SBAA565 November   2022 ADC081C021 , ADC081C027 , ADC101C021 , ADC101C027 , ADC121C021 , ADC121C021-Q1 , ADC121C027 , ADC128D818 , ADS1000 , ADS1000-Q1 , ADS1013 , ADS1014 , ADS1015 , ADS1015-Q1 , ADS1100 , ADS1110 , ADS1112 , ADS1113 , ADS1114 , ADS1115 , ADS1115-Q1 , ADS7823 , ADS7827 , ADS7828 , ADS7828-Q1 , ADS7830 , ADS7924 , AFE539A4 , DAC081C081 , DAC081C085 , DAC101C081 , DAC101C081Q , DAC101C085 , DAC121C081 , DAC121C085 , DAC43204 , DAC43401 , DAC43401-Q1 , DAC43608 , DAC43701 , DAC43701-Q1 , DAC53002 , DAC53004 , DAC53202 , DAC53204 , DAC53204W , DAC53401 , DAC53401-Q1 , DAC53608 , DAC53701 , DAC53701-Q1 , DAC5571 , DAC5573 , DAC5574 , DAC5578 , DAC60501 , DAC60502 , DAC63002 , DAC63004 , DAC63202 , DAC63204 , DAC6571 , DAC6573 , DAC6574 , DAC6578 , DAC70501 , DAC70502 , DAC7571 , DAC7573 , DAC7574 , DAC7578 , DAC7678 , DAC80501 , DAC80502 , DAC8571 , DAC8574

 

  1.   Abstract
  2.   Trademarks
  3. 1I2C Overview
    1. 1.1 History
    2. 1.2 I2C Speed Modes
  4. 2I2C Physical Layer
    1. 2.1 Two-Wire Communication
    2. 2.2 Open-Drain Connection
    3. 2.3 Non-Destructive Bus Contention
  5. 3I2C Protocol
    1. 3.1 I2C START and STOP
    2. 3.2 Logical Ones and Zeros
    3. 3.3 I2C Communication Frames
  6. 4I2C Examples
    1. 4.1 DAC80501 Example
      1. 4.1.1 DAC80501 DAC Data Register
      2. 4.1.2 DAC80501 I2C Example Write
    2. 4.2 ADS1115 Example
      1. 4.2.1 ADS1115 Configuration Register
      2. 4.2.2 ADS1115 I2C Example Read
      3. 4.2.3 ADS1115 Conversion Result
  7. 5Reserved Addresses
    1. 5.1 General Call
    2. 5.2 START Byte
    3. 5.3 C-Bus Address, Different Bus Format, Future Purposes
    4. 5.4 HS-Mode Controller Code
    5. 5.5 Device ID
    6. 5.6 10-Bit Target Addressing
      1. 5.6.1 10-Bit Target Addressing Write
      2. 5.6.2 10-Bit Target Addressing Read
  8. 6Advanced Topics
    1. 6.1 Clock Synchronization and Arbitration
    2. 6.2 Clock Stretching
    3. 6.3 Electrical Specifications
    4. 6.4 Voltage Level Translation
      1. 6.4.1 Example 1
      2. 6.4.2 Example 2
      3. 6.4.3 Example 3
      4. 6.4.4 Example 4
    5. 6.5 Pullup Resistor Sizing
      1. 6.5.1 Minimum Pullup Resistance Sizing
      2. 6.5.2 Maximum Pullup Resistance Sizing
  9. 7Protocols Similar to I2C
  10. 8Summary

Non-Destructive Bus Contention

One of the benefits of I2C using an open drain is that bus contention does not put the bus into a destructive state. With an open-drain output, many devices can be connected together without destructive contention. For any output on that connection, if any output pulls the line low, the line is low. This kind of connection is called a wired-AND connection. The output is the logical AND of all the outputs when tied together.

If the outputs are a push-pull type, the outputs cannot be tied together without the possibility of a destructive state. A push-pull output (often used for SPI communication) has complementary NMOS and PMOS transistors that drive the output high or low. Figure 2-4 shows a comparison between open-drain and push-pull outputs in contention.

Figure 2-4 Comparison Between Open-Drain and Push-Pull Contention

With the open-drain connection, any device can pull the connection low at any time. The line appears low any time any device pulled the line low, but does not appear as destructive contention.

In the push-pull output, the outputs are also tied together. If two devices are active on the bus and one output is high and another output is low, this bus contention has an undetermined state, possibly settling at the mid-supply point. Additionally, one device has NMOS conducting current and another device has a PMOS conducting current. These devices source current from VDD to GND through a very low impedance path, conducting as much current as the transistors allow. The result of this contention can be a significant amount of current, potentially damaging the devices.