Datasheet

ADM1069
Rev. C | Page 18 of 32
SEQUENCING ENGINE APPLICATION EXAMPLE
The application in this section demonstrates the operation of
the SE. Figure 28 shows how the simple building block of a
single SE state can be used to build a power-up sequence for
a three-supply system. Table 8 lists the PDO outputs for each
state in the same SE implementation. In this system, a good 5 V
supply on VP1 and the VX1 pin held low are the triggers required
to start a power-up sequence. The sequence next turns on the 3.3 V
supply, then the 2.5 V supply (assuming successful turn-on of the
3.3 V supply). When all three supplies have turned on correctly,
the PWRGD state is entered, where the SE remains until a fault
occurs on one of the three supplies, or until it is instructed to go
through a power-down sequence by VX1 going high.
Faults are dealt with throughout the power-up sequence on a
case-by-case basis. The following three sections (the Sequence
Detector section, the Monitoring Fault Detector section, and
the Timeout Detector section) describe the individual blocks
and use the sample application shown in Figure 28 to demonstrate
the actions of the state machine.
Sequence Detector
The sequence detector block is used to detect when a step in a
sequence has been completed. It looks for one of the SE inputs
to change state, and is most often used as the gate for successful
progress through a power-up or power-down sequence. A timer
block that is included in this detector can insert delays into
a power-up or power-down sequence, if required. Timer delays
can be set from 10 μs to 400 ms. Figure 27 is a block diagram of
the sequence detector.
04735-032
SUPPLY FAULT
DETECTION
LOGIC INPUT CHANGE
OR FAULT DETECTION
WARNINGS
FORCE FLOW
(UNCONDITIONAL JUMP)
VP1
VX4
INVERT
SEQUENCE
DETECTOR
SELECT
TIMER
Figure 27. Sequence Detector Block Diagram
If a timer delay is specified, the input to the sequence detector
must remain in the defined state for the duration of the timer
delay. If the input changes state during the delay, the timer is reset.
The sequence detector can also help to identify monitoring faults.
In the sample application shown in Figure 28, the FSEL1 and
FSEL2 states first identify which of the VP1, VP2, or VP3 pins
has faulted, and then they take appropriate action.
04735-030
IDLE1
IDLE2
EN3V3
DIS3V3
DIS2V5PWRGD
FSEL1
FSEL2
SEQUENCE
STATES
MONITOR FAULT
STATES
TIMEOUT
STATES
VX1 = 0
VP1 = 1
VP1 = 0
(VP1 + VP2) = 0
(VP1 + VP2 + VP3) = 0
(VP1 +
VP2) = 0
VP2 = 1
VP3 = 1
VP2 = 0
VX1 = 1
VP3 = 0
VP2 = 0
VP1 = 0
VX1 = 1
VX1 = 1
10ms
20ms
EN2V5
Figure 28. Sample Application Flow Diagram
Table 8. PDO Outputs for Each State
PDO Outputs IDLE1 IDLE2 EN3V3 EN2V5 DIS3V3 DIS2V5 PWRGD FSEL1 FSEL2
PDO1 = 3V3ON 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 1
PDO2 = 2V5ON 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1
PDO3 = FAULT 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 1 1