SLUSBB3E December 2013 – January 2016
PRODUCTION DATA.
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The bq27621-G1 battery fuel gauge accurately predicts the battery capacity and other operational characteristics of a single Li-based rechargeable cell. It can be interrogated by a system processor to provide cell information such as State of Charge (%) and Remaining Capacity (mAh). The device is preconfigured with three battery profiles. The default profile is for standard LiCoO2-based batteries with a maximum charge voltage of 4.2 V. The other two profiles that can be selected via I2C commands are for batteries with charging voltages of 4.3 V and 4.35 V.
Unlike some other fuel gauges, the bq27621-G1 fuel gauge cannot be programmed with specific battery chemistry profiles. For many battery types and applications, the predefined standard chemistry profiles available in the bq27621-G1 fuel gauge are sufficient matches from a gauging perspective.
NOTE
Formatting conventions used in this document:
Commands: italics with parentheses and no breaking spaces, for example:
RemainingCapacity()
Data Memory Configuration Parameter: italics, bold, and breaking spaces, for example: Design Capacity
Register bits and flags: brackets and italics, for example: [ITPOR]
Data Memory Configuration Parameter bits: brackets, italics and bold, for example: [BIE]
Modes and states: ALL CAPITALS, for example: UNSEALED mode
Information is accessed through a series of commands, called Standard Commands. Further capabilities are provided by the additional Extended Commands set. Both sets of commands, indicated by the general format Command(), are used to read and write information contained within the control and status registers, as well as its data locations. Commands are sent from system to gauge using the I2C serial communications engine, and can be executed during application development, system manufacture, or end-equipment operation.
The key to the fuel gauging prediction of the bq27621-G1 fuel gauge is Texas Instruments proprietary Dynamic Voltage Correlation algorithm. This algorithm eliminates the need for a sense resistor when calculating remaining battery capacity (mAh) and state-of-charge (%). This algorithm uses cell voltage measurements and cell characteristics to create state-of-charge predictions that can achieve high accuracy across a wide variety of operating conditions.
The fuel gauge estimates charge and discharge activity by monitoring the cell voltage. Cell impedance is computed based on estimated current, open-circuit voltage (OCV), and cell voltage under loaded conditions.
The fuel gauge uses an integrated temperature sensor for estimating cell temperature. Alternatively, the system processor can provide temperature data for the fuel gauge.
To minimize power consumption, the fuel gauge has several power modes: INITIALIZATION, NORMAL, SLEEP, HIBERNATE, and SHUTDOWN. The fuel gauge passes automatically between these modes, depending upon the occurrence of specific events, though a system processor can initiate some of these modes directly.
The gauge can be configured and used in a matter of minutes by following the Quickstart Guide for bq27621-G1 (SLUUAP5). The information in that document is sufficient for most applications. For further customization and options, more exhaustive details can be found in the bq27621-G1 Technical Reference Manual (SLUUAD4).
The bq27621-G1 uses a series of 2-byte standard commands to enable system reading and writing of battery information. Each standard command has an associated command-code pair, as indicated in Table 1. Because each command consists of two bytes of data, two consecutive I2C transmissions must be executed both to initiate the command function, and to read or write the corresponding two bytes of data. Additional details are found in the bq27621-G1 Technical Reference Manual (SLUUAD4).
NOTE
Data values read by the host may be invalid during initialization for a period of up to 3 seconds.
NAME | COMMAND CODE |
UNIT | SEALED ACCESS | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Control() | CNTL | 0x00 and 0x01 | NA | R/W |
Temperature() | TEMP | 0x02 and 0x03 | 0.1°K | R/W |
Voltage() | VOLT | 0x04 and 0x05 | mV | R |
Flags() | FLAGS | 0x06 and 0x07 | NA | R |
NominalAvailableCapacity() | 0x08 and 0x09 | mAh | R | |
FullAvailableCapacity() | 0x0A and 0x0B | mAh | R | |
RemainingCapacity() | RM | 0x0C and 0x0D | mAh | R |
FullChargeCapacity() | FCC | 0x0E and 0x0F | mAh | R |
EffectiveCurrent() | 0x10 and 0x11 | mA | R | |
AveragePower() | 0x18 and 0x19 | mW | R | |
StateOfCharge() | SOC | 0x1C and 0x1D | % | R |
InternalTemperature() | 0x1E and 0x1F | 0.1°K | R | |
RemainingCapacityUnfiltered() | 0x28 and 0x29 | mAh | R | |
RemainingCapacityFiltered() | 0x2A and 0x2B | mAh | R | |
FullChargeCapacityUnfiltered() | 0x2C and 0x2D | mAh | R | |
FullChargeCapacityFiltered() | 0x2E and 0x2F | mAh | R | |
StateOfChargeUnfiltered() | 0x30 and 0x31 | mAh | R | |
OperationConfiguration() | 0x3A and 0x3B | NA | R |
Issuing a Control() command requires a subsequent 2-byte subcommand. These additional bytes specify the particular control function desired. The Control() command allows the system to control specific features of the fuel gauge during normal operation and additional features when the device is in different access modes. Additional details are found in the bq27621-G1 Technical Reference Manual (SLUUAD4).
CNTL FUNCTION | CNTL DATA | SEALED ACCESS | DESCRIPTION |
---|---|---|---|
CONTROL_STATUS | 0x0000 | Yes | Reports the status of device. |
DEVICE_TYPE | 0x0001 | Yes | Reports the device type (0x0621). |
FW_VERSION | 0x0002 | Yes | Reports the firmware version of the device. |
PREV_MACWRITE | 0x0007 | Yes | Returns previous MAC command code. |
CHEM_ID | 0x0008 | Yes | Reports the chemical identifier of the battery profile currently used by the fuel gauging algorithm |
BAT_INSERT | 0x000C | Yes | Forces the [BAT_DET] bit set when the [BIE] bit is 0. |
BAT_REMOVE | 0x000D | Yes | Forces the [BAT_DET] bit clear when the [BIE] bit is 0. |
TOGGLE_POWERMIN | 0x0010 | Yes | Set CONTROL_STATUS [POWERMIN] to 1. |
SET_HIBERNATE | 0x0011 | Yes | Forces CONTROL_STATUS [HIBERNATE] to 1. |
CLEAR_HIBERNATE | 0x0012 | Yes | Forces CONTROL_STATUS [HIBERNATE] to 0. |
SET_CFGUPDATE | 0x0013 | No | Force CONTROL_STATUS [CFGUPMODE] to 1 and gauge enters CONFIG UPDATE mode. |
SHUTDOWN_ENABLE | 0x001B | No | Enables device SHUTDOWN mode. |
SHUTDOWN | 0x001C | No | Commands the device to enter SHUTDOWN mode. |
SEALED | 0x0020 | No | Places the device in SEALED access mode. |
TOGGLE_GPOUT | 0x0023 | Yes | Test the GPIO pin by sending a pulse signal |
ALT_CHEM1 | 0x0031 | No | Selects alternate chemistry 1 (0x1210) |
ALT_CHEM2 | 0x0032 | No | Selects alternate chemistry 2 (0x354) |
RESET | 0x0041 | No | Performs a full device reset. |
SOFT_RESET | 0x0042 | No | Gauge exits CONFIG UPDATE mode. |
EXIT_CFGUPDATE | 0x0043 | No | Exits CONFIG UPDATE mode without an OCV measurement and without resimulating to update StateOfCharge(). |
EXIT_RESIM | 0x0044 | No | Exits CONFIG UPDATE mode without an OCV measurement and resimulates with the updated configuration data to update StateOfCharge(). |
The fuel gauge allows the user to change the chemistry settings using I2C commands. The default chemistry has a CHEM_ID of 0x1202. The two other CHEM_IDs supported by this device includes CHEM_ID 0x1210 and CHEM_ID 0x354. The detailed procedure to change the chemistry is available in the bq27621-G1 Technical Reference Manual (SLUUAD4).
The bq27621-G1 fuel gauge supports the standard I2C read, incremental read, quick read, one-byte write, and incremental write functions. The 7-bit device address (ADDR) is the most significant 7 bits of the hex address and is fixed as 1010101. The first 8 bits of the I2C protocol are, therefore, 0xAA or 0xAB for write or read, respectively.
The quick read returns data at the address indicated by the address pointer. The address pointer, a register internal to the I2C communication engine, increments whenever data is acknowledged by the fuel gauge or the I2C master. The quick writes function in the same manner and are a convenient means of sending multiple bytes to consecutive command locations (such as two-byte commands that require two bytes of data).
The following command sequences are not supported:
The I2C engine releases both SDA and SCL if the I2C bus is held low for 2 seconds. If the fuel gauge is holding the lines, releasing them frees them for the master to drive the lines.
To ensure proper operation at 400 kHz, a t(BUF) ≥ 66 µs bus-free waiting time must be inserted between all packets addressed to the fuel gauge. In addition, if the SCL clock frequency (fSCL) is > 100 kHz, use individual 1-byte write commands for proper data flow control. The following diagram shows the standard waiting time required between issuing the control subcommand the reading the status result. For read-write standard command, a minimum of 2 seconds is required to get the result updated. For read-only standard commands, there is no waiting time required, but the host must not issue any standard command more than two times per second. Otherwise, the gauge could result in a reset issue due to the expiration of the watchdog timer.
A clock stretch of up to 4 ms can occur during all modes of fuel gauge operation. In SLEEP and HIBERNATE modes, a short clock stretch occurs on all I2C traffic as the device must wake-up to process the packet. In the other modes (INITIALIZATION, NORMAL) clock stretching only occurs for packets addressed for the fuel gauge. The majority of clock stretch periods are small as the I2C interface performs normal data flow control.