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DS18B20ZMAIXMN/a1500avaiProgrammable Resolution 1-Wire Digital Thermometer


DS18B20Z ,Programmable Resolution 1-Wire Digital Thermometerblock diagram of Figure 1 shows the major components of the DS18B20. The DS18B20 has fourmain data ..
DS18B20Z+ ,Programmable Resolution 1-Wire Digital ThermometerDS18B20 Programmable Resolution 1-Wire Digital Thermometer
DS18S20 ,1-Wire Parasite-Power Digital ThermometerApplications● Thermostatic Controls● Available in 8-Pin SO (150 mils) and 3-Pin TO-92 ● Industrial ..
DS18S20 ,1-Wire Parasite-Power Digital ThermometerElectrical Characteristics(V = 3.0V to 5.5V, T = -55°C to +125°C, unless otherwise noted.)DD APARAM ..
DS18S20+ ,1-Wire Parasite-Power Digital ThermometerApplicationsbus that by definition requires only one data line (and • Measures Temperatures from -5 ..
DS18S20+ ,1-Wire Parasite-Power Digital ThermometerElectrical Characteristics—NV Memory(V = 3.0V to 5.5V, T = -55°C to +100°C, unless otherwise noted. ..


DS18B20Z
Programmable Resolution 1-Wire Digital Thermometer
FEATURESUnique 1-Wire interface requires only oneport pin for communicationMultidrop capability simplifies distributed
temperature sensing applicationsRequires no external componentsCan be powered from data line. Power supplyrange is 3.0V to 5.5VZero standby power requiredMeasures temperatures from -55°C to
+125°C. Fahrenheit equivalent is -67°F to
+257°F±0.5°C accuracy from -10°C to +85°CThermometer resolution is programmable
from 9 to 12 bitsConverts 12-bit temperature to digital word in750 ms (max.)User-definable, nonvolatile temperature alarm
settingsAlarm search command identifies and
addresses devices whose temperature isoutside of programmed limits (temperature
alarm condition)Applications include thermostatic controls,
industrial systems, consumer products,
thermometers, or any thermally sensitivesystem
PIN ASSIGNMENT
PIN DESCRIPTION

GND- GroundDQ- Data In/Out
VDD- Power Supply Voltage- No Connect
DESCRIPTION

The DS18B20 Digital Thermometer provides 9 to 12-bit (configurable) temperature readings which
indicate the temperature of the device.
Information is sent to/from the DS18B20 over a 1-Wire interface, so that only one wire (and ground)
needs to be connected from a central microprocessor to a DS18B20. Power for reading, writing, and
performing temperature conversions can be derived from the data line itself with no need for an external
power source.
Because each DS18B20 contains a unique silicon serial number, multiple DS18B20s can exist on the
same 1-Wire bus. This allows for placing temperature sensors in many different places. Applications
where this feature is useful include HVAC environmental controls, sensing temperatures inside buildings,
DS18B20
Programmable Resolution
1-Wire®

GND
VDD
1 2 3
BOTTOM VIEW
DS18B20 To-92
Package
GND
VDD
DS18B20Z
8-Pin SOIC (150 mil)
DS18B20
DETAILED PIN DESCRIPTION Table 1

DS18B20Z (8-pin SOIC): All pins not specified in this table are not to be connected.
OVERVIEW

The block diagram of Figure 1 shows the major components of the DS18B20. The DS18B20 has four
main data components: 1) 64-bit lasered ROM, 2) temperature sensor, 3) nonvolatile temperature alarm
triggers TH and TL, and 4) a configuration register. The device derives its power from the 1-Wirecommunication line by storing energy on an internal capacitor during periods of time when the signal line
is high and continues to operate off this power source during the low times of the 1-Wire line until it
returns high to replenish the parasite (capacitor) supply. As an alternative, the DS18B20 may also be
powered from an external 3 volt - 5.5 volt supply.
Communication to the DS18B20 is via a 1-Wire port. With the 1-Wire port, the memory and control
functions will not be available before the ROM function protocol has been established. The master must
first provide one of five ROM function commands: 1) Read ROM, 2) Match ROM, 3) Search ROM, 4)
Skip ROM, or 5) Alarm Search. These commands operate on the 64-bit lasered ROM portion of each
device and can single out a specific device if many are present on the 1-Wire line as well as indicate tothe bus master how many and what types of devices are present. After a ROM function sequence has
been successfully executed, the memory and control functions are accessible and the master may then
provide any one of the six memory and control function commands.
One control function command instructs the DS18B20 to perform a temperature measurement. The resultof this measurement will be placed in the DS18B20’s scratch-pad memory, and may be read by issuing a
memory function command which reads the contents of the scratchpad memory. The temperature alarm
triggers TH and TL consist of 1 byte EEPROM each. If the alarm search command is not applied to the
DS18B20, these registers may be used as general purpose user memory. The scratchpad also contains a
configuration byte to set the desired resolution of the temperature to digital conversion. Writing TH, TL,and the configuration byte is done using a memory function command. Read access to these registers is
through the scratchpad. All data is read and written least significant bit first.
DS18B20
DS18B20 BLOCK DIAGRAM Figure 1
PARASITE POWER

The block diagram (Figure 1) shows the parasite-powered circuitry. This circuitry “steals” power
whenever the DQ or VDD pins are high. DQ will provide sufficient power as long as the specified timing
and voltage requirements are met (see the section titled “1-Wire Bus System”). The advantages of
parasite power are twofold: 1) by parasiting off this pin, no local power source is needed for remote
sensing of temperature, and 2) the ROM may be read in absence of normal power.
In order for the DS18B20 to be able to perform accurate temperature conversions, sufficient power mustbe provided over the DQ line when a temperature conversion is taking place. Since the operating current
of the DS18B20 is up to 1.5 mA, the DQ line will not have sufficient drive due to the 5k pullup resistor.
This problem is particularly acute if several DS18B20s are on the same DQ and attempting to convert
simultaneously.
There are two ways to assure that the DS18B20 has sufficient supply current during its active conversion
cycle. The first is to provide a strong pullup on the DQ line whenever temperature conversions or copiesto the E2 memory are taking place. This may be accomplished by using a MOSFET to pull the DQ line
directly to the power supply as shown in Figure 2. The DQ line must be switched over to the strong pull-
up within 10 μs maximum after issuing any protocol that involves copying to the E2 memory or initiates
temperature conversions. When using the parasite power mode, the VDD pin must be tied to ground.
Another method of supplying current to the DS18B20 is through the use of an external power supply tiedto the VDD pin, as shown in Figure 3. The advantage to this is that the strong pullup is not required on the
DQ line, and the bus master need not be tied up holding that line high during temperature conversions.
This allows other data traffic on the 1-Wire bus during the conversion time. In addition, any number of
DS18B20s may be placed on the 1-Wire bus, and if they all use external power, they may all
simultaneously perform temperature conversions by issuing the Skip ROM command and then issuing theConvert T command. Note that as long as the external power supply is active, the GND pin may not be
floating.
The use of parasite power is not recommended above 100°C, since it may not be able to sustain
VDD
DS18B20
For situations where the bus master does not know whether the DS18B20s on the bus are parasite
powered or supplied with external VDD, a provision is made in the DS18B20 to signal the power supply
scheme used. The bus master can determine if any DS18B20s are on the bus which require the strong
pullup by sending a Skip ROM protocol, then issuing the read power supply command. After thiscommand is issued, the master then issues read time slots. The DS18B20 will send back “0” on the
1-Wire bus if it is parasite powered; it will send back a “1” if it is powered from the VDD pin. If the
master receives a “0,” it knows that it must supply the strong pullup on the DQ line during temperature
conversions. See “Memory Command Functions” section for more detail on this command protocol.
STRONG PULLUP FOR SUPPLYING DS18B20 DURING TEMPERATURE
CONVERSION Figure 2
USING VDD TO SUPPLY TEMPERATURE CONVERSION CURRENT Figure 3

+3V - +5.5V
DS18B20
EXTERNAL+3V - +5.5V
SUPPLY
TO OTHER1-WIRE
DEVICES
DS18B20
OPERATION - MEASURING TEMPERATURE

The core functionality of the DS18B20 is its direct-to-digital temperature sensor. The resolution of the
DS18B20 is configurable (9, 10, 11, or 12 bits), with 12-bit readings the factory default state. This
equates to a temperature resolution of 0.5°C, 0.25°C, 0.125°C, or 0.0625°C. Following the issuance of
the Convert T [44h] command, a temperature conversion is performed and the thermal data is stored inthe scratchpad memory in a 16-bit, sign-extended two’s complement format. The temperature
information can be retrieved over the 1-Wire interface by issuing a Read Scratchpad [BEh] command
once the conversion has been performed. The data is transferred over the 1-Wire bus, LSB first. The
MSB of the temperature register contains the “sign” (S) bit, denoting whether the temperature is positive
or negative.
Table 2 describes the exact relationship of output data to measured temperature. The table assumes 12-bit
resolution. If the DS18B20 is configured for a lower resolution, insignificant bits will contain zeros. For
Fahrenheit usage, a lookup table or conversion routine must be used.
Temperature/Data Relationships Table 2
LSB
MSb(unit = °C)LSbSMSB
*The power on reset register value is +85°C.
OPERATION - ALARM SIGNALING

After the DS18B20 has performed a temperature conversion, the temperature value is compared to the
trigger values stored in TH and TL. Since these registers are 8-bit only, bits 9-12 are ignored forcomparison. The most significant bit of TH or TL directly corresponds to the sign bit of the 16-bit
temperature register. If the result of a temperature measurement is higher than TH or lower than TL, an
alarm flag inside the device is set. This flag is updated with every temperature measurement. As long as
the alarm flag is set, the DS18B20 will respond to the alarm search command. This allows many
DS18B20s to be connected in parallel doing simultaneous temperature measurements. If somewhere the
DS18B20
64-BIT LASERED ROM

Each DS18B20 contains a unique ROM code that is 64-bits long. The first 8 bits are a 1-Wire family
code (DS18B20 code is 28h). The next 48 bits are a unique serial number. The last 8 bits are a CRC of
the first 56 bits. (See Figure 4.) The 64-bit ROM and ROM Function Control section allow the DS18B20
to operate as a 1-Wire device and follow the 1-Wire protocol detailed in the section “1-Wire Bus
System.” The functions required to control sections of the DS18B20 are not accessible until the ROMfunction protocol has been satisfied. This protocol is described in the ROM function protocol flowchart
(Figure 5). The 1-Wire bus master must first provide one of five ROM function commands: 1) Read
ROM, 2) Match ROM, 3) Search ROM, 4) Skip ROM, or 5) Alarm Search. After a ROM function
sequence has been successfully executed, the functions specific to the DS18B20 are accessible and the
bus master may then provide one of the six memory and control function commands.
CRC GENERATION

The DS18B20 has an 8-bit CRC stored in the most significant byte of the 64-bit ROM. The bus master
can compute a CRC value from the first 56-bits of the 64-bit ROM and compare it to the value stored
within the DS18B20 to determine if the ROM data has been received error-free by the bus master. The
equivalent polynomial function of this CRC is:
CRC = X8 + X5 + X4 + 1
The DS18B20 also generates an 8-bit CRC value using the same polynomial function shown above and
provides this value to the bus master to validate the transfer of data bytes. In each case where a CRC isused for data transfer validation, the bus master must calculate a CRC value using the polynomial
function given above and compare the calculated value to either the 8-bit CRC value stored in the 64-bit
ROM portion of the DS18B20 (for ROM reads) or the 8-bit CRC value computed within the DS18B20
(which is read as a ninth byte when the scratchpad is read). The comparison of CRC values and decision
to continue with an operation are determined entirely by the bus master. There is no circuitry inside theDS18B20 that prevents a command sequence from proceeding if the CRC stored in or calculated by the
DS18B20 does not match the value generated by the bus master.
The 1-Wire CRC can be generated using a polynomial generator consisting of a shift register and XOR
gates as shown in Figure 6. Additional information about the Dallas 1-Wire Cyclic Redundancy Check isavailable in Application Note 27 entitled “Understanding and Using Cyclic Redundancy Checks with
Dallas Semiconductor Touch Memory Products.”
The shift register bits are initialized to 0. Then starting with the least significant bit of the family code,
1 bit at a time is shifted in. After the 8th bit of the family code has been entered, then the serial number isentered. After the 48th bit of the serial number has been entered, the shift register contains the CRC
value. Shifting in the 8 bits of CRC should return the shift register to all 0s.
64-BIT LASERED ROM Figure 4

MSBLSBMSBLSBMSBLSB
DS18B20
ROM FUNCTIONS FLOW CHART Figure 5
DS18B20
1-WIRE CRC CODE Figure 6
MEMORY
The DS18B20’s memory is organized as shown in Figure 8. The memory consists of a scratchpad RAM
and a nonvolatile, electrically erasable (E2) RAM, which stores the high and low temperature triggers TH
and TL, and the configuration register. The scratchpad helps insure data integrity when communicating
over the 1-Wire bus. Data is first written to the scratchpad using the Write Scratchpad [4Eh] command.
It can then be verified by using the Read Scratchpad [BEh] command. After the data has been verified, aCopy Scratchpad [48h] command will transfer the data to the nonvolatile (E2) RAM. This process insures
data integrity when modifying memory. The DS18B20 EEPROM is rated for a minimum of 50,000
writes and 10 years data retention at T = +55°C.
The scratchpad is organized as eight bytes of memory. The first 2 bytes contain the LSB and the MSB ofthe measured temperature information, respectively. The third and fourth bytes are volatile copies of TH
and TL and are refreshed with every power-on reset. The fifth byte is a volatile copy of the configuration
register and is refreshed with every power-on reset. The configuration register will be explained in more
detail later in this section of the datasheet. The sixth, seventh, and eighth bytes are used for internal
computations, and thus will not read out any predictable pattern.
It is imperative that one writes TH, TL, and config in succession; i.e. a write is not valid if one writes
only to TH and TL, for example, and then issues a reset. If any of these bytes must be written, all three
must be written before a reset is issued.
There is a ninth byte which may be read with a Read Scratchpad [BEh] command. This byte contains a
cyclic redundancy check (CRC) byte which is the CRC over all of the eight previous bytes. This CRC is
implemented in the fashion described in the section titled “CRC Generation”.
Configuration Register

The fifth byte of the scratchpad memory is the configuration register.
It contains information which will be used by the device to determine the resolution of the temperature to
digital conversion. The bits are organized as shown in Figure 7.
DS18B20 CONFIGURATION REGISTER Figure 7
111
MSbLSb
Bits 0-4 are don’t cares on a write but will always read out “1”.
INPUT
DS18B20
R0, R1: Thermometer resolution bits. Table 3 below defines the resolution of the digital thermometer,

based on the settings of these 2 bits. There is a direct tradeoff between resolution and conversion time, as
depicted in the AC Electrical Characteristics. The factory default of these EEPROM bits is R0=1 and
R1=1 (12-bit conversions).
Thermometer Resolution Configuration Table 3
DS18B20 MEMORY MAP Figure 8

SCRATCHPAD
BYTE2RAM
DS18B20
1-WIRE BUS SYSTEM

The 1-Wire bus is a system which has a single bus master and one or more slaves. The DS18B20
behaves as a slave. The discussion of this bus system is broken down into three topics: hardware
configuration, transaction sequence, and 1-Wire signaling (signal types and timing).
HARDWARE CONFIGURATION

The 1-Wire bus has only a single line by definition; it is important that each device on the bus be able to
drive it at the appropriate time. To facilitate this, each device attached to the 1-Wire bus must have opendrain or 3-state outputs. The 1-Wire port of the DS18B20 (DQ pin) is open drain with an internal circuit
equivalent to that shown in Figure 9. A multidrop bus consists of a 1-Wire bus with multiple slaves
attached. The 1-Wire bus requires a pullup resistor of approximately 5 kΩ.
HARDWARE CONFIGURATION Figure 9

The idle state for the 1-Wire bus is high. If for any reason a transaction needs to be suspended, the bus
MUST be left in the idle state if the transaction is to resume. Infinite recovery time can occur between
bits so long as the 1-Wire bus is in the inactive (high) state during the recovery period. If this does not
occur and the bus is left low for more than 480 μs, all components on the bus will be reset.
TRANSACTION SEQUENCE

The protocol for accessing the DS18B20 via the 1-Wire port is as follows:InitializationROM Function CommandMemory Function CommandTransaction/Data
+3V - +5VBUS MASTER
DS18B20 1-WIRE PORT
DS18B20
INITIALIZATION

All transactions on the 1-Wire bus begin with an initialization sequence. The initialization sequence
consists of a reset pulse transmitted by the bus master followed by presence pulse(s) transmitted by the
slave(s).
The presence pulse lets the bus master know that the DS18B20 is on the bus and is ready to operate. Formore details, see the “1-Wire Signaling” section.
ROM FUNCTION COMMANDS

Once the bus master has detected a presence, it can issue one of the five ROM function commands. All
ROM function commands are 8 bits long. A list of these commands follows (refer to flowchart in
Figure 5):
Read ROM [33h]

This command allows the bus master to read the DS18B20’s 8-bit family code, unique 48-bit serial
number, and 8-bit CRC. This command can only be used if there is a single DS18B20 on the bus. If
more than one slave is present on the bus, a data collision will occur when all slaves try to transmit at the
same time (open drain will produce a wired AND result).
Match ROM [55h]
The match ROM command, followed by a 64-bit ROM sequence, allows the bus master to address a
specific DS18B20 on a multidrop bus. Only the DS18B20 that exactly matches the 64-bit ROM sequence
will respond to the following memory function command. All slaves that do not match the 64-bit ROM
sequence will wait for a reset pulse. This command can be used with a single or multiple devices on the
bus.
Skip ROM [CCh]

This command can save time in a single drop bus system by allowing the bus master to access the
memory functions without providing the 64-bit ROM code. If more than one slave is present on the bus
and a Read command is issued following the Skip ROM command, data collision will occur on the bus as
multiple slaves transmit simultaneously (open drain pulldowns will produce a wired AND result).
Search ROM [F0h]
When a system is initially brought up, the bus master might not know the number of devices on the
1-Wire bus or their 64-bit ROM codes. The search ROM command allows the bus master to use a
process of elimination to identify the 64-bit ROM codes of all slave devices on the bus.
Alarm Search [ECh]

The flowchart of this command is identical to the Search ROM command. However, the DS18B20 will
respond to this command only if an alarm condition has been encountered at the last temperaturemeasurement. An alarm condition is defined as a temperature higher than TH or lower than TL. The
alarm condition remains set as long as the DS18B20 is powered up, or until another temperature
measurement reveals a non-alarming value. For alarming, the trigger values stored in EEPROM are taken
into account. If an alarm condition exists and the TH or TL settings are changed, another temperature
conversion should be done to validate any alarm conditions.
DS18B20
Example of a ROM Search

The ROM search process is the repetition of a simple three-step routine: read a bit, read the complement
of the bit, then write the desired value of that bit. The bus master performs this simple, three-step routine
on each bit of the ROM. After one complete pass, the bus master knows the contents of the ROM in one
device. The remaining number of devices and their ROM codes may be identified by additional passes.
The following example of the ROM search process assumes four different devices are connected to the
same 1-Wire bus. The ROM data of the four devices is as shown:
ROM100110101...
ROM210101010...ROM311110101...
ROM400010001...
The search process is as follows:
1. The bus master begins the initialization sequence by issuing a reset pulse. The slave devices respond
by issuing simultaneous presence pulses.
2. The bus master will then issue the Search ROM command on the 1-Wire bus.
3. The bus master reads a bit from the 1-Wire bus. Each device will respond by placing the value of the
first bit of their respective ROM data onto the 1-Wire bus. ROM1 and ROM4 will place a 0 onto the
1-Wire bus, i.e., pull it low. ROM2 and ROM3 will place a 1 onto the 1-Wire bus by allowing the
line to stay high. The result is the logical AND of all devices on the line, therefore the bus master
sees a 0. The bus master reads another bit. Since the Search ROM data command is being executed,all of the devices on the 1-Wire bus respond to this second read by placing the complement of the first
bit of their respective ROM data onto the 1-Wire bus. ROM1 and ROM4 will place a 1 onto the
1-Wire, allowing the line to stay high. ROM2 and ROM3 will place a 0 onto the 1-Wire, thus it will
be pulled low. The bus master again observes a 0 for the complement of the first ROM data bit. The
bus master has determined that there are some devices on the 1-Wire bus that have a 0 in the firstposition and others that have a 1.
The data obtained from the two reads of the three-step routine have the following interpretations:There are still devices attached which have conflicting bits in this position.01All devices still coupled have a 0-bit in this bit position.All devices still coupled have a 1-bit in this bit position.There are no devices attached to the 1-Wire bus.
4. The bus master writes a 0. This deselects ROM2 and ROM3 for the remainder of this search pass,leaving only ROM1 and ROM4 connected to the 1-Wire bus.
5. The bus master performs two more reads and receives a 0-bit followed by a 1-bit. This indicates that
all devices still coupled to the bus have 0s as their second ROM data bit.
6. The bus master then writes a 0 to keep both ROM1 and ROM4 coupled.
DS18B20
8. The bus master writes a 0-bit. This deselects ROM1, leaving ROM4 as the only device still
connected.
9. The bus master reads the remainder of the ROM bits for ROM4 and continues to access the part ifdesired. This completes the first pass and uniquely identifies one part on the 1-Wire bus.
10. The bus master starts a new ROM search sequence by repeating steps 1 through 7.
11. The bus master writes a 1-bit. This decouples ROM4, leaving only ROM1 still coupled.
12. The bus master reads the remainder of the ROM bits for ROM1 and communicates to the underlying
logic if desired. This completes the second ROM search pass, in which another of the ROMs was
found.
13. The bus master starts a new ROM search by repeating steps 1 through 3.
14. The bus master writes a 1-bit. This deselects ROM1 and ROM4 for the remainder of this search pass,
leaving only ROM2 and ROM3 coupled to the system.
15. The bus master executes two Read time slots and receives two 0s.
16. The bus master writes a 0-bit. This decouples ROM3 leaving only ROM2.
17. The bus master reads the remainder of the ROM bits for ROM2 and communicates to the underlyinglogic if desired. This completes the third ROM search pass, in which another of the ROMs was
found.
18. The bus master starts a new ROM search by repeating steps 13 through 15.
19. The bus master writes a 1-bit. This decouples ROM2, leaving only ROM3.
20. The bus master reads the remainder of the ROM bits for ROM3 and communicates to the underlying
logic if desired. This completes the fourth ROM search pass, in which another of the ROMs was
found.
NOTE:

The bus master learns the unique ID number (ROM data pattern) of one 1-Wire device on each ROM
Search operation. The time required to derive the part’s unique ROM code is:
960 μs + (8 + 3 x 64) 61 μs = 13.16 ms
The bus master is therefore capable of identifying 75 different 1-Wire devices per second.
I/O SIGNALING

The DS18B20 requires strict protocols to insure data integrity. The protocol consists of several types of
signaling on one line: reset pulse, presence pulse, write 0, write 1, read 0, and read 1. All of these signals,
with the exception of the presence pulse, are initiated by the bus master.
DS18B20
The initialization sequence required to begin any communication with the DS18B20 is shown in
Figure 11. A reset pulse followed by a presence pulse indicates the DS18B20 is ready to send or receive
data given the correct ROM command and memory function command.
The bus master transmits (TX) a reset pulse (a low signal for a minimum of 480 μs). The bus master then
releases the line and goes into a receive mode (RX). The 1-Wire bus is pulled to a high state via the 5k
pullup resistor. After detecting the rising edge on the DQ pin, the DS18B20 waits 15-60 μs and then
transmits the presence pulse (a low signal for 60-240 μs).
MEMORY COMMAND FUNCTIONS

The following command protocols are summarized in Table 4, and by the flowchart of Figure 10.
Write Scratchpad [4Eh]

This command writes to the scratchpad of the DS18B20, starting at the TH register. The next 3 bytes
written will be saved in scratchpad memory at address locations 2 through 4. All 3 bytes must be written
before a reset is issued.
Read Scratchpad [BEh]

This command reads the contents of the scratchpad. Reading will commence at byte 0 and will continue
through the scratchpad until the ninth (byte 8, CRC) byte is read. If not all locations are to be read, the
master may issue a reset to terminate reading at any time.
Copy Scratchpad [48h]

This command copies the scratchpad into the E2 memory of the DS18B20, storing the temperature triggerbytes in nonvolatile memory. If the bus master issues read time slots following this command, the
DS18B20 will output 0 on the bus as long as it is busy copying the scratchpad to E2; it will return a 1
when the copy process is complete. If parasite-powered, the bus master has to enable a strong pullup for
at least 10 ms immediately after issuing this command. The DS18B20 EEPROM is rated for a minimum
of 50,000 writes and 10 years data retention at T=+55°C.
Convert T [44h]

This command begins a temperature conversion. No further data is required. The temperature
conversion will be performed and then the DS18B20 will remain idle. If the bus master issues read time
slots following this command, the DS18B20 will output 0 on the bus as long as it is busy making a
temperature conversion; it will return a 1 when the temperature conversion is complete. If parasite-powered, the bus master has to enable a strong pullup for a period greater than tconv immediately after
issuing this command.
Recall E2 [B8h]

This command recalls the temperature trigger values and configuration register stored in E2 to the
scratchpad. This recall operation happens automatically upon power-up to the DS18B20 as well, so validdata is available in the scratchpad as soon as the device has power applied. With every read data time slot
issued after this command has been sent, the device will output its temperature converter busy flag:
0=busy, 1=ready.
Read Power Supply [B4h]
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