_2: MISO (slave only) ■ Auxiliary clock output: ACLK1 ■ ■ – – C3 P37 Input Floating VDDO Note 6. During Power-On Reset, all inputs are disabled. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 25 of 47 CYW20730 Table 9. GPIO Pin Descriptions[6] Pin Number 32-Pin QFN 40-pin QFN 64-pin BGA Pin Name Default Direction After POR Power Domain Alternate Function Description GPIO: P38 ■ A/D converter input ■ SPI_2: MOSI (master and slave) ■ IR_TX ■ XTALO32K (64-BGA only) Alternative Function: ■ P14 in 32-QFN only ■ 30 – B3 P38 Input Floating VDDO GPIO: P39 SPI_2: SPI_CS (slave only) ■ SPI_1: MISO (master only) ■ Infrared control: IR_RX ■ External PA ramp control: PA_Ramp ■ XTALI32K (64-BGA only) ■ 60Hz_main ■ ■ – – A3 P39 Input Floating VDDO Note 6. During Power-On Reset, all inputs are disabled. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 26 of 47 CYW20730 2.2 Ball Maps P32 P25 P24 VDDO P13/P28 P14/P38 P15 P12/P26/XTALO32K Figure 8. 32-Pin QFN Ball Map 32 31 30 29 28 27 26 25 24 P8/P33 LDO_IN 2 23 P4 LDO_OUT 3 22 P2 VDDIF 4 21 P3 VDDFE 5 20 P1 RF 6 19 P0 VDDVCO 7 18 RST_N VDDPLL 8 17 TMC Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K SCL SDA VDDM UART_TXD UART_RXD 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 VDDC 9 XTALO 1 XTALI P11/P27/XTALI32K Page 27 of 47 CYW20730 XTALI32K/P11 XTALO32K/P12 P26/PWM0 P15 P14 P13 VDDO P24 P25 P32 Figure 9. 40-pin QFN Ball Map 40 39 38 37 36 35 34 33 32 31 28 P7 LDOIN 4 27 P6 LDOOUT 5 26 P5 VDDIF 6 25 P4 VDDFE 7 24 P2 RF 8 23 P3 VDDVCO 9 22 P1 VDDPLL 10 21 P0 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 RESET_N 3 TMC P9 SCL P8 SDA 29 VDDM 2 UART_TXD P10 UART_RXD P33 VDDC 30 XTALO 1 XTALI P27/PWM1 Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 28 of 47 CYW20730 Figure 10. 64-pin BGA Ball Map 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 A P9 P15 P39/ XTALI32K P26/ PWM0 P29/ PWM3 VDDO P24 P20 A B LDOIN P12 P38/ XTALO32K P27/ PWM1 P28/ PWM2 P34 P25 P19 B C LDOOUT P11 P37 P36 P7 P21 P18 P16 C D VDDIF P10 P14 VSS P35 P32 VDDO P33 D E VDDFE VSS P23 P30 VSS P5 P31 SCL E F RF VSS P13 P8 P6 P0 SDA P3 F G VSS VSS XTALO P22 UART_ TXD P1 TMC RESET _N G H VDDVCO VDDPLL XTALI P17 UART_ RXD VDDC P4 P2 H 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 29 of 47 CYW20730 3. Specifications 3.1 Electrical Characteristics Table 10 shows the maximum electrical rating for voltages referenced to VDD pin. Table 10. Maximum Electrical Rating Rating DC supply voltage for RF domain DC supply voltage for core domain DC supply voltage for VDDM domain (UART/I2C) DC supply voltage for VDDO domain DC supply voltage for VR3V DC supply voltage for VDDFE Voltage on input or output pin Operating ambient temperature range Storage temperature range Symbol – – – – – – – Topr Tstg Value 1.4 1.4 3.8 3.8 3.8 1.4 VSS – 0.3 to VDD + 0.3 0 to +70 –40 to +125 Unit V V V V V V V °C °C Table 11 shows the power supply characteristics for the range TJ = 0 to 125°C. Table 11. Power Supply Parameter DC supply voltage for RF DC supply voltage for Core DC supply voltage for VDDM (UART/I2C) DC supply voltage for VDDO DC supply voltage for LDOIN DC supply voltage for VDDFE Supply noise for VDDO (peak-to-peak) Supply noise for LDOIN (peak-to-peak) Minimum[7] 1.14 1.14 1.62 1.62 1.425 1.14 – – Typical 1.2 1.2 – – – 1.2[8] – – Maximum[7] 1.26 1.26 3.63 3.63 3.63 1.26 100 100 Unit V V V V V V mV mV Notes 7. Overall performance degrades beyond minimum and maximum supply voltages. 8. 1.2V for Class 2 output with internal VREG. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 30 of 47 CYW20730 Table 13 shows the digital level characteristics for (VSS = 0V). Table 12. LDO Regulator Electrical Specifications Parameter Conditions Min Input voltage range – Default output voltage – Range Output voltage Step size Accuracy at any step Load current – Typ Max Unit 1.425 – 3.63 V – 1.2 – V 0.8 – 1.4 V – 40 or 80 – mV –5 – +5 % – – 30 mA –0.2 – 0.2 %VO/V Line regulation Vin from 1.425 to 3.63V, Iload = 30 mA Load regulation Iload from 1 µA to 30 mA, Vin = 3.3V, Bonding R = 0.3 – 0.1 0.2 %VO/mA Quiescent current No load @Vin = 3.3V *Current limit enabled – 6 – µA Power-down current Vin = 3.3V, worst@70°C – 5 200 nA Table 13. ADC Specifications Parameter Symbol Conditions Min Typ Max Unit ADC Characteristics Number of Input channels – – – 28 – – Channel switching rate fch – – – 133.33 kch/s Input signal range Vinp Reference settling time – – Changing refsel 0 – 3.63 V 7.5 – – s Input resistance Rinp Effective, single-ended – 500 – k Input capacitance Cinp – – – 5 pF Conversion rate fC – 5.859 – 187 kHz Conversion time TC – 5.35 – 170.7 s Resolution R – – 16 – bits Effective number of bits – – – See Table 2 – Absolute voltage measurement error – Using on-chip ADC firmware driver – ±2 – % Current I Iavdd1p2 + Iavdd3p3 – – 1 mA P Power Leakage current Power-up time Integral nonlinearity [9] Differential nonlinearity[9] – – 1.5 – mW Ileakage T = 25°C – – 100 nA Tpowerup – – – 200 s INL – –1 – 1 LSB[9] DNL – –1 – 1 LSB[9] Note 9. LSBs are expressed at the 10-bit level. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 31 of 47 CYW20730 Table 14. Digital Level[10] Symbol Min Typ Max Unit Input low voltage Characteristics VIL – – 0.4 V Input high voltage VIH 0.75 × VDDO – – V Input low voltage (VDDO = 1.62V) VIL – – 0.4 V Input high voltage (VDDO = 1.62V) VIH 1.2 – – V Output low voltage[10] VOL – – 0.4 V Output high voltage[11] VOH VDDO – 0.4 – – V Input capacitance (VDDMEM domain) CIN – 0.12 – pF Notes 10. This table is also applicable to VDDMEM domain. 11. At the specified drive current for the pad. Table 15. Current Consumption[12] Operational Mode Receive Conditions Typ Max Unit Receiver and baseband are both operating, 100% ON. – 26.6 mA mA Transmit Transmitter and baseband are both operating, 100% ON. – 24 at 2 dBm, 19 at 0 dBm DM1 Average current when the device is in the transmit state, 100% utilization of available slots. 15.2 – mA DH1 Average current when the device is in the receive state, 100% utilization of available slots. 16.67 – mA Sleep Internal LPO is in use. 28.4 – A 1.5 – A HIDOFF – Sniff mode, 11.25 ms Slave 2.8 – mA Sniff mode, 22.5 ms Slave 1.27 – mA Sniff mode, 60 ms Slave 750 – A Sniff mode, 100 ms Slave 500 – A Sniff mode, 495 ms Slave 125 – A Note 12. Current consumption measurements are taken at VBAT with the assumption that VBAT is connected to VDDIO and LDOIN. Caution: This device is susceptible to permanent damage from electrostatic discharge (ESD). Proper precautions are required during handling and mounting to avoid excessive ESD. Table 16. ESD Tolerance Model Tolerance Human Body Model (HBM) ± 2000V Charged Device Model (CDM) ± 400V Machine Model (MM) ± 150V Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 32 of 47 CYW20730 3.2 RF Specifications Table 17. Receiver RF Specifications Parameter Mode and Conditions Min – 2402 – – Typ Max Unit – 2480 MHz –88.0 –84.0 dBm –84.0 – dBm Receiver Section Frequency range RX sensitivity (standard) GFSK, 0.1%BER, 1 Mbps RX sensitivity (low current) Input IP3 – –16 – – dBm Maximum input – –10 – – dBm GFSK, 0.1%BER[13] – – 11.0 dB GFSK, 0.1%BER [13] – – 0.0 dB C/I 2 MHz adjacent channel GFSK, 0.1%BER [13] – – –30.0 dB C/I 3 MHz adjacent channel GFSK, 0.1%BER[13] – – –40.0 dB GFSK, 0.1%BER [13] – – –9.0 dB C/I 1 MHz adjacent to image channel GFSK, 0.1%BER [13] – – –20.0 dB Interference Performance C/I co channel C/I 1 MHz adjacent channel C/I image channel Out-of-Band Blocking Performance (CW)[14] 30 MHz to 2000 MHz 0.1%BER – –10.0 – dBm 2000 MHz to 2399 MHz 0.1%BER – –27 – dBm 2498 MHz to 3000 MHz 0.1%BER – –27 – dBm 3000 MHz to 12.75 GHz 0.1%BER – –10.0 – dBm Spurious Emissions 30 MHz to 1 GHz – – – –57.0 dBm 1 GHz to 12.75 GHz – – – –55.0 dBm Notes 13. Desired signal is 10 dB above the reference sensitivity level (defined as –70 dBm). 14. Desired signal is 3 dB above the reference sensitivity level (defined as –70 dBm). Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 33 of 47 CYW20730 Table 18. Transmitter RF Specifications Parameter Min Typ Max Unit Frequency range 2402 – 2480 MHz Output power adjustment range –6.0 – 4.0 dBm Default output power – 4.0 – dBm Output power variation – 2.0 – dB 20 dB bandwidth – 900 1000 kHz |M – N| = 2 – – –20 dBm |M – N| 3 – – –40 dBm 30 MHz to 1 GHz – – –36.0 dBm 1 GHz to 12.75 GHz – – –30.0 dBm 1.8 GHz to 1.9 GHz – – –47.0 dBm 5.15 GHz to 5.3 GHz – – –47.0 dBm – – ±75 kHz DH1 packet – – ±25 kHz DH3 packet – – ±40 kHz Transmitter Section Adjacent Channel Power Out-of-Band Spurious Emission LO Performance Initial carrier frequency tolerance Frequency Drift DH5 packet – – ±40 kHz Drift rate – – 20 kHz/50 µs Average deviation in payload (sequence used is 00001111) 140 – 175 kHz Maximum deviation in payload (sequence used is 10101010) 115 – – kHz – 1 – MHz Frequency Deviation Channel spacing Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 34 of 47 CYW20730 3.3 Timing and AC Characteristics In this section, use the numbers listed in the Reference column of each table to interpret the following timing diagrams. 3.3.1 UART Timing Table 19. UART Timing Specifications Reference Characteristics Min Max Unit 1 Delay time, UART_CTS_N low to UART_TXD valid – 24 Baud out cycles 2 Setup time, UART_CTS_N high before midpoint of stop bit – 10 ns 3 Delay time, midpoint of stop bit to UART_RTS_N high – 2 Baud out cycles Figure 11. UART Timing Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 35 of 47 CYW20730 3.3.2 SPI Timing The SPI interface supports clock speeds up to 12 MHz with VDDIO ≥ 2.2V. The supported clock speed is 6 MHz when 2.2V ≥ VDDIO ≥ 1.62V. Figure 12 shows the timing diagram. SPI timing values for different values of SCLK and VDDM are shown in Table 20, Table 21 on page 37, Table 22 on page 37, Table 23 on page 38. Figure 12. SPI Timing Diagram CS 5 6 SCLK Mode 1 SCLK Mode 3 2 1 MSB MOSI LSB 4 3 MISO Invalid bit MSB LSB Table 20. SPI1 Timing Values — SCLK = 12 MHz and VDDM = 3.2V[15] Reference Characteristics Symbol Min Typical[16] Max Unit 1 Output setup time, from MOSI  data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mo – 20 – ns 2 Output hold time, from sample edge of SCLK to MOSI data update Tdh_mo – 63 – ns 3 Input setup time, from MISO data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mi – TBD – ns 4 Input hold time, from sample  edge of SCLK to MISO data update Tdh_mi – TBD – ns 5[17] Time from CS assert to first SCLK edge Tsu_cs ½ SCLK period – 1 – – ns 6[17] Time from first SCLK edge to CS deassert ½ SCLK period – – ns Thd_cs Notes 15. The SCLK period is based on the limitation of Tds_mi. SCLK is designed for a maximum speed of 12 MHz. The speed can be adjusted to as low as 400 Hz by configuring the firmware. 16. Typical timing based on 20 pF/1 MΩ load and SCLK = 12 MHz. 17. CS timing is firmware controlled. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 36 of 47 CYW20730 Table 21. SPI1 Timing Values — SCLK = 6 MHz and VDDM = 1.62V[18] Reference Characteristics Symbol Min Typical[19] Max Unit 1 Output setup time, from MOSI data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mo – 41 – ns 2 Output hold time, from sample  edge of SCLK to MOSI data update Tdh_mo – 120 – ns 3 Input setup time, from MISO  data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mi – TBD – ns 4 Input hold time, from sample  edge of SCLK to MISO data update Tdh_mi – TBD – ns 5[20] Time from CS assert to first SCLK edge Tsu_cs ½ SCLK period – 1 – – ns 6[20] Time from first SCLK edge to CS deassert Thd_cs ½ SCLK period – – ns Notes 18. The SCLK period is based on the limitation of Tds_mi. SCLK is designed for a maximum speed of 6 MHz. The speed can be adjusted to as low as 400 Hz by configuring the firmware. 19. Typical timing based on 20 pF/1 MΩ load and SCLK = 6 MHz. 20. CS timing is firmware controlled. Table 22. SPI2 Timing Values — SCLK = 12 MHz and VDDM = 3.2V[21] Symbol Min Typical[22] Max Unit 1 Output setup time, from MOSI  data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mo – 26 – ns 2 Output hold time, from sample  edge of SCLK to MOSI data update Tdh_mo – 56 – ns 3 Input setup time, from MISO  data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mi – TBD – ns 4 Input hold time, from sample  edge of SCLK to MISO data update Tdh_mi – TBD – ns 5[23] Time from CS assert to first SCLK edge Tsu_cs ½ SCLK period – 1 – – ns 6[23] Time from first SCLK edge to CS deassert Thd_cs ½ SCLK period – – ns Reference Characteristics Notes 21. The SCLK period is based on the limitation of Tds_mi. SCLK is designed for a maximum speed of 6 MHz. The speed can be adjusted to as low as 400 Hz by configuring the firmware. 22. Typical timing based on 20 pF/1 MΩ load and SCLK = 6 MHz. 23. CS timing is firmware controlled in master mode and can be adjusted as required in slave mode. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 37 of 47 CYW20730 Table 23. SPI2 Timing Values — SCLK = 6 MHz and VDDM = 1.62V[24] Symbol Min Typical[25] Max Unit 1 Output setup time, from MOSI  data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mo – 50 – ns 2 Output hold time, from sample  edge of SCLK to MOSI data update Tdh_mo – 120 – ns 3 Input setup time, from MISO  data valid to sample edge of SCLK Tds_mi – TBD – ns 4 Input hold time, from sample  edge of SCLK to MISO data update Tdh_mi – TBD – ns 5[26] Time from CS assert to first SCLK edge Tsu_cs ½ SCLK period – 1 – – ns 6[26] Time from first SCLK edge to CS deassert Thd_cs ½ SCLK period – – ns Reference Characteristics Notes 24. The SCLK period is based on the limitation of Tds_mi. SCLK is designed for a maximum speed of 6 MHz. The speed can be adjusted to as low as 400 Hz by configuring the firmware. 25. Typical timing based on 20 pF/1 MΩ load and SCLK = 6 MHz. 26. CS timing is firmware controlled in master mode and can be adjusted as required in slave mode. Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 38 of 47 CYW20730 3.3.3 Interface Timing Table 24. Interface Timing Specifications Reference Characteristics Min Max Unit 100 1 Clock frequency – 400 800 kHz 1000 2 START condition setup time 650 – ns 3 START condition hold time 280 – ns 4 Clock low time 650 – ns 5 Clock high time 280 – ns 0 – ns [27] 6 Data input hold time 7 Data input setup time 100 – ns 8 STOP condition setup time 280 – ns 9 Output valid from clock – 400 ns 650 – ns 10 Bus free time [28] Notes 27. As a transmitter, 300 ns of delay is provided to bridge the undefined region of the falling edge of SCL to avoid unintended generation of START or STOP conditions. 28. Time that the cbus must be free before a new transaction can start. Figure 13. Interface Timing Diagram Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 39 of 47 CYW20730 4. Mechanical Information Figure 14. 32-Pin QFN Package Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 40 of 47 CYW20730 Figure 15. 40-pin QFN Package Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 41 of 47 CYW20730 Figure 16. 64-pin FBGA Package Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 42 of 47 CYW20730 4.1 Tape Reel and Packaging Specifications Table 25. CYW20730 5 × 5 × 1 mm QFN, 32-Pin Tape Reel Specifications Parameter Value Quantity per reel 2500 pieces Reel diameter 13 inches Hub diameter 7 inches Tape width 12 mm Tape pitch 8 mm Table 26. CYW20730 6 × 6 × 1 mm QFN, 40-Pin Tape Reel Specifications Parameter Value Quantity per reel 4000 pieces Reel diameter 13 inches Hub diameter 4 inches Tape width 16 mm Tape pitch 12 mm Table 27. CYW20730 7 × 7 × 0.8 mm WFBGA, 64-Pin Tape Reel Specifications Parameter Value Quantity per reel 2500 pieces Reel diameter 13 inches Hub diameter 4 inches Tape width 16 mm Tape pitch 12 mm The top left corner of the CYW20730 package is situated near the sprocket holes, as shown in Figure 17. Figure 17. Pin 1 Orientation Pin 1: Top left corner of package toward sprocket holes Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 43 of 47 CYW20730 5. Ordering Information Table 28. Ordering Information Part Number Package Ambient Operating Temperature CYW20730A2KML2G 32-pin QFN 0°C to 70°C CYW20730A2KMLG 40-pin QFN 0°C to 70°C CYW20730A2KFBG 64-pin BGA 0°C to 70°C CYW20730A1KML2G 32-pin QFN 0°C to 70°C CYW20730A1KMLG 40-pin QFN 0°C to 70°C CYW20730A1KFBG 64-pin BGA 0°C to 70°C 6. Additional Information 6.1 Acronyms and Abbreviations In most cases, acronyms and abbreviations are defined upon first use. For a more complete list of acronyms and other terms used in Cypress documents, go to: http://www.cypress.com/glossary. 6.2 References The references in this section may be used in conjunction with this document. Note: Cypress provides customer access to technical documentation and software through its Customer Support Portal (CSP) and Downloads & Support site (see on page 2). For documents, replace the “x” in the document number with the largest number available in the repository to ensure that you have the most current version of the document. Document Name [1] Single-Chip Bluetooth® Transceiver and Baseband Processor Broadcom Number Cypress Number 20702-DS10x-R 002-14772 6.3 IoT Resources Cypress provides a wealth of data at http://www.cypress.com/internet-things-iot to help you to select the right IoT device for your design, and quickly and effectively integrate the device into your design. Cypress provides customer access to a wide range of information, including technical documentation, schematic diagrams, product bill of materials, PCB layout information, and software updates. Customers can acquire technical documentation and software from the Cypress Support Community website  (https://community.cypress.com/) Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 44 of 47 CYW20730 47 Document History Document Title: CYW20730 Single-Chip Bluetooth Transceiver for Wireless Input Devices Document Number: 002-14824 Revision ECN Submission Date ** – 04/27/2010 20730-DS100-RI: Initial release 06/25/2010 20730-DS101-R: Added: “Shutter Control for 3D Glasses” on page 10. “Infrared Modulator” on page 10. “Infrared Learning” on page 11. “Triac Control” on page 12. “Broadcom Proprietary Control Signalling and Triggered Baseband Fast Connect” on page 12. Figure 5: “Internal Reset Timing,” on page 17. Figure 6: “External Reset Timing,” on page 17. Figure 10: “40-pin QFN Ball Map,” on page 33. Figure 11: “64-pin BGA Ball Map,” on page 34. “SPI Timing” on page 41. Figure 16: “40-pin QFN,” on page 44. Figure 17: “64-pin FBGA,” on page 45. Revised: “Microprocessor Unit” on page 16. Table 6: “Pin Descriptions,” on page 25. Table 11: “ADC Specifications,” on page 36. Table 14: “Receiver RF Specifications,” on page 38. Table 15: “Transmitter RF Specifications,” on page 39. Table 21: “Ordering Information,” on page 50. 03/23/2011 20730-DS102-R: Added: Table 1: “ADC Modes,” on page 18 Revised: Figure 1: “Functional Block Diagram,” on page 2 “ADC Port” on page 17 “Internal LDO Regulator” on page 22 “UART Interface” on page 23 Table 6: “XTAL Oscillator Characteristics,” on page 25 Table 8: “GPIO Pin Descriptions,” on page 30 Table 10: “Power Supply,” on page 39 Table 11: “LDO Regulator Electrical Specifications,” on page 40 Table 12: “ADC Specifications,” on page 41 Table 14: “Current Consumption,” on page 42 Table 15: “Receiver RF Specifications,” on page 43 Table 16: “Transmitter RF Specifications,” on page 44 Table 18: “SPI Interface Timing Specifications,” on page 46 Table 21: “BCM20730 6 × 6 × 1 mm QFN, 40-Pin Tape Reel Specifications,” on page 52 Table 22: “BCM20730 7 × 7 × .8 mm WFBGA, 64-Pin Tape Reel Specifications,” on page 52 Deleted: Placeholder for Figure 4: Triac Control Placeholder for Figure 18: BCM20730, 6 x 6 QFN Package Tray Placeholder for Figure 19: BCM20730, 7 x 7 FBGA Package Tray 04/06/2011 20730-DS103-R: Revised: Table 14: “Current Consumption,” on page 42 Table 23: “Ordering Information,” on page 54 *A *B *C – – – Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Description of Change Page 45 of 47 CYW20730 47 Document Title: CYW20730 Single-Chip Bluetooth Transceiver for Wireless Input Devices Document Number: 002-14824 Revision *D ECN – Submission Date Description of Change 05/09/2011 20730-DS104-R: Revised: Figure 1: “Functional Block Diagram,” on page 2 “ADC Port” on page 17 Table 10: “Power Supply,” on page 39 *E – 06/29/2011 20730-DS105-R: Added: Figure 9: “32-Pin QFN Ball Map,” on page 39 Figure 16: “32-Pin QFN Package,” on page 52 Table 20: “BCM20730 5 × 5 × 1 mm QFN, 32-Pin Tape Reel Specifications,” on page 55 Revised: General Description and Features on Cover Figure 1: “Functional Block Diagram,” on page 2 “ADC Port” on page 17 Table 2: “BCM20730 First SPI Set (Master Mode),” on page 18 Table 2: “BCM20730 First SPI Set (Master Mode),” on page 18 Table 2: “BCM20730 First SPI Set (Master Mode),” on page 18 Figure 5: “External Reset Timing,” on page 22 “GPIO Port” on page 27 “BBC Power Management” on page 29 Table 7: “Pin Descriptions,” on page 30 Table 8: “GPIO Pin Descriptions,” on page 32 Table 12: “ADC Specifications,” on page 44 *F – 09/20/2011 20730-DS106-R: Changed from a Preliminary Data Sheet to a Data Sheet. *G – 10/10/2012 20730-DS107-R: Revised: “SPI Timing” on page 49 *H – 09/09/2013 20730-DS108-R: Revised: Section 1.3: “Shutter Control for 3D Glasses,” on page 5 Table 28, “Ordering Information,” on page 44 Added: Table 16, “ESD Tolerance,” on page 32 *I 5522944 11/16/2016 Updated to Cypress template *J 5700376 04/25/2017 Updated Cypress Logo and Copyright. 06/08/2020 Removed “Cypress Part Numbering Scheme” table from page 1. Replaced “Broadcom Serial Control” with “Serial control” and “3.0” with “5.0” Removed “IR learning” from Features. Removed Infrared Learning section. *K 6893048 Document Number: 002-14824 Rev. *K Page 46 of 47 CYW20730 Sales, Solutions, and Legal Information Worldwide Sales and Design Support Cypress maintains a worldwide network of offices, solution centers, manufacturer’s representatives, and distributors. To find the office closest to you, visit us at Cypress Locations. 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