logo logologo

Language
Search...

Products

Products

Home > Products > Holtek MCUs > 32-bit(Flash)MCU

Holtek MCU HT32F61355-HT32F61356-HT32F61357

These devices are high performance, low power consumption 32-bit microcontrollers based around an Arm® Cortex®-M0+ processor core.

General Description

These devices are high performance, low power consumption 32-bit microcontrollers based around  an Arm® Cortex®-M0+ processor core. The Cortex®-M0+ is a next-generation processor core which  is tightly coupled with Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC), SysTick timer and including  advanced debug support.

The devices operate at a frequency of up to 48 MHz with a Flash accelerator to obtain maximum  efficiency. They provide up to 128 KB of embedded Flash memory for code/data storage and 16  KB of embedded SRAM memory for system operation and application program usage. A variety  of peripherals, such as ADC, 2-channel DAC, I2 C, I2 S, USART, UART, SPI, QSPI, GPTM, SCTM,  CRC-16/32, RTC, WDT, USB2.0 FS, 32-channel music synthesizer, SW-DP (Serial Wire Debug  Port), etc., are also implemented in the devices. Several power saving modes provide the flexibility  for maximum optimization between wakeup latency and power consumption, an especially  important consideration in low power applications.

The devices integrate Wave Table synthesis function. They can operate up to 32 channels of Wave  Table synthesis at one time and control the MIDI Engine to generate melody by setting the special  registers. The Wave Table synthesis waveform data including instrument tone, MIDI scores, voice,  sound effect,etc., are strored in the internal SPI Flash Data Memory. With these features, the  devices provide enhanced functions and higher performance.

The above features ensure that the devices are suitable for use in a wide range of applications,  especially in areas such as electronic organs, digital pianos, electronic drums, electric guitars,  electric accordions and so on.

Product Features

  • Core

    ▆ 32-bit Arm® Cortex®-M0+ processor core

    ▆ Up to 48 MHz operating frequency

    ▆ 0.93 DMIPS / MHz (Dhrystone v2.1)

    ▆ Single-cycle multiplication

    ▆ Integrated Nested Vectored Interrupt Controller (NVIC)

    ▆ 24-bit SysTick timer

    The Cortex®-M0+ processor is a very low gate count, highly energy efficient processor that is  intended for microcontrollers and deeply embedded applications that require an area optimized,  low-power processor. The processor is based on the Armv6-M architecture and supports Thumb® instruction sets; single-cycle I/O port; hardware multiplier and low latency interrupt respond time.

  • On-chip Memory

    ▆ Up to 128 KB on-chip Flash memory for instruction/data and options storage

    ▆ 16 KB on-chip SRAM

    ▆ Supports multiple boot modes

    The Arm® Cortex®-M0+ processor accesses and debug accesses share the single external interface  to external AHB peripheral. The processor accesses take priority over debug accesses. The  maximum address range of the Cortex®-M0+ is 4 GB since it has a 32-bit bus address width.  Additionally, a pre-defined memory map is provided by the Cortex®-M0+ processor to reduce  the software complexity of repeated implementation by different device vendors. However, some  regions are used by the Arm® Cortex®-M0+ system peripherals. Refer to the Arm® Cortex®-M0+  Technical Reference Manual for more information.

  • Flash Memory Controller – FMC

    ▆ Flash accelerator for maximum efficiency

    ▆ 32-bit word programming with In System Programming Interface (ISP) and In Application  Programming (IAP)

    ▆ Flash protection capability to prevent illegal access

    The Flash Memory Controller, FMC, provides all the necessary functions and pre-fetch buffer  for the embedded on-chip Flash Memory. Since the access speed of the Flash Memory is slower  than the CPU, a wide access interface with a pre-fetch buffer and cache are provided for the Flash  Memory in order to reduce the CPU waiting time which will cause CPU instruction execution  delays. Flash Memory word program/page erase functions are also provided.

  • Reset Control Unit – RSTCU

    ▆ Supply supervisor:

    ● Power on Reset / Power down Reset – POR/PDR

    ● Brown-out Detector – BOD

    ● Programmable Low Voltage Detector – LVD

    The Reset Control Unit, RSTCU, has three kinds of reset, a power on reset, a system reset and an  APB unit reset. The power on reset, known as a cold reset, resets the full system during power up.  A system reset resets the processor core and peripheral IP components with the exception of the  SW-DP controller. The resets can be triggered by an external signal, internal events and the reset  generators.

  • Clock Control Unit – CKCU

    ▆ External 4 to 16 MHz crystal oscillator

    ▆ External 32,768 Hz crystal oscillator

    ▆ Internal 8 MHz RC oscillator trimmed to ±2 % accuracy at 3.3 V operating voltage and 25 °C  operating temperature

    ▆ Internal 32 kHz RC oscillator

    ▆ Integrated system clock PLL

    ▆ Independent clock divider and gating bits for peripheral clock sources

    The Clock Control unit, CKCU, provides a range of oscillator and clock functions. These include  a High Speed Internal RC oscillator (HSI), a High Speed External crystal oscillator (HSE), a  Low Speed Internal RC oscillator (LSI), a Low Speed External crystal oscillator (LSE), a Phase  Lock Loop (PLL), an HSE clock monitor, clock prescalers, clock multiplexers, APB clock divider  and gating circuitry. The AHB, APB and Cortex®-M0+ clocks are derived from the system clock (CK_SYS) which can come from the LSI, LSE, HSI, HSE or PLL. The Watchdog Timer and Real  Time Clock (RTC) use either the LSI or LSE as their clock source.

  • Power Management Control Unit – PWRCU

    ▆ Single VDD power supply: 2.0 V to 3.6 V

    ▆ Integrated 1.5 V LDO regulator for CPU core, peripherals and memories power supply

    ▆ VDD power supply for RTC

    ▆ Two power domains: VDD, 1.5 V

    ▆ Four power saving modes: Sleep, Deep-Sleep1, Deep-Sleep2, Power-Down

    Power consumption can be regarded as one of the most important issues for many embedded  system applications. Accordingly the Power Control Unit, PWRCU, in the devices provides many  types of power saving modes such as Sleep, Deep-Sleep1, Deep-Sleep2 and Power-Down mode.  These operating modes reduce the power consumption and allow the application to achieve the best  trade-off between the conflicting demands of CPU operating time, speed and power consumption.

  • External Interrupt/Event Controller – EXTI

    ▆ Up to 16 EXTI lines with configurable trigger source and type

    ▆ All GPIO pins can be selected as EXTI trigger source

    ▆ Source trigger type includes high level, low level, negative edge, positive edge or both edge

    ▆ Individual interrupt enable, wakeup enable and status bits for each EXTI line

    ▆ Software interrupt trigger mode for each EXTI line

    ▆ Integrated deglitch filter for short pulse blocking

    The External Interrupt/Event Controller, EXTI, comprises 16 edge detectors which can generate a  wake-up event or interrupt requests independently. Each EXTI line can also be masked independently.

  • Analog to Digital Converter – ADC

    ▆ 12-bit SAR ADC engine

    ▆ Up to 1 Msps conversion rate

    ▆ Up to 16 external analog input channels

    A 12-bit multi-channel ADC is integrated in the devices. There are multiplexed channels, which  include 16 external analog signal channels and 2 internal channels which can be measured. If  the input voltage is required to remain within a specific threshold window, an Analog Watchdog  function will monitor and detect these signals. An interrupt will then be generated to inform the  device that the input voltage is not within the preset threshold levels. There are three conversion  modes to convert an analog signal to digital data. The ADC can be operated in one shot, continuous  and discontinuous conversion modes.

  • I/O Ports – GPIO

    ▆ Up to 43 GPIOs

    ▆ Port A, B, C, D are mapped as 16 external interrupts – EXTI

    ▆ Almost all I/O pins have a configurable output driving current.

    There are up to 43 General Purpose I/O pins, GPIO for the implementation of logic input/output  functions. Each of the GPIO ports has a series of related control and configuration registers to  maximize flexibility and to meet the requirements of a wide range of applications.

    The GPIO ports are pin-shared with other alternative functions to obtain maximum functional  flexibility on the package pins. The GPIO pins can be used as alternative functional pins by  configuring the corresponding registers regardless of the input or output pins. The external  interrupts on the GPIO pins of the devices have related control and configuration registers in the  External Interrupt Control Unit, EXTI.

  • PWM Generation and Capture Timers – GPTM

    ▆ One 16-bit up, down, up/down auto-reload counter

    ▆ 16-bit programmable prescaler allowing counter clock frequency division by any factor between  1 and 65536

    ▆ Input Capture function

    ▆ Compare Match Output

    ▆ PWM waveform generation with Edge-aligned and Center-aligned Counting Modes

    ▆ Single Pulse Mode Output

    ▆ Encoder interface controller with two inputs using quadrature decoder

    The General Purpose Timer consists of one 16-bit up/down-counter, four 16-bit Capture/Compare  Registers (CCRs), one 16-bit Counter Reload Register (CRR) and several control/status registers.  They can be used for a variety of purposes including general time measurement, input signal pulse  width measurement, output waveform generation such as single pulse generation or PWM output  generation. The GPTM supports an Encoder Interface using a decoder with two inputs.

  • Single Channel Generation and Capture Timers – SCTM

    ▆ One 16-bit up and auto-reload counter

    ▆ One channel for each timer

    ▆ 16-bit programmable prescaler allowing counter clock frequency division by any factor between  1 and 65536

    ▆ Input Capture function

    ▆ Compare Match Output

    ▆ PWM waveform generation with Edge-aligned

    ▆ Single Pulse Mode Output

    The Single-Channel Timer consists of one 16-bit up-counter, one 16-bit Capture/Compare Register  (CCR), one 16-bit Counter-Reload Register (CRR) and several control/status registers. It can be  used for a variety of purposes including general timer, input signal pulse width measurement or  output waveform generation such as single pulse generation or PWM output.

  • Basic Function Timer – BFTM

    ▆ One 32-bit compare/match count-up counter – no I/O control features

    ▆ One shot mode – counting stops after a match condition

    ▆ Repetitive mode – restart counter after a match condition

    The Basic Function Timer is a simple count-up 32-bit counter designed to measure time intervals  and generate a one shot or repetitive interrupts. The BFTM operates in two functional modes,  repetitive or one shot mode. In the repetitive mode the BFTM restarts the counter when a compare  match event occurs. The BFTM also supports a one shot mode which forces the counter to stop  counting when a compare match event occurs.

  • Digital to Analog Converter – DAC

    ▆ Two 16-bit high resolution D/A converters with excellent frequency response characteristics and  good power consumption for stereo audio output.

  • Music Synthesis Engine (MIDI Engine) – MSE

    ▆ Up to 32 simultaneous sounds

    ▆ 10-bit Volume Control

    ▆ Output sampling frequency up to 50 kHz

    ▆ Waveform data lengths of 8, 12 or 16 bits

    ▆ Stereo output

    ▆ Supports Repeat loop Play

    ▆ Supports PDMA interface

  • Watchdog Timer – WDT

    ▆ 12-bit down counter with 3-bit prescaler

    ▆ Reset event for the system

    ▆ Programmable watchdog timer window function

    ▆ Register write protection function

    The Watchdog Timer is a hardware timing circuit that can be used to detect system failures due  to software malfunctions. It includes a 12-bit count-down counter, a prescaler, a WDT delta value  register, WDT operation control circuitry and a WDT protection mechanism. If the software does  not reload the counter value before a Watchdog Timer underflow occurs, a reset will be generated  when the counter underflows. In addition, a reset is also generated if the software reloads the  counter when the counter value is greater than the WDT delta value. This means the counter must  be reloaded within a limited timing window using a specific method. The Watchdog Timer counter  can be stopped while the processor is in the debug mode. There is a register write protect function  which can be enabled to prevent it from changing the Watchdog Timer configuration unexpectedly.

  • Real Time Clock – RTC

    ▆ 32-bit up-counter with a programmable prescaler

    ▆ Alarm function

    ▆ Interrupt and Wake-up event

    The Real Time Clock, RTC, includes an APB interface, a 32-bit count-up counter, a control register,  a prescaler, a compare register and a status register. Most of the RTC circuits are located in the VDD Domain except for the APB interface. The APB interface is located in the VDD15 power domain.  Therefore, it is necessary to be isolated from the ISO signal that comes from the power control unit  when the VDD15 power domain is powered off, that is when the device enters the Power-Down mode.  The RTC counter is used as a wakeup timer to generate a system resume signal from the PowerDown mode.

  • Inter-Integrated Circuit – I2 C

    ▆ Supports both master and slave modes with a frequency of up to 1 MHz

    ▆ Provides an arbitration function and clock synchronization

    ▆ Supports 7-bit and 10-bit addressing modes and general call addressing

    ▆ Supports slave multi-addressing mode with maskable address

    The I2 C is an internal circuit allowing communication with an external I2 C interface which is an  industry standard two line serial interface used for connection to external hardware. These two  serial lines are known as a serial data line, SDA, and a serial clock line, SCL. The I2 C module  provides three data transfer rates: (1) 100 kHz in the Standard mode, (2) 400 kHz in the Fast mode  and (3) 1 MHz in the Fast plus mode. The SCL period generation register is used to setup different  kinds of duty cycle implementations for the SCL pulse.

    The SDA line which is connected directly to the I2 C bus is a bi-directional data line between the  master and slave devices and is used for data transmission and reception. The I2 C also has an  arbitration detect function and clock synchronization to prevent situations where more than one  master attempts to transmit data to the I2 C bus at the same time.

  • Inter-IC Sound – I2 S

    ▆ Master or slave mode

    ▆ Mono and stereo

    ▆ I2 S-justified, Left-justified and Right-justified mode

    ▆ 8 / 16 / 24 / 32-bit sample size with 32-bit channel extended

    ▆ 8 × 32-bit TX & RX FIFO with PDMA supported

    ▆ 8-bit Fractional Clock Divider with rate control

    The I2 S is a synchronous communication interface that can be used as a master or slave to exchange  data with other audio peripherals, such as ADCs or DACs. The I2 S supports a variety of data  formats. In addition to the stereo I2 S-justified, Left-justified and Right-justified modes, there are  mono PCM modes with 8 / 16 / 24 / 32-bit sample size. When the I2 S operates in the master mode,  then when using the fractional divider, it can provide an accurate sampling frequency output and  support the rate control function and fine-tuning of the output frequency to avoid system problems  caused by the cumulative frequency error between different devices.

  • Operation Divider – DIV

    ▆ Signed/unsigned 32-bit divider

    ▆ Operation in 8 clock cycles, Load in 1 clock cycle

    ▆ Divide by zero error flag

    In order to enhance MCU performance, a Divider is implemented within the devices. The division  and modulus functions of the truncated division are related in the following way:  A / B = Q…R

    Where "A" is Dividend, "B" is Divisor, "Q" is Quotient and "R" is Remainder. Divider needs  software trigger start signal by using the control register "START" bit , after 8 clock cycles, the  divider calculate complete flag will be set to 1, but if divisor register data is zero, divide 0 error flag  will be set to 1.

  • Serial P5eripheral Interface – SPI

    ▆ Supports both master and slave mode

    ▆ Frequency of up to (fPCLK/2) MHz for the master mode and (fPCLK/3) MHz for the slave mode

    ▆ FIFO Depth: 8 levels

    ▆ Multi-master and multi-slave operation

    The Serial Peripheral Interface, SPI, provides an SPI protocol data transmit and receive function  in both master and slave mode. The SPI interface uses 4 pins, which are the serial data input and  output lines MISO and MOSI, the clock line, SCK, and the slave select line, SEL. One SPI device  acts as a master device which controls the data flow using the SEL and SCK signals to indicate the  start of data communication and the data sampling rate. To receive a data byte, the streamed data  bits are latched on a specific clock edge and stored in the data register or in the RX FIFO. Data  transmission is carried out in a similar way but in a reverse sequence. The mode fault detection  provides a capability for multi-master applications.

  • Quad Serial Peripheral Interface – QSPI

    ▆ Master or slave mode

    ▆ Master mode speed up to fHCLK/2

    ▆ Slave mode speed up to fHCLK/3

    ▆ Programmable data frame length up to 16 bits

    ▆ FIFO Depth: 8 levels

    ▆ MSB or LSB first shift selection

    ▆ Programmable slave select high or low active polarity

    ▆ Multi-master and multi-slave operation

    ▆ Master mode supports the dual/quad output read mode of QSPI series NOR Flash

    ▆ Four error flags with individual interrupt

    ● Read overrun

    ● Write collision

    ● Mode fault

    ● Slave abort

    ▆ Supports PDMA interface

    The Quad Serial Peripheral Interface, QSPI, provides a QSPI protocol data transmit and receive  functions in both master or slave mode. The QSPI interface uses 6 pins for Dual/Quad SPI, among  which are serial data input and output lines SIO3, SIO2, MISO/SIO1 and MOSI/SIO0, the clock  line SCK, and the slave select line SEL.

  • Universal Synchronous Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter – USART

    ▆ Supports both asynchronous and clocked synchronous serial communication modes

    ▆ Asynchronous operating baud rate up to (fPCLK/16) MHz and synchronous operating rate up to  (fPCLK/8) MHz

    ▆ Full duplex communication

    ▆ Fully programmable serial communication characteristics including:

    ● Word length: 7, 8 or 9-bit character

    ● Parity: Even, odd or no-parity bit generation and detection

    ● Stop bit: 1 or 2 stop bit generation

    ● Bit order: LSB-first or MSB-first transfer

    ▆ Error detection: Parity, overrun and frame error

    ▆ Auto hardware flow control mode – RTS, CTS

    ▆ IrDA SIR encoder and decoder

    ▆ RS485 mode with output enable control

    ▆ FIFO Depth: 8 × 9 bits for both receiver and transmitter

    The Universal Synchronous Asynchronous Receiver Transceiver, USART, provides a flexible full  duplex data exchange using synchronous or asynchronous data transfer. The USART is used to  translate data between parallel and serial interfaces, and is commonly used for RS232 standard  communication. The USART peripheral function supports four types of interrupt including Line  Status Interrupt, Transmitter FIFO Empty Interrupt, Receiver Threshold Level Reaching Interrupt  and Time Out Interrupt. The USART module includes a transmitter FIFO, TX FIFO, and receiver  FIFO, RX FIFO. The software can detect a USART error status by reading the Line Status  Register, LSR. The status includes the type and the condition of transfer operations as well as  several error conditions resulting from Parity, Overrun, Framing and Break events.

  • Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transmitter – UART

    ▆ Asynchronous serial communication operating baud rate up to fPCLK/16 MHz

    ▆ Full duplex communication

    ▆ Fully programmable serial communication characteristics including:

    ● Word length: 7, 8 or 9-bit character

    ● Parity: Even, odd or no-parity bit generation and detection

    ● Stop bit: 1 or 2 stop bit generation

    ● Bit order: LSB-first or MSB-first transfer

    ▆ Error detection: Parity, overrun and frame error

    The Universal Asynchronous Receiver Transceiver, UART, provides a flexible full duplex data  exchange using asynchronous transfer. The UART is used to translate data between parallel and  serial interfaces, and is commonly used for RS232 standard communication. The UART peripheral  function supports Line Status Interrupt. The software can detect a UART error status by reading  the Line Status Register, LSR. The status includes the type and the condition of transfer operations  as well as several error conditions resulting from Parity, Overrun, Framing and Break events.

  • Cyclic Redundancy Check – CRC

    ▆Supports CRC16 polynomial: 0x8005, X16 + X15 + X2  + 1

    ▆ Supports CCITT CRC16 polynomial: 0x1021, X16 + X12 + X5  + 1

    ▆ Supports IEEE-802.3 CRC32 polynomial: 0x04C11DB7, X32 + X26 + X23 + X22 + X16 + X12 + X11 + X10 + X8  + X7  + X5  + X4  + X2  + X + 1

    ▆ Supports 1's complement, byte reverse & bit reverse operation on data and checksum

    ▆ Supports byte, half-word & word data size

    ▆ Programmable CRC initial seed value

    ▆ CRC computation executed in 1 AHB clock cycle for 8-bit data and 4 AHB clock cycles for 32-bit data

    ▆ Supports PDMA to complete a CRC computation of a block of memory

    The CRC calculation unit is an error detection technique test algorithm which is used to verify data  transmission or storage data correctness. A CRC calculation takes a data stream or a block of data as  its input and generates a 16-bit or 32-bit output remainder. Ordinarily, a data stream is suffixed by a  CRC code and used as a checksum when being sent or stored. Therefore, the received or restored data  stream is calculated by the same generator polynomial as described above. If the new CRC code result  does not match the one calculated earlier, then this means that the data stream contains a data error.

  • Universal Serial Bus Device Controller – USB

    ▆ Complies with USB 2.0 full-speed (12 Mbps) specification

    ▆ On-chip USB full-speed transceiver

    ▆ 1 control endpoint (EP0) for control transfer

    ▆ 3 single-buffered endpoints (EP1 ~ EP3) for bulk and interrupt transfer

    ▆ 4 double-buffered endpoints (EP4 ~ EP7) for bulk, interrupt and isochronous transfer

    ▆ 1,024 bytes EP_SRAM used as the endpoint data buffers

    The USB device controller is compliant with the USB 2.0 full-speed specification. There is one  control endpoint known as Endpoint 0 and seven configurable endpoints. A 1024-byte SRAM is used  as the endpoint buffer. Each endpoint buffer size is programmable using corresponding registers,  which provides maximum flexibility for various applications. The integrated USB full-speed  transceiver helps to minimize the overall system complexity and cost. The USB functional block also  contains the resume and suspend feature to meet the requirements of low-power consumption.

  • Peripheral Direct Memory Access – PDMA

    ▆ 6 channels with trigger source grouping

    ▆ 8 / 16 / 32-bit width data transfer

    ▆ Supports Linear address, circular address and fixed address modes

    ▆ 4-level programmable channel priority

    ▆ Auto reload mode

    ▆ Supports trigger source: ADC, SPI, QSPI, USART, UART, I2 C, I2 S, GPTM, MIDI Engine and  software request

    The Peripheral Direct Memory Access controller, PDMA, moves data between the peripherals  and the system memory on the AHB bus. Each PDMA channel has a source address, destination  address, block length and transfer count. The PDMA can exclude the CPU intervention and avoid  interrupt service routine execution. It improves system performance as the software does not need  to join each data movement operation.

  • SPI Flash Data Memory

    ▆ Full voltage range: 2.3 V ~ 3.6 V

    ▆ Serial Interface Architecture

    ▆ SPI compatible: Mode 0 and Mode 3

    ▆ 256 bytes per programmable page

    ▆ Standard, Dual or Quad SPI modes

    ▆ Low power consumption

    ▆ Uniform Sector Architecture

    ▆ Any sector or block can be erased individually

    ▆ Software and Hardware Reset

    ▆ Read Unique ID Number

    The Flash data memory is a 32 / 64 / 128 Mbits Serial Flash memory, with advanced write  protection mechanisms. The devices support the single bit and four bits serial input and output  commands via standard Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI) pins: Serial Clock, Chip Select, Serial  DQ0 (DI) and DQ1(DO), DQ2 and DQ3. The memory can be programmed 1 to 256 bytes each  time, using the Page Program instruction.

    The devices also offer a sophisticated method for protecting individual blocks against erroneous  or malicious program and erase operations. By providing the ability to individually protect and  unprotect blocks, a system can unprotect a specific block to modify its contents while keeping the  remaining blocks of the memory array securely protected.

  • Debug Support

    ▆ Serial Wire Debug Port – SW-DP

    ▆ 4 comparators for hardware breakpoint or code / literal patch

    ▆ 2 comparators for hardware watch points

  • Package and Operation Temperature

    ▆ 48 / 64-pin LQFP (7 mm × 7 mm)

    ▆ Operation temperature range: -40 °C to +85 °C

Device Information


Block Diagram


Memory Map

Holtek MCU HT32F52220


How to Order

You can get your Holtek MCU HT32F61355-HT32F61356-HT32F61357 solution by flling out the form below and we will contact you immediately.

Want to turn your idea into reality? Contact YFM Support
Copyright © 2022 Shenzhen Yufan Microelectronics Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. | Sitemap

Contact

Copyright © 2022 Shenzhen Yufan Microelectronics Co., Ltd. All Rights Reserved. | { fanyi('Sitemap') }}
Online

Email

Message
TOP