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PDF LM75 Data sheet ( Hoja de datos )

Número de pieza LM75
Descripción 2-Wire Serial Temperature Sensor and Monitor
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LM75
2-Wire Serial Temperature
Sensor and Monitor
The LM75 is a serially programmable temperature sensor that
notifies the host controller when ambient temperature exceeds a
user–programmed setpoint. Hysteresis is also programmable. The
INT/CMPTR output is programmable as either a simple comparator
for thermostat operation or as a temperature event interrupt.
Communication with the LM75 is accomplished via a two–wire bus
that is compatible with industry standard protocols. This permits
reading the current temperature, programming the setpoint and
hysteresis, and configuring the device.
The LM75 powers up in Comparator Mode with a default setpoint
of 80°C with 5°C hysteresis. Defaults allow independent operation as
a stand–alone thermostat. A shutdown command may be sent via the
2–wire bus to activate the low–power standby mode. Address
selection inputs allow up to eight LM75’s to share the same 2–wire bus
for multi–zone monitoring.
All registers can be read by the host and the INT/CMPTR output’s
polarity is user programmable. Both polled and interrupt driven
systems are easily accommodated. Small physical size, low installed
cost, and ease of use make the LM75 an ideal choice for implementing
sophisticated system management schemes.
Features
Temperature Sensing: 0.5°C Accuracy (Typ.)
Operates from: 55°C to +125°C
Operating Range: 2.7V – 5.5V
Programmable Trip Point and Hysteresis with
Power–up Defaults
Standard 2–Wire Serial Interface
Thermal Event Alarm Output Functions as Interrupt or Comparator /
Thermostat Output
Up to 8 LM75’s May Share the Same Bus
Shutdown Mode for Low Standby Power Consumption
5V Tolerant I/O at VDD = 3V
Low Power 250µA (Typ.) Operating, 1µA (Typ.)
Shutdown Mode
Typical Applications
Thermal Protection for High Performance CPUs
Solid–State Thermometer
Fire/Heat Alarms
Thermal Management in Electronic Systems:
Computers
Telecom Racks
Power Supplies / UPS
Copiers / Office Electronics
Consumer Electronics / Amplifiers
Process Control
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Micro8
DM SUFFIX
CASE TBD
PRELIMINARY INFORMATION
PIN CONFIGURATION
(Top View)
SDA 1
SCL 2
INT/CMPTR 3
GND 4
LM75
8 V DD
7 A0
6 A1
5 A2
ORDERING INFORMATION
Device
LM75DM–33R2
Package
Micro–8
Shipping
2500 Tape/Reel
LM75DM–50R2
Micro–8
2500 Tape/Reel
© Semiconductor Components Industries, LLC, 1999
February, 2000 – Rev. 0
1
Publication Order Number:
LM75/D

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LM75 pdf
LM75
programmed in the Fault Queue. Up to a six–cycle ”filter”
may be selected. See Register Set and Programmer’s Model.
Serial Port Operation
The Serial Clock input (SCL) and bidirectional data port
(SDA) form a 2–wire bidirectional serial port for
programming and interrogating the LM75. The following
conventions are used in this bus scheme:
LM75 Serial Bus Conventions
Term
Explanation
Transmitter The device sending data to the bus.
Receiver The device receiving data from the bus.
Master
The device which controls the bus: initiat-
ing transfers (START), generating the
clock, and terminating transfers (STOP).
Slave
The device addressed by the master.
Start
A unique condition signaling the beginning
of a transfer indicated by SDA falling
(High–Low) while SCL is high.
Stop
A unique condition signaling the end of a
transfer indicated by SDA rising (Low –
High) while SCL is high.
ACK
A Receiver acknowledges the receipt of
each byte with this unique condition. The
Receiver drives SDA low during SCL high
of the ACK clock–pulse. The Master pro-
vides the clock pulse for the ACK cycle.
NOT Busy When the bus is idle, both SDA & SCL will
remain high.
Data Valid
The state of SDA must remain stable dur-
ing the High period of SCL in order for a
data bit to be considered valid. SDA only
changes state while SCL is low during nor-
mal data transfers. (See Start and Stop
conditions)
All transfers take place under control of a host, usually a
CPU or microcontroller, acting as the Master, which
provides the clock signal for all transfers. The LM75 always
operates as a Slave. This serial protocol is illustrated in
Figure 2. All data transfers have two phases; and all bytes are
transferred MSB first. Accesses are initiated by a start
condition (START), followed by a device address byte and
one or more data bytes. The device address byte includes a
Read/Write selection bit. Each access must be terminated by
a Stop Condition (STOP). A convention called
Acknowledge (ACK) confirms receipt of each byte. Note
that SDA can change only during periods when SCL is LOW
(SDA changes while SCL is HIGH are reserved for Start and
Stop Conditions).
Start Condition (START)
The LM75 continuously monitors the SDA and SCL lines
for a start condition (a HIGH to LOW transition of SDA
while SCL is HIGH), and will not respond until this
condition is met. (See Timing Diagram)
Address Byte
Immediately following the Start Condition, the host must
next transmit the address byte to the LM75. The four most
significant bits of the Address Byte (A6, A5, A4, A3) are
fixed to 1001(B). The states of A2, A1 and A0 in the serial
bit stream must match the states of the A2, A1 and A0
address inputs for the LM75 to respond with an
Acknowledge (indicating the LM75 is on the bus and ready
to accept data). The eighth bit in the Address Byte is a
Read–Write Bit. This bit is a 1 for a read operation or 0 for
a write operation.
Acknowledge (ACK)
Acknowledge (ACK) provides a positive handshake
between the host and the LM75. The host releases SDA after
transmitting eight bits then generates a ninth clock cycle to
allow the LM75 to pull the SDA line LOW to acknowledge
that it successfully received the previous eight bits of data or
address.
Data Byte
After a successful ACK of the address byte, the host must
next transmit the data byte to be written or clock out the data
to be read. (See the appropriate timing diagrams.) ACK will
be generated after a successful write of a data byte into the
LM75.
Stop Condition (STOP)
Communications must be terminated by a stop condition
(a LOW to HIGH transition of SDA while SCL is HIGH).
The Stop Condition must be communicated by the
transmitter to the LM75. (See Timing Diagram)
Power Supply
To minimize temperature measurement error, the
LM75DM–33 is factory calibrated at a supply voltage of
3.3V ±5% and the LM75DM–50 is factory calibrated at a
supply voltage of 5V ±5%. Either device is fully operational
over the power supply voltage range of 2.7V to 5.5V, but
with a lower measurement accuracy. The typical value of
this power supply–related error is ±2°C.
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Notes
LM75
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