SAM9G45 Atmel Corporation, SAM9G45 Datasheet - Page 417

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SAM9G45

Manufacturer Part Number
SAM9G45
Description
Manufacturer
Atmel Corporation
Datasheets

Specifications of SAM9G45

Flash (kbytes)
0 Kbytes
Pin Count
324
Max. Operating Frequency
400 MHz
Cpu
ARM926
Hardware Qtouch Acquisition
No
Max I/o Pins
160
Ext Interrupts
160
Usb Transceiver
3
Usb Speed
Hi-Speed
Usb Interface
Host, Device
Spi
2
Twi (i2c)
2
Uart
5
Lin
4
Ssc
2
Ethernet
1
Sd / Emmc
2
Graphic Lcd
Yes
Video Decoder
No
Camera Interface
Yes
Adc Channels
8
Adc Resolution (bits)
10
Adc Speed (ksps)
440
Resistive Touch Screen
Yes
Temp. Sensor
No
Crypto Engine
No
Sram (kbytes)
64
Self Program Memory
NO
External Bus Interface
2
Dram Memory
DDR2/LPDDR, SDRAM/LPSDR
Nand Interface
Yes
Picopower
No
Temp. Range (deg C)
-40 to 85
I/o Supply Class
1.8/3.3
Operating Voltage (vcc)
0.9 to 1.1
Fpu
No
Mpu / Mmu
No/Yes
Timers
6
Output Compare Channels
6
Input Capture Channels
6
Pwm Channels
4
32khz Rtc
Yes
Calibrated Rc Oscillator
No
29. Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI)
29.1
29.2
6438G–ATARM–19-Apr-11
Description
Embedded Characteristics
The Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) circuit is a synchronous serial data link that provides com-
munication with external devices in Master or Slave Mode. It also enables communication
between processors if an external processor is connected to the system.
The Serial Peripheral Interface is essentially a shift register that serially transmits data bits to
other SPIs. During a data transfer, one SPI system acts as the “master”' which controls the data
flow, while the other devices act as “slaves'' which have data shifted into and out by the master.
Different CPUs can take turn being masters (Multiple Master Protocol opposite to Single Master
Protocol where one CPU is always the master while all of the others are always slaves) and one
master may simultaneously shift data into multiple slaves. However, only one slave may drive its
output to write data back to the master at any given time.
A slave device is selected when the master asserts its NSS signal. If multiple slave devices
exist, the master generates a separate slave select signal for each slave (NPCS).
The SPI system consists of two data lines and two control lines:
• Master Out Slave In (MOSI): This data line supplies the output data from the master shifted
• Master In Slave Out (MISO): This data line supplies the output data from a slave to the input
• Serial Clock (SPCK): This control line is driven by the master and regulates the flow of the
• Slave Select (NSS): This control line allows slaves to be turned on and off by hardware.
• Supports communication with serial external devices
• Master or slave serial peripheral bus interface
• Very fast transfers supported
into the input(s) of the slave(s).
of the master. There may be no more than one slave transmitting data during any particular
transfer.
data bits. The master may transmit data at a variety of baud rates; the SPCK line cycles once
for each bit that is transmitted.
– Four chip selects with external decoder support allow communication with up to 15
– Serial memories, such as DataFlash and 3-wire EEPROMs
– Serial peripherals, such as ADCs, DACs, LCD Controllers, CAN Controllers and
– External co-processors
– 8- to 16-bit programmable data length per chip select
– Programmable phase and polarity per chip select
– Programmable transfer delays between consecutive transfers and between clock
– Programmable delay between consecutive transfers
– Selectable mode fault detection
– Transfers with baud rates up to MCK
– The chip select line may be left active to speed up transfers on the same device
peripherals
Sensors
and data per chip select
SAM9G45
417

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