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DS1722SMAXIMN/a14avaiDigital Thermometer with SPI/3-Wire Interface
DS1722S+ |DS1722SMAXIMN/a609avaiDigital Thermometer with SPI/3-Wire Interface
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DS1722S-DS1722S+-DS1722S+T&R-DS1722U-DS1722U+
Digital Thermometer with SPI/3-Wire Interface
DS1722 Digital Thermometer with SPI/3-Wire Interface FEATURES ƒ Temperature Measurements Require No
External Components Measures Temperatures from -55°C to
+120°C. Fahrenheit Equivalent is -67°F to
+248°F ƒ Thermometer Accuracy is ±2.0°C ƒ Thermometer Resolution is Configurable
from 8 to 12 bits (1.0°C to 0.0625°C
Resolution) ƒ Data is Read From/Written to Via a Motorola
Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) or Standard
3-Wire Serial Interface ƒ Wide Analog Power Supply Range (2.65V -
5.5V) ƒ Separate Digital Supply Allows for 1.8V
Logic ƒ Available in an 8-Pin SO (150mil) and 8-Pin μMAX package
PIN ASSIGNMENT

VDDD
PIN DESCRIPTION

SERMODE - Serial Interface Mode
CE - Chip Enable
SCLK - Serial Clock
GND - Ground
VDDA - Analog Supply Voltage
SDO - Serial Data Out
SDI - Serial Data In
VDDD - Digital Supply Voltage
DESCRIPTION

The DS1722 Digital Thermometer and Thermostat with SPI/3-Wire Interface provides temperature
readings which indicate the temperature of the device. No additional components are required; the device
is truly a temperature-to-digital converter. Temperature readings are communicated from the DS1722
over a Motorola SPI interface or a standard 3-wire serial interface. The choice of interface standard is
selectable by the user.
For applications that require greater temperature resolution, the user can adjust the readout resolution
from 8 to 12 bits. This is particularly useful in applications where thermal runaway conditions must be
detected quickly.
For application flexibility, the DS1722 features a wide analog supply rail of 2.65V - 5.5V. A separate
digital supply allows a range of 1.8V to 5.5V.
The DS1722 is available in an 8-pin SO (150mil) and 8-pin μMAX package.
Applications for the DS1722 include personal computers/servers/workstations, cellular telephones, office
equipment, or any thermally-sensitive system.
SCLK
GND
VDDA
DS1722S
n SO (150mil)
1 8
2 7
3 6
4 5
8-Pi
SERMODE
SDI
SDO
DS1722U
8-PIN µMAX
VDDA
SERMODE
SDI
SDO
VDDD
CE
SCLK
GND
DS1722
ORDERING INFORMATION Table 1
PART MARKING DESCRIPTION

DS1722S DS1722 DS1722 in 150mil 8-Pin SO
DS1722S/T&R DS1722 DS1722 in 150mil 8-Pin SO, 2500 Piece Tape-and-
Reel
DS1722S+ DS1722
(See note)
DS1722 in Lead-Free 150mil 8-Pin SO
DS1722S+T&R DS1722
(See note)
DS1722 in Lead-Free 150mil 8-Pin SO, 2500 Piece
Tape-and-Reel
DS1722U 1722 DS1722 in 8-Pin µMAX
DS1722U/T&R 1722 DS1722 in 8-Pin µMAX, 3000 Piece Tape-and-
Reel
DS1722U+ 1722
(See note)
DS1722 in Lead-Free 8-Pin µMAX
DS1722U+T&R 1722
(See note)
DS1722 in Lead-Free 8-Pin µMAX, 3000 Piece
Tape-and-Reel
Note: A “+” will also be marked on the package next to the pin 1 indicator.
DETAILED PIN DESCRIPTION Table 2
SOIC SYMBOL DESCRIPTION
PIN 1
VDDDDigital Supply Voltage 1.8V-5.5V. Defines the top rails for the digital
inputs and outputs.
PIN 2
CE Chip Enable Must be asserted high for communication to take place for
either the SPI or 3-wire interface.
PIN 3
SCLK Serial Clock Input Used to synchronize data movement on the serial
interface for either the SPI or 3-wire interface.
PIN 4
GND Ground pin.
PIN 5
SDO
Serial Data Output When SPI communication is selected, the SDO pin is

the serial data output for the SPI bus. When 3-wire communication is
selected, this pin must be tied to the SDI pin (the SDI and SDO pins function
as a single I/O pin when tied together.)
PIN 6
SDI
Serial Data Input When SPI communication is selected, the SDI pin is the

serial data input for the SPI bus. When 3-wire communication is selected,
this pin must be tied to the SDO pin (the SDI and SDO pins function as a
single I/O pin when tied together.)
PIN 7
SERMODE
Serial Interface Mode Input This pin selects which interface standard will

be used: SPI when connected to VCC ; standard 3-wire when connected to
GND.
PIN 8
VDDAAnalog Supply Voltage 2.65V – 5.5V input power pin.
DS1722
OVERVIEW

A block diagram of the DS1722 is shown in Figure 1. The DS1722 consists of four major components:
1. Precision temperature sensor
2. Analog-to-digital converter
3. SPI/3-wire interface electronics
4. Data registers
The factory-calibrated temperature sensor requires no external components. The DS1722 is in a power-
conserving shutdown state upon power-up. After power-up, the user may alter the configuration register
to place the device in a continuous temperature conversion mode or in a one-shot conversion mode. In
the continuous conversion mode, the DS1722 continuously converts the temperature and stores the result
in the temperature register. As conversions are performed in the background, reading the temperature
register does not affect the conversion in progress. In the one-shot temperature conversion mode, the
DS1722 will perform one temperature conversion, store the result in the temperature register, and then
return to the shutdown state. This conversion mode is ideal for power sensitive applications. More
information on the configuration register is contained in the “OPERATION-Programming” section.
The temperature conversion results will have a default resolution of 9 bits. In applications where small
incremental temperature changes are critical, the user can change the conversion resolution from 9 bits to
8, 10, 11, or 12. This is accomplished by programming the configuration register. Each additional bit of
resolution approximately doubles the conversion time.
The DS1722 can communicate using either a Motorola Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) or standard 3-
wire interface. The user can select either communication standard through the SERMODE pin, tying it to
VDDD for SPI and to ground for 3-wire.
The device contains both an analog supply voltage and a digital supply voltage (VDDA and VDDD,
respectively). The analog supply powers the device for operation while the digital supply provides the
top rails for the digital inputs and outputs. The DS1722 was designed to be 1.8V Logic-Ready.
DS1722
DS1722 FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM Figure 1

OPERATION-Measuring Temperature

The core of DS1722 functionality is its direct-to-digital temperature sensor. The DS1722 measures
temperature through the use of an on-chip temperature measurement technique with an operating range
from -55° to +120°C. The device powers up in a power-conserving shutdown mode. After power-up, the
DS1722 may be placed in a continuous conversion mode or in a one-shot conversion mode. In the
continuous conversion mode, the device continuously computes the temperature and stores the most
recent result in the temperature register at addresses 01h (LSB) and 02h (MSB). In the one-shot
conversion mode, the DS1722 performs one temperature conversion and then returns to the shutdown
mode, storing temperature in the temperature register. Details on how to change the setting after power-
up are contained in the “OPERATION-Programming” section.
The resolution of the temperature conversion is configurable (8, 9, 10, 11, or 12 bits), with 9-bit readings
the default state. This equates to a temperature resolution of 1.0°C, 0.5°C, 0.25°C, 0.125°C, or 0.0625°C.
Following each conversion, thermal data is stored in the thermometer register in two’s complement
format; the information can be retrieved over the SPI or 3-wire interface with the address set to the
temperature register, 01h (LSB) and then 02h (MSB). Table 3 describes the exact relationship of output
data to measured temperature. The table assumes the DS1722 is configured for 12-bit resolution; if the
device is configured in a lower resolution mode, those bits will contain 0s. The data is transmitted
serially over the digital interface, MSb first for SPI communication and LSb first for 3-wire
DS1722
Temperature/Data Relationships Table 3
Address
Location

S 2625242322212002h
MSb (unit = °C) LSb -12-22-32-40 0 0 0 01h
TEMPERATURE
DIGITAL OUTPUT
(BINARY)
DIGITAL OUTPUT
(HEX)

+120°C 0111 1000 0000 0000 7800h
+25.0625°C 0001 1001 0001 0000 1910h
+10.125°C 0000 1010 0010 0000 0A20h
+0.5°C 0000 0000 1000 0000 0080h
0°C 0000 0000 0000 0000 0000h
-0.5°C 1111 1111 1000 0000 FF80h
-10.125°C 1111 0101 1110 0000 F5E0h
-25.0625°C 1110 0110 1111 0000 E6F0h
-55°C 1100 1001 0000 0000 C900h
OPERATION-Programming

The area of interest in programming the DS1722 is the Configuration register. All programming is done
via the SPI or 3-wire communication interface by selecting the appropriate address of the desired register
location. Table 4 illustrates the addresses for the two registers (configuration and temperature) of the
DS1722.
Register Address Structure Table 4
Read Address Write Address Active Register

00h 80h Configuration
01h No access Temperature LSB
02h No access Temperature MSB
CONFIGURATION REGISTER PROGRAMMING

The configuration register is accessed in the DS1722 with the 00h address for reads and the 80h address
for writes. Data is read from or written to the configuration register MSb first for SPI communication and
LSb first for 3-wire communication. The format of the register is illustrated in Figure 2. The effect each
bit has on DS1722 functionality is described below along with the power-up state of the bit. The entire
register is volatile, and thus it will power-up in the default state.
DS1722
CONFIGURATION/STATUS REGISTER Figure 2

1 1 1 1SHOT R2 R1 R0 SD
MSb LSb
1SHOT =
One-shot temperature conversion bit. If the SD bit is "1", (continuous temperature
conversions are not taking place), a "1" written to the 1SHOT bit will cause the DS1722 to perform one
temperature conversion and store the results in the temperature register at addresses 01h (LSB) and 02h
(MSB). The bit will clear itself to "0" upon completion of the temperature conversion. The user has
read/write access to the 1SHOT bit, although writes to this bit will be ignored if the SD bit is a "0",
(continuous conversion mode). The power-up default of the one-shot bit is "0".
R0, R1, R2 =
Thermometer resolution bits. Table 5 below defines the resolution of the digital
thermometer, based on the settings of these 3 bits. There is a direct tradeoff between resolution and
conversion time, as depicted in the AC Electrical Characteristics. The user has read/write access to the
R2, R1 and R0 bits and the power-up default state is R2="0", R1="0", and R0="1" (9-bit conversions).
THERMOMETER RESOLUTION CONFIGURATION Table 5
R2 R1 R0 Thermometer Resolution Max Conversion Time

0 0 0 8-bit 0.075s
0 0 1 9-bit 0.15s
0 1 0 10-bit 0.3s
0 1 1 11-bit 0.6s
1 x x 12-bit 1.2s
x=Don’t care.
SD = Shutdown bit. If SD is "0", the DS1722 will continuously perform temperature conversions and

store the last completed result in the temperature register. If SD is changed to a "1", the conversion in
progress will be completed and stored and then the device will revert to a low-power shutdown mode.
The communication port remains active. The user has read/write access to the SD bit and the power-up
default is "1" (shutdown mode).
SERIAL INTERFACE

The DS1722 offers the flexibility to choose between two serial interface modes. The DS1722 can
communicate with the SPI interface or with a standard 3-wire interface. The interface method used is
determined by the SERMODE pin. When this pin is connected to VDDD SPI communication is selected.
When this pin is connected to ground, standard 3-wire communication is selected.
SERIAL PERIPHERAL INTERFACE (SPI)

The serial peripheral interface (SPI) is a synchronous bus for address and data transfer. The SPI mode of
serial communication is selected by tying the SERMODE pin to VDDD. Four pins are used for the SPI.
The four pins are the SDO (Serial Data Out), SDI (Serial Data In), CE (Chip Enable), and SCLK (Serial
Clock). The DS1722 is the slave device in an SPI application, with the microcontroller being the master.
The SDI and SDO pins are the serial data input and output pins for the DS1722, respectively. The CE
input is used to initiate and terminate a data transfer. The SCLK pin is used to synchronize data
movement between the master (microcontroller) and the slave (DS1722) devices.
The shift clock (SCLK), which is generated by the microcontroller, is active only when CE is high and
DS1722
inactive clock is determined by sampling SCLK when CE becomes active. Therefore, either SCLK
polarity can be accommodated. Input data (SDI) is latched on the internal strobe edge and output data
(SDO) is shifted out on the shift edge (See Table 6 and Figure 3). There is one clock for each bit
transferred. Address and data bits are transferred in groups of eight, MSB first. FUNCTION TABLE Table 6
MODE CE SCLK SDI SDO

Disable Reset L Input Disabled Input Disabled High Z
Write H CPOL=1* Data Bit Latch High Z
CPOL=0
Read H CPOL=1
CPOL=0 Next data bit
shift**
*CPOL is the “Clock Polarity” bit that is set in the control register of the microcontroller.
** SDO remains at High Z until eight bits of data are ready to be shifted out during a read.
NOTE:

CPHA bit polarity must be set to “1”.
SERIAL CLOCK AS A FUNCTION OF MICROCONTROLLER CLOCK
POLARITY (CPOL) Figure 3

CPOL=1
CPOL=0
CE
SCLK
CE
SCLK
INTERNAL
STROBESHIFT
INTERNAL
STROBESHIFT
NOTE:

CPOL is a bit that is set in the microcontroller’s Control Register.
ADDRESS AND DATA BYTES

Address and data bytes are shifted MSB first into the serial data input (SDI) and out of the serial data
output (SDO). Any transfer requires the address of the byte to specify a write or a read, followed by one
or more bytes of data. Data is transferred out of the SDO for a read operation and into the SDI for a write
operation.
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