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X1228 Datasheet, PDF (25/31 Pages) Xicor Inc. – Real Time Clock/Calendar/CPU Supervisor with EEPROM
X1228
A final application for the ATR control is in-circuit cali-
bration for high accuracy applications, along with a
temperature sensor chip. Once the RTC circuit is pow-
ered up with battery backup, the PHZ output is set at
32.768kHz and frequency drift is measured. The ATR
control is then adjusted to a setting which minimizes
drift. Once adjusted at a particular temperature, it is
possible to adjust at other discrete temperatures for
minimal overall drift, and store the resulting settings in
the EEPROM. Extremely low overall temperature drift
is possible with this method. The Xicor evaluation
board contains the circuitry necessary to implement
this control.
For more detailed operation see Xicor’s application
note AN154 on Xicor’s website at www.xicor.com.
Layout Considerations
The crystal input at X1 has a very high impedance and
will pick up high frequency signals from other circuits
on the board. Since the X2 pin is tied to the other side
of the crystal, it is also a sensitive node. These signals
can couple into the oscillator circuit and produce dou-
ble clocking or mis-clocking, seriously affecting the
accuracy of the RTC. Care needs to be taken in layout
of the RTC circuit to avoid noise pickup. Below in Fig-
ure 15 is a suggested layout for the X1228 device.
Figure 15. Suggested Layout for Xicor RTC in SO-14
C1
0.1µF
XTAL1
32.768kGz
R1 10k
U1
X1228
The X1 and X2 connections to the crystal are to be
kept as short as possible. A thick ground trace around
the crystal is advised to minimize noise intrusion, but
ground near the X1 and X2 pins should be avoided as
it will add to the load capacitance at those pins. Keep in
mind these guidelines for other PCB layers in the vicin-
ity of the RTC device. A small decoupling capacitor at
the Vcc pin of the chip is mandatory, with a solid con-
nection to ground.
Assembly
Most electronic circuits do not have to deal with
assembly issues, but with the RTC devices assembly
includes insertion or soldering of a live battery into an
unpowered circuit. If a socket is soldered to the board,
and a battery is inserted in final assembly, then there
are no issues with operation of the RTC. If the battery
is soldered to the board directly, then the RTC device
Vback pin will see some transient upset from either sol-
dering tools or intermittent battery connections which
can stop the circuit from oscillating. Once the battery is
soldered to the board, the only way to assure the circuit
will start up is to momentarily (very short period of
time!) short the Vback pin to ground and the circuit will
begin to oscillate.
Oscillator Measurements
When a proper crystal is selected and the layout guide-
lines above are observed, the oscillator should start up
in most circuits in less than one second. Some circuits
may take slightly longer, but startup should definitely
occur in less than 5 seconds. When testing RTC cir-
cuits, the most common impulse is to apply a scope
probe to the circuit at the X2 pin (oscillator output) and
observe the waveform. DO NOT DO THIS! Although in
some cases you may see a useable waveform, due to
the parasitics (usually 10pF to ground) applied with the
scope probe, there will be no useful information in that
waveform other than the fact that the circuit is oscillat-
ing. The X2 output is sensitive to capacitive impedance
so the voltage levels and the frequency will be affected
by the parasitic elements in the scope probe. Applying
a scope probe can possibly cause a faulty oscillator to
start up, hiding other issues (although in the Xicor
RTC’s, the internal circuitry assures startup when
using the proper crystal and layout).
REV 1.3 3/24/04
www.xicor.com
Characteristics subject to change without notice. 25 of 31