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1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
DS2431-A1
General Description
The DS2431-A1 is an AEC-Q100 Grade 1 qualified version of the DS2431. The logical behavior of both versions is identical. The DS2431-A1 is a 1024-bit, 1-Wire®
EEPROM chip organized as four memory pages of 256
bits each. Data is written to an 8-byte scratchpad, verified,
and then copied to the EEPROM memory. As a special
feature, the four memory pages can individually be write
protected or put in EPROM-emulation mode, where bits
can only be changed from a 1 to a 0 state.
The DS2431-A1 communicates over the single-conductor
1-Wire bus. The communication follows the standard
1-Wire protocol. Each device has its own unalterable and
unique 64-bit ROM registration number that is factory
lasered into the chip. The registration number is used to
address the device in a multidrop 1-Wire net environment.
Applications
Features
● 1024 Bits of EEPROM Memory Partitioned Into
Four Pages of 256 Bits
● Individual Memory Pages Can Be Permanently
Write Protected or Put in EPROM-Emulation Mode
(“Write to 0”)
● Switchpoint Hysteresis and Filtering to Optimize
Performance in the Presence of Noise
● IEC 1000-4-2 Level 4 ESD Protection
(+8kV Contact, +15kV Air, Typ)
● Reads and Writes Over a 4.5V to 5.25V Voltage
Range from -40°C to +125°C
● Communicates to Host with a Single Digital
Signal at 15.4kbps Using 1-Wire Protocol
● Meets AEC-Q100 Grade 1 Qualification
Requirements
● Automotive Sensor Identification and Calibration
Data Storage
● Also Available as Standard Version for Industrial
Temperature Range (DS2431)
● Automotive Cable Assembly Identification
Ordering Information
● Accessory/PCB Identification
PART
Commands and modes are capitalized for clarity.
TEMP RANGE
PIN-PACKAGE
DS2431P-A1+
-40°C to +125°C
6 TSOC
DS2431P-A1+T
-40°C to +125°C
6 TSOC
+Denotes a lead(Pb)-free/RoHS-compliant package.
T = Tape and reel.
Typical Operating Circuit
Pin Configuration
VCC
TOP VIEW
RPUP
+
I/O
μC
DS2431-A1
GND
GND
1
I/O
2
N.C.
3
6 N.C.
DS2431-A1
5 N.C.
4 N.C.
TSOC
1-Wire is a registered trademark of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc.
19-8224; Rev 2; 7/22
© 2022 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.
One Analog Way, Wilmington, MA 01887 U.S.A.
|
Tel: 781.329.4700
|
© 2022 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Absolute Maximum Ratings
Junction Temperature.......................................................+150°C
Storage Temperature Range............................. -55°C to +125°C
Soldering Temperature.................... See IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020
specification
I/O Voltage to GND..................................................... -0.5V, +6V
I/O Sink Current..................................................................20mA
Operating Temperature Range.......................... -40°C to +125°C
Stresses beyond those listed under “Absolute Maximum Ratings” may cause permanent damage to the device. These are stress ratings only, and functional operation of the device at these
or any other conditions beyond those indicated in the operational sections of the specifications is not implied. Exposure to absolute maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect
device reliability.
Electrical Characteristics
(TA = -40°C to +125°C) (Note 1)
PARAMETER
SYMBOL
CONDITIONS
MIN
TYP
MAX
UNITS
I/O PIN GENERAL DATA
1-Wire Pullup Voltage
1-Wire Pullup Resistance
VPUP
RPUP
(Note 2)
4.5
5.25
V
(Notes 2, 3)
0.3
2.2
kΩ
CIO
(Notes 4, 5)
1000
pF
IL
I/O pin at VPUP
0.05
10
µA
High-to-Low Switching Threshold
VTL
(Notes 5, 6, 7)
0.5
VPUP
-1.8
V
Input Low Voltage
VIL
(Notes 2, 8)
0.5
V
V
V
Input Capacitance
Input Load Current
Low-to-High Switching Threshold
VTH
(Notes 5, 6, 9)
1.0
VPUP
-1.0
Switching Hysteresis
VHY
(Notes 5, 6, 10)
0.21
1.70
tREC
RPUP = 2.2kΩ (Notes 2, 12)
Output Low Voltage
Recovery Time
Rising-Edge Hold-Off Time
Time Slot Duration
VOL
At 4mA (Note 11)
0.4
tREH
(Notes 5, 13)
0.5
tSLOT
(Notes 2, 14)
65
tRSTL
(Note 2)
5
V
µs
5.0
µs
µs
I/O PIN, 1-Wire RESET, PRESENCE-DETECT CYCLE
Reset Low Time
Presence-Detect High Time
Presence-Detect Low Time
Presence-Detect Sample Time
I/O PIN, 1-Wire WRITE
Write-0 Low Time
Write-1 Low Time
I/O PIN, 1-Wire READ
Read Low Time
Read Sample Time
EEPROM
tPDH
480
640
µs
15
60
µs
60
240
µs
tMSP
(Notes 2, 15)
60
75
µs
tW0L
(Notes 2, 16)
60
120
µs
tW1L
(Notes 2, 16)
1
15
µs
tPDL
tRL
(Notes 2, 17)
5
15 - d
µs
tMSR
(Notes 2, 17)
tRL + d
15
µs
IPROG
(Notes 5, 18)
0.8
mA
tPROG
(Note 19)
10
ms
Write/Erase Cycles (Endurance)
(Notes 20, 21)
At +25°C
200k
NCY
At +85°C
50k
At +125°C
1k
Data Retention
(Notes 22, 23, 24)
tDR
At +125°C (worst case)
10
Programming Current
Programming Time
www.analog.com
—
Years
Analog Devices │ 2
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Electrical Characteristics (continued)
Note 1: Specifications at TA = -40°C are guaranteed by design only and not production tested.
Note 2: System requirement.
Note 3: Maximum allowable pullup resistance is a function of the number of 1-Wire devices in the system and 1-Wire recovery
times. The specified value here applies to systems with only one device and with the minimum 1-Wire recovery times.
For more heavily loaded systems, an active pullup such as that found in the DS2482-x00, DS2480B, or DS2490 may be
required.
Note 4: Maximum value represents the internal parasite capacitance when VPUP is first applied. If a 2.2kΩ resistor is used to pull
up the data line, 2.5μs after VPUP has been applied, the parasite capacitance does not affect normal communications.
Note 5: Guaranteed by design, characterization, and/or simulation only. Not production tested.
Note 6: VTL, VTH, and VHY are a function of the internal supply voltage, which is a function of VPUP, RPUP, 1-Wire timing, and
capacitive loading on I/O. Lower VPUP, higher RPUP, shorter tREC, and heavier capacitive loading all lead to lower values
of VTL, VTH, and VHY.
Note 7: Voltage below which, during a falling edge on I/O, a logic 0 is detected.
Note 8: The voltage on I/O needs to be less than or equal to VILMAX at all times the master is driving I/O to a logic-0 level.
Note 9: Voltage above which, during a rising edge on I/O, a logic 1 is detected.
Note 10: After VTH is crossed during a rising edge on I/O, the voltage on I/O must drop by at least VHY to be detected as logic 0.
Note 11: The I-V characteristic is linear for voltages less than 1V.
Note 12: Applies to a single device attached to a 1-Wire line.
Note 13: The earliest recognition of a negative edge is possible at tREH after VTH has been reached on the preceding rising edge.
Note 14: Defines maximum possible bit rate. Equal to tW0LMIN + tRECMIN.
Note 15: Interval after tRSTL during which a bus master is guaranteed to sample a logic 0 on I/O if there is a DS2431-A1 present.
Minimum limit is tPDHMAX; maximum limit is tPDHMIN + tPDLMIN.
Note 16: ε in Figure 11 represents the time required for the pullup circuitry to pull the voltage on I/O up from VIL to VTH. The actual
maximum duration for the master to pull the line low is tW1LMAX + tF - ε and tW0LMAX + tF - ε, respectively.
Note 17: δ in Figure 11 represents the time required for the pullup circuitry to pull the voltage on I/O up from VIL to the input-high
threshold of the bus master. The actual maximum duration for the master to pull the line low is tRLMAX + tF.
Note 18: Current drawn from I/O during the EEPROM programming interval. The pullup circuit on I/O during the programming interval should be such that the voltage at I/O is greater than or equal to VPUPMIN. If VPUP in the system is close to VPUPMIN,
a low-impedance bypass of RPUP, which can be activated during programming, may need to be added.
Note 19: Interval begins tREHMAX after the trailing rising edge on I/O for the last time slot of the E/S byte for a valid Copy
Scratchpad sequence. Interval ends once the device’s self-timed EEPROM programming cycle is complete and the current
drawn by the device has returned from IPROG to IL.
Note 20: Write-cycle endurance is degraded as TA increases.
Note 21: Not 100% production tested; guaranteed by reliability monitor sampling.
Note 22: Data retention is degraded as TA increases.
Note 23: Guaranteed by 100% production test at elevated temperature for a shorter time; equivalence of this production test to the
data sheet limit at operating temperature range is established by reliability testing.
Note 24: EEPROM writes can become nonfunctional after the data-retention time is exceeded. Long-term storage at elevated temperatures is not recommended; the device can lose its write capability after 10 years at +125°C or 40 years at +85°C.
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Analog Devices │ 3
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Pin Description
PIN
NAME
1
GND
2
I/O
3–6
N.C.
FUNCTION
Ground Reference
1-Wire Bus Interface. Open drain, requires external pullup resistor.
No Connection
Detailed Description
The DS2431-A1 combines 1024 bits of EEPROM, an
8-byte register/control page with up to seven user read/
write bytes, and a fully featured 1-Wire interface in a
single chip. Each DS2431-A1 has its own 64-bit ROM
registration number that is factory lasered into the chip to
provide a guaranteed unique identity for absolute traceability. Data is transferred serially through the 1-Wire
protocol, which requires only a single data lead and a
ground return. The DS2431-A1 has an additional memory
area called the scratchpad that acts as a buffer when writing to the main memory or the register page. Data is first
written to the scratchpad from which it can be read back.
After the data has been verified, a Copy Scratchpad command transfers the data to its final memory location. The
DS2431-A1 applications include sensor, cable, accessory, or PCB identification in environments that demand
automotive AEC-Q100 Grade 1 reliability.
Overview
The block diagram in Figure 1 shows the relationships
between the major control and memory sections of the
DS2431-A1. The DS2431-A1 has four main data components: 64-bit lasered ROM, 64-bit scratchpad, four
32-byte pages of EEPROM, and 64-bit register page.
www.analog.com
PARASITE POWER
I/O
1-Wire
FUNCTION CONTROL
64-BIT
LASERED ROM
DS2431-A1
MEMORY
FUNCTION
CONTROL UNIT
CRC-16
GENERATOR
DATA MEMORY
4 PAGES OF
256 BITS EACH
64-BIT
SCRATCHPAD
REGISTER PAGE
64 BITS
Figure 1. Block Diagram
Analog Devices │ 4
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
DS2431-A1 COMMAND LEVEL:
1-Wire ROM FUNCTION COMMANDS
(SEE FIGURE 9)
DS2431-A1-SPECIFIC
MEMORY FUNCTION COMMANDS
(SEE FIGURE 7)
AVAILABLE COMMANDS: DATA FIELD AFFECTED:
READ ROM
MATCH ROM
SEARCH ROM
SKIP ROM
RESUME
64-BIT REG. #, RC-FLAG
64-BIT REG. #, RC-FLAG
64-BIT REG. #, RC-FLAG
RC-FLAG
RC-FLAG
WRITE SCRATCHPAD
READ SCRATCHPAD
COPY SCRATCHPAD
READ MEMORY
64-BIT SCRATCHPAD, FLAGS
64-BIT SCRATCHPAD
DATA MEMORY, REGISTER PAGE
DATA MEMORY, REGISTER PAGE
Figure 2. Hierarchical Structure for 1-Wire Protocol
MSB
8-BIT
CRC CODE
MSB
LSB MSB
48-BIT SERIAL NUMBER
LSB
8-BIT FAMILY
CODE (2Dh)
LSB MSB
LSB
Figure 3. 64-Bit Lasered ROM
The hierarchical structure of the 1-Wire protocol is shown
in Figure 2. The bus master must first provide one of the
five ROM function commands: Read ROM, Match ROM,
Search ROM, Skip ROM, and Resume. The protocol
required for these ROM function commands is described
in Figure 9. After a ROM function command is successfully executed, the memory functions become accessible
and the master can provide any one of the four memory
function commands. The protocol for these memory function commands is described in Figure 7. All data is read
and written least significant bit first.
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64-Bit Lasered ROM
Each DS2431-A1 contains a unique ROM code that is 64
bits long. The first 8 bits are a 1-Wire family code. The
next 48 bits are a unique serial number. The last 8 bits are
a CRC (cyclic redundancy check) of the first 56 bits. See
Figure 3 for details. The 1-Wire CRC is generated using
a polynomial generator consisting of a shift register and
XOR gates as shown in Figure 4. The polynomial is X8 +
X5 + X4 + 1. Additional information about the 1-Wire CRC
is available in Application Note 27.
The shift register bits are initialized to 0. Then, starting
with the least significant bit of the family code, one bit at
a time is shifted in. After the 8th bit of the family code has
been entered, the serial number is entered. After the last
bit of the serial number has been entered, the shift register contains the CRC value. Shifting in the 8 bits of the
CRC returns the shift register to all 0s.
Analog Devices │ 5
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
POLYNOMIAL = X8 + X5 + X4 + 1
1ST
STAGE
X0
2ND
STAGE
X1
3RD
STAGE
X2
4TH
STAGE
X3
5TH
STAGE
6TH
STAGE
X4
X5
7TH
STAGE
X6
8TH
STAGE
X7
X8
INPUT DATA
Figure 4. 1-Wire CRC Generator
Memory
Data memory and registers are located in a linear address
space, as shown in Figure 5. The data memory and the
registers have unrestricted read access. The DS2431-A1
EEPROM array consists of 18 rows of 8 bytes each. The
first 16 rows are divided equally into four memory pages
(32 bytes each). These four pages are the primary data
memory. Each page can be individually set to open (unpro-
tected), write protected, or EPROM mode by setting the
associated protection byte in the register row. The last
two rows contain protection registers and reserved bytes.
The register row consists of four protection control bytes,
a copy protection byte, the factory byte, and two user
byte/manufacture ID bytes. The manufacturer ID can be a
customer-supplied identification code that assists the application software in identifying the product the DS2431-A1 is
associated with. Contact the factory to set up and register a
ADDRESS RANGE
TYPE
0000h to 001Fh
R/(W)
Data Memory Page 0
DESCRIPTION
—
PROTECTION CODES
0020h to 003Fh
R/(W)
Data Memory Page 1
—
0040h to 005Fh
R/(W)
Data Memory Page 2
—
0060h to 007Fh
R/(W)
Data Memory Page 3
—
0080h*
R/(W)
Protection Control Byte Page 0
55h: Write Protect P0; AAh: EPROM Mode P0; 55h
or AAh: Write Protect 80h
0081h*
R/(W)
Protection Control Byte Page 1
55h: Write Protect P1; AAh: EPROM Mode P1; 55h
or AAh: Write Protect 81h
0082h*
R/(W)
Protection Control Byte Page 2
55h: Write Protect P2; AAh: EPROM Mode P2; 55h
or AAh: Write Protect 82h
0083h*
R/(W)
Protection Control Byte Page 3
55h: Write Protect P3; AAh: EPROM Mode P3; 55h
or AAh: Write Protect 83h
0084h*
R/(W)
Copy Protection Byte
55h or AAh: Copy Protect 0080:008Fh, and Any
Write-Protected Pages
0085h
R
Factory Byte. Set at Factory.
AAh: Write Protect 85h, 86h, 87h;
55h: Write Protect 85h, Unprotect 86h, 87h
0086h
R/(W)
User Byte/Manufacturer ID
—
0087h
R/(W)
User Byte/Manufacturer ID
—
0088h to 008Fh
N/A
Reserved
—
*Once programmed to AAh or 55h this address becomes read-only. All other codes can be stored, but neither write protect
the address nor activate any function.
Figure 5. Memory Map
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Analog Devices │ 6
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
custom manufacturer ID. The last row is reserved for future
use. It is undefined in terms of R/W functionality and should
not be used.
user byte row are blocked. In addition, all copy attempts
to write-protected main memory pages (i.e., refresh) are
blocked.
In addition to the main EEPROM array, an 8-byte volatile
scratchpad is included. Writes to the EEPROM array are
a two-step process. First, data is written to the scratchpad
and then copied into the main array. This allows the user
to first verify the data written to the scratchpad prior to
copying into the main array. The device only supports full
row (8-byte) copy operations. For data in the scratchpad
to be valid for a copy operation, the address supplied with
a Write Scratchpad must start on a row boundary, and 8
full bytes must be written into the scratchpad.
Address Registers and Transfer Status
The DS2431-A1 employs three address registers: TA1,
TA2, and E/S (Figure 6). These registers are common
to many other 1-Wire devices but operate slightly differently with the DS2431-A1. Registers TA1 and TA2
must be loaded with the target address to which the
data is written or from which data is read. Register E/S
is a readonly transfer-status register used to verify data
integrity with write commands. E/S bits E2:E0 are loaded
with the incoming T2:T0 on a Write Scratchpad command
and increment on each subsequent data byte. This is,
in effect, a byte-ending offset counter within the 8-byte
scratchpad. Bit 5 of the E/S register, called PF, is a logic
1 if the data in the scratchpad is not valid due to a loss of
power or if the master sends less bytes than needed to
reach the end of the scratchpad. For a valid write to the
scratchpad, T2:T0 must be 0 and the master must have
sent 8 data bytes. Bits 3, 4, and 6 have no function; they
always read 0. The highest valued bit of the E/S register,
called AA or authorization accepted, acts as a flag to indicate that the data stored in the scratchpad has already
been copied to the target memory address. Writing data
to the scratchpad clears this flag.
The protection control registers determine how incoming data on a Write Scratchpad command is loaded into
the scratchpad. A protection setting of 55h (write protect)
causes the incoming data to be ignored and the target
address main memory data to be loaded into the scratchpad. A protection setting of AAh (EPROM mode) causes
the logical AND of incoming data and target address
main memory data to be loaded into the scratchpad. Any
other protection control register setting leaves the associated memory page open for unrestricted write access.
Protection control byte settings of 55h or AAh also write
protect the protection control byte. The protection control
byte setting of 55h does not block the copy. This allows
write-protected data to be refreshed (i.e., reprogrammed
with the current data) in the device.
Writing with Verification
To write data to the DS2431-A1, the scratchpad must be
used as intermediate storage. First, the master issues
the Write Scratchpad command to specify the desired
target address, followed by the data to be written to the
scratchpad. Note that Copy Scratchpad commands must
The copy protection byte is used for a higher level of
security, and should only be used after all other protection
control bytes, user bytes, and write-protected pages are
set to their final value. If the copy protection byte is set
to 55h or AAh, all copy attempts to the register row and
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Target Address (TA1)
T7
T6
T5
T4
T3
T2
T1
T0
Target Address (TA2)
T15
T14
T13
T12
T11
T10
T9
T8
Ending Address with
Data Status (E/S)
(Read Only)
AA
0
PF
0
0
E2
E1
E0
Bit #
Figure 6. Address Registers
www.analog.com
Analog Devices │ 7
DS2431-A1
be performed on 8-byte boundaries, i.e., the three LSBs
of the target address (T2, T1, T0) must be equal to 000b.
If T2:T0 are sent with nonzero values, the copy function is blocked. Under certain conditions (see the Write
Scratchpad [0Fh] section) the master receives an inverted
CRC-16 of the command, address (actual address sent),
and data at the end of the Write Scratchpad command
sequence. Knowing this CRC value, the master can
compare it to the value it has calculated to decide if the
communication was successful and proceed to the Copy
Scratchpad command. If the master could not receive the
CRC-16, it should send the Read Scratchpad command
to verify data integrity. As a preamble to the scratchpad
data, the DS2431-A1 repeats the target address TA1 and
TA2 and sends the contents of the E/S register. If the PF
flag is set, data did not arrive correctly in the scratchpad
or there was a loss of power since data was last written
to the scratchpad. The master does not need to continue
reading; it can start a new trial to write data to the scratchpad. Similarly, a set AA flag together with a cleared PF
flag indicates that the device did not recognize the Write
command. If everything went correctly, both flags are
cleared. Now the master can continue reading and verifying every data byte. After the master has verified the data,
it can send the Copy Scratchpad command, for example.
This command must be followed exactly by the data of the
three address registers, TA1, TA2, and E/S. The master
should obtain the contents of these registers by reading
the scratchpad.
Memory Function Commands
The Memory Function Flow Chart (Figure 7) describes
the protocols necessary for accessing the memory of the
DS2431-A1. An example on how to use these functions
to write to and read from the device is included at the end
of this document.
www.analog.com
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Write Scratchpad [0Fh]
The Write Scratchpad command applies to the data
memory and the writable addresses in the register page.
In order for the scratchpad data to be valid for copying
to the array, the user must perform a Write Scratchpad
command of 8 bytes starting at a valid row boundary. The
Write Scratchpad command accepts invalid addresses
and partial rows, but subsequent Copy Scratchpad commands are blocked. After issuing the Write Scratchpad
command, the master must first provide the 2-byte target
address, followed by the data to be written to the scratchpad. The data is written to the scratchpad starting at the
byte offset of T2:T0. The E/S bits E2:E0 are loaded with
the starting byte offset, and increment with each subsequent byte. Effectively, E2:E0 is the byte offset of the last
full byte written to the scratchpad. Only full data bytes are
accepted.
When executing the Write Scratchpad command, the
CRC generator inside the DS2431-A1 (Figure 13) calculates a CRC of the entire data stream, starting at the command code and ending at the last data byte as sent by the
master. This CRC is generated using the CRC-16 polynomial by first clearing the CRC generator and then shifting
in the command code (0Fh) of the Write Scratchpad command, the target addresses (TA1 and TA2), and all the
data bytes. Note that the CRC-16 calculation is performed
with the actual TA1 and TA2 and data sent by the master.
The master can end the Write Scratchpad command at
any time. However, if the end of the scratchpad is reached
(E2:E0 = 111b), the master can send 16 read-time slots
and receive the CRC generated by the DS2431-A1.
If a Write Scratchpad is attempted to a write-protected
location, the scratchpad is loaded with the data already in
memory, rather than the data transmitted. Similarly, if the
target address page is in EPROM mode, the scratchpad
is loaded with the bitwise logical AND of the transmitted
data and data already in memory.
Analog Devices │ 8
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
FROM ROM FUNCTIONS
FLOW CHART (FIGURE 9)
BUS MASTER Tx MEMORY
FUNCTION COMMAND
0Fh
WRITE SCRATCHPAD?
AAh
READ SCRATCHPAD?
N
Y
BUS MASTER Rx
TA1 (T7:T0), TA2 (T15:T8),
AND E/S BYTE
DS2431-A1 SETS
SETS PF = 1
CLEARS AA = 0
SETS E2:E0 = T2:T0
DS2431-A1 SETS
SCRATCHPAD
BYTE COUNTER = T2:T0
MASTER Tx DATA BYTE
TO SCRATCHPAD
MASTER Tx RESET?
APPLIES ONLY
IF THE MEMORY
AREA IS NOT
PROTECTED.
Y
N
N
E2:E0 = 7?
Y
T2:T0 = 0?
TO FIGURE 7
2ND PART
Y
BUS MASTER Tx
TA1 (T7:T0), TA2 (T15:T8)
DS2431-A1
INCREMENTS
E2:E0
N
N
BUS MASTER Rx
DATA BYTE FROM
SCRATCHPAD
DS2431-A1
INCREMENTS
BYTE COUNTER
IF WRITE PROTECTED,
THE DS2431-A1
COPIES THE DATE
BYTE FROM THE
TARGET ADDRESS
INTO THE SP.
IF IN EPROM MODE,
THE DS2431-A1
LOADS THE BITWISE
LOGICAL AND,
THE TRANSMITTED
BYTE, AND THE
DATA BYTE FROM
THE TARGETED
ADDRESS INTO
THE SP.
MASTER Tx RESET?
Y
N
N
BYTE COUNTER
= E2:E0?
Y
BUS MASTER Rx CRC-16
OF COMMAND, ADDRESS,
E/S BYTE, DATA BYTES
AS SENT BY THE DS2431-A1
Y
PF = 0
DS2431-A1 Tx CRC-16 OF
COMMAND, ADDRESS,
DATA BYTES AS THEY
WERE SENT BY THE BUS
MASTER
BUS MASTER
Rx "1"s
N
BUS MASTER
Rx "1"s
N
MASTER Tx RESET?
Y
MASTER Tx RESET?
Y
TO FIGURE 7
2ND PART
TO ROM FUNCTIONS
FLOW CHART (FIGURE 9)
Figure 7. Memory Function Flow Chart
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Analog Devices │ 9
DS2431-A1
FROM FIGURE 7
1ST PART
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
55h
COPY SCRATCHPAD?
Y
Y
N
BUS MASTER Tx
TA1 (T7:T0), TA2 (T15:T8)
ADDRESS < 90h?
Y
T15:T0 < 0090h?
N
Y
APPLICABLE TO ALL R/W
MEMORY LOCATIONS.
BUS MASTER Tx
TA1 (T7:T0), TA2 (T15:T8)
AND E/S BYTE
AUTH. CODE
MATCH?
F0h
READ MEMORY?
N
Y
N
N
N
PF = 0?
BUS MASTER Rx
DATA BYTE FROM
MEMORY ADDRESS
DS2431-A1
INCREMENTS
ADDRESS
COUNTER
Y
Y
DS2431-A1 SETS MEMORY
ADDRESS = (T15:T0)
COPY PROTECTED?
MASTER Tx RESET?
N
DURATION: tPROG
BUS MASTER
Rx "1"s
MASTER Tx RESET?
Y
N
ADDRESS < 8Fh?
*
N
DS2431 Tx "0"
N
BUS MASTER
Rx "1"s
N
AA = 1
DS2431-A1 COPIES
SCRATCHPAD
DATA TO ADDRESS
Y
BUS MASTER
Rx "1"s
N
MASTER Tx RESET?
Y
MASTER Tx RESET?
Y
Y
MASTER Tx RESET?
Y
N
DS2431 Tx "1"
MASTER Tx RESET?
FROM FIGURE 7
1ST PART
N
Y
* 1-Wire IDLE HIGH FOR POWER
Figure 7. Memory Function Flow Chart (continued)
www.analog.com
Analog Devices │ 10
DS2431-A1
Read Scratchpad [AAh]
The Read Scratchpad command allows verifying the target address and the integrity of the scratchpad data. After
issuing the command code, the master begins reading.
The first two bytes are the target address. The next byte
is the ending offset/data status byte (E/S) followed by the
scratchpad data, which may be different from what the
master originally sent. This is of particular importance if
the target address is within the register page or a page in
either Write Protection or EPROM modes. See the Write
Scratchpad [0Fh] section for details. The master should
read through the scratchpad (E2:E0 - T2:T0 + 1 bytes),
after which it receives the inverted CRC, based on data
as it was sent by the DS2431-A1. If the master continues
reading after the CRC, all data are logic 1s.
Copy Scratchpad [55h]
The Copy Scratchpad command is used to copy data from
the scratchpad to writable memory sections. After issuing
the Copy Scratchpad command, the master must provide
a 3-byte authorization pattern, which should have been
obtained by an immediately preceding Read Scratchpad
command. This 3-byte pattern must exactly match the
data contained in the three address registers (TA1, TA2,
E/S, in that order). If the pattern matches, the target
address is valid, the PF flag is not set, and the target
memory is not copy protected, then the AA (authorization
accepted) flag is set and the copy begins. All eight bytes
of scratchpad contents are copied to the target memory
location. The duration of the device’s internal data transfer
is tPROG during which the voltage on the 1-Wire bus must
not fall below VPUPMIN. A pattern of alternating 0s and 1s
are transmitted after the data has been copied until the
master issues a reset pulse. If the PF flag is set or the
target memory is copy protected, the copy does not begin
and the AA flag is not set.
Read Memory [F0h]
The Read Memory command is the general function to
read data from the DS2431-A1. After issuing the command, the master must provide the 2-byte target address.
After these two bytes, the master reads data beginning
from the target address and may continue until address
008Fh. If the master continues reading, the result is logic
1s. The device’s internal TA1, TA2, E/S, and scratchpad
contents are not affected by a Read Memory command.
www.analog.com
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
1-Wire Bus System
The 1-Wire bus is a system that has a single bus master
and one or more slaves. In all instances the DS2431-A1
is a slave device. The bus master is typically a microcontroller. The discussion of this bus system is broken down
into three topics: hardware configuration, transaction
sequence, and 1-Wire signaling (signal types and timing).
The 1-Wire protocol defines bus transactions in terms of
the bus state during specific time slots, which are initiated
on the falling edge of sync pulses from the bus master.
Hardware Configuration
The 1-Wire bus has only a single line by definition; it is
important that each device on the bus be able to drive
it at the appropriate time. To facilitate this, each device
attached to the 1-Wire bus must have open-drain or
three-state outputs. The 1-Wire port of the DS2431-A1
is open drain with an internal circuit equivalent to that
shown in Figure 8. A multidrop bus consists of a 1-Wire
bus with multiple slaves attached. The DS2431-A1 communicates at a maximum data rate of 15.4kbps. Note that
legacy 1-Wire products support a standard communication speed of 16.3kbps. The slightly reduced rates for
the DS2431-A1 are a result of additional recovery times,
which in turn were driven by a 1-Wire physical interface
enhancement to improve noise immunity. The value of the
pullup resistor primarily depends on the network size and
load conditions. The DS2431-A1 requires a pullup resistor
of 2.2kΩ (max).
The idle state for the 1-Wire bus is high. If for any reason
a transaction needs to be suspended, the bus MUST
be left in the idle state if the transaction is to resume. If
this does not occur and the bus is left low for more than
120μs, one or more devices on the bus might be reset.
Transaction Sequence
The protocol for accessing the DS2431-A1 through the
1-Wire port is as follows:
●
Initialization
●
ROM Function Command
●
Memory Function Command
●
Transaction/Data
Analog Devices │ 11
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
VPUP
BUS MASTER
DS2431-A1 1-Wire PORT
RPUP
DATA
Rx
Tx
OPEN-DRAIN
PORT PIN
Rx = RECEIVE
Tx = TRANSMIT
Rx
IL
Tx
100Ω MOSFET
Figure 8. Hardware Configuration
Initialization
All transactions on the 1-Wire bus begin with an initialization sequence. The initialization sequence consists of a
reset pulse transmitted by the bus master followed by
presence pulse(s) transmitted by the slave(s). The presence pulse lets the bus master know that the DS2431-A1
is on the bus and is ready to operate. For more details,
see the 1-Wire Signaling section.
1-Wire ROM Function
Commands
Once the bus master has detected a presence, it can
issue one of the five ROM function commands that the
DS2431-A1 supports. All ROM function commands are 8
bits long. A list of these commands follows (see the flow
chart in Figure 9).
Read ROM [33h]
The Read ROM command allows the bus master to read
the DS2431-A1’s 8-bit family code, unique 48-bit serial
number, and 8-bit CRC. This command can only be used
if there is a single slave on the bus. If more than one
slave is present on the bus, a data collision occurs when
all slaves try to transmit at the same time (open drain
produces a wired-AND result). The resultant family code
and 48-bit serial number result in a mismatch of the CRC.
Match ROM [55h]
The Match ROM command, followed by a 64-bit ROM
sequence, allows the bus master to address a specific
DS2431-A1 on a multidrop bus. Only the DS2431-A1 that
exactly matches the 64-bit ROM sequence responds to
the following memory function command. All other slaves
wait for a reset pulse. This command can be used with a
single or multiple devices on the bus.
www.analog.com
Search ROM [F0h]
When a system is initially brought up, the bus master
might not know the number of devices on the 1-Wire
bus or their registration numbers. By taking advantage
of the wired-AND property of the bus, the master can
use a process of elimination to identify the registration
numbers of all slave devices. For each bit of the registration number, starting with the least significant bit, the bus
master issues a triplet of time slots. On the first slot, each
slave device participating in the search outputs the true
value of its registration number bit. On the second slot,
each slave device participating in the search outputs the
complemented value of its registration number bit. On
the third slot, the master writes the true value of the bit
to be selected. All slave devices that do not match the
bit written by the master stop participating in the search.
If both of the read bits are zero, the master knows that
slave devices exist with both states of the bit. By choosing
which state to write, the bus master branches in the romcode tree. After one complete pass, the bus master knows
the registration number of a single device. Additional
passes identify the registration numbers of the remaining
devices. Refer to Application Note 187: 1-Wire Search
Algorithm for a detailed discussion, including an example.
Skip ROM [CCh]
This command can save time in a single-drop bus system by allowing the bus master to access the memory
functions without providing the 64-bit ROM code. If more
than one slave is present on the bus and, for example, a
Read command is issued following the Skip ROM command, data collision occurs on the bus as multiple slaves
transmit simultaneously (open-drain pulldowns produce a
wired-AND result).
Analog Devices │ 12
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
BUS MASTER Tx
RESET PULSE
FROM MEMORY FUNCTIONS
FLOW CHART (FIGURE 7)
BUS MASTER Tx ROM
FUNCTION COMMAND
33h
READ ROM
COMMAND?
DS2431-A1 Tx
PRESENCE PULSE
N
55h
MATCH ROM
COMMAND?
F0h
SEARCH ROM
COMMAND?
N
N
CCh
SKIP ROM
COMMAND?
Y
Y
Y
Y
RC = 0
RC = 0
RC = 0
RC = 0
N
A5h
RESUME
COMMAND?
Y
RC = 1?
DS2431-A1 Tx
FAMILY CODE
(1 BYTE)
DS2431-A1 Tx BIT 0
MASTER Tx BIT 0
DS2431-A1 Tx BIT 0
N
N
BIT 0 MATCH?
Y
Y
Y
MASTER Tx
RESET?
Y
N
DS2431-A1 Tx BIT 1
MASTER Tx BIT 1
DS2431-A1 Tx BIT 1
MASTER Tx BIT 1
BIT 1 MATCH?
N
N
BIT 1 MATCH?
Y
Y
DS2431-A1 Tx
CRC BYTE
N
MASTER Tx BIT 0
BIT 0 MATCH?
DS2431-A1 Tx
SERIAL NUMBER
(6 BYTES)
N
DS2431-A1 Tx BIT 63
MASTER Tx BIT 63
DS2431-A1 Tx BIT 63
MASTER Tx BIT 63
BIT 63 MATCH?
N
N
BIT 63 MATCH?
Y
Y
RC = 1
RC = 1
TO MEMORY FUNCTIONS
FLOW CHART (FIGURE 7)
Figure 9. ROM Functions Flow Chart
www.analog.com
Analog Devices │ 13
DS2431-A1
Resume [A5h]
To maximize the data throughput in a multidrop environment, the Resume function is available. This function
checks the status of the RC bit and, if it is set, directly
transfers control to the Memory functions, similar to a Skip
ROM command. The only way to set the RC bit is through
successfully executing the Match ROM or Search ROM
command. Once the RC bit is set, the device can repeatedly be accessed through the Resume command function. Accessing another device on the bus clears the RC
bit, preventing two or more devices from simultaneously
responding to the Resume command function.
1-Wire Signaling
The DS2431-A1 requires strict protocols to ensure data
integrity. The protocol consists of four types of signaling
on one line: reset sequence with reset pulse and presence
pulse, write-zero, write-one, and read-data. Except for the
presence pulse, the bus master initiates all falling edges.
To get from idle to active, the voltage on the 1-Wire line
needs to fall from VPUP below the threshold VTL. To get
from active to idle, the voltage needs to rise from VILMAX
past the threshold VTH. The time it takes for the voltage
to make this rise is seen in Figure 10 as ε, and its duration depends on the pullup resistor (RPUP) used and the
capacitance of the 1-Wire network attached. The voltage
VILMAX is relevant for the DS2431-A1 when determining
a logical level, not triggering any events.
Figure 10 shows the initialization sequence required to
begin any communication with the DS2431-A1. A reset
pulse followed by a presence pulse indicates that the
DS2431-A1 is ready to receive data, given the correct
ROM and memory function command. If the bus master
uses slew-rate control on the falling edge, it must pull
down the line for tRSTL + tF to compensate for the edge.
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1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
After the bus master has released the line it goes into
receive mode. Now the 1-Wire bus is pulled to VPUP
through the pullup resistor, or in the case of a DS2482-x00
or DS2480B driver, through the active circuitry. When the
threshold VTH is crossed, the DS2431-A1 waits for tPDH
and then transmits a presence pulse by pulling the line
low for tPDL. To detect a presence pulse, the master must
test the logical state of the 1-Wire line at tMSP.
The tRSTH window must be at least the sum of tPDHMAX, tPDLMAX, and tRECMIN. Immediately after tRSTH is
expired, the DS2431-A1 is ready for data communication.
In a mixed population network, tRSTH should be extended
to minimum 480μs to accommodate other 1-Wire devices.
Read-/Write-Time Slots
Data communication with the DS2431-A1 takes place in
time slots, which carry a single bit each. Write-time slots
transport data from bus master to slave. Read-time slots
transfer data from slave to master. Figure 11 illustrates
the definitions of the write- and read-time slots. All communication begins with the master pulling the data line
low. As the voltage on the 1-Wire line falls below the
threshold VTL, the DS2431-A1 starts its internal timing
generator that determines when the data line is sampled
during a write-time slot and how long data is valid during
a read-time slot.
Master-to-Slave
For a write-one time slot, the voltage on the data line
must have crossed the VTH threshold before the writeone
low time tW1LMAX is expired. For a write-zero time slot,
the voltage on the data line must stay below the VTH
threshold until the write-zero low time tW0LMIN is expired.
For the most reliable communication, the voltage on the
data line should not exceed VILMAX during the entire
tW0L or tW1L window. After the VTH threshold has been
crossed, the DS2431-A1 needs a recovery time tREC
before it is ready for the next time slot.
Analog Devices │ 14
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
MASTER Tx "RESET PULSE"
MASTER Rx "PRESENCE PULSE"
ε
tMSP
VPUP
VIHMASTER
VTH
VTL
VILMAX
0V
tRSTL
tPDH
tF
tPDL
tREC
tRSTH
RESISTOR
MASTER
DS2431-A1
Figure 10. Initialization Procedure: Reset and Presence Pulse
Slave-to-Master
A read-data time slot begins like a write-one time slot.
The voltage on the data line must remain below VTL until
the read low time tRL is expired. During the tRL window,
when responding with a 0, the DS2431-A1 starts pulling
the data line low; its internal timing generator determines
when this pulldown ends and the voltage starts rising
again. When responding with a 1, the DS2431-A1 does
not hold the data line low at all, and the voltage starts rising as soon as tRL is over.
The sum of tRL + δ (rise time) on one side and the internal timing generator of the DS2431-A1 on the other side
define the master sampling window (tMSRMIN to tMSRMAX), in which the master must perform a read from the
www.analog.com
data line. For the most reliable communication, tRL should
be as short as permissible, and the master should read
close to but no later than tMSRMAX. After reading from
the data line, the master must wait until tSLOT is expired.
This guarantees sufficient recovery time tREC for the
DS2431-A1 to get ready for the next time slot. Note that
tREC specified herein applies only to a single DS2431-A1
attached to a 1-Wire line. For multidevice configurations,
tREC should be extended to accommodate the additional
1-Wire device input capacitance. Alternatively, an interface that performs active pullup during the 1-Wire recovery time such as the DS2482-x00 or DS2480B 1-Wire line
drivers can be used.
Analog Devices │ 15
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
WRITE-ONE TIME SLOT
tW1L
VPUP
VIHMASTER
VTH
VTL
VILMAX
0V
ε
tF
tSLOT
RESISTOR
MASTER
WRITE-ZERO TIME SLOT
tW0L
VPUP
VIHMASTER
VTH
VTL
VILMAX
0V
ε
tF
tSLOT
RESISTOR
READ-DATA TIME SLOT
tRL
VPUP
VIHMASTER
VTH
VTL
VILMAX
0V
tREC
MASTER
tMSR
MASTER
SAMPLING
WINDOW
δ
tF
tSLOT
RESISTOR
MASTER
tREC
DS2431-A1
Figure 11. Read/Write Timing Diagrams
www.analog.com
Analog Devices │ 16
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Improved Network Behavior
(Switchpoint Hysteresis)
In a 1-Wire environment, line termination is possible only
during transients controlled by the bus master (1-Wire
driver). 1-Wire networks, therefore, are susceptible to
noise of various origins. Depending on the physical size
and topology of the network, reflections from end points
and branch points can add up or cancel each other to
some extent. Such reflections are visible as glitches or
ringing on the 1-Wire communication line. Noise coupled
onto the 1-Wire line from external sources can also result
in signal glitching. A glitch during the rising edge of a time
slot can cause a slave device to lose synchronization with
the master and, consequently, result in a Search ROM
command coming to a dead end or cause a device-specific function command to abort. For better performance in
network applications, the DS2431-A1 uses a new 1-Wire
frontend, which makes it less sensitive to noise.
threshold and extend beyond the tREH window cannot be filtered out and are taken as the beginning of
a new time slot (Figure 12, Case C, tGL ≥ tREH).
Devices that have the parameters VHY and tREH specified in their electrical characteristics use the improved
1-Wire front-end.
CRC Generation
2) There is a hysteresis at the low-to-high switching
threshold VTH. If a negative glitch crosses VTH but
does not go below VTH - VHY, it will not be recognized (Figure 12, Case A).
The DS2431-A1 uses two different types of CRCs. One
CRC is an 8-bit type and is stored in the most significant
byte of the 64-bit ROM. The bus master can compute a
CRC value from the first 56 bits of the 64-bit ROM and
compare it to the value stored within the DS2431-A1 to
determine if the ROM data has been received error-free.
The equivalent polynomial function of this CRC is X8 +
X5 + X4 + 1. This 8-bit CRC is received in the true (noninverted) form. It is computed at the factory and lasered
into the ROM. The other CRC is a 16-bit type, generated according to the standardized CRC-16 polynomial
function X16 + X15 + X2 + 1. This CRC is used for fast
verification of a data transfer when writing to or reading
from the scratchpad. In contrast to the 8-bit CRC, the
16-bit CRC is always communicated in the inverted form.
A CRC generator inside the DS2431-A1 chip (Figure 13)
calculates a new 16-bit CRC, as shown in the command
flow chart (Figure 7). The bus master compares the CRC
value read from the device to the one it calculates from
the data, and decides whether to continue with an operation or to reread the portion of the data with the CRC error.
3) There is a time window specified by the rising edge
hold-off time tREH during which glitches are ignored,
even if they extend below the VTH - VHY threshold
(Figure 12, Case B, tGL < tREH). Deep voltage drops
or glitches that appear late after crossing the VTH
With the Write Scratchpad command, the CRC is generated by first clearing the CRC generator and then shifting
in the command code, the target addresses TA1 and TA2,
and all the data bytes as they were sent by the bus master.
The DS2431-A1 transmits this CRC only if E2:E0 = 111b.
The 1-Wire front-end of the DS2431-A1 differs from traditional slave devices in three characteristics.
1) There is additional lowpass filtering in the circuit that
detects the falling edge at the beginning of a time
slot. This reduces the sensitivity to high-frequency
noise.
tREH
VPUP
VTH
tREH
VHY
CASE A
0V
CASE B
tGL
CASE C
tGL
Figure 12. Noise Suppression Scheme
www.analog.com
Analog Devices │ 17
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
POLYNOMIAL = X16 + X15 + X2 + 1
1ST
STAGE
3RD
STAGE
2ND
STAGE
X0
X2
X1
9TH
STAGE
X8
10TH
STAGE
X9
4TH
STAGE
11TH
STAGE
X10
X3
12TH
STAGE
X11
5TH
STAGE
6TH
STAGE
X4
13TH
STAGE
X12
X5
14TH
STAGE
X13
7TH
STAGE
X6
8TH
STAGE
X7
15TH
STAGE
X14
16TH
STAGE
X15
X16
CRC OUTPUT
INPUT DATA
Figure 13. CRC-16 Hardware Description and Polynomial
With the Read Scratchpad command, the CRC is generated by first clearing the CRC generator and then shifting
in the command code, the target addresses TA1 and
TA2, the E/S byte, and the scratchpad data as they were
sent by the DS2431-A1. The DS2431-A1 transmits this
CRC only if the reading continues through the end of the
scratchpad. For more information on generating CRC
values, refer to Application Note 27.
Command-Specific 1-Wire Communication Protocol—Legend
SYMBOL
DESCRIPTION
RST
1-Wire reset pulse generated by master.
PD
1-Wire presence pulse generated by slave.
Select
Command and data to satisfy the ROM function protocol.
WS
Command “Write Scratchpad.”
RS
Command “Read Scratchpad.”
CPS
Command “Copy Scratchpad.”
RM
Command “Read Memory.”
TA
Target address TA1, TA2.
TA-E/S
Target address TA1, TA2 with E/S byte.
Transfer of as many bytes as needed to reach the end of the scratchpad for a given target address.
Transfer of as many data bytes as are needed to reach the end of the memory.
CRC-16
Transfer of an inverted CRC-16.
FF Loop
Indefinite loop where the master reads FF bytes.
AA Loop
Indefinite loop where the master reads AA bytes.
Programming
www.analog.com
Data transfer to EEPROM; no activity on the 1-Wire bus permitted during this time.
Analog Devices │ 18
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Command-Specific 1-Wire Communication Protocol—Color Codes
Master to Slave
Slave to Master
Programming
1-Wire Communication Examples
Write Scratchpad
RST PD Select WS TA CRC-16
FF Loop
Read Scratchpad
RST PD Select RS TA-E/S
CRC-16
FF Loop
Copy Scratchpad (Success)
RST PD Select CPS TA-E/S Programming AA Loop
Copy Scratchpad (Invalid Address or PF = 1 or Copy Protected)
RST PD Select CPS TA-E/S FF Loop
Read Memory (Success)
RST PD Select RM TA FF Loop
Read Memory (Invalid Address)
RST PD Select RM TA FF Loop
www.analog.com
Analog Devices │ 19
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Memory Function Example
With only a single DS2431-A1 connected to the bus master, the communication looks like this:
Write to the first 8 bytes of memory page 1. Read the
entire memory.
MASTER MODE
DATA (LSB FIRST)
Tx
(Reset)
COMMENTS
Rx
(Presence)
Tx
CCh
Issue “Skip ROM” command
Tx
0Fh
Issue “Write Scratchpad” command
Tx
20h
TA1, beginning offset = 20h
Tx
00h
TA2, address = 0020h
Reset pulse
Presence pulse
Tx
Rx
Write 8 bytes of data to scratchpad
Tx
(Reset)
Rx
(Presence)
Tx
CCh
Issue “Skip ROM” command
Tx
AAh
Issue “Read Scratchpad” command
Rx
20h
Read TA1, beginning offset = 20h
Rx
00h
Read TA2, address = 0020h
Rx
07h
Read E/S, ending offset = 111b, AA, PF = 0
Read CRC to check for data integrity
Reset pulse
Presence pulse
Rx
Rx
Read scratchpad data and verify
Tx
(Reset)
Rx
(Presence)
Tx
CCh
Issue “Skip ROM” command
Tx
55h
Issue “Copy Scratchpad” command
Tx
20h
TA1
Tx
00h
TA2
Tx
07h
E/S
—
Rx
AAh
Tx
(Reset)
Rx
(Presence)
Tx
CCh
Issue “Skip ROM” command
Tx
F0h
Issue “Read Memory” command
Tx
00h
TA1, beginning offset = 00h
TA2, address = 0000h
Read CRC to check for data integrity
Reset pulse
Presence pulse
(AUTHORIZATION CODE)
Wait tPROGMAX for the copy function to complete
Read copy status, AAh = success
Reset pulse
Tx
00h
Rx
Tx
(Reset)
Rx
(Presence)
Presence pulse
Read the entire memory
Reset pulse
Presence pulse
Package Information
For the latest package outline information and land patterns (footprints), go to www.maximintegrated.com/packages. Note that a “+”,
“#”, or “-” in the package code indicates RoHS status only. Package drawings may show a different suffix character, but the drawing
pertains to the package regardless of RoHS status.
PACKAGE TYPE
PACKAGE CODE
DOCUMENT NO.
6 TSOC
D6+1
21-0382
www.analog.com
Analog Devices │ 20
DS2431-A1
1024-Bit, 1-Wire EEPROM
for Automotive Applications
Revision History
REVISION
NUMBER
REVISION
DATE
0
11/07
Initial release.
1
3/08
Removed all references to overdrive speed.
2
7/22
Updated the minimum 1-Wire voltage required for data transfer in the Copy
Scratchpad section
DESCRIPTION
PAGES
CHANGED
—
1–5, 8, 11, 13, 14,
15, 18
11
Information furnished by Analog Devices is believed to be accurate and reliable. However, no responsibility is
assumed by Analog Devices for its use, nor for any infringements of patents or other rights of third parties that
may result from its use. Specifications subject to change without notice. No license is granted by implication
or otherwise under any patent or patent rights of Analog Devices. Trademarks and registered trademarks are
the property of their respective owners.
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Analog Devices │ 21