Functionality And Usage Of The Battery Monitor; Using The Battery Monitor For Temperature Monitoring; Values Showing How Different Temperatures Relate To Battmon_Voltage For A Typical Device - Texas Instruments CC253x User Manual

System-on-chip for 2.4ghz
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Functionality and Usage of the Battery Monitor

13.1 Functionality and Usage of the Battery Monitor
The battery monitor makes it possible to check whether the supply voltage (AVDD5) is above or below a
certain programmable level. Its usage is controlled by the BATTMON register in the following manner:
BATTMON_VOLTAGE is used to set the trigger point for the battery monitor. Note the fact that the step size
is different for different voltage ranges (see the register description in
done to achieve good accuracy in the voltage areas around 2 V, with lower resolution at higher voltages.
BATTMON_PD is used to enable or disable the battery monitor.
After enabling the battery monitor by setting BATTMON_PD = 0 and waiting for at least 2 µs, the value of
BATTMON_OUT indicates whether the voltage is above or below the trigger point (set by
BATTMON_VOLTAGE).
NOTE: One should turn the battery monitor off (
BATTMON_OUT
enabled ( = 0).
Recommended usage of the battery monitor can be summarized in the following way:
1. Set BATTMON_VOLTAGE to the value to be monitored.
2. Enable the battery monitor by setting BATTMON_PD =
3. Wait for at least 2 µs.
4. Read the BATTMON_OUT result to see whether the voltage level is above or below the value set in
BATTMON_VOLTAGE.
5. Disable the battery monitor (BATTMON_PD = 1) to avoid unnecessary current consumption.

13.2 Using the Battery Monitor for Temperature Monitoring

The battery monitor can also be used to do some simple temperature monitoring. When the battery
monitor is connected to the internal temperature sensor instead of the supply voltage AVDD5 (see the
description of MONMUX in
certain level. This is done by comparing the voltage coming from the temperature sensor to the voltage
trigger point of the battery monitor. The controls for this measurement are the same as for the normal use
of the battery monitor (see the description of BATTMON in
It is important to understand that due to the nature of the battery monitor (optimized for voltages around
2 V) and the output voltage range of the temperature sensor, there are only about 8 temperature trigger
values in the temperature range of –40°C to 125°C (see
only a rough indication of the temperature range, but this is useful for doing temperature compensation on
analog components in a system. See the data sheet of the device
characteristics.
140
Battery Monitor
in order to save power, as the battery monitor consumes power when
0.
Section
13.3), it can indicate whether the temperature is above or below a
Table 13-1. Values Showing How Different
Temperatures Relate to BATTMON_VOLTAGE for a
Typical Device
Temperature
–40°C
–26°C
–11°C
7°C
25°C
47°C
70°C
97°C
128°C
Copyright © 2009–2014, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Section 13.3
BATTMON_PD
= 1) after reading the measurement
Section
13.3).
Table
13-1). As a result, the battery monitor gives
(Appendix
BATTMON_VOLTAGE
22
21
20
19
18
17
16
15
14
SWRU191F – April 2009 – Revised April 2014
www.ti.com
for details). This is
C) for details of performance
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