Slide 1 Slide 2 Slide 3 Slide 4 Slide 5 Slide 6 Slide 7 Slide 8 Slide 9 Slide 10 Slide 11 Slide 12 Slide 13 Slide 14 Slide 15 Slide 16 Slide 17 Slide 18 Slide 19 Slide 20 Slide 21 Slide 22 Slide 23 Slide 24 Slide 25 Slide 26 Slide 27 Slide 28 Slide 29 Slide 30 Slide 31 Slide 32 Slide 33 Slide 34 Slide 35 Slide 36 Slide 37 Slide 38 Slide 39 Slide 40 Slide 41 Slide 42 Slide 43 Slide 44 Slide 45 Slide 46 Slide 47 Slide 48 Slide 49 Slide 50 Slide 51 Slide 52 Slide 53 Slide 54 Slide 55 Slide 56 Slide 57 Product List
PMIC: CP240x LCD Driver Family Slide 32
This page shows an illustration of an I²C bus. Essentially, it is a multi-master bus with an underlying protocol. The data direction outlined above is based on the bus cycle and master device. Once a master gets control of the bus then all other devices become slaves as there can be only one master. I²C is based on peripheral addresses. A master addresses the peripheral device and provides the cycle type, whether it is a read or write. For a write operation, the master sends data on the bus for the slave device to accept. For a read, the slave takes over the bus and drives the data. The master always drives the clock on the bus. I²C also provides a level of error checking. It communicates with an ACK/NACK protocol. If the master or slave did not receive the data correctly or for some reason cannot accept the data it can NACK the transfer. All of the ACK and NACK signals are based on bit timing and are generated in the 9th bit position. The start and stop bits are also based on timing. These bits are defined by the state at the point of transition of the I²C clock. The legend shows which device controls the bus and therefore data direction.
PTM Published on: 2011-05-13