SLLSE49D September 2010 – July 2017 SN65HVD1780-Q1 , SN65HVD1781-Q1 , SN65HVD1782-Q1
UNLESS OTHERWISE NOTED, this document contains PRODUCTION DATA.
NOTE
Information in the following applications sections is not part of the TI component specification, and TI does not warrant its accuracy or completeness. TI’s customers are responsible for determining suitability of components for their purposes. Customers should validate and test their design implementation to confirm system functionality.
The SN65HVD178x-Q1 family of devices is a half-duplex RS-485 transceiver commonly used for asynchronous data transmissions. The driver and receiver enable pins allow for the configuration of different operating modes.
Using independent enable lines provides the most flexible control as it allows for the driver and the receiver to be turned on and off individually. While this configuration requires two control lines, it allows for selective listening into the bus traffic, whether the driver is transmitting data or not.
Combining the enable signals simplifies the interface to the controller by forming a single direction-control signal. In this configuration, the transceiver operates as a driver when the direction-control line is high, and as a receiver when the direction-control line is low.
Additionally, only one line is required when connecting the receiver-enable input to ground and controlling only the driver-enable input. In this configuration, a node not only receives the data from the bus, but also the data it sends and can verify that the correct data have been transmitted.
An RS-485 bus consists of multiple transceivers connecting in parallel to a bus cable. To eliminate line reflections, each cable end is terminated with a termination resistor, RT, whose value matches the characteristic impedance, Z0, of the cable. This method, known as parallel termination, allows for higher data rates over longer cable length.
RS-485 is a robust electrical standard suitable for long-distance networking that may be used in a wide range of applications with varying requirements, such as distance, data rate, and number of nodes.
There is an inverse relationship between data rate and bus length, meaning the higher the data rate, the shorter the cable length; and conversely, the lower the data rate, the longer the cable may be without introducing data errors. While most RS-485 systems use data rates between 10 kbps and 100 kbps, some applications require data rates up to 250 kbps at distances of 4000 feet and longer. Longer distances are possible by allowing for small signal jitter of up to 5 or 10%.
The RS-485 standard specifies that a compliant driver must be able to driver 32 unit loads (UL), where 1 unit load represents a load impedance of approximately 12 kΩ. Because the SN65HVD7x-Q1 family of devices consists of 1/10 UL transceivers, it is possible to connect up to 320 receivers to the bus.
Although the SN65HVD178x-Q1 family of devices is internally protected against human-body-model ESD strikes up to 16 kV, additional protection against higher-energy transients can be provided at the application level by implementing external protection devices.
Figure 17 shows a protection circuit intended to withstand 8-kV IEC ESD (per IEC 61000-4-2) as well as 4-kV EFT (per IEC 61000-4-4).
DEVICE | FUNCTION | ORDER NUMBER | MANUFACTURER |
---|---|---|---|
XCVR | RS-485 Transceiver | SN65HVD178x-Q1 | TI |
R1, R2 | 10-Ω, Pulse-Proof Thick-Film Resistor | CRCW0603010RJNEAHP | Vishay |
TVS | Bidirectional 600-W Transient Suppressor | SMBJ43CA | Littlefuse |
When connecting a node to the bus, the distance between the transceiver inputs and the cable trunk, known as the stub, should be as short as possible. Stubs present a non-terminated piece of bus line which can introduce reflections as the length of the stub increases. As a general guideline, the electrical length, or round-trip delay, of a stub should be less than one-tenth of the rise time of the driver, thus giving a maximum physical stub length as shown in Equation 1.
where
The differential receivers of the SN65HVD178x-Q1 family have receiver input thresholds that are offset so that receiver output state is known for the following three fault conditions:
In any of these cases, the differential receiver will output a failsafe logic High state so that the output of the receiver is not indeterminate.
Receiver failsafe is accomplished by offsetting the receiver thresholds such that the input indeterminate range does not include zero volts differential. In order to comply with the RS-422 and RS-485 standards, the receiver output must output a High when the differential input VID is more positive than 200 mV, and must output a Low when VID is more negative than –200 mV. The receiver parameters which determine the failsafe performance are VIT(+), VIT(–), and VHYS (the separation between VIT(+) and VIT(–)). As shown in the Electrical Characteristics table, differential signals more negative than –200mV will always cause a Low receiver output, and differential signals more positive than 200 mV will always cause a High receiver output.
When the differential input signal is close to zero, it is still above the maximum VIT(+) threshold of –35 mV, and the receiver output will be High. Only when the differential input is more than VHYS below VIT(+) will the receiver output transition to a Low state. Therefore, the noise immunity of the receiver inputs during a bus fault condition includes the receiver hysteresis value, VHYS, as well as the value of VIT(+).
1-Mbps Operation |