Agilent HCTL-2032, HCTL-2032-SC, HCTL-2022 Quadrature Decoder/Counter Interface ICs Data Sheet Features * Interfaces Encoder to Microprocessor * 33 MHz Clock Operation * Programmable Count Modes (1x, 2x or 4x) * Single or Dual Axis Support * Index Channel Support Description The HCTL- 20XX- XX is CMOS ICs that perform the quadrature decoder, counter, and bus interface function. The HCTL- 20XX- XX is designed to improve system performance in digital closed loop motion control systems and digital data input systems. It does this by shifting time intensive quadrature decoder functions to a cost effective hardware solution. The HCTL- 20XX- XX consists of a quadrature decoder logic, a binary up/ down state counter, and an 8bit bus interface. The use of Schmitt- triggered CMOS inputs and input noise filters allows reliable operation in noisy environments. The HCTL- 20XXXX contains 32- bit counter and provides LSTLL compatible tristate output buffers. Operation is specified for a temperature range from -40 to +100C at clock frequencies up to 33MHz. The HCTL- 2032 and HCTL2032- SC have dual- axis capability and index channel support. Both devices can be programmed as 4x/2x/1x count mode. The HCTL- 2032 and HCTL2032- SC also provides quadrature decoder output signals and cascade signals for use with many standard computer ICs. The HCTL- 2022 has most of the HCTL- 2032 features, but it can only supports single axis and fixed at 4x count mode. The HCTL- 2022 doesn't provide decoder output and cascade signals. * High Noise Immunity: * Schmitt Trigger Inputs and Digital Noise Filter * 32-Bit Binary Up/Down Counter * Latched Outputs * 8-Bit Tristate Interface * 8, 16, 24, or 32-Bit Operating Modes * Quadrature Decoder Output Signals, Up/Down and Count * Cascade Output Signals, Up/Down and Count * Substantially Reduced System Software * 5V Operation (VDD - VSS) * TTL/CMOS Compatible I/O * Operating Temperature: -40C to 100C * 32-Pin PDIP, 32-Pin SOIC, 20-Pin PDIP Applications * Interface Quadrature Incremental Encoders to Microprocessors * Interface Digital Potentiometers to Digital Data Input Buses ESD WARNING: Standard CMOS handling precautions should be observed with the HCTL- 2032 family ICs. Devices Part Number Description HCTL-2032 32-bit counter, dual axis, decoder and cascade outputs, index channel support, A programmable count modes, and 33 Mhz clock operation. HCTL-2032-SC All features of HCTL-2032. B HCTL-2022 Most of the HCTL-2032 features. The device supports single axis, and no decoder output and cascade signals. The programmable count mode is set to 4x internally. C PINOUT A Package Drawing PINOUT B VDD X/Y VDD D1 D1 EN1 D1 D0 D2 EN2 D2 EN2 D2 CLK D3 D0 D3 D0 D3 SEL1 CNTDECY CLK SEL1 CNTDECX SEL1 OE U/DY D7 HCTL-2032 CLK SEL2 OE CNTCASX U/DX CNTCASY U/DY TEST D7 CNTDECY OE CNTDECX U/D SEL2 TEST D4 D5 D6 RST CNTCASY CHB VSS TEST CHA INDEX RSTY D4 RSTY D4 D5 RSTX D5 CHBY D6 CHBY D6 CHBX CHIY CHBX CHIY CHAX VSS CHIX CHAX CHAY VSS CHAY 1) HCTL-2032 SEL2 CNTCASX RSTX Package Dimensions (dimension in inches) D7 HCTL-2022 X/Y EN1 HCTL-2032-SC VDD U/DX 2 PINOUT C CHIX ii) HCTL-2032-SC 3) HCTL-2022 3 Operating Characteristics Table 1. Absolute Maximum Ratings (All voltages below are referenced to VSS) Parameter DC Supply Voltage Input Voltage Storage Temperature Operating Temperature [1] Symbol VDD VIN TS TA Limits -0.3 to +6.0 -0.3 to (VDD +0.3) -55 to +150 -40 to +100 Units V V C C Symbol Limits Units DC Supply Voltage VDD 4.5 to 5.5 V Ambient Temperature [1] TA -40 to +100 C Table 2. Recommended Operating Conditions Parameter Table 3. DC Characteristics VDD = 5V 5%; TA = -40 to 100C Symbol Parameter Condition Typ Max Unit 1.5 V VIL [2] Low-Level Input Voltage VIH [2] High-Level Input Voltage VT+ Schmitt-Trigger Positive-Going Threshold VT- Schmitt-Trigger Negative-Going Threshold 1.0 1.5 V VH Schmitt-Trigger Hysteresis 1.0 2.0 V IIN Input Current VIN=VSS or VDD -10 1 VOH [2] High-Level Output Voltage IOH = -3.75 mA 2.4 4.5 VOL [2] Low-Level Output Voltage IOL = +3.75mA IOZ High-Z Output Leakage Current VO=VSS or VDD IDD Quiescent Supply Current CIN [3] COUT [3] 3.5 V 3.5 4.0 +10 V A V 0.2 0.4 V 1 +10 A VIN=Vss or VDD 1 10 A Input Capacitance Any Input 5 pF Output Capacitance Any Output 5 pF Notes 1. Free Air 2. In general, for any VDD between the allowable limits (+4.5V to +5.5V), VIL = 0.3VDD and VIH = 0.7VDD; typical values are VOH = VDD - 0.5V and VOL = VSS + 0.2V 3. Including package capacitance 4 Min -10 Functional Pin Description Table 4. Functional Pin Descriptions. Pin Symbol HCTL 2032/ 2032-SC HCTL 2022 Description VDD 1 1 Power Supply VSS 18 12 Ground CLK 5 3 CLK is a Schmitt-trigger input for the external clock signal. CHAX CHAY CHBX CHBY 15 16 14 13 10 NC 9 NC CHAX, CHAY, CHBX, and CHBY are Schmitt-trigger inputs that accept the outputs from a quadrature-encoded source, such as incremental optical shaft encoder. Two channels, A and B, nominally 90 degrees out of phase, are required. CHAX and CHBX are the 1st axis and CHAY and CHBY are the 2nd axis. CHIX CHIY 17 19 11 NC CHIX and CHIY are Schmitt-trigger inputs that accept the outputs of Index channel from an incremental optical shaft encoder. RSTNX RSTNY 12 11 8 NC This active low Schmitt-trigger input clears the internal position counter and the position latch. It also resets the inhibit logic. RSTX/ and RSTY/ are asynchronous with respect to any other input signals. RSTX/ is to reset the 1st axis counter and RSTY/ is to reset the 2nd axis counter. OEN 7 5 This CMOS active low input enables the tri-state output buffers. The OE/, SEL1, and SEL2 inputs are sampled by the internal inhibit logic on the falling edge of the clock to control the loading of the internal position data latch. SEL1 SEL2 6 26 4 17 These CMOS inputs directly controls which data byte from the position latch is enabled into the 8-bit tri-state output buffer. As in OE/ above, SEL1 and SEL2 also control the internal inhibit logic. SEL1 0 1 0 1 EN1 EN2 2 3 NC NC SEL2 1 1 0 0 32 NC LSB D3 D2 D1 These CMOS control pins are set to high or low to activate the selected count mode before the decoding begins. EN1 0 1 0 1 X/Y BYTE SELECTED 2ND 3RD MSB D4 EN2 0 0 1 1 4x Count Modes 2x Illegal Mode 1x On On On Select the 1st or 2nd axis data to be read. Low bit enables the 1st axis data, while high bit enables the 2nd axis data. CNTDECX CNTDECY 27 28 NC NC A pulse is presented on this LSTTL-compatible output when the quadrature decoder (4x/2x/1x) has detected a state transition. CNTDECX is for 1st axis and CNTDECY is for 2nd axis. U/Dx U/Dy 8 9 6 NC This LSTTL-compatible output allows the user to determine whether the IC is counting up or down and is intended to be used with the CNTDEC and CNTCAS outputs. The proper signal U (high level) or D/ (low level) will be present before the rising edge of the CNTDEC and CNTCAS outputs. 5 6 CNTCASX 25 CNTCASY 24 NC NC A pulse is presented on this LSTTL-compatible output when the HCTL-2032 / 2032-SC internal counter overflows or underflows. The rising edge on this waveform may be used to trigger an external counter. TEST 23 16 This pin is used for internal testing. Tied it to ground or leave it floating for normal operation. D0 4 2 D1 31 20 D2 30 19 These LSTTL-compatible tri-state outputs form an 8-bit output ports through which the contents of the 32-bit position latch may be read in 4 sequential bytes. The MSB is read first followed by the rest of the bytes with the LSB is read last. D3 29 18 D4 22 15 D5 21 14 D6 20 13 D7 10 7 Switching Characteristics Table 5. Switching Characteristics Max/Min specifications at VDD = 5.0 5%, TA = -40 to +100 OC, CL = 40 pf Symbol Description Min. Max. Units 33 MHz 1 tCLK Clock Period 2 tCHH Pulse width, clock high 3 tCD Delay time, rising edge of clock to valid, updated count information on D0-7 31 ns 4 tODE Delay time, OEN fall to valid data 29 ns 5 tODZ Delay time, OEN rise to Hi-Z state on D0-7 29 ns 6 tSDV Delay time, SEL0~SEL1 valid to stable, selected data byte (delay to High Byte = delay to Low Byte) 29 ns 7 tXNYDV Delay time, XNY valid to stable, selected data byte. 29 ns 8 tCLH Pulse width, clock low 15 ns 9 tSS Setup time, SEL1~SEL2 before clock fall 12 ns 10 tOS Setup time, OEN before clock fall 12 ns 11 tXNYS Setup time, XNY before clock fall 12 ns 12 tSH Hold time, SEL1~SEL2 after clock fall 0 ns 13 tOH Hold time, OEN after clock fall 0 ns 14 tXNYH Hold time, XNY after clock fall 0 ns 15 tRST Pulse width, RSTNX~RSTNY low 10 ns 16 tDCD Hold time, last position count stable on D0-7 after clock rise 2 ns 17 tDSD Hold time, last data byte stable after next SEL state change 2 ns 18 tDOD Hold time, data byte stable after OEN rise 2 ns 19 tDXNYD Hold time, data byte stable after XNY change 2 ns 20 tUDDX Delay time, U/DNX valid after clock rise 4 29 ns 21 tUDDY Delay time, U/DNY valid after clock rise 4 29 ns 22 tCHXD Delay time, CNTDECX or CNTCASX high after clock rise 4 31 ns 23 tCHYD Delay time, CNTDECY or CNTCASY high after clock rise 4 31 ns 24 tCLXD Delay time, CNTDECX or CNTCASX low after clock fall 4 31 ns 25 tCLYD Delay time, CNTDECY or CNTCASY low after clock fall 4 31 ns 26 tUDXH Hold time, U/DNX stable after clock rise 2 ns 27 tUDYH Hold time, U/DNY stable after clock rise 2 ns 28 tUDCXS Setup time, U/DNX valid before CNTDECX or CNTCASX rise Note 1 ns 29 tUDCYS Setup time, U/DNY valid before CNTDECY or CNTCASY rise Note 1 ns 30 tUDCXH Hold time, U/DNX stable after CNTDECX or CNTCASX rise Note 2 ns 31 tUDCYH Hold time, U/DNY stable after CNTDECY or CNTCASY: rise Note 2 ns 1/f ns Notes 1. tclk - max delay (item 20/21) + min delay (item 22/23) 2. tclk - max delay (item 22/23) + min delay (item 20/21) 7 t RST RSTX / RSTY Figure 1. Reset Waveform tCLK tCHH tCLH CLK tCD OLD DATA D0-D7 NEW DATA DATA NOT STABLE tDCD tDCD Figure 2: Waveforms for Positive Clock Edge Related Delays tDOD OE tODE D0 -D7 HIGH - Z tODZ NOT STABLE STABLE DATA HIGH - Z NOT STABLE Figure 3: Tri-State Output Timing CLK tOS tOH OE tSH SEL2 tSS SEL1 INTERNAL INHIBIT D0 -D7 tDSD HIGH -Z Figure 4: Bus Control Timing 8 HIGH - Z OR UNSTABLE DATA tSDV tSDV tSDV MSB STABLE tSDV tDSD tDSD 3rd BYTE STABLE 2nd BYTE STABLE tDSD LSB STABLE CLK t UDDX / t UDDY t UDXH / t UDYH U/DX U/DY CNTDECX CNTCASX CNTDECY CNTCASY t CLXD / t CLYD t CHXD / t CHYD t UDXS / t UDYS t UDXH / t UDYH Figure 5: Decoder, Cascade Output Timing CLK t XNYS XNY t DXNYD D0-D7 D0-D7 (1st-Axis) D0-D7 (2nd-Axis) t XNYDV Figure 6: Output Data from 1st-axis and 2nd-axis CLK CHA CHB D0-D7 H'FFFFFFFD H'FFFFFFFE H'FFFFFFFF H'00000000 H'00000001 H'00000002 H'00000003 CNTDEC CNTCAS Figure 7: Quadrature decoder for 1st-axis / 2nd-axis (4x count mode) 9 CLK CHA CHB D0-D7 H'FFFFFFFF H'00000000 H'00000001 H'00000002 CNTDEC CNTCAS Figure 8: Quadrature decoder for 1st-axis / 2nd-axis (2x count mode) CLK CHA CHB D0-D7 H'FFFFFFFF CNTDEC CNTCAS Figure 9: Quadrature decoder for 1st-axis / 2nd-axis (1x count mode) 10 H'00000000 H'00000001 Operation A block diagram of the HCTL20XX- XX family is shown in Figure 10. The operation of each major function is described in the following sections. Decode / Cascade Outputs (Y) U/DY CNTDECY CNTCASY Decode / Cascade Outputs (X) U/DX CNTDECX CNTCASX CLK Digital Filter 4x/2x/1x Decode Logic 32 Bits Binary Counter QX0 - QX31 QY0 - QY31 CHAX 32 32 DX0 - DX31 DY0 - DY31 CHAX filtered CHBX CNTX CNTX UP/DN X CHAY CHAY filtered CHBY CNTY UP/DN Y CNTY UP/DN Y CHBY filtered CLRX CHIX CLRY EN1 EN2 RX RY 8 8 8 8 8 8 8 DX0 - DX7 DX8 - DX15 DX16 - DX23 DX24 - DX31 DY0 - DY7 DY8 - DY15 DY16 - DY23 DY24 - DY31 SEL2 CLRY CHIY filtered 8 8 SEL1 CLRX CHIX filtered CHIY D0 - D7 DX0 - DX7 DX8 - DX15 DX16 - DX23 DX24 - DX31 DY0 - DY7 DY8 - DY15 DY16 - DY23 DY24 - DY31 CHBX filtered UP/DN X Octal 4 bit Mux/Buffer 32 Bits Latch INHX INHY OE XNY RSTX RSTY Inhibit Block CLRX EN1 CLRY EN2 SEL1 SEL2 OE SEL1 SEL2 OE XNY Figure 10. Simplified Logic Diagram 11 Digital Noise Filter The digital noise filter section is responsible for rejecting noise on the incoming quadrature signals. The input section uses two techniques to implement improved noise rejection. Schmitt- trigger inputs and a three- clock- cycle delay filter combine to reject low level noise and large, short duration noise spikes that typically occur in motor system applications. Both common mode and differential mode noise are rejected. The user benefits from these techniques by improved integrity of the data in the counter. False counts triggered by noise are avoided. Figure 11 shows the simplified schematic of the input section. The signals are first passed through a Schmitt- trigger buffer to address the problem of input signals with slow rise times and low- level noise (approximately < 1V). The cleaned up signals are then passed to a four- bit delay filter. The signals on each channel are sampled on rising clock edges. A time history of the signals is stored in the fourbit shift register. Any change on the input is tested for a stable level being present for three consecutive rising clock edges. Therefore, the filtered output waveforms can change only after an input level has the same value for three consecutive rising clock edges. Refer to Figure 12, which shows the timing diagram. The result of this circuitry is that short noise spikes between rising clock edges are ignored and pulses shorter than two clock periods are rejected. J Q CHA filtered Q CHB filtered Q CHI filtered CK K CHA D Q D Q D Q D Q CK J CK K CHB D Q D Q D Q D Q CK J CK K CHI D Q D CK Figure 11. Simplified Digital Noise Filter Logic 12 Q D Q D Q 3 tCLK CLK CHA tE tE CHB tES tE tES tES tES tE Noise Spike CHI CHA filtered CHB filtered CHI filtered Figure 12. Signal Propagation through Digital Noise Filter Quadrature Decoder The quadrature decoder samples the outputs of the CHA and CHB filters. Based on the past binary state of the two signals and the present state, it outputs a count signal and a direction signal to the integral position counter. The quadrature decoder decodes the incoming filtered signals into count information. This circuitry multiplies the resolution of the input signals by a factor of one, two or four (1X, 2X, 4X decoding) depending on the resolution mode. When using an encoder for motion sensing, the user benefits from the selectable resolution by being able to provide better system control. Figure 13 shows the quadrature states of Channel A and Channel B signals. The 4x decoder mode will output a count signal for every state transition (count up and count down). Figure 14 shows the valid state transitions for 2x and 1x decoder modes. The 2x/ 1x decoder will output a count signal at respective state transition, depending on the counting direction. Channel A leading channel B results in counting up. Channel B leading channel A results in counting down. Illegal state transitions, caused by faulty encoders or noise severe enough to pass through the filter, will produce an erroneous count. clk state count up 2 1 3 1 4 chA 4 chB Valid State Transitions 2 Tes 3 Te Telp count down 13 CHA CHB STATE 4X Decoder (Count Up & Count Down) 1 0 1 Pulse 1 1 2 Pulse 0 1 3 Pulse 0 0 4 Pulse Figure 13. 4x Decoder Mode CHA CHB STATE 2x Count Up 2x Count Down 1x Count Up 1x Count Down 1 0 1 Pulse - Pulse - 1 1 2 - Pulse - Pulse 0 1 3 Pulse - - - 0 0 4 - Pulse - - Figure 14. 2x and 1x Decoder Modes Design Considerations The designer should be aware that the operation of the digital filter places a timing constraint on the relationship between incoming quadrature signals and the external clock. Figure 12 shows the timing waveform with an incremental encoder input. Since an input has to be stable for three rising clock edges, the encoder pulse width (tE - low or high) has to be greater than three clock periods (3tCLK). This guarantees that the asynchronous input will be stable during three consecutive rising clock edges. A realistic design also has to take into account finite rise time of the waveforms, asymmetry of the waveforms, and noise. In the presence of large amounts of noise, tE should be much greater than 3tCLK to allow for the interruption of the consecutive level sampling by the three- bit delay filter. It should be noted that a change on the inputs that is qualified by the filter will internally propagate in a maximum of seven clock periods. 14 The quadrature decoder circuitry imposes a second timing constraint between the external clock and the input signals. There must be at least one clock period between consecutive quadrature states. As shown in Figure 13, a quadrature state is defined by consecutive edges on both channels. Therefore, tES (encoder state period) > tCLK. The designer must account for deviations from the nominal 90 degree phasing of input signals to guarantee that tES > tCLK. Position Counter This section consists of a 32- bit (HCTL- 20XX- XX) binary up/ down counter which counts on rising clock edges as explained in the Quadrature Decoder Section. All 32 bits of data are passed to the position data latch. The system can use this count data in several ways: A. System total range is 32 bits, so the count represents "absolute" position. B. The system is cyclic with 32 bits of count per cycle. RST/ is used to reset the counter every cycle and the system uses the data to interpolate within the cycle. C. System count is >8, 16, 24, or 32 bits, so the count data is used as a relative or incremental position input for a system software computation of absolute position. In this case counter rollover occurs. In order to prevent loss of position information, the processor must read the outputs of the IC before the count increments one- half of the maximum count capability. Two's- complement arithmetic is normally used to compute position from these periodic position updates. D. The system count is >32 bits so the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC can be cascaded with other standard counter ICs to give absolute position. Position Data Latch Bus Interface The position data latch is a 32bit latch which captures the position counter output data on each rising clock edge, except when its inputs are disabled by the inhibit logic section during four- byte read operations. The output data is passed to the bus interface section. When active, a signal from the inhibit logic section prevents new data from being captured by the latch, keeping the data stable while successive reads are made through the bus section. The latch is automatically re- enabled at the end of these reads. The latch is cleared to 0 asynchronously by the RST signal. The bus interface section consists of a 32 to 8 line multiplexer and an 8- bit, threestate output buffer. The multiplexer allows independent access to the low and high bytes of the position data latch. The SEL1, SEL2 and OE signals determine which byte is output and whether or not the output bus is in the high- Z state. In the HCTL- 20XX- XX, the data latch is 32 bit wide. Inhibit Logic The Inhibit Logic Section samples the OE, SEL1 and SEL2 signals on the falling edge of the clock and, in response to certain conditions (see Figure 15), inhibits the position data latch. The RST signal asynchronously clears the inhibit logic, enabling the latch. Quadrature Decoder Output (HCTL-2032 / 2032-SC only) The quadrature decoder output section consists of count and up/down outputs derived from the 4x/2x/1x decoder mode of the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC. When the decoder has detected a count, a pulse, one- half clock cycle long, will be output on the CNTDCDR pin. This output will occur during the clock cycle in which the internal counter is updated. The U/D pin will be set to the proper voltage level one clock cycle before the rising edge of the CNTDCDR pulse, and CLK held one clock cycle after the rising edge of the CNTDCDR pulse. These outputs are not affected by the inhibit logic. Cascade Output (HCTL-2032 / 2032-SC only) The cascade output also consists of count and up/down outputs. When the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC internal counter overflows or underflows, a pulse, one- half clock cycle long, will be output on the CNTCAS pin. This output will occur during the clock cycle in which the internal counter is updated. The U/D pin will be set to the proper voltage level one clock cycle before the rising edge of the CNTCAS pulse, and held one clock cycle after the rising edge of the CNTCAS pulse. These outputs are not affected by the inhibit logic. Step SEL1 SEL2 OE Inhibit Signal Action 1 L H L 1 Set inhibit; Read MSB 2 H H L 1 Read 2nd Byte 3 L L L 1 Read 3rd Byte 4 H L L 1 Read LSB 5 X X H 0 Completes inhibit logic reset Figure 15. Four Bytes Read Sequence 15 Cascade Considerations (HCTL-2032 / 2032-SC only) The HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC 's cascading system allows for position reads of more than four bytes. These reads can be accomplished by latching all the bytes and then reading the bytes sequentially over the 8- bit bus. It is assumed here that, externally, a counter followed by a latch is used to count any count that exceeds 32 bits. This configuration is compatible with the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC internal counter/latch combination. Consider the sequence of events for a read cycle that starts as the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC 's internal counter rolls over. On the rising clock edge, count data is updated in the internal counter, rolling it over. A countcascade pulse (CNTCAS) will be generated with some delay after the rising clock edge (tCHD). There will be additional propagation delays through the external counters and registers. Meanwhile, with SEL and OE low to start the read, the internal latches are inhibited at the falling edge and do not update again till the inhibit is reset. If the CNTCAS pulse now toggles the external counter and this count gets latched a major count error will occur. The count error is because the external latches get updated when the internal latch is inhibited. Valid data can be ensured by latching the external counter data when the high byte read is started (SEL and OE low). This latched external byte corresponds to the count in the inhibited internal latch. The cascade pulse that occurs during the clock cycle when the read begins gets counted by the external counter and is not lost. For example, suppose the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC count is at FFFFFFFFh and an external counter is at F0h, with the count going up. A count occurring in the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC will cause the counter to roll over and a cascade pulse will be generated. A read starting on this clock cycle will show FFFFFFFFh from the HCTL- 2032 / 2032- SC. The external latch should read F0h, but if the host latches the count after the cascade signal propagates through, the external latch will read F1h. CLK CHA FLT CHB FLT U/Dbar CNT DCDR CNT cas COUNT FFFFFFFDh FFFFFFFEh Figure 16. Decode and Cascade Output Diagram (4x) 16 FFFFFFFh 00000000h FFFFFFFEh FFFFFFFh Interfacing the HCTL-2032 to an Atmel AVR 90S8535 The circuit shown in Figure 17 shows the connections between an HCTL- 2032 and an Atmel AVR controller. Data lines D0- D7 are connected to the Atmel AVR bus port. The 8 MHz oscillators clock the Atmel AVR, whereas the external 33 MHz oscillators clock the HCTL- 2032. Figure 18 illustrates the program that interfaces with an Atmel AVR 90S8535. R= 2.7kOHM +5v R 5 R CHB 4 VCC 3 CHA 2 CHI 1 GND CHBX CHAX CHIX R= 2.7kOHM +5v R 5 R R CHB 4 VCC 3 CHA 2 CHI 1 GND R CHBY CHAY CHIY D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 SEL1 SEL2 EN1 EN2 OE RSTX RSTY X/Y PA0 PA1 PA2 PA3 PA4 PA5 PA6 PA7 PB1 PB3 PB4 PB5 PB0 PB2 PC7 PB6 HCTL2032 AT90S8535 Figure 17. An HCTL-2032-to-Atmel AVR Interface 17 Set Portb.4 Reset Portb.5 Reset Portb.6 'EN1=1 'EN2=0 'Select X-axis Result_new = 0 Result_old_x = 0 Result_old_y = 0 Do Set Portb.0 Waitms 25 'Disable OE Reset Portb.1 Set Portb.3 Reset Portb.0 'SEL1=0 (MSB) 'SEL2=1 (MSB) 'Enable OE Gosub Get_hi 'Get MSB Set Portb.1 Set Portb.3 'SEL1=1 (2nd Byte) 'SEL2=1 (2nd Byte) Gosub Get_2nd 'Get 2nd Byte Reset Portb.1 Reset Portb.3 'SEL1=0 (3rd Byte) 'SEL2=0 (3rd Byte) Gosub Get_3rd 'Get 3rd Byte Set Portb.1 Reset Portb.3 'SEL1=1 (LSB) 'SEL2=0 (LSB) Gosub Get_lo 'Get LSB Set Portb.0 Waitms 25 'Disable OE Mult = 1 Temp = Result_lo * Mult Result = Temp Mult = Mult * 256 Temp = Result_3rd * Mult Result = Result + Temp Mult = Mult * 256 Temp = Result_2nd * Mult Result = Result + Temp Mult = Mult * 256 Temp = Result_hi * Mult Result = Result + Temp 'Assign LSB 'Assign 3rd Byte 'Assign 2nd Byte 'Assign MSB ' 'Result = 32-bits Count Data ' . . Loop Get_hi: Hi_old = Pina Hi_new = Pina If Hi_new = Hi_old Then Result_hi = Hi_new Return Else Goto Get_hi End If Figure 18. Typical Program for Reading HCTL-2032 with Atmel AVR 18 'Get Current Data 'Get 2nd Data 'Get Stable Data Get_2nd: 2nd_old = Pina 'Get current data 2nd_new = Pina 'Get 2nd Data If 2nd_new = 2nd_old Then Result_2nd = 2nd_new 'Get stable data Return Else Goto Get_2nd End If Get_3rd: 3rd_old = Pina 'Get current data 3rd_new = Pina 'Get 2nd Data If 3rd_new = 3rd_old Then Result_3rd = 3rd_new 'Get stable data Return Else Goto Get_3rd End If Get_lo: Lo_old = Pina Lo_new = Pina If Lo_new = Lo_old Then Result_lo = Lo_new Return Else Goto Get_lo End If 'Get current data 'Get 2nd Data 'Get stable data Figure 18 Cont. Typical Program for Reading HCTL-2032 with Atmel AVR ACTIONS 1. At first, Port B4, B5, and B6 are setup for 4X encoding and X/Y axis selection. 2. The HCTL-2032 detects that OE/ are low on the next falling edge of the CLK and asserts the internal inhibit signal. Data can be read without regard for the phase of the CLK. 3. SEL1 and SEL2 are setup to select the appropriate bytes. The "Get_hi" subroutine is called and the data is read into the AVR. 4. Step 3 is repeated by changing the SEL1 and SEL2 combinations and specific subroutine is called to read in the appropriate data. 5. The HCTL-2032 detects OE/ high on the next falling edge of the CLK. The program set OE/ high by writing the correct value to the respective Port. This causes the data lines to be tristated. On the next rising CLK edge new data is transferred from the counter to the position data latch. 6. For displaying purposes, the data is arranged in 32-bit data by shifting the MSB to the left through multiplication. 19 Ordering Information HCTL - 20 XX - XX 32 Blank 32-PDIP Package 32 SC 32-SOIC Package 22 Blank 20-PDIP Package www.agilent.com/semiconductors For product information and a complete list of distributors, please go to our web site. For technical assistance call: Americas/Canada: +1 (800) 235-0312 or (916) 788-6763 Europe: +49 (0) 6441 92460 China: 10800 650 0017 Hong Kong: (+65) 6756 2394 India, Australia, New Zealand: (+65) 6755 1939 Japan: (+81 3) 3335-8152 (Domestic/International), or 0120-61-1280 (Domestic Only) Korea: (+65) 6755 1989 Singapore, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Philippines, Indonesia: (+65) 6755 2044 Taiwan: (+65) 6755 1843 Data subject to change. Copyright 2003 Agilent Technologies, Inc. September 19, 2003 5989-0060EN