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ID 434L: Incorporating a Capacitive Touch Interface into Your Design Renesas Electronics America Inc. Jim Page Senior Applications Engineer 12 & 13 October 2010 Version: 1.1 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Jim Page  Senior Applications Engineer  Developed reference designs with Renesas Capacitive Touch Solution  Applications Engineering Support for Renesas Capacitive Touch  Author of Application notes on Renesas Capacitive Touch  B.S. EET from Western Carolina University  Go Catamounts!!  Expert in Serial (I2C, SPI, others) and USB technologies  Co-patent holder and developer of original Renesas Flash-Over-USB technology  Contributor to ‘USB Design by Example, 2nd ed.’ by John Hyde from Intel Press  Created platform code key to USB certification requirements and silicon development  Key support and development role for several successful projects being used in-field today 2 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Renesas Technology and Solution Portfolio Microcontrollers & Microprocessors #1 Market share worldwide * ASIC, ASSP & Memory Advanced and proven technologies Solutions for Innovation Analog and Power Devices #1 Market share in low-voltage MOSFET** * MCU: 31% revenue basis from Gartner "Semiconductor Applications Worldwide Annual Market Share: Database" 25 March 2010 ** Power MOSFET: 17.1% on unit basis from Marketing Eye 2009 (17.1% on unit basis). 3 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Renesas Technology and Solution Portfolio Microcontrollers & Microprocessors #1 Market share worldwide * Solutions for Innovation ASIC, ASSP & Memory Advanced and proven technologies Analog and Power Devices #1 Market share in low-voltage MOSFET** * MCU: 31% revenue basis from Gartner "Semiconductor Applications Worldwide Annual Market Share: Database" 25 March 2010 ** Power MOSFET: 17.1% on unit basis from Marketing Eye 2009 (17.1% on unit basis). 4 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Microcontroller and Microprocessor Line-up Superscalar, MMU, Multimedia  Up to 1200 DMIPS, 45, 65 & 90nm process  Video and audio processing on Linux  Server, Industrial & Automotive  Up to 500 DMIPS, 150 & 90nm process  600uA/MHz, 1.5 uA standby  Medical, Automotive & Industrial High Performance CPU, Low Power High Performance CPU, FPU, DSC  Up to 165 DMIPS, 90nm process  500uA/MHz, 2.5 uA standby  Ethernet, CAN, USB, Motor Control, TFT Display  Legacy Cores  Next-generation migration to RX General Purpose  Up to 10 DMIPS, 130nm process  350 uA/MHz, 1uA standby  Capacitive touch 5 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Ultra Low Power Embedded Security  Up to 25 DMIPS, 150nm process  Up to 25 DMIPS, 180, 90nm process  190 uA/MHz, 0.3uA standby  1mA/MHz, 100uA standby  Application-specific integration  Crypto engine, Hardware security Microcontroller and Microprocessor Line-up R8C Superscalar, MMU, Multimedia  Up to 1200 DMIPS, 45, 65 & 90nm process  Video and audio processing on Linux  Server, Industrial & Automotive Capacitive High Performance CPU, Low Power Touch Solution High Performance CPU, FPU, DSC  Up to 500 DMIPS, 150 & 90nm process  600uA/MHz, 1.5 uA standby  Medical, Automotive & Industrial  Up to 165 DMIPS, 90nm process  500uA/MHz, 2.5 uA standby  Ethernet, CAN, USB, Motor Control, TFT Display  Legacy Cores  Next-generation migration to RX General Purpose  Up to 10 DMIPS, 130nm process  350 uA/MHz, 1uA standby  Capacitive touch 6 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Ultra Low Power Embedded Security  Up to 25 DMIPS, 150nm process  Up to 25 DMIPS, 180, 90nm process  190 uA/MHz, 0.3uA standby  1mA/MHz, 100uA standby  Application-specific integration  Crypto engine, Hardware security Switches… 7 7 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Switches… 8 8 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Switches… 9 9 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Renesas Capacitive Touch Innovation Renesas provides you a complete hardware, software, and tool solution for implementing capacitive touch technology into your embedded designs. 10 10 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Course Agenda  Touch Basics  Touch Detection  Creating a ‘Digital Touch’  Renesas Hardware Overview  Renesas Touch Solution  Application View  Renesas Software  Available Tools  Lab Overview Lab Time!!  Wrap-up and questions 11 11 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch Basics 12 12 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Capacitive Touch Detection Methods Mutual Capacitance * Power Consumption: Medium/High Emissions: Medium/High Immunity: Medium/High    Self Capacitance *    Power Consumption: Low Emissions: Low Immunity: Medium * Attributes may vary depending on implementation 13 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. 13 All rights reserved. Touch Basics  Simple Touch System  Sensor  Electrode pad  Connecting traces  Capacitive Component     14 Earth Enclosure PCB + Components Overlay 14 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch Basics  Make it simple…  Lump them together  Create combined ‘cap’ ) 15 15 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Quick Question… Q: Based on this self capacitance method, what are some ways that you would measure the change in capacitance of that sensor pad to detect a touch? A: Create a simple RC charge circuit that will charge the ‘system’ to a known voltage and discharge it at accurate rate. The change in C will effect the discharge curve in a measureable fashion. 16 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. 16 Touch Basics  Simple RC Circuit Comparison Capacitor Charge/Discharge Resistor Charge Capacitor 17 17 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch Basics  Add control components 18 18 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch Basics  Charge circuit… 19 19 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch Basics  Charging Completed… 20 20 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch Basics  Discharge Circuit… 21 21 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Quick Question… Q: Now that we’ve created this ‘RC’ charge/discharge circuit, what happens to the curve when we touch the pad? A: Touching the sensor pad causes an increase to the lumped capacitance that is seen by the RC circuit. This causes the RC waveform to change it’s charge/timing characteristics in a measurable fashion. 22 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. 22 Touch Basics  ‘Object’ Introduction  Adds Capacitance – Few pF  Very Small  mV of difference 23 23 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Quick Question… Q: What might be an easy way to detect a touch measuring the RC circuit A: Sampling the voltage to some ‘threshold’ could allow us to detect touch. Let’s Check it out!! 24 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. 24 Touch…Analog to Digital  Sampling  Create ‘counts’ vs. ‘threshold’ 25 25 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch…Analog to Digital  ‘Counts’ vs. Time 26 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch…Analog to Digital 27 27 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. The Sensor Control Unit (SCU) 28 28 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Why Develop Hardware?  How could we control the switches shown in the diagram?  Would our timing need to be accurate?  How would you measure the discharge curve voltage? 29 29 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Why Develop Hardware? (continued)  CPU used 100% in software solution  CPU in R8C/3xT  Fully stopped  Or system functions  Less than 15% CPU usage CPU Active (Touch Scanning) Softwarebased solution CPU CPU R8C/3xT Option A R8C/3xT Option B 30 CPU Active (System Functions) Not Operating SCU Scanning + Data Transfer CPU System Functions SCU Scanning + Data Transfer CLK … © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. CPU Active (Touch Post Processing) Less than 15% of total CPU time (20MHz) SCU (Sensor Control Unit)  SCU performs:  Sequencing and timing of the charge/discharge  Key scanning  High-frequency filtering  Interrupt Generation  Data Transfers – DTC or DMA SCU  SCU Features  18 channel sense capability  Single, scan, or selective scan modes  Additional noise filtering  S/W or H/W scan kickoff 31 31 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Scan Sequence SCU Data Transfer to RAM Buffer SCSTRT (Start bit) SCU Operating SCU Operating Ch 0 Measure Ch 1 Measure Ch 2 Measure SCU Interrupt Touch SW Processing SCU Operating SCU DTC Ch 2 User Code running SCU DTC Ch 1 User Code running User Code running SCU DTC Ch 0 Complete scan example using Ch 0 to Ch 2 Scan is started by program Note: Time for operations not to scale 32 32 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Single Channel Operation  SCU can scan single touch channels  Trigger interrupt on complete start Measure Ch 2 SCU Interrupt* 33 33 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Scan Operation  SCU can scan multiple touch channels  Scan ascending or descending order Ascending Descending start start Measure Ch 0 Measure Ch 2 Measure Ch 1 Measure Ch 1 Measure Ch 2 Measure Ch 0 SCU Interrupt* SCU Interrupt*  SFR values set range of scan  Trigger interrupt on complete 34 34 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Selective Scan Operation  Selective channel scan capable  All channels still scanned start  Channels selectively enabled Measure Ch 0  Trigger interrupt on complete Measure Ch 1 Measure Ch 2 Measure Ch 3 - These channels are tested but the analog SW of these channels is OFF - measurement data is still transferred to RAM but this data is invalid Measure Ch 4 SCU Interrupt* 35 35 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Hardware Noise Filtering  Multiple ‘Pre’-Measurement Points  SCU Generates each scan  User selectable in software API  2 Modes  1st threshold crossing  7th consecutive crossing  Helps with hardware noise rejection 36 36 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Hardware Noise Filtering  Multiple Measurement Types  Random sample point(s)  Software Selectable  16 sequential points  Moves ‘Count’ sample point within window  Helps with noise rejection 37 37 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Hardware Noise Filtering  Multiple Measurement Types  Majority vote  Selectable ‘majority’ – 7 types  Records ‘Count’ after majority reached 38 38 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Hardware Noise Filtering  Delay Timing Measurement  Uses Random Pattern – ~5nS Variation/sample  Selectable random pattern 39 39 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Data Storage  Primary and secondary count data is transferred by DTC to RAM Buffer  Start address of buffer is set in SCU Destination Register  Dedicated RAM Example • Scan channel 0-2 in ascending order • SCU Destination Register = 0C00h start Measure Ch 0 Measure Ch 1 Measure Ch 2 0C00h 0C01h 0C02h 0C03h 0C04h 0C05h 0C06h 0C07h 0C08h 0C09h 0C0Ah 0C0Bh CH0 dataA CH0 dataD CH1 dataA CH1 dataD CH2 dataA CH2 dataD SCU Interrupt 40 40 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Data Storage (Selective Scan)  Primary and secondary count data is transferred by DTC to RAM Buffer Example • Scan channel 0-4 in ascending order • Skip channel 1 and 3 • SCU Destination Register = 0C00h start  Start address of buffer is set in SCU Destination Register  Data is transferred even for disabled channels, higher level software should ignore Measure Ch 0 Measure Ch 1 Measure Ch 2 Measure Ch 3 Measure Ch 4 SCU Interrupt* 41 0C00h 0C01h 0C02h 0C03h 0C04h 0C05h 0C06h 0C07h 0C08h 0C09h 0C0Ah 0C0Bh 0C0Ch 0C0Dh 0C0Eh 0C0Fh 0C10h 0C11h 0C12h 0C13h CH0 dataA CH0 dataD CH1 dataA CH1 dataD CH2 dataA CH2 dataD CH3 dataA CH3 dataD CH4 dataA CH4 dataD 41 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. SCU Low Power Operation  Core can be in “Wait” mode  SCU trigger from Timer for sampling interval  Power numbers TBD…  Once scan is completed DMA (not DTC) transfers data to RAM  Utilizes a special SDMA block  DMA interrupt “wakes” MCU on transfer complete  Touch determination made  No touch MCU back to sleep  Touch - MCU services button 42 42 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Low-power Example Example using Timer as Trigger SCU SCU not operating touch detection Touch Data processing normal process Power Consumption SCU SCU not operating Touch Data processing Wait mode Wait mode touch detection Timer trigger Enable SCU (via S/W) Start trigger (internal) SCU DMA transfers touch data to RAM Buffer so MCU does not wake up until DMA Interrupt occurs 43 43 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Renesas Touch Solution 44 44 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Renesas Touch Software Application Layer Application Example  Four Distinct Layers  Renesas API covers:  SCU Interface  Sensor API Functional Implementation Interface Layer Functional Noise Rejection (Debounce, Wipedown) Wheel Decoder Slider Decoder Switch Function Matrix Decode Auto Calibration  Matrix Decode  Sample code available  Wheel Sensor Touch Decision (Binary) Drift Compensation Reference and Threshold Firmware  Slider  Switch Types Low Level Filter Sensor API Layer  Auto Calibration SCU Driver 45 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Hardware Interface Layer © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. 45 All rights reserved. Renesas Touch API  Small  ~2.2k ROM  700 Bytes RAM  Efficient  < 15% CPU B/W  Easy to Use  API doc available  Only 5 source files  Source Code Free 46 46 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch API Features  Integrated Averaging      Reduced supply effects Environmental issues Low frequency noise rejection 4x sample rate on low-level SCU data Continual processing  Additional Filtering  FIR (4-tap) 47 47 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch API Features  Drift Compensation  Monitors continuously  Reduces environmental effects  Suspended if touched 48 48 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Workbench Tuning Tool  Several Tools in One     Parameter Setup Status Monitoring Teaching Tool Circuit Tuning Wizard  Multiple Connection Methods  Hew Target Server (HTS)  Via E8a  Serial  No Software Modification needed  Snoops API touch variables  No overhead when not connected 49 49 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Workbench Tuning Tool 50 50 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Workbench Tuning Tool 51 51 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Touch Application Notes  Application notes     Hardware Design Power Supplies Layout Noise  Tech Briefs  Humidity  Temperature  Design Guides  Touch Benchmarks 52 52 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Capacitive Touch Lab Hardware  Renesas Demo Kit for R8C/33T       Full featured development platform Includes E8a debugger HEW IDE environment and trial compiler Touch software source included Workbench tuning tool included Processor Key Features:     53 Renesas Demo Kit for R8C/33T R8C 16-bit CPU core 20 MHz Operation Touch detector (SCU): 18-input (shared with I/O ports) Timers, Serial IO, ADC, others 53 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Lab Overview 54 54 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Lab Overview  Takeaways     Overview of the Touch API Explore a simple touch project Connect to tuning tools Experiment with touch settings  Additional benefits  HEW environment  development tools  debugger system 55 55 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Start the Lab  Keep your dice turned to the section of the lab you are on. (Instructions are provided in the lab handout)  Please refer to the Lab Handout and let’s get started! 56 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. 56 All rights reserved. Questions? 57 57 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Lab Questions Question • If Sensor_SetSCU_Scan(0x0000F) is enabled, what channels are active when the a scan is kicked off? Answer: Channels 0-3 are the only channels active. Question • If Nref is 398, Cthr is 52, and Ncount, when touched dips to 347, has a touch event occurred? Answer: No, Ncount would need to dip below 346 for a touch to be registered Question • What is the size of the variable used to return the binary touch data to the calling function? Answer: 32-bit variable Question • What is the connection method to Workbench using the E8a? Answer: HEW Target Server 58 58 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Thank You! 59 © 2010 Renesas Electronics America Inc. All rights reserved. Renesas Electronics America Inc.