Data Sheet
June 2001
DSP16410B Digital Signal Processor
Agere Systems Inc.
Agere Systems—Proprietary
Use pursuant to Company instructions
271
10 Electrical Characteristics and Requirements
(continued)
10.3 Power Dissipation
The total device power dissipation is comprised of two components:
I
The contribution from the V
DD
1 and V
DD
1A supplies, referred to as internal power dissipation.
I
The contribution from the V
DD
2 supply, referred to as I/O power dissipation.
The next two sections specify power dissipation for each component.
10.3.1 Internal Power Dissipation
Internal power dissipation is highly dependent on operating voltage, core program activity, internal peripheral activ-
ity, and CLK frequency.
Table 179
lists the DSP16410B typical internal power dissipation contribution for various
conditions. The following conditions are assumed for all cases:
I
V
DD
1 and V
DD
1A are both 1.8 V.
I
All memory accesses by the cores and the DMAU are to internal memory.
I
SIU0 and SIU1 are operating at 30 MHz in loopback mode. An external device drives the SICK
0—1
and
SOCK
0—1
input pins at 30 MHz, and SIU
0—1
are programmed to select passive input clocks and internal
loopback (the ICKA field (
SCON10
[2]—
Table 111 on page 188
) and OCKA field (
SCON10
[6]) are cleared and
the SIOLB field (
SCON10
[8]) is set).
I
The PLL is enabled and selected as the source of the internal clock, CLK.
Table 179
specifies the internal power
dissipation for the following values of CLK: 170 MHz and 185 MHz.
The internal power dissipation for the low-power standby and typical operating modes described in
Table 179
is
representative of actual applications. The worst-case internal power dissipation occurs under an artificial condition
that is unlikely to occur for an extended period of time in an actual application. This worst-case power should be
used for the calculation of maximum ambient operating temperature (T
A
MAX
) defined in
Section 9.3.1
. This value
should also be used for worst-case system power supply design for V
DD
1 and V
DD
1A.
Table 179. Typical Internal Power Dissipation at 1.8 V
Condition
Internal Power Dissipation (W)
170 MHz
0.25
Type
Core Operation
The AWAIT field (
alf
[15]) is set
in both cores.
Both cores repetitively exe-
cute a 20-tap FIR
filter
.
Both cores execute worst-case
instructions with worst-case
data patterns.
DMAU Activity
The DMAU is operating the
MMT4 channel to continuously
transfer data.
185 MHz
0.27
Low-power
Standby
Typical
To optimize execution speed, the cores each execute the inner loop of the filter from cache and perform a double-word data access every
cycle from separate modules of TPRAM.
This is an artificial condition that is unlikely to occur for an extended period of time in an actual application because the cores are not per-
forming any I/O servicing. In an actual application, the cores perform I/O servicing that changes program flow and lowers the power dissipa-
tion.
0.80
0.87
Worst-case
The DMAU is operating all six
channels (SWT
0—3
and
MMT
4—5
) to continuously
transfer data.
1.44
1.56