TCA4307 Hot-Swappable I2C Bus and SMBus Buffer

TCA4307 Hot-Swappable I2C Bus and SMBus Buffer

Texas Instruments’ buffer features stuck bus recovery

Texas Instruments’ TCA4307 is a hot-swappable I2C bus buffer that supports I/O card insertion into a live backplane without corruption of the data and clock lines. Control circuitry prevents the backplane-side I2C lines (in) from being connected to the card-side I2C lines (out) until a stop command or bus idle condition occurs on the backplane without bus contention on the card. When the connection is made, this device provides bidirectional buffering, keeping the backplane and card capacitances isolated. During insertion, the SDA and SCL lines are pre-charged to 1 V to minimize the current required to charge the parasitic capacitance of the device.

The TCA4307 has stuck bus recovery, which automatically disconnects the bus if it detects either SDAOUT or SCLOUT are low for about 40 ms. Once the bus is disconnected, the device automatically generates up to 16 pulses on SCLOUT to attempt to reset the device which is holding the bus low. When the I2C bus is idle, the TCA4307 can be put into shutdown mode by setting the EN-pin low, reducing power consumption. When EN is pulled high, the TCA4307 resumes normal operation. This buffer includes an open-drain READY output pin, which indicates that the backplane and card sides are connected. When READY is high, the SDAIN and SCLIN are connected to SDAOUT and SCLOUT. When the two sides are disconnected, READY is low.

  • Supports bidirectional data transfer of I2C bus signals
  • Operating power supply voltage range: 2.3 V to 5.5 V
  • Ambient air temperature range (TA): -40°C to +125°C
  • Stuck bus recovery featuring automatic bus recovery
  • 1 V pre-charge on all SDA and SCL lines prevents corruption during live insertion
  • Accommodates standard-mode and fast-mode I2C devices
  • Supports clock stretching, arbitration, and synchronization
  • Powered-off high-impedance I2C pins

more information: https://www.ti.com/product/TCA4307

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Mike is the founder and editor of Electronics-Lab.com, an electronics engineering community/news and project sharing platform. He studied Electronics and Physics and enjoys everything that has moving electrons and fun. His interests lying on solar cells, microcontrollers and switchmode power supplies. Feel free to reach him for feedback, random tips or just to say hello :-)

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