SLOSE95A december   2022  – september 2023 TAS6424R-Q1

PRODUCTION DATA  

  1.   1
  2. Features
  3. Applications
  4. Description
  5. Revision History
  6. Device Options
  7. Pin Configuration and Functions
  8. Specifications
    1. 7.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings
    2. 7.2 Recommended Operating Conditions
    3. 7.3 ESD Ratings
    4. 7.4 Thermal Information
    5. 7.5 Electrical Characteristics
    6. 7.6 Typical Characteristics: Bridge-Tied Load (BTL)
    7. 7.7 Typical Characteristics: Bridge-Tied Load (BTL, 384 kHz)
    8. 7.8 Typical Characteristics: Parallel Bridge-Tied (PBTL)
    9. 7.9 Typical Characteristics: Parallel Bridge-Tied Load (PBTL, 384 kHz)
  9. Parameter Measurement Information
  10. Detailed Description
    1. 9.1 Overview
    2. 9.2 Functional Block Diagram
    3. 9.3 Feature Description
      1. 9.3.1  Serial Audio Port
        1. 9.3.1.1 I2S Mode
        2. 9.3.1.2 Left-Justified Timing
        3. 9.3.1.3 Right-Justified Timing
        4. 9.3.1.4 TDM Mode
        5. 9.3.1.5 Supported Clock Rates
        6. 9.3.1.6 Audio-Clock Error Handling
      2. 9.3.2  DC Blocking
      3. 9.3.3  Volume Control and Gain
      4. 9.3.4  High-Frequency Pulse-Width Modulator (PWM)
      5. 9.3.5  EMI Management Features
        1. 9.3.5.1 Spread-Spectrum
        2. 9.3.5.2 Channel-to-Channel Output Phase Control
      6. 9.3.6  Gate Drive
      7. 9.3.7  Power FETs
      8. 9.3.8  Load Diagnostics
        1. 9.3.8.1 DC Load Diagnostics
        2. 9.3.8.2 Line Output Diagnostics
        3. 9.3.8.3 AC Load Diagnostics
          1. 9.3.8.3.1 Impedance Magnitude Measurement
          2. 9.3.8.3.2 Impedance Phase Reference Measurement
          3. 9.3.8.3.3 Impedance Phase Measurement
      9. 9.3.9  Protection and Monitoring
        1. 9.3.9.1 Overcurrent Limit (ILIMIT)
        2. 9.3.9.2 Overcurrent Shutdown (ISD)
        3. 9.3.9.3 DC Detect
        4. 9.3.9.4 Clip Detect
        5. 9.3.9.5 Global Overtemperature Warning (OTW), Overtemperature Shutdown (OTSD)
        6. 9.3.9.6 Channel Overtemperature Warning [OTW(i)] and Shutdown [OTSD(i)]
        7. 9.3.9.7 Undervoltage (UV) and Power-On-Reset (POR)
        8. 9.3.9.8 Overvoltage (OV) and Load Dump
      10. 9.3.10 Power Supply
        1. 9.3.10.1 Vehicle-Battery Power-Supply Sequence
          1. 9.3.10.1.1 Power-Up Sequence
          2. 9.3.10.1.2 Power-Down Sequence
        2. 9.3.10.2 Boosted Power-Supply Sequence
      11. 9.3.11 Hardware Control Pins
        1. 9.3.11.1 FAULT
        2. 9.3.11.2 WARN
        3. 9.3.11.3 MUTE
        4. 9.3.11.4 STANDBY
    4. 9.4 Device Functional Modes
      1. 9.4.1 Operating Modes and Faults
    5. 9.5 Programming
      1. 9.5.1 I2C Serial Communication Bus
      2. 9.5.2 I2C Bus Protocol
      3. 9.5.3 Random Write
      4. 9.5.4 Sequential Write
      5. 9.5.5 Random Read
      6. 9.5.6 Sequential Read
    6. 9.6 Register Maps
      1. 9.6.1  Mode Control Register (address = 0x00) [default = 0x00]
      2. 9.6.2  Miscellaneous Control 1 Register (address = 0x01) [default = 0x32]
      3. 9.6.3  Miscellaneous Control 2 Register (address = 0x02) [default = 0x62]
      4. 9.6.4  SAP Control (Serial Audio-Port Control) Register (address = 0x03) [default = 0x04]
      5. 9.6.5  Channel State Control Register (address = 0x04) [default = 0x55]
      6. 9.6.6  Channel 1 Through 4 Volume Control Registers (address = 0x05–0x08) [default = 0xCF]
      7. 9.6.7  DC Load Diagnostic Control 1 Register (address = 0x09) [default = 0x00]
      8. 9.6.8  DC Load Diagnostic Control 2 Register (address = 0x0A) [default = 0x11]
      9. 9.6.9  DC Load Diagnostic Control 3 Register (address = 0x0B) [default = 0x11]
      10. 9.6.10 DC Load Diagnostic Report 1 Register (address = 0x0C) [default = 0x00]
      11. 9.6.11 DC Load Diagnostic Report 2 Register (address = 0x0D) [default = 0x00]
      12. 9.6.12 DC Load Diagnostics Report 3 Line Output Register (address = 0x0E) [default = 0x00]
      13. 9.6.13 Channel State Reporting Register (address = 0x0F) [default = 0x55]
      14. 9.6.14 Channel Faults (Overcurrent, DC Detection) Register (address = 0x10) [default = 0x00]
      15. 9.6.15 Global Faults 1 Register (address = 0x11) [default = 0x00]
      16. 9.6.16 Global Faults 2 Register (address = 0x12) [default = 0x00]
      17. 9.6.17 Warnings Register (address = 0x13) [default = 0x20]
      18. 9.6.18 Pin Control Register (address = 0x14) [default = 0x00]
      19. 9.6.19 AC Load Diagnostic Control 1 Register (address = 0x15) [default = 0x00]
      20. 9.6.20 AC Load Diagnostic Control 2 Register (address = 0x16) [default = 0x00]
      21. 9.6.21 AC Load Diagnostic Impedance Report Ch1 through Ch4 Registers (address = 0x17–0x1A) [default = 0x00]
      22. 9.6.22 AC Load Diagnostic Phase Report High Register (address = 0x1B) [default = 0x00]
      23. 9.6.23 AC Load Diagnostic Phase Report Low Register (address = 0x1C) [default = 0x00]
      24. 9.6.24 AC Load Diagnostic STI Report High Register (address = 0x1D) [default = 0x00]
      25. 9.6.25 AC Load Diagnostic STI Report Low Register (address = 0x1E) [default = 0x00]
      26. 9.6.26 Miscellaneous Control 3 Register (address = 0x21) [default = 0x00]
      27. 9.6.27 Clip Control Register (address = 0x22) [default = 0x01]
      28. 9.6.28 Clip Window Register (address = 0x23) [default = 0x14]
      29. 9.6.29 Clip Warning Register (address = 0x24) [default = 0x00]
      30. 9.6.30 ILIMIT Status Register (address = 0x25) [default = 0x00]
      31. 9.6.31 Miscellaneous Control 4 Register (address = 0x26) [default = 0x40]
      32. 9.6.32 Miscellaneous Control 5 Register (address = 0x28) [default = 0x0A]
      33. 9.6.33 Spread-Spectrum Control 1 Register (address = 0x77) [default = 0x00]
      34. 9.6.34 Spread Spectrum Control 2 Register (address = 0x78) [default = 0x3F]
      35. 9.6.35 Spread Spectrum Control 3 Register (address = 0x79) [default = 0x00]
  11. 10Application and Implementation
    1. 10.1 Application Information
      1. 10.1.1 AM-Radio Band Avoidance
      2. 10.1.2 Parallel BTL Operation (PBTL)
      3. 10.1.3 Demodulation Filter Design
      4. 10.1.4 Line Driver Applications
    2. 10.2 Typical Application
      1. 10.2.1 BTL Application
        1. 10.2.1.1 Design Requirements
          1. 10.2.1.1.1 Communication
        2. 10.2.1.2 Detailed Design Procedure
          1. 10.2.1.2.1 Hardware Design
          2. 10.2.1.2.2 Digital Input and the Serial Audio Port
          3. 10.2.1.2.3 Bootstrap Capacitors
          4. 10.2.1.2.4 Output Reconstruction Filter
      2. 10.2.2 PBTL Application
        1. 10.2.2.1 Design Requirements
        2. 10.2.2.2 Detailed Design Procedure
    3. 10.3 Power Supply Recommendations
    4. 10.4 Layout
      1. 10.4.1 Layout Guidelines
        1. 10.4.1.1 Electrical Connection of Thermal pad and Heat Sink
        2. 10.4.1.2 EMI Considerations
        3. 10.4.1.3 General Guidelines
      2. 10.4.2 Layout Example
      3. 10.4.3 Thermal Considerations
  12. 11Device and Documentation Support
    1. 11.1 Documentation Support
      1. 11.1.1 Related Documentation
    2. 11.2 Receiving Notification of Documentation Updates
    3. 11.3 Support Resources
    4. 11.4 Trademarks
    5. 11.5 Electrostatic Discharge Caution
    6. 11.6 Glossary
  13. 12Mechanical, Packaging, and Orderable Information
    1. 12.1 Package Option Addendum
      1. 12.1.1 Packaging Information
    2. 12.2 Tape and Reel Information
    3. 12.3 Mechanical Data

Package Options

Mechanical Data (Package|Pins)
Thermal pad, mechanical data (Package|Pins)
Orderable Information

I2C Bus Protocol

The device has a bidirectional serial-control interface that is compatible with the I2C bus protocol and supports 100 kbps and 400 kbps data transfer rates for random and sequential write and read operations. The TAS6424R-Q1 is a target-only device that does not support a multicontroller bus environment or wait-state insertion. The control interface is used to program the registers of the device and to read device status.

The I2C bus uses two signals, SDA (data) and SCL (clock), to communicate between integrated circuits in a system. Data is transferred on the bus serially, one bit at a time. The address and data are transferred in byte (8-bit) format with the most-significant bit (MSB) transferred first. In addition, each byte transferred on the bus is acknowledged by the receiving device with an acknowledge bit. Each transfer operation begins with the controller device driving a start condition on the bus, and ends with the controller device driving a stop condition on the bus. The bus uses transitions on the data terminal (SDA) while the clock is HIGH to indicate a start and stop conditions. A HIGH-to-LOW transition on SDA indicates a start, and a LOW-to-HIGH transition indicates a stop. Normal data bit transitions must occur within the low time of the clock period. The controller generates the 7-bit target address and the read/write (R/W) bit to open communication with another device and then wait for an acknowledge condition. The device holds SDA LOW during the acknowledge-clock period to indicate an acknowledgment. When this occurs, the controller transmits the next byte of the sequence. Each device is addressed by a unique 7-bit target address plus a R/W bit (1 byte). All compatible devices share the same signals via a bidirectional bus using a wired-AND connection. An external pullup resistor must be used for the SDA and SCL signals to set the HIGH level for the bus. The number of bytes that can be transmitted between start and stop conditions is unlimited. When the last word transfers, the controller generates a stop condition to release the bus.

GUID-77F9865A-68A1-4A1E-988F-3CE0B61BF661-low.svgFigure 9-8 Typical I2C Sequence
GUID-3B1C9E96-7316-479C-B31E-E6E6CDECB34D-low.gifFigure 9-9 SCL and SDA Timing

Use the I2C ADDRx pins to program the device target address. Read and write data can be transmitted using single-byte or multiple-byte data transfers.