SWRA640H December   2018  – May 2024 CC1310 , CC1312R , CC1314R10 , CC1350 , CC1352P , CC1352R , CC1354P10 , CC1354R10 , CC2620 , CC2630 , CC2640 , CC2640R2F , CC2640R2F-Q1 , CC2642R , CC2642R-Q1 , CC2650 , CC2652P , CC2652R , CC2652R7 , CC2652RB , CC2652RSIP , CC2674P10 , CC2674R10

 

  1.   1
  2.   Abstract
  3.   Trademarks
  4. Reference Design
    1. 1.1 Sub-1GHz LaunchPads
      1. 1.1.1 LAUNCHXL-CC1310
      2. 1.1.2 LAUNCHXL-CC1312R
    2. 1.2 2.4GHz LaunchPads
      1. 1.2.1 LAUNCHXL-CC2640R2
      2. 1.2.2 LAUNCHXL-CC26x2R
      3. 1.2.3 LP-CC26x1
    3. 1.3 Dual-Band LaunchPads
      1. 1.3.1 LAUNCHXL-CC1350EU/US
      2. 1.3.2 LAUNCHXL-CC1350-4
      3. 1.3.3 LAUNCHXL-CC1352R
      4. 1.3.4 LAUNCHXL-CC1352P1
      5. 1.3.5 LAUNCHXL-CC1352P-2
      6. 1.3.6 LAUNCHXL-CC1352P-4
      7. 1.3.7 LP-CC1352P7-1
      8. 1.3.8 LP-CC1352P7-4
      9. 1.3.9 LP-EM-CC1354P10-6
    4. 1.4 Reference Design Overview
  5. Front-End Configurations
    1. 2.1 Overview of Front-end Configurations
    2. 2.2 Configuring the Front-End Mode
    3. 2.3 CC13xx Single-Ended Mode
      1. 2.3.1 Single-Ended Modes
      2. 2.3.2 Single-Ended TX-Only
      3. 2.3.3 Single-Ended RX-Only
      4. 2.3.4 Single-Ended Modes - 2.4GHz
    4. 2.4 CC26xx Single-End Mode
  6. Schematic
    1. 3.1 Schematic Overview
      1. 3.1.1 24/48MHz Crystal
      2. 3.1.2 32.768kHz Crystal
      3. 3.1.3 Balun
      4. 3.1.4 Filter
      5. 3.1.5 RX_TX Pin
      6. 3.1.6 Decoupling Capacitors
      7. 3.1.7 Antenna Components
      8. 3.1.8 RF Shield
      9. 3.1.9 I/O Pins Drive Strength
    2. 3.2 Bootloader Pins
    3. 3.3 AUX Pins
      1. 3.3.1 Reference
      2. 3.3.2 CC26x2/CC13x2 AUX Pins
      3. 3.3.3 CC26x0/CC13x0 AUX Pins
    4. 3.4 JTAG Pins
  7. PCB Layout
    1. 4.1  Board Stack-Up
    2. 4.2  Balun - Sub-1GHz
    3. 4.3  Balun - 2.4GHz
      1. 4.3.1 Recommended Layout and Considerations for 20dBm
    4. 4.4  LC Filter
    5. 4.5  Decoupling Capacitors
    6. 4.6  Placement of Crystal Load Capacitors
    7. 4.7  Current Return Path
    8. 4.8  DC/DC Regulator
    9. 4.9  Antenna Matching Components
    10. 4.10 Transmission Lines
    11. 4.11 Electromagnetic Simulation
  8. Antenna
    1. 5.1 Single-Band Antenna
    2. 5.2 Dual-Band Antenna
      1. 5.2.1 Dual-Band Antenna Match Example: 863-928 MHz and 2.4 GHz
      2. 5.2.2 Dual-Band Antenna Match: 433-510MHz and 2.4GHz
  9. Crystal Tuning
    1. 6.1 CC13xx/CC26xx Crystal Oscillators
    2. 6.2 Crystal Selection
    3. 6.3 Tuning the LF Crystal Oscillator
    4. 6.4 Tuning the HF Oscillator
  10. TCXO Support
    1. 7.1 Hardware
    2. 7.2 Software
    3. 7.3 Example: Usage of TCXO on CC1312R Launchpad
  11. Integrated Passive Component (IPC)
  12. Optimum Load Impedance
  13. 10PA Table
  14. 11Power Supply Configuration
    1. 11.1 Introduction
    2. 11.2 DC/DC Converter Mode
    3. 11.3 Global LDO Mode
    4. 11.4 External Regulator Mode
  15. 12Board Bring-Up
    1. 12.1 Power On
    2. 12.2 RF Test: SmartRF Studio
    3. 12.3 RF Test: Conducted Measurements
      1. 12.3.1 Sensitivity
      2. 12.3.2 Output Power
    4. 12.4 Software Bring-Up
    5. 12.5 Hardware Troubleshooting
      1. 12.5.1 No Link: RF Settings
      2. 12.5.2 No Link: Frequency Offset
      3. 12.5.3 Poor Link: Antenna
      4. 12.5.4 Bluetooth Low Energy: Device Does Advertising But Cannot Connect
      5. 12.5.5 Poor Sensitivity: DCDC Layout
      6. 12.5.6 Poor Sensitivity: Background noise
      7. 12.5.7 High Sleep Power Consumption
  16. 13References
  17. 14Revision History

Bootloader Pins

The bootloader communicates with an external device over a 2-pin universal asynchronous receiver/transmitter (UART) or a 4-pin SSI interface. The SSI0 port has the advantage of supporting higher and more flexible data rates, but it also requires more connections to the CC13xx/CC26xx devices. The UART0 has the disadvantage of having slightly lower and possibly less flexible rates. However, the UART0 requires fewer pins and can be easily implemented with any standard UART connection. The serial interface signals are configured to specific DIOs. These pins are fixed and cannot be reconfigured.

Table 3-2 CC13x0/CC26x0: Configuration of Signal Interfaces
Signal Pin Configuration 7 × 7 QFN (RGZ) 5 × 5 QFN (RHB) 4 × 4 QFN (RSM) 2.7 × 2.7 WCSP (YFV)
UART0 RX Input with pull-up DIO2 DIO1 DIO1 DIO1
UART0 TX No pull (output when selected) DIO3 DIO0 DIO2 DIO0
SSI0 CLK Input with pull-up DIO10 DIO10 DIO8 DIO10
SSI0 FSS Input with pull-up DIO11 DIO9 DIO7 DIO9
SSI0 RX Input with pull-up DIO9 DIO11 DIO9 DIO11
SSI0 TX No pull (output when selected) DIO8 DIO12 DIO0 DIO12
Table 3-3 CC1311Rx, CC1312Rx, CC2651Rx, CC2652Rx: Configuration of Signal Interfaces
Signal Pin Configuration
UART0 RX Input with pull-up DIO2
UART0 TX No pull (output when selected) DIO3
SSI0 CLK Input with pull-up DIO10
SSI0 FSS Input with pull-up DIO11
SSI0 RX Input with pull-up DIO9
SSI0 TX No pull (output when selected) DIO8
Table 3-4 CC13x4x10, CC26x4x10: Configuration of Signal Interfaces
Signal Pin Configuration CC26x4x10 CC1314R10 CC1354x10
UART0 RX Input with pull-up DIO12 DIO2 DIO12
UART0 TX No pull (output when selected) DIO13 DIO3 DIO13
SPI0 MISO No pull (output when selected) DIO8 DIO8 DIO8
SPI0 MOSI Input with pull-up DIO9 DIO9 DIO9
SPI0 CLK Input with pull-up DIO10 DIO10 DIO10
SPI0 CS Input with pull-up DIO11 DIO11 DIO11