MC9S12E128CPV Freescale Semiconductor, MC9S12E128CPV Datasheet - Page 315

Microcontrollers (MCU) 16 Bit 16MHz

MC9S12E128CPV

Manufacturer Part Number
MC9S12E128CPV
Description
Microcontrollers (MCU) 16 Bit 16MHz
Manufacturer
Freescale Semiconductor
Datasheet

Specifications of MC9S12E128CPV

Data Bus Width
16 bit
Program Memory Type
Flash
Program Memory Size
128 KB
Data Ram Size
8 KB
Interface Type
SCI, SPI
Maximum Clock Frequency
25 MHz
Number Of Programmable I/os
92
Number Of Timers
16 bit
Operating Supply Voltage
3.135 V to 5.5 V
Maximum Operating Temperature
+ 85 C
Mounting Style
SMD/SMT
Package / Case
LQFP-112
Minimum Operating Temperature
- 40 C
On-chip Adc
10 bit
On-chip Dac
8 bit, 2 Channel
Lead Free Status / Rohs Status
No RoHS Version Available

Available stocks

Company
Part Number
Manufacturer
Quantity
Price
Part Number:
MC9S12E128CPVE
Manufacturer:
FREESCALE
Quantity:
1 560
Part Number:
MC9S12E128CPVE
Manufacturer:
Freescale Semiconductor
Quantity:
10 000
Part Number:
MC9S12E128CPVE
Manufacturer:
FREESCALE
Quantity:
1 560
If the master receiver does not acknowledge the slave transmitter after a byte transmission, it means 'end
of data' to the slave, so the slave releases the SDA line for the master to generate STOP or START signal.
10.4.1.4
The master can terminate the communication by generating a STOP signal to free the bus. However, the
master may generate a START signal followed by a calling command without generating a STOP signal
first. This is called repeated START. A STOP signal is defined as a low-to-high transition of SDA while
SCL at logical 1 (see
The master can generate a STOP even if the slave has generated an acknowledge at which point the slave
must release the bus.
10.4.1.5
As shown in
STOP signal to terminate the communication. This is used by the master to communicate with another
slave or with the same slave in different mode (transmit/receive mode) without releasing the bus.
10.4.1.6
The Inter-IC bus is a true multi-master bus that allows more than one master to be connected on it. If two
or more masters try to control the bus at the same time, a clock synchronization procedure determines the
bus clock, for which the low period is equal to the longest clock low period and the high is equal to the
shortest one among the masters. The relative priority of the contending masters is determined by a data
arbitration procedure, a bus master loses arbitration if it transmits logic 1 while another master transmits
logic 0. The losing masters immediately switch over to slave receive mode and stop driving SDA output.
In this case the transition from master to slave mode does not generate a STOP condition. Meanwhile, a
status bit is set by hardware to indicate loss of arbitration.
10.4.1.7
Because wire-AND logic is performed on SCL line, a high-to-low transition on SCL line affects all the
devices connected on the bus. The devices start counting their low period and as soon as a device's clock
has gone low, it holds the SCL line low until the clock high state is reached.However, the change of low to
high in this device clock may not change the state of the SCL line if another device clock is within its low
period. Therefore, synchronized clock SCL is held low by the device with the longest low period. Devices
with shorter low periods enter a high wait state during this time (see
concerned have counted off their low period, the synchronized clock SCL line is released and pulled high.
There is then no difference between the device clocks and the state of the SCL line and all the devices start
counting their high periods.The first device to complete its high period pulls the SCL line low again.
Freescale Semiconductor
Figure
STOP Signal
Repeated START Signal
Arbitration Procedure
Clock Synchronization
10-8, a repeated START signal is a START signal generated without first generating a
Figure
10-8).
MC9S12E128 Data Sheet, Rev. 1.07
Figure
Chapter 10 Inter-Integrated Circuit (IICV2)
10-9). When all devices
315

Related parts for MC9S12E128CPV