PIC18F67J11T-I/PT Microchip Technology, PIC18F67J11T-I/PT Datasheet - Page 156

IC PIC MCU FLASH 64KX16 64TQFP

PIC18F67J11T-I/PT

Manufacturer Part Number
PIC18F67J11T-I/PT
Description
IC PIC MCU FLASH 64KX16 64TQFP
Manufacturer
Microchip Technology
Series
PIC® 18Fr

Specifications of PIC18F67J11T-I/PT

Core Size
8-Bit
Program Memory Size
128KB (64K x 16)
Oscillator Type
Internal
Core Processor
PIC
Speed
48MHz
Connectivity
I²C, SPI, UART/USART
Peripherals
Brown-out Detect/Reset, LVD, POR, PWM, WDT
Number Of I /o
52
Program Memory Type
FLASH
Ram Size
3930 x 8
Voltage - Supply (vcc/vdd)
2 V ~ 3.6 V
Data Converters
A/D 11x10b
Operating Temperature
-40°C ~ 85°C
Package / Case
64-TFQFP
Controller Family/series
PIC18
No. Of I/o's
52
Ram Memory Size
3930Byte
Cpu Speed
48MHz
No. Of Timers
5
No. Of Pwm
RoHS Compliant
Processor Series
PIC18F
Core
PIC
Data Bus Width
8 bit
Data Ram Size
3904 B
Interface Type
EUSART, I2C, MSSP, SPI
Maximum Clock Frequency
48 MHz
Number Of Programmable I/os
68
Number Of Timers
5
Maximum Operating Temperature
+ 85 C
Mounting Style
SMD/SMT
3rd Party Development Tools
52715-96, 52716-328, 52717-734, 52712-325, EWPIC18
Development Tools By Supplier
PG164130, DV164035, DV244005, DV164005, PG164120, DV164136, DM183022, DM183032
Minimum Operating Temperature
- 40 C
On-chip Adc
10 bit, 15 Channel
Lead Free Status / RoHS Status
Lead free / RoHS Compliant
For Use With
AC162091 - HEADER MPLAB ICD2 18F87J11 64/80MA180020 - MODULE PLUG-IN HPC EXPL 18F87J11AC164327 - MODULE SKT FOR 64TQFP
Eeprom Size
-
Lead Free Status / Rohs Status
 Details
Other names
PIC18F67J11T-I/PTTR

Available stocks

Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
PIC18F67J11T-I/PT
Manufacturer:
Microchip Technology
Quantity:
10 000
PIC18F87J10
12.3.3
The Timer1 oscillator circuit draws very little power
during operation. Due to the low-power nature of the
oscillator, it may also be sensitive to rapidly changing
signals in close proximity.
The oscillator circuit, shown in Figure 12-3, should be
located as close as possible to the microcontroller.
There should be no circuits passing within the oscillator
circuit boundaries other than V
If a high-speed circuit must be located near the oscilla-
tor (such as the ECCP1 pin in Output Compare or PWM
mode, or the primary oscillator using the OSC2 pin), a
grounded guard ring around the oscillator circuit, as
shown in Figure 12-4, may be helpful when used on a
single-sided PCB or in addition to a ground plane.
FIGURE 12-4:
12.4
The TMR1 register pair (TMR1H:TMR1L) increments
from 0000h to FFFFh and rolls over to 0000h. The
Timer1 interrupt, if enabled, is generated on overflow
which is latched in interrupt flag bit, TMR1IF
(PIR1<0>). This interrupt can be enabled or disabled
by setting or clearing the Timer1 Interrupt Enable bit,
TMR1IE (PIE1<0>).
DS39663D-page 154
Note: Not drawn to scale.
Timer1 Interrupt
TIMER1 OSCILLATOR LAYOUT
CONSIDERATIONS
OSCILLATOR CIRCUIT
WITH GROUNDED
GUARD RING
SS
V
OSC1
OSC2
RC0
RC1
V
RC2
or V
DD
SS
DD
.
Preliminary
12.5
If ECCP1 or ECCP2 is configured to use Timer1 and to
generate a Special Event Trigger in Compare mode
(CCPxM3:CCPxM0 = 1011), this signal will reset
Timer3. The trigger from ECCP2 will also start an A/D
conversion if the A/D module is enabled (see
Section 17.2.1 “Special Event Trigger” for more
information).
The module must be configured as either a timer or a
synchronous counter to take advantage of this feature.
When used this way, the CCPRxH:CCPRxL register
pair effectively becomes a period register for Timer1.
If Timer1 is running in Asynchronous Counter mode,
this Reset operation may not work.
In the event that a write to Timer1 coincides with a
Special Event Trigger, the write operation will take
precedence.
12.6
Adding an external LP oscillator to Timer1 (such as the
one described in Section 12.3 “Timer1 Oscillator”
above) gives users the option to include RTC function-
ality to their applications. This is accomplished with an
inexpensive watch crystal to provide an accurate time
base and several lines of application code to calculate
the time. When operating in Sleep mode and using a
battery or supercapacitor as a power source, it can
completely eliminate the need for a separate RTC
device and battery backup.
The application code routine, RTCisr, shown in
Example 12-1, demonstrates a simple method to
increment a counter at one-second intervals using an
Interrupt Service Routine. Incrementing the TMR1
register pair to overflow triggers the interrupt and calls
the routine which increments the seconds counter by
one. Additional counters for minutes and hours are
incremented as the previous counter overflows.
Since the register pair is 16 bits wide, counting up to
overflow the register directly from a 32.768 kHz clock
would take 2 seconds. To force the overflow at the
required one-second intervals, it is necessary to pre-
load it. The simplest method is to set the MSb of
TMR1H with a BSF instruction. Note that the TMR1L
register is never preloaded or altered; doing so may
introduce cumulative error over many cycles.
For this method to be accurate, Timer1 must operate in
Asynchronous mode and the Timer1 overflow interrupt
must be enabled (PIE1<0> = 1) as shown in the
routine, RTCinit. The Timer1 oscillator must also be
enabled and running at all times.
Note:
Resetting Timer1 Using the ECCP
Special Event Trigger
Using Timer1 as a Real-Time Clock
The Special Event Triggers from the
ECCPx module will not set the TMR1IF
interrupt flag bit (PIR1<0>).
© 2006 Microchip Technology Inc.

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