SDAA265 April   2026 TPS26750A

 

  1.   1
  2.   Abstract
  3.   Trademarks
  4. 1Applicability to other TI USB-PD Controllers
    1. 1.1 USB-PD Sink Introduction
    2. 1.2 Autonegotiate Sink Purpose
    3. 1.3 Definitions
  5. 2Fields Covered
  6. 3Autonegotiate Sink Basics with Examples
    1. 3.1 Auto Neg RDO Priority (ANRDOPriority)
    2. 3.2 Auto Compute Sink Min Power and Auto Neg Sink Min Required Power
    3. 3.3 No Capability Mismatch and Auto Disable Sink Upon Capability Mismatch
    4. 3.4 Auto Compute Sink Min Voltage and Auto Neg Min Voltage
    5. 3.5 Auto Compute Sink Max Voltage & Auto Neg Max Voltage
  7. 4Autonegotiate Sink Basics with EPR Examples
    1. 4.1 Systems Requiring ≥140W
    2. 4.2 Sink Path SPR to EPR Transitions
  8. 5Common Mistakes or Unique System Constraints
    1. 5.1 System Needs More Power but PD Selects Lower Power PDOs
    2. 5.2 System Supports EPR Power but PD Keeps Selecting 20V PDOs
    3. 5.3 Setting the Min Voltage and Max Voltage to the Same Values
  9. 6Advanced Autonegotiate Sink Examples
    1. 6.1 Downgrading to 5V Fixed PDO
    2. 6.2 Autonegotiate Sink With Interrupt Driven EC
    3. 6.3 ANeg: Auto Negotiate Sink Update
    4. 6.4 AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK Register
      1. 6.4.1 AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK Usage Example 1
      2. 6.4.2 AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK Usage Example 2
      3. 6.4.3 AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK Usage Example 3
      4. 6.4.4 AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK Usage Example 4
  10. 7References

Auto Compute Sink Min Voltage and Auto Neg Min Voltage

Changed fields from the default values for this example:
  • AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK.AutoNegMinVoltage = Varied
  • AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK.AutoComputeSinkMinVoltage = Varied

Typical applications set this to AUTO_NEGOTIATE_SINK.AutoComputeSinkMinVoltage = 1 to allow PD to compute this value. The PD always sets this to 4.75V. This means PD can always fall-back to the 5V PDO if no other PDO works for PD controller.