SNLA411 October   2022 DP83TC812R-Q1 , DP83TC812S-Q1 , DP83TC813R-Q1 , DP83TC813S-Q1

 

  1.   Abstract
  2.   Trademarks
  3. Introduction
    1. 1.1 System Block Diagram
    2. 1.2 Terminology
  4. TC10 Pin Descriptions
  5. Primary Functions of the PHY
    1. 3.1 Transition from Sleep to Wake-up mode
      1. 3.1.1 Local Wake Detection
      2. 3.1.2 WUP Transmission and Reception
    2. 3.2 Wake Forwarding
    3. 3.3 Transition to Sleep - Sleep Negotiation
      1. 3.3.1 Sleep Ack
      2. 3.3.2 Sleep Request
      3. 3.3.3 Sleep Silent
      4. 3.3.4 Sleep Fail
      5. 3.3.5 Sleep
      6. 3.3.6 Normal State
      7. 3.3.7 Other Transitions
        1. 3.3.7.1 Forced Sleep
        2. 3.3.7.2 Activity during Sleep Negotiation
        3. 3.3.7.3 Link Down during Sleep Negotiation
        4. 3.3.7.4 Sleep Silent to Standby
  6. Relevant Registers
  7. Power Supply Recommendation
    1. 5.1 Core Supply Network Recommendation
    2. 5.2 Networks with Shared Core Supplies
  8. Sequence of Events and Timing
    1. 6.1 Local Wake Timing
    2. 6.2 Remote Wake Timing
    3. 6.3 Successful Sleep Negotiation Timing
    4. 6.4 Sleep Abort Timing
    5. 6.5 WUR Timing
  9. Ethernet Network Wake-up
  10. Configuration for non-TC10 Applications
  11. Additional Features
    1. 9.1 WUR Initiation Through WAKE Pin
    2. 9.2 Programmable Wake-Forward Pulse Width
  12. 10Conclusion

Local Wake Detection

To wake-up the PHY locally (local wake), a pulse of width greater than 40 μs is required to be forced on the WAKE pin. The detection circuit inside the PHY on the WAKE pin rejects any pulse of width less than 10 μs and detects any pulse greater than 40 μs reliably. The core power supplies (VDDA, VDDIO/VDDMAC) are not needed for the PHY for local wake detection.

After the wake-up, PHY transitions from sleep to wake-up mode and pulls INH to high.

For local wake, it is assumed that some portion of the system is already active and the PHY is in TC10 sleep. As an example, the system might have a microcontroller in active mode to control the WAKE pin of the PHY. When the MCU wants to wake up the PHY from TC10 sleep, it raises the WAKE pin to 3.3 V to send a wake pulse.