Date: 7/29/04
SP503 Multiprotocol Transceiver
8
Copyright 2004 Sipex Corporation
Pin 32 — V
–10V Charge Pump Capacitor —
Connects from ground to V
SS
. Suggested ca-
pacitor size is 22
μ
F, 16V.
Pins 26 and 30 — C
Capacitor — Connects from C
gested capacitor size is 22
μ
F, 16V.
+
and C
–
— Charge Pump
+
to C
1
–
. Sug-
Pins 28 and 31 — C
Capacitor — Connects from C
gested capacitor size is 22
μ
F, 16V.
+
and C
–
— Charge Pump
+
to C
2
–
. Sug-
NOTE: NC pins should be left floating; internal
signals may be present.
pared to older less–efficient designs. The charge
pump still requires four external capacitors, but
uses a four–phase voltage shifting technique to
attain symmetrical 10V power supplies.
Figure
3(a)
shows the waveform found on the positive
side of capcitor C2, and
Figure 3(b)
shows the
negative side of capcitor C2. There is a free–
running oscillator that controls the four phases
of the voltage shifting. A description of each
phase follows.
Phase 1
— V
charge storage —During this phase of
the clock cycle, the positive side of capacitors
C
and C
are initially charged to +5V. C
l
then switched to ground and the charge on C
transferred to C
+5V, the voltage potential across capacitor C
2
is now 10V.
+
is
–
is
–
. Since C
+
is connected to
Phase 2
— V
transfer — Phase two of the clock con-
nects the negative terminal of C
to the V
SS
storage capacitor and the positive terminal of C
2
to ground, and transfers the generated –l0V to
C
. Simultaneously, the positive side of capaci-
tor C
is switched to +5V and the negative side
is connected to ground.
Phase 3
— V
charge storage — The third phase of the
clock is identical to the first phase — the charge
transferred in C
produces –5V in the negative
terminal of C
, which is applied to the negative
side of capacitor C
. Since C
voltage potential across C
2
is l0V.
+
is at +5V, the
Phase 4
— V
transfer — The fourth phase of the
clock connects the negative terminal of C
to
ground and transfers the generated l0V across
C
2
to C
4
, the V
DD
storage capacitor. Again,
FEATURES…
The
SP503
is a highly integrated serial trans-
ceiver that allows software control of its inter-
face modes. The
SP503
offers hardware inter-
face modes for RS-232 (V.28), RS-422A (V.11),
RS-449, RS-485, V.35, and EIA-530. The inter-
face mode selection is done via an 8–bit switch;
four (4) bits control the drivers and four (4) bits
control the receivers. The
SP503
is fabricated
using low–power BiCMOS process technology,
and incorporates a
Sipex
patented (5,306,954)
charge pump allowing +5V only operation. Each
device is packaged in an 80–pin Quad FlatPack
package.
The
SP503
is ideally suited for wide area net-
work connectivity based on the interface modes
offered and the driver and receiver
configurations. The
SP503
has seven (7)
independent drivers and seven (7) independent
receivers. The seventh driver of the
SP503
allows it to support applications which require
two separate clock outputs making it ideal for
DCE applications.
THEORY OF OPERATION
The
SP503
is made up of four separate circuit
blocks — the charge pump, drivers, receivers,
and decoder. Each of these circuit blocks is
described in more detail below.
Charge–Pump
The charge pump is a
Sipex
patented design
(5,306,954) and uses a unique approach com-
V
CC
= +5V
–5V
–5V
+5V
V
SS
Storage Capacitor
V
DD
Storage Capacitor
C
1
C
2
C
3
C
4
+
+
+
+
–
–
–
–
Figure 1. Charge Pump Phase 1.