THALES DIS AlS Deutschland ELS81-US LTE/WCDMA Module ELS81-US User Manual els81 us hid
Gemalto M2M GmbH LTE/WCDMA Module ELS81-US els81 us hid
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user manual_els81-us_hid
Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Version: DocId: 01.004 els81-us_hid_v01.004 GEMALTO.COM/M2M Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 2 of 107 Document Name: Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Version: 01.004 Date: 2017-09-27 DocId: els81-us_hid_v01.004 Status Confidential / Preliminary GENERAL NOTE THE USE OF THE PRODUCT INCLUDING THE SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION (THE "PRODUCT") IS SUBJECT TO THE RELEASE NOTE PROVIDED TOGETHER WITH PRODUCT. IN ANY EVENT THE PROVISIONS OF THE RELEASE NOTE SHALL PREVAIL. THIS DOCUMENT CONTAINS INFORMATION ON GEMALTO M2M PRODUCTS. THE SPECIFICATIONS IN THIS DOCUMENT ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT GEMALTO M2M'S DISCRETION. GEMALTO M2M GMBH GRANTS A NONEXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE PRODUCT. THE RECIPIENT SHALL NOT TRANSFER, COPY, MODIFY, TRANSLATE, REVERSE ENGINEER, CREATE DERIVATIVE WORKS; DISASSEMBLE OR DECOMPILE THE PRODUCT OR OTHERWISE USE THE PRODUCT EXCEPT AS SPECIFICALLY AUTHORIZED. THE PRODUCT AND THIS DOCUMENT ARE PROVIDED ON AN "AS IS" BASIS ONLY AND MAY CONTAIN DEFICIENCIES OR INADEQUACIES. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, GEMALTO M2M GMBH DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES AND LIABILITIES. THE RECIPIENT UNDERTAKES FOR AN UNLIMITED PERIOD OF TIME TO OBSERVE SECRECY REGARDING ANY INFORMATION AND DATA PROVIDED TO HIM IN THE CONTEXT OF THE DELIVERY OF THE PRODUCT. THIS GENERAL NOTE SHALL BE GOVERNED AND CONSTRUED ACCORDING TO GERMAN LAW. Copyright Transmittal, reproduction, dissemination and/or editing of this document as well as utilization of its contents and communication thereof to others without express authorization are prohibited. Offenders will be held liable for payment of damages. All rights created by patent grant or registration of a utility model or design patent are reserved. Copyright © 2017, Gemalto M2M GmbH, a Gemalto Company Trademark Notice Gemalto, the Gemalto logo, are trademarks and service marks of Gemalto and are registered in certain countries. Microsoft and Windows are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. All other registered trademarks or trademarks mentioned in this document are property of their respective owners. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 3 of 107 Contents 107 Contents Introduction ................................................................................................................. 9 1.1 Key Features at a Glance .................................................................................. 9 1.2 ELS81-US System Overview ........................................................................... 12 1.3 Circuit Concept ................................................................................................ 13 Interface Characteristics .......................................................................................... 15 2.1 Application Interface ........................................................................................ 15 2.1.1 Pad Assignment.................................................................................. 15 2.1.2 Signal Properties................................................................................. 17 2.1.2.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings ................................................ 23 2.1.3 USB Interface...................................................................................... 24 2.1.3.1 Reducing Power Consumption............................................ 25 2.1.4 Serial Interface ASC0 ......................................................................... 26 2.1.5 Serial Interface ASC1 ......................................................................... 28 2.1.6 UICC/SIM/USIM Interface................................................................... 30 2.1.6.1 Enhanced ESD Protection for SIM Interface ....................... 32 2.1.7 RTC Backup....................................................................................... 33 2.1.8 GPIO Interface .................................................................................... 34 2.1.9 I2C Interface ........................................................................................ 36 2.1.10 SPI Interface ....................................................................................... 38 2.1.11 PWM Interfaces .................................................................................. 39 2.1.12 Pulse Counter ..................................................................................... 39 2.1.13 Control Signals.................................................................................... 39 2.1.13.1 Status LED .......................................................................... 39 2.1.13.2 Power Indication Circuit ...................................................... 40 2.1.13.3 Host Wakeup....................................................................... 40 2.1.13.4 Fast Shutdown .................................................................... 41 2.2 RF Antenna Interface....................................................................................... 42 2.2.1 Antenna Interface Specifications ........................................................ 42 2.2.2 Antenna Installation ............................................................................ 44 2.2.3 RF Line Routing Design...................................................................... 45 2.2.3.1 Line Arrangement Examples ............................................... 45 2.2.3.2 Routing Example................................................................. 50 2.3 Sample Application .......................................................................................... 51 2.3.1 Sample Level Conversion Circuit........................................................ 53 Operating Characteristics ........................................................................................ 54 3.1 Operating Modes ............................................................................................. 54 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios ................................................................... 55 3.2.1 Turn on ELS81-US.............................................................................. 55 3.2.1.1 Connecting ELS81-US BATT+ Lines .................................. 55 3.2.1.2 Switch on ELS81-US Using ON Signal ............................... 57 3.2.1.3 Automatic Power On ........................................................... 58 3.2.2 Restart ELS81-US .............................................................................. 59 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 4 of 107 Contents 107 3.3 3.4 3.5 3.6 3.7 3.8 3.2.2.1 Restart ELS81-US via AT+CFUN Command ...................... 59 3.2.2.2 Restart ELS81-US Using EMERG_RST ............................. 60 3.2.3 Signal States after Startup .................................................................. 61 3.2.4 Turn off ELS81-US.............................................................................. 62 3.2.4.1 Switch off ELS81-US Using AT Command .......................... 62 3.2.5 Automatic Shutdown ........................................................................... 64 3.2.5.1 Thermal Shutdown .............................................................. 64 3.2.5.2 Undervoltage Shutdown...................................................... 65 3.2.5.3 Overvoltage Shutdown........................................................ 65 Power Saving................................................................................................... 66 3.3.1 Power Saving while Attached to WCDMA Networks .......................... 66 3.3.2 Power Saving while Attached to LTE Networks .................................. 67 3.3.3 Wake-up via RTS0.............................................................................. 68 Power Supply................................................................................................... 69 3.4.1 Power Supply Ratings......................................................................... 69 3.4.2 Measuring the Supply Voltage (VBATT+) ........................................... 72 3.4.3 Monitoring Power Supply by AT Command ........................................ 72 Operating Temperatures.................................................................................. 73 Electrostatic Discharge .................................................................................... 74 3.6.1 ESD Protection for Antenna Interfaces ............................................... 74 Blocking against RF on Interface Lines ........................................................... 75 Reliability Characteristics ................................................................................. 77 Mechanical Dimensions, Mounting and Packaging............................................... 78 4.1 Mechanical Dimensions of ELS81-US ............................................................. 78 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform ......................................... 80 4.2.1 SMT PCB Assembly ........................................................................... 80 4.2.1.1 Land Pattern and Stencil..................................................... 80 4.2.1.2 Board Level Characterization.............................................. 82 4.2.2 Moisture Sensitivity Level ................................................................... 82 4.2.3 Soldering Conditions and Temperature .............................................. 83 4.2.3.1 Reflow Profile ...................................................................... 83 4.2.3.2 Maximum Temperature and Duration .................................. 84 4.2.4 Durability and Mechanical Handling.................................................... 85 4.2.4.1 Storage Conditions.............................................................. 85 4.2.4.2 Processing Life.................................................................... 86 4.2.4.3 Baking ................................................................................. 86 4.2.4.4 Electrostatic Discharge ....................................................... 86 4.3 Packaging ........................................................................................................ 87 4.3.1 Tape and Reel .................................................................................... 87 4.3.1.1 Orientation........................................................................... 87 4.3.1.2 Barcode Label ..................................................................... 88 4.3.2 Shipping Materials .............................................................................. 89 4.3.2.1 Moisture Barrier Bag ........................................................... 89 4.3.2.2 Transportation Box .............................................................. 91 4.3.3 Trays ................................................................................................... 92 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 5 of 107 Contents 107 Regulatory and Type Approval Information ........................................................... 93 5.1 Directives and Standards................................................................................. 93 5.2 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles ............................................... 96 5.3 Reference Equipment for Type Approval ......................................................... 97 5.4 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations ..................................... 98 Document Information............................................................................................ 100 6.1 Revision History ............................................................................................. 100 6.2 Related Documents ....................................................................................... 100 6.3 Terms and Abbreviations ............................................................................... 100 6.4 Safety Precaution Notes ................................................................................ 104 Appendix.................................................................................................................. 105 7.1 List of Parts and Accessories......................................................................... 105 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 6 of 107 Tables 118 Tables Table 1: Table 2: Table 3: Table 4: Table 5: Table 6: Table 7: Table 8: Table 9: Table 10: Table 11: Table 12: Table 13: Table 14: Table 15: Table 16: Table 17: Table 18: Table 19: Table 20: Table 21: Table 22: Table 23: Table 24: Table 25: Table 26: Table 27: Pad assignments............................................................................................ 16 Signal properties ............................................................................................ 17 Absolute maximum ratings............................................................................. 23 Signals of the SIM interface (SMT application interface) ............................... 30 GPIO lines and possible alternative assignment............................................ 34 Host wakeup lines .......................................................................................... 40 Return loss in the active band........................................................................ 42 RF Antenna interface UMTS/LTE (at operating temperature range) ............. 42 Overview of operating modes ........................................................................ 54 Signal states................................................................................................... 61 Temperature dependent behavior.................................................................. 64 Voltage supply ratings.................................................................................... 69 Current consumption ratings (typical ratings to be confirmed)....................... 70 Board temperature ......................................................................................... 73 Electrostatic values ........................................................................................ 74 EMI measures on the application interface .................................................... 76 Summary of reliability test conditions............................................................. 77 Reflow temperature ratings ............................................................................ 84 Storage conditions ......................................................................................... 85 Directives ....................................................................................................... 93 Standards of North American type approval .................................................. 93 Standards of European type approval............................................................ 93 Requirements of quality ................................................................................. 94 Standards of the Ministry of Information Industry of the People’s Republic of China ............................................................................ 94 Toxic or hazardous substances or elements with defined concentration limits ........................................................................................ 95 List of parts and accessories........................................................................ 105 Molex sales contacts (subject to change) .................................................... 106 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 7 of 107 Figures 118 Figures Figure 1: Figure 2: Figure 3: Figure 4: Figure 5: Figure 6: Figure 7: Figure 8: Figure 9: Figure 10: Figure 11: Figure 12: Figure 13: Figure 14: Figure 15: Figure 16: Figure 17: Figure 18: Figure 19: Figure 20: Figure 21: Figure 22: Figure 23: Figure 24: Figure 25: Figure 26: Figure 27: Figure 28: Figure 29: Figure 30: Figure 31: Figure 32: Figure 33: Figure 34: Figure 35: Figure 36: Figure 37: Figure 38: Figure 39: Figure 40: Figure 41: Figure 42: Figure 43: Figure 44: Figure 45: Figure 46: Figure 47: Figure 48: Figure 49: Figure 50: ELS81-US system overview........................................................................... ELS81-US block diagram............................................................................... ELS81-US RF section block diagram............................................................. Numbering plan for connecting pads (bottom view)....................................... USB circuit ..................................................................................................... Serial interface ASC0..................................................................................... ASC0 startup behavior ................................................................................... Serial interface ASC1..................................................................................... ASC1 startup behavior ................................................................................... External UICC/SIM/USIM card holder circuit ................................................. SIM interface - enhanced ESD protection...................................................... RTC supply variants....................................................................................... GPIO startup behavior ................................................................................... I2C interface connected to V180 .................................................................... I2C startup behavior ....................................................................................... Characteristics of SPI modes......................................................................... Status signaling with LED driver .................................................................... Power indication circuit .................................................................................. Fast shutdown timing ..................................................................................... Antenna pads (bottom view) .......................................................................... Embedded Stripline with 65µm prepreg (1080) and 710µm core .................. Micro-Stripline on 1.0mm standard FR4 2-layer PCB - example 1 ................ Micro-Stripline on 1.0mm Standard FR4 PCB - example 2............................ Micro-Stripline on 1.5mm Standard FR4 PCB - example 1............................ Micro-Stripline on 1.5mm Standard FR4 PCB - example 2............................ Routing to application‘s RF connector - top view ........................................... Schematic diagram of ELS81-US sample application.................................... Sample level conversion circuit...................................................................... Sample circuit for applying power using an external µC ................................ ON circuit options........................................................................................... ON timing ....................................................................................................... Automatic ON circuit based on voltage detector - option 1 ............................ Automatic ON circuit based on voltage detector - option 2 ............................ Emergency restart timing ............................................................................... Switch off behavior......................................................................................... Power saving and paging in WCDMA networks............................................. Power saving and paging in LTE networks .................................................... Wake-up via RTS0 ......................................................................................... Position of reference points BATT+ and GND ............................................... ESD protection for RF antenna interface ....................................................... EMI circuits..................................................................................................... ELS81-US– top and bottom view ................................................................... Dimensions of ELS81-US (all dimensions in mm) ......................................... Land pattern (top view) .................................................................................. Recommended design for 110µm thick stencil (top view).............................. Recommended design for 150µm thick stencil (top view).............................. Reflow Profile ................................................................................................. Carrier tape .................................................................................................... Reel direction ................................................................................................. Barcode label on tape reel ............................................................................. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 12 13 14 15 24 26 27 28 29 31 32 33 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 52 53 56 57 58 58 59 60 63 66 67 68 72 74 75 78 79 80 81 81 83 87 87 88 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 8 of 107 Figures 118 Figure 51: Figure 52: Figure 53: Figure 54: Figure 55: Moisture barrier bag (MBB) with imprint......................................................... Moisture Sensitivity Label .............................................................................. Humidity Indicator Card - HIC ........................................................................ Tray dimensions............................................................................................. Reference equipment for Type Approval ....................................................... els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 89 90 91 92 97 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 9 of 107 1 Introduction 14 Introduction This document1 describes the hardware of the Cinterion® ELS81-US module. It helps you quickly retrieve interface specifications, electrical and mechanical details and information on the requirements to be considered for integrating further components. 1.1 Key Features at a Glance Feature Implementation General Frequency bands UMTS/HSPA+: Triple band, 850 (BdV) / AWS (BdIV) / 1900MHz (BdII) LTE: Quad band, 700 (Bd12) / 850 (Bd5) / AWS (Bd4) / 1900MHz (Bd2) Output power (according to Release 99) Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 1900,WCDMA FDD BdII Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS AWS, WCDMA FDD BdIV Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 850, WCDMA FDD BdV Output power (according to Release 8) Class 3 (+23dBm ±2dB) for LTE 1900,LTE FDD Bd2 Class 3 (+23dBm ±2dB) for LTE AWS, LTE FDD Bd4 Class 3 (+23dBm ±2dB) for LTE 850, LTE FDD Bd5 Class 3 (+23dBm ±2dB) for LTE 700, LTE FDD Bd12 Power supply 3.0V to 4.5V Operating temperature (board temperature) Normal operation: -30°C to +85°C Extended operation: -40°C to +90°C Physical Dimensions: 27.6mm x 25.4mm x 2.2mm Weight: approx. 4g RoHS All hardware components fully compliant with EU RoHS Directive LTE features 3GPP Release 9 UE CAT 4 supported DL 150Mbps, UL 50Mbps HSPA features 3GPP Release 8 DL 7.2Mbps, UL 5.7Mbps HSDPA Cat.8 / HSUPA Cat.6 data rates Compressed mode (CM) supported according to 3GPP TS25.212 UMTS features 3GPP Release 4 PS data rate – 384 kbps DL / 384 kbps UL CS data rate – 64 kbps DL / 64 kbps UL 1. The document is effective only if listed in the appropriate Release Notes as part of the technical documentation delivered with your Gemalto M2M product. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 10 of 107 1.1 Key Features at a Glance 14 Feature Implementation SMS Point-to-point MT and MO Cell broadcast Text and PDU mode Storage: SIM card plus SMS locations in mobile equipment Software AT commands Hayes 3GPP TS 27.007, TS 27.005, Gemalto M2M AT commands for RIL compatibility Java™ Open Platform Java™ Open Platform with • Java™ profile IMP-NG & CLDC 1.1 HI • Secure data transmission via HTTPS/SSL1 • Multi-threading programming and multi-application execution Major benefits: seamless integration into Java applications, ease of programming, no need for application microcontroller, extremely cost-efficient hardware and software design – ideal platform for industrial applications. The memory space available for Java programs is 30MB in the flash file system and 18MB RAM. Application code and data share the space in the flash file system and in RAM. Microsoft™ compatibility RIL for Pocket PC and Smartphone SIM Application Toolkit SAT letter classes b, c, e; with BIP Firmware update Generic update from host application over ASC0 or USB modem. Interfaces Module interface Surface mount device with solderable connection pads (SMT application interface). Land grid array (LGA) technology ensures high solder joint reliability and allows the use of an optional module mounting socket. For more information on how to integrate SMT modules see also [3]. This application note comprises chapters on module mounting and application layout issues as well as on additional SMT application development equipment. USB USB 2.0 High Speed (480Mbit/s) device interface, Full Speed (12Mbit/s) compliant 2 serial interfaces ASC0 (shared with GPIO lines): • 8-wire modem interface with status and control lines, unbalanced, asynchronous • Adjustable baud rates: 1,200bps to 921,600bps • Autobauding: 1,200bps to 230,400bps • Supports RTS0/CTS0 hardware flow control. ASC1 (shared with GPIO lines): • 4-wire, unbalanced asynchronous interface • Adjustable baud rates: 1,200bps to 921,60bps • Autobauding: 1,200bps to 230,400bps • Supports RTS1/CTS1 hardware flow control UICC interface Supported SIM/USIM cards: 3V, 1.8V els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 11 of 107 1.1 Key Features at a Glance 14 Feature Implementation GPIO interface 22 GPIO lines comprising: 13 lines shared with ASC0, ASC1 and SPI lines, with network status indication, PWM functionality, fast shutdown and pulse counter 5 GPIO lines not shared I2C interface Supports I2C serial interface SPI interface Serial peripheral interface, shared with GPIO lines Antenna interface pads 50Ω. UMTS/LTE main antenna, UMTS/LTE Rx Diversity antenna Power on/off, Reset Power on/off Switch-on by hardware signal ON Switch-off by AT command Switch off by hardware signal FST_SHDN instead of AT command Automatic switch-off in case of critical temperature or voltage conditions Reset Orderly shutdown and reset by AT command Emergency reset by hardware signal EMERG_RST Special features Real time clock Timer functions via AT commands Evaluation kit Evaluation module ELS81-US module soldered onto a dedicated PCB that can be connected to an adapter in order to be mounted onto the DSB75. DSB75 DSB75 Development Support Board designed to test and type approve Gemalto M2M modules and provide a sample configuration for application engineering. A special adapter is required to connect the ELS81-US evaluation module to the DSB75. 1. HTTP/SecureConnection over SSL version 3.0 and TLS versions 1.0, 1.1, and 1.2 are supported. For details please refer to Java User’s Guide for Cinterion ® ELS81-US. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 12 of 107 1.2 ELS81-US System Overview 14 1.2 ELS81-US System Overview Application Serial interface/ SPI interface COUNTER ASC0 lines ASC0 lines I2C Serial modem interface lines I2C USB Backup supply Power supply ON Emergency reset POWER Main antenna (UMTS/LTE) Rx diversity antenna (UMTS/LTE) Main antenna RTC Rx diversity CONTROL SIM card (with SIM detection) SIM interface Pulse counter Serial modem interface lines/ SPI interface USB ASC1/SPI Fast shutdown Fast shutdown PWM DAC (PWM) LED Status GPIO Module GPIO interface Figure 1: ELS81-US system overview els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 13 of 107 1.3 Circuit Concept 14 1.3 Circuit Concept Figure 2 and Figure 3 show block diagrams of the ELS81-US module and illustrate the major functional components: BATT+ BB SD1 SD2 V180 PMU LDOs ON EMERG _RST ON circuit ON SD2 LDOs Reset_BB FST_SHDWN SD3 I2C USB ASC0 I2CCLK I2CDAT USB USIF1/ GPIO GPIO GPIO ASC1/GPIO/ SPI USIF3 SIM CCIN Baseband controller and Power management VDD ADQ0 ~ ADQ15 Control Control DDR_CA _0~DDR _CA _9 FLASH VDD LPDDR2 SDRAM DDR _DQ_0~DDR_DQ_15 SIM RX/TX CCIN RF control Figure 2: ELS81-US block diagram els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 14 of 107 1.3 Circuit Concept 14 BATT+ RF PA DCDC SKY87000 LTE / UMTS RF transceiver RX/TX SKY77622 RF control SKY13525 TQ_H TP_H TQ_L TP_L RX_M1 RX_M1X 4G_HB_IN 2G/3G_HB_IN 4G_LB_IN 2G/3G_LB_IN B2_OUT B4_OUT B5_OUT B12_OUT Coupler Band2 Duplexer Antenna TRX4 V180 BATT+BB RX_H4 RX_H4X RX_L1 RX_L1X RX_L3 RX_L3X Band4 Duplexer TRX6 Band5 Duplexer TRX5 Band12 Duplexer TRX2 MAIN_FWD FBR_RF2 4G_HB_IN Band2 SAW Filter 4G_HB_IN Band4 SAW Filter 26MHz TRX2 TRX1 SKY13525 4G_HB_IN 4G_HB_IN Band5 SAW Filter Diversity Antenna TRX3 TRX5 Band12 SAW Filter MIPI Figure 3: ELS81-US RF section block diagram els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 15 of 107 2 Interface Characteristics 53 Interface Characteristics ELS81-US is equipped with an SMT application interface that connects to the external application. The SMT application interface incorporates the various application interfaces as well as the RF antenna interface. 2.1 Application Interface 2.1.1 Pad Assignment The SMT application interface on the ELS81-US provides connecting pads to integrate the module into external applications. Figure 4 shows the connecting pads’ numbering plan, the following Table 1 lists the pads’ assignments. 240 239 238 237 236 235 234 233 232 231 230 229 228 227 226 225 224 223 241 222 242 221 53 33 54 32 250 55 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 249 31 56 251 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 30 248 57 58 29 89 90 91 92 85 86 87 88 27 59 26 60 61 28 81 82 83 84 25 24 62 63 252 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 247 245 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 246 23 22 64 21 65 66 20 243 220 219 244 201 202 203 Supply pads: BATT+ 204 205 207 206 208 USB pads 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 I2C pads Combined GPIO/Control pads (LED, PWM, COUNTER, FST_SHDN) Supply pads: Other ASC0 pads RF antenna pads Combined GPIO/ASC1/SPI pads Control pads Combined GPIO/ ASC0/SPI pads GPIO pads Do not use Not connected Reserved GND pads SIM pads ADC pad Figure 4: Numbering plan for connecting pads (bottom view) els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 16 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 Table 1: Pad assignments Pad no. Signal name 201 Not connected 202 Not connected 203 GND 204 BATT+BB 205 GND 206 ADC1 207 ON 208 GND 209 V180 210 RXD0 211 CTS0 212 TXD0 213 GPIO24/RING0 214 RTS0 215 VDDLP 216 CCRST 217 CCIN 218 CCIO 219 GPIO14 220 GPIO13 20 CCVCC 21 CCCLK 22 VCORE 23 GPIO20 Centrally located pads 67 Not connected 68 Not connected 69 Not connected 70 Not connected 71 Not connected 72 Not connected 73 Not connected 74 Do not use 75 Do not use 76 Not connected 77 Not connected 78 Not connected 79 Not connected 80 Not connected 81 GND 82 GND Pad no. 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 221 222 223 224 225 226 227 228 229 230 231 232 233 234 Signal name GPIO22 GPIO21 GPIO23 I2CDAT I2CCLK GPIO17/TXD1/MISO GPIO16/RXD1/MOSI GPIO18/RTS1 GPIO19/CTS1/SPI_CS EMERG_RST GPIO12 GPIO11 GND Not connected GND Not connected GND Not connected GPIO4/FST_SHDN GPIO3/DSR0/SPI_CLK GPIO2/DCD0 GPIO1/DTR0 VUSB USB_DP Pad no. 235 236 237 238 239 240 241 242 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 243 244 Signal name USB_DN Not connected Not connected GND GPIO5/LED GPIO6/PWM2 GPIO7/PWM1 GPIO8/COUNTER BATT+RF GND GND ANT_DRX GND GND ANT_MAIN GND GND GND GND Not connected Not connected Not connected Not connected GPIO15 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 GND GND GND GND Not connected GND GND GND Not connected GND GND GND GND GND GND GND 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 245 246 247 248 249 250 251 252 GND GND GND GND GND Not connected Not connected Not connected GND Not connected Not connected Not connected Not connected GND GND GND Signal pads that are not used should not be connected to an external application. Please note that the reference voltages listed in Table 2 are the values measured directly on the ELS81-US module. They do not apply to the accessories connected. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 17 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.2 Signal Properties Table 2: Signal properties Function Signal name IO Signal form and level Comment Power supply BATT+BB BATT+RF WCDMA activated: VImax = 4.5V VInorm = 3.8V VImin = 3.0V during Transmit active. Imax = 900mA during Tx Lines of BATT+ and GND must be connected in parallel for supply purposes because higher peak currents may occur. LTE activated: VImax = 4.5V VInorm = 3.8V VImin = 3.0V during Transmit active. Minimum voltage must not fall below 3.0V including drop, ripple, spikes and not rise above 4.5V. BATT+BB and BATT+RF require an ultra low ESR capacitor: BATT+BB --> 150µF BATT+RF --> 150µF If using Multilayer Ceramic Chip Capacitors (MLCC) please take DCbias into account. Note that minimum ESR value is advised at <70mΩ. Power supply GND External supply voltage V180 Ground Application Ground Normal operation: VOnorm = 1.80V ±3% IOmax = -10mA V180 should be used to supply level shifters at the interfaces or to supply external application circuits. SLEEP mode Operation: VOSleep = 1.80V ±5% IOmax = -10mA CLmax = 100µF VCORE VOnorm = 1.2V ±2.5% IOmax = -10mA CLmax = 100nF SLEEP mode Operation: VOSleep = 0.90V...1.2V ±4% IOmax = -10mA VCORE and V180 may be used for the power indication circuit. Vcore and V180 are sensitive against backpowering by other signals. While switched off these voltage domains must have <0.2V. If unused keep lines open. Ignition ON1 VIHmax = 5V tolerant VIHmin = 1.3V VILmax = 0.5V Slew rate < 1ms ON ___|~~~~ els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary This signal switches the module on, and is rising edge sensitive triggered. Internal pull down value for this signal is 100kΩ. 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 18 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 Table 2: Signal properties Function Signal name IO Signal form and level Comment Emergency restart EMERG_RST RI ≈ 1kΩ, CI ≈ 1nF VOHmax = VDDLP max VIHmin = 1.35V VILmax = 0.3V at ~200µA This line must be driven low by an open drain or open collector driver connected to GND. ~~|___|~~ low impulse width > 10ms If unused keep line open. RTC backup VDDLP I/O VOnorm = 1.8V ±5% IOmax = -25mA VImax = 1.9V VImin = 1.0V IItyp < 1µA USB VUSB_IN VImin = 3V VImax = 5.25V Active and suspend current: Imax < 100µA USB_DN USB_DP Serial Interface ASC0 RXD0 CTS0 DSR0 DCD0 RING0 TXD0 VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.30V VIHmax = 1.85V RTS0 Pull down resistor active VILmax = 0.35V at > 50µA VIHmin = 1.30V at < 240µA VIHmax = 1.85V at < 240µA DTR0 I/O Full and high speed signal characteristics according USB 2.0 Specification. VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.55V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V Pull up resistor active VILmax = 0.35V at < -200µA VIHmin = 1.30V at > -50µA VIHmax = 1.85V els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary It is recommended to use a serial resistor between VDDLP and a possible capacitor (bigger than 1µF). If unused keep line open. All electrical characteristics according to USB Implementers' Forum, USB 2.0 Specification. If unused keep lines open. If unused keep lines open. Note that some ASC0 lines are originally available as GPIO lines. If configured as ASC0 lines, the GPIO lines are assigned as follows: GPIO1 --> DTR0 GPIO2 --> DCD0 GPIO3 --> DSR0 GPIO24 --> RING0 The DSR0 line is also shared with the SPI interface‘s SPI_CLK signal. Note that DCD0/GPIO2 must not be driven low during startup 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 19 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 Table 2: Signal properties Function Signal name IO Signal form and level Comment Serial Interface ASC1 RXD1 If unused keep line open. TXD1 VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.55V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V RTS1 CTS1 CCIN SIM card detection VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.30V VIHmax = 1.85V RI ≈ 110kΩ VIHmin = 1.45V at I = 15µA, VIHmax= 1.9V VILmax = 0.3V Note that the ASC1 interface lines are originally available as GPIO lines. If configured as ASC1 lines, the GPIO lines are assigned as follows: GPIO16 --> RXD1 GPIO17 --> TXD1 GPIO18 --> RTS1 GPIO19 --> CTS1 CCIN = High, SIM card inserted. For details please refer to Section 2.1.6. If unused keep line open. 3V SIM Card Interface CCRST VOLmax = 0.30V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 2.45V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 2.90V CCIO I/O VILmax = 0.50V VIHmin = 2.05V VIHmax = 2.90V Maximum cable length or copper track to SIM card holder should not exceed 100mm. VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 2.50V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 2.90V CCCLK VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 2.40V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 2.90V CCVCC VOmin= 2.70V VOtyp = 2.90V VOmax = 3.30V IOmax = -30mA els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 20 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 Table 2: Signal properties Function Signal name 1.8V SIM CCRST Card Interface CCIO IO Signal form and level Comment VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.45V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.90V Maximum cable length or copper track to SIM card holder should not exceed 100mm. I/O VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.25V VIHmax = 1.85V VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.50V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V I2C CCCLK VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.50V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V CCVCC VOmin = 1.75V VOtyp = 1.80V VOmax = 1.85V IOmax = -30mA I2CCLK IO I2CDAT IO Open drain IO VOLmin = 0.35V at Imax = 4mA (Imax = Imax external + I pull-up) VOHmax = 1.85V R external pull up min = 560Ω VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.3V VIHmax = 1.85V According to the I2C Bus Specification Version 2.1 for the fast mode a rise time of max. 300ns is permitted. There is also a maximum VOL=0.4V at 3mA specified. The value of the pull-up depends on the capacitive load of the whole system (I2C Slave + lines). The maximum sink current of I2CDAT and I2CCLK is 4mA. I2C interface of the module already has internal 1KOhm pull up resistor to V180 inside the module. Please take this into consideration during application design. If lines are unused keep lines open. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 21 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 Table 2: Signal properties Function Signal name IO Signal form and level Comment SPI SPI_CLK MOSI VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.55V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V If lines are unused keep lines open. MISO SPI_CS GPIO1-GPIO3 IO GPIO4 IO GPIO5 IO GPIO6 IO GPIO7 IO VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.30V VIHmax = 1.85V GPIO8 IO Imax = ±5mA GPIO11GPIO15 IO GPIO16GPIO19 IO GPIO20GPIO23 IO GPIO24 IO FST_SHDN GPIO interface Fast shutdown Status LED LED VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.30V VIHmax = 1.85V VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.55V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V Note that the SPI interface lines are originally available as GPIO lines. If configured as SPI lines, the GPIO lines are assigned as follows: GPIO3 --> SPI_CLK GPIO16 --> MOSI GPIO17 --> MISO GPIO19 --> SPI_CS If unused keep line open. Please note that most GPIO lines can be configured by AT command for alternative functions: GPIO1-GPIO3: ASC0 control lines DTR0, DCD0 and DSR0 GPIO4: Fast shutdown GPIO5: Status LED line GPIO6/GPIO7: PWM GPIO8: Pulse Counter GPIO16-GPIO19: ASC1 or SPI GPIO24: ASC0 control line RING0 VILmax = 0.35V VIHmin = 1.30V VIHmax = 1.85V This line must be driven low. If unused keep line open. ~~|___|~~ low impulse width > 1ms Note that the fast shutdown line is originally available as GPIO line. If configured as fast shutdown, the GPIO line is assigned as follows: GPIO4 --> FST_SHDN VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.55V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V If unused keep line open. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary Note that the LED line is originally available as GPIO line. If configured as LED line, the GPIO line is assigned as follows: GPIO5 --> LED 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 22 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 Table 2: Signal properties Function Signal name IO Signal form and level Comment PWM PWM1 PWM2 VOLmax = 0.25V at I = 1mA VOHmin = 1.55V at I = -1mA VOHmax = 1.85V If unused keep lines open. Note that the PWM lines are originally available as GPIO lines. If configured as PWM lines, the GPIO lines are assigned as follows: GPIO7 --> PWM1 GPIO6 --> PWM2 Pulse counter COUNTER ADC1 ADC (Analog-toDigital Converter) Internal up resistor active VILmax = 0.35V at < -200µA VIHmin = 1.30V at > -50µA VIHmax = 1.85V If unused keep line open. RI = 1MΩ VI = 0V ... 1.2V (valid range) VIH max = 1.2V ADC can be used as input for external measurements. Resolution 1024 steps Tolerance 0.3% If unused keep line open. Note that the COUNTER line is originally available as GPIO line. If configured as COUNTER line, the GPIO line is assigned as follows: GPIO8 --> COUNTER 1. After the operating voltage is applied, it is required to wait at least 1 second to trigger the ON signal. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 23 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.2.1 Absolute Maximum Ratings The absolute maximum ratings stated in Table 3 are stress ratings under any conditions. Stresses beyond any of these limits will cause permanent damage to ELS81-US. Table 3: Absolute maximum ratings1 Parameter Min Max Unit Supply voltage BATT+BB, BATT+RF -0.5 +5.5 Voltage at all signal lines in Power Down mode -0.3 +0.3 Voltage at digital lines in normal operation -0.2 V180 + 0.2 V Voltage at SIM/USIM interface, CCVCC in normal operation -0.5 +3.3 VDDLP input voltage -0.15 2.0 Voltage at ADC line in normal operation 1.2 V180 in normal operation +1.7 +1.9 Current at V180 in normal operation -0 +50 mA VCORE in normal operation +0.85 +1.25 Current at VCORE in normal operation -0 +50 mA Voltage at ON signal -0.5 +6.5 Current at single GPIO -5 +5 mA Current at all GPIO -50 +50 mA Voltage at VCORE, V180 in power down mode -0.2 +0.2 1. Positive noted current means current sourcing from ELS81-US. Negative noted current means current sourcing towards ELS81-US. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 24 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.3 USB Interface ELS81-US supports a USB 2.0 High Speed (480Mbit/s) device interface that is Full Speed (12Mbit/s) compliant. The USB interface is primarily intended for use as command and data interface and for downloading firmware. The external application is responsible for supplying the VUSB_IN line. This line is used for cable detection only. The USB part (driver and transceiver) is supplied by means of BATT+. This is because ELS81-US is designed as a self-powered device compliant with the “Universal Serial Bus Specification Revision 2.0”1. Module SMT VREG (3V075) lin. reg. BATT+ GND USB part1) VBUS Detection only VUSB_IN RS RS DP DN Host wakeup USB_DP2) USB_DN2) RING0 1) All serial (including RS) and pull-up resistors for data lines are implemented. If the USB interface is operated in High Speed mode (480MHz), it is recommended to take special care routing the data lines USB_DP and USB_DN. Application layout should in this case implement a differential impedance of 90 ohms for proper signal integrity. 2) Figure 5: USB circuit To properly connect the module's USB interface to the external application, a USB 2.0 compatible connector and cable or hardware design is required. For more information on the USB related signals see Table 2. Furthermore, the USB modem driver distributed with ELS81-US needs to be installed. 1. The specification is ready for download on http://www.usb.org/developers/docs/ els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 25 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.3.1 Reducing Power Consumption While a USB connection is active, the module will never switch into SLEEP mode. Only if the USB interface is in Suspended state or Detached (i.e., VUSB_IN = 0) is the module able to switch into SLEEP mode thereby saving power. There are two possibilities to enable power reduction mechanisms: • Recommended implementation of USB Suspend/Resume/Remote Wakeup: The USB host should be able to bring its USB interface into the Suspended state as described in the “Universal Serial Bus Specification Revision 2.0“1. For this functionality to work, the VUSB_IN line should always be kept enabled. On incoming calls and other events ELS81-US will then generate a Remote Wakeup request to resume the USB host controller. See also [5] (USB Specification Revision 2.0, Section 10.2.7, p.282): "If USB System wishes to place the bus in the Suspended state, it commands the Host Controller to stop all bus traffic, including SOFs. This causes all USB devices to enter the Suspended state. In this state, the USB System may enable the Host Controller to respond to bus wakeup events. This allows the Host Controller to respond to bus wakeup signaling to restart the host system." • Implementation for legacy USB applications not supporting USB Suspend/Resume: As an alternative to the regular USB suspend and resume mechanism it is possible to employ the RING0 line to wake up the host application in case of incoming calls or events signalized by URCs while the USB interface is in Detached state (i.e., VUSB_IN = 0). Every wakeup event will force a new USB enumeration. Therefore, the external application has to carefully consider the enumeration timings to avoid loosing any signalled events. For details on this host wakeup functionality see Section 2.1.13.3. To prevent existing data call connections from being disconnected while the USB interface is in detached state (i.e., VUSB_IN=0) it is possible to call AT&D0, thus ignoring the status of the DTR line (see also [1]). 1. The specification is ready for download on http://www.usb.org/developers/docs/ els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 26 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.4 Serial Interface ASC0 ELS81-US offers an 8-wire unbalanced, asynchronous modem interface ASC0 conforming to ITU-T V.24 protocol DCE signalling. The electrical characteristics do not comply with ITU-T V.28. The significant levels are 0V (for low data bit or active state) and 1.8V (for high data bit or inactive state). For electrical characteristics please refer to Table 2. For an illustration of the interface line’s startup behavior see Figure 7. ELS81-US is designed for use as a DCE. Based on the conventions for DCE-DTE connections it communicates with the customer application (DTE) using the following signals: • Port TXD @ application sends data to the module’s TXD0 signal line • Port RXD @ application receives data from the module’s RXD0 signal line Figure 6: Serial interface ASC0 Features: • Includes the data lines TXD0 and RXD0, the status lines RTS0 and CTS0 and, in addition, the modem control lines DTR0, DSR0, DCD0 and RING0. • The RING0 signal serves to indicate incoming calls and other types of URCs (Unsolicited Result Code). It can also be used to send pulses to the host application, for example to wake up the application from power saving state. • Configured for 8 data bits, no parity and 1 stop bit. • ASC0 can be operated at fixed bit rates from 1,200bps up to 921,600bps. • Autobauding supports bit rates from 1,200bps up to 230,400bps. • Supports RTS0/CTS0 hardware flow control. The hardware hand shake line RTS0 has an internal pull down resistor causing a low level signal, if the line is not used and open. Although hardware flow control is recommended, this allows communication by using only RXD and TXD lines. • Wake up from SLEEP mode by RTS0 activation (high to low transition; see Section 3.3.2). Note: The ASC0 modem control lines DTR0, DCD0, DSR0 and RING0 are originally available as GPIO lines. If configured as ASC0 lines, these GPIO lines are assigned as follows: GPIO1 --> DTR0, GPIO2 --> DCD0, GPIO3 --> DSR0 and GPIO24 --> RING0. Also, DSR0 is shared with the SPI_CLK line of the SPI interface and may be configured as such. Configuration is done by AT command (see [1]). The configuration is non-volatile and becomes active after a module restart. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 27 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 The following figure shows the startup behavior of the asynchronous serial interface ASC0. Power supply active Start up Reset state Firmware initialization Command interface initialization Interface active ON VCORE V180 EMERG_RST TXD0 PD RXD0 PU RTS0 PU CTS0 PU DTR0/GPIO1 PD DSR0/GPIO3 PD PU PD DCD0/GPIO2 PD PU PD RING0/GPIO24 PD PU PD PD For pull-up and pull-down values see Table 10. Figure 7: ASC0 startup behavior Notes: During startup the DTR0 signal is driven active low for 500µs. It is recommended to provide a 470Ω serial resistor for the DTR0 line to prevent shorts (high current flow). No data must be sent over the ASC0 interface before the interface is active and ready to receive data (see Section 3.2.1). An external pull down to ground on the DCD0 line during the startup phase activates a special mode for ELS81-US. In this special mode the AT command interface is not available and the module may therefore no longer behave as expected. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 28 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.5 Serial Interface ASC1 Four ELS81-US GPIO lines can be configured as ASC1 interface signals to provide a 4-wire unbalanced, asynchronous modem interface ASC1 conforming to ITU-T V.24 protocol DCE signalling. The electrical characteristics do not comply with ITU-T V.28. The significant levels are 0V (for low data bit or active state) and 1.8V (for high data bit or inactive state). For electrical characteristics please refer to Table 2. For an illustration of the interface line’s startup behavior see Figure 9. The ASC1 interface lines are originally available as GPIO lines. If configured as ASC1 lines, the GPIO lines are assigned as follows: GPIO16 --> RXD1, GPIO17 --> TXD1, GPIO18 --> RTS1 and GPIO19 --> CTS1. Configuration is done by AT command (see [1]: AT^SCFG). The configuration is non-volatile and becomes active after a module restart. ELS81-US is designed for use as a DCE. Based on the conventions for DCE-DTE connections it communicates with the customer application (DTE) using the following signals: • Port TXD @ application sends data to module’s TXD1 signal line • Port RXD @ application receives data from the module’s RXD1 signal line Figure 8: Serial interface ASC1 Features • Includes only the data lines TXD1 and RXD1 plus RTS1 and CTS1 for hardware handshake. • On ASC1 no RING line is available. • Configured for 8 data bits, no parity and 1 or 2 stop bits. • ASC1 can be operated at fixed bit rates from 1,200 bps to 921,600 bps. • Autobauding supports bit rates from 1,200bps up to 230,400bps. • Supports RTS1/CTS1 hardware flow. The hardware hand shake line RTS0 has an internal pull down resistor causing a low level signal, if the line is not used and open. Although hardware flow control is recommended, this allows communication by using only RXD and TXD lines. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 29 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 The following figure shows the startup behavior of the asynchronous serial interface ASC1. Power supply active Start up Reset state Firmware initialization Command interface initialization Interface active ON VCORE V180 EMERG_RST TXD1/GPIO17 PD RXD1/GPIO16 PD RTS1/GPIO18 PD CTS1/GPIO19 PD PD *) For pull-down values see Table 10. Figure 9: ASC1 startup behavior els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 30 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.6 UICC/SIM/USIM Interface ELS81-US has an integrated UICC/SIM/USIM interface compatible with the 3GPP 31.102 and ETSI 102 221. This is wired to the host interface in order to be connected to an external SIM card holder. Five pads on the SMT application interface are reserved for the SIM interface. The UICC/SIM/USIM interface supports 3V and 1.8V SIM cards. Please refer to Table 2 for electrical specifications of the UICC/SIM/USIM interface lines depending on whether a 3V or 1.8V SIM card is used. The CCIN signal serves to detect whether a tray (with SIM card) is present in the card holder. To take advantage of this feature, an appropriate SIM card detect switch is required on the card holder. For example, this is true for the model supplied by Molex, which has been tested to operate with ELS81-US and is part of the Gemalto M2M reference equipment submitted for type approval. See Section 7.1 for Molex ordering numbers. Table 4: Signals of the SIM interface (SMT application interface) Signal Description GND Separate ground connection for SIM card to improve EMC. CCCLK Chipcard clock CCVCC SIM supply voltage. CCIO Serial data line, input and output. CCRST Chipcard reset CCIN Input on the baseband processor for detecting a SIM card tray in the holder. If the SIM is removed during operation the SIM interface is shut down immediately to prevent destruction of the SIM. The CCIN signal is by default low and will change to high level if a SIM card is inserted. The CCIN signal is mandatory for applications that allow the user to remove the SIM card during operation. The CCIN signal is solely intended for use with a SIM card. It must not be used for any other purposes. Failure to comply with this requirement may invalidate the type approval of ELS81-US. Note [1]: No guarantee can be given, nor any liability accepted, if loss of data is encountered after removing the SIM card during operation. Also, no guarantee can be given for properly initializing any SIM card that the user inserts after having removed the SIM card during operation. In this case, the application must restart ELS81-US. Note [2]: On the evaluation board, the CCIN signal is inverted, thus the CCIN signal is by default high and will change to a low level if a SIM card is inserted. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 31 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 The figure below shows a circuit to connect an external SIM card holder. V180 CCIN CCVCC SIM 220nF 1nF CCRST CCIO CCCLK Figure 10: External UICC/SIM/USIM card holder circuit The total cable length between the SMT application interface pads on ELS81-US and the pads of the external SIM card holder must not exceed 100mm in order to meet the specifications of 3GPP TS 51.010-1 and to satisfy the requirements of EMC compliance. To avoid possible cross-talk from the CCCLK signal to the CCIO signal be careful that both lines are not placed closely next to each other. A useful approach is using a GND line to shield the CCIO line from the CCCLK line. An example for an optimized ESD protection for the SIM interface is shown in Section 2.1.6.1. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 32 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.6.1 Enhanced ESD Protection for SIM Interface To optimize ESD protection for the SIM interface it is possible to add ESD diodes to the SIM interface lines as shown in the example given in Figure 11.1 The example was designed to meet ESD protection according ETSI EN 301 489-1/7: Contact discharge: ± 4kV, air discharge: ± 8kV. Module CCRST SIM_RST CCCLK SIM_CLK CCIO SIM_IO CCVCC CCIN SIM_VCC GND SIM_DET Figure 11: SIM interface - enhanced ESD protection 1. Note that the protection diode shall have low internal capacitance less than 5pF for IO and CLK. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 33 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.7 RTC Backup The internal Real Time Clock of ELS81-US is supplied from a separate voltage regulator in the power supply component which is also active when ELS81-US is in Power Down mode and BATT+ is available. An alarm function is provided that allows to wake up ELS81-US without logging on to the RF network. In addition, you can use the VDDLP pad to backup the RTC from an external capacitor. The capacitor is charged from the internal LDO of ELS81-US. If the voltage supply at BATT+ is disconnected the RTC can be powered by the capacitor. The size of the capacitor determines the duration of buffering when no voltage is applied to ELS81-US, i.e. the greater the capacitor the longer ELS81-US will save the date and time. The RTC can also be supplied from an external battery (rechargeable or non-chargeable). In this case the electrical specification of the VDDLP pad (see Section 2.1.2) has to be taken in to account. Figure 12 shows an RTC backup configuration. A serial 1kΩ resistor has to be placed on the application next to VDDLP. It limits the input current of an empty capacitor or battery. Module LRTC Processor and power management RTC Application interface BATT+ VDDLP 1k Capacitor GND Figure 12: RTC supply variants els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 34 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.8 GPIO Interface ELS81-US offers a GPIO interface with 22 GPIO lines. The GPIO lines are shared with other interfaces or functions: Fast shutdown (see Section 2.1.13.4), status LED (see Section 2.1.13.1), the PWM functionality (see Section 2.1.11), an pulse counter (see Section 2.1.12), ASC0 (see Section 2.1.4), ASC1 (see Section 2.1.5), an SPI interface (see Section 2.1.10). The following table shows the configuration variants for the GPIO pads. All variants are mutually exclusive, i.e. a pad configured for instance as Status LED is locked for alternative usage. Table 5: GPIO lines and possible alternative assignment GPIO Fast Shutdown Status LED PWM Pulse Counter ASC0 GPIO1 DTR0 GPIO2 DCD0 GPIO3 DSR0 GPIO4 GPIO5 SPI SPI_CLK FST_SHDN Status LED GPIO6 PWM2 GPIO7 PWM1 GPIO8 ASC1 COUNTER GPIO11 GPIO12 GPIO13 GPIO14 GPIO15 GPIO16 RXD1 MOSI GPIO17 TXD1 MISO GPIO18 RTS1 GPIO19 CTS1 SPI_CS GPIO20 GPIO21 GPIO22 GPIO23 GPIO24 RING0 After startup, the above mentioned alternative GPIO line assignments can be configured using AT commands (see [1]). The configuration is non-volatile and available after module restart. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 35 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 The following figure shows the startup behavior of the GPIO interface. With an active state of the ASC0 interface (i.e. CTS0 is at low level) the initialization of the GPIO interface lines is also finished. Power supply active Start up Reset state Firmware initialization Command interface initialization Interface active ON VCORE V180 EMERG_RST PD GPIO 1-8 PD GPIO 11 - 24 CTS0 *) For pull down values see Table 10. Figure 13: GPIO startup behavior els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 36 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.9 I2C Interface I2C is a serial, 8-bit oriented data transfer bus for bit rates up to 400kbps in Fast mode. It consists of two lines, the serial data line I2CDAT and the serial clock line I2CCLK. The module acts as a single master device, e.g. the clock I2CCLK is driven by the module. I2CDAT is a bi-directional line. Each device connected to the bus is software addressable by a unique 7-bit address, and simple master/slave relationships exist at all times. The module operates as mastertransmitter or as master-receiver. The customer application transmits or receives data only on request of the module. To configure and activate the I2C bus use the AT^SSPI command. Detailed information on the AT^SSPI command as well explanations on the protocol and syntax required for data transmission can be found in [1]. The I2C interface can be powered via the V180 line of ELS81-US. If connected to the V180 line, the I2C interface will properly shut down when the module enters the Power Down mode. In the application I2CDAT and I2CCLK lines need to be connected to a positive supply voltage via a pull-up resistor. For electrical characteristics please refer to Table 2. Module Application R pull up R pull up 1KOhm R pull up 1KOhm R pull up V180 I2CCLK I2CCLK I2CDAT I2CDAT GND GND Figure 14: I2C interface connected to V180 Note: Good care should be taken when creating the PCB layout of the host application: The traces of I2CCLK and I2CDAT should be equal in length and as short as possible. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 37 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 The following figure shows the startup behavior of the I2C interface. With an active state of the ASC0 interface (i.e. CTS0 is at low level) the initialization of the I2C interface is also finished. Power supply active Start up Reset state Firmware initialization Command interface initialization Interface active ON VCORE V180 EMERG_RST I2CCLK Open Drain (external pull up) I2CDAT Open Drain (external pull up) CTSx Figure 15: I2C startup behavior els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 38 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.10 SPI Interface Four ELS81-US GPIO interface lines can be configured as Serial Peripheral Interface (SPI). The SPI is a synchronous serial interface for control and data transfer between ELS81-US and the external application. Only one application can be connected to the SPI and the interface supports only master mode. The transmission rates are up to 6.5Mbit/s. The SPI interface comprises the two data lines MOSI and MISO, the clock line SPI_CLK a well as the chip select line SPI_CS. The four GPIO lines can be configured as SPI interface signals as follows: GPIO3 --> SPI_CLK, GPIO16 --> MOSI, GPIO17 --> MISO and GPIO19 --> SPI_CS. The configuration is done by AT command (see [1]). It is non-volatile and becomes active after a module restart. The GPIO lines are also shared with the ASC1 signal lines and the ASC0 modem status signal line DSR0. To configure and activate the SPI interface use the AT^SSPI command. Detailed information on the AT^SSPI command as well explanations on the SPI modes required for data transmission can be found in [1]. In general, SPI supports four operation modes. The modes are different in clock phase and clock polarity. The module’s SPI mode can be configured by using the AT command AT^SSPI. Make sure the module and the connected slave device works with the same SPI mode. Figure 16 shows the characteristics of the four SPI modes. The SPI modes 0 and 3 are the most common used modes. For electrical characteristics please refer to Table 2. Clock phase SPI MODE 0 SPI MODE 1 SPI_CS SPI_CLK SPI_CLK MOSI MOSI MISO MISO Clock polarity SPI_CS Sample Sample SPI MODE 2 SPI MODE 3 SPI_CS SPI_CS SPI_CLK SPI_CLK MOSI MOSI MISO MISO Sample Sample Figure 16: Characteristics of SPI modes els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 39 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.11 PWM Interfaces The GPIO6 and GPIO7 interface lines can be configured as Pulse Width Modulation interface lines PWM1 and PWM2. The PWM interface lines can be used, for example, to connect buzzers. The PWM1 line is shared with GPIO7 and the PWM2 line is shared with GPIO6 (for GPIOs see Section 2.1.8). GPIO and PWM functionality are mutually exclusive. The startup behavior of the lines is shown in Figure 13. 2.1.12 Pulse Counter The GPIO8 line can be configured as pulse counter line COUNTER. The pulse counter interface can be used, for example, as a clock (for GPIOs see Section 2.1.8). 2.1.13 2.1.13.1 Control Signals Status LED The GPIO5 interface line can be configured to drive a status LED that indicates different operating modes of the module (for GPIOs see Section 2.1.8). GPIO and LED functionality are mutually exclusive. To take advantage of this function connect an LED to the GPIO5/LED line as shown in Figure 17. VCC R3 GPIO5/ LED LED R1 R2 GND GND Figure 17: Status signaling with LED driver els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 40 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.13.2 Power Indication Circuit In Power Down mode the maximum voltage at any digital or analog interface line must not exceed +0.3V (see also Section 2.1.2.1). Exceeding this limit for any length of time might cause permanent damage to the module. It is therefore recommended to implement a power indication signal that reports the module’s power state and shows whether it is active or in Power Down mode. While the module is in Power Down mode all signals with a high level from an external application need to be set to low state or high impedance state. The sample power indication circuit illustrated in Figure 18 denotes the module’s active state with a low signal and the module’s Power Down mode with a high signal or high impedance state. 10k External power supply Power indication 22k V180 4.7k 100k 100k VCORE Figure 18: Power indication circuit 2.1.13.3 Host Wakeup If no call, data or message transfer is in progress, the host may shut down its own USB interface to save power. If a call or other request (URC’s, messages) arrives, the host can be notified of these events and be woken up again by a state transition of the ASC0 interface‘s RING0 line. This functionality should only be used with legacy USB applications not supporting the recommended USB suspend and resume mechanism as described in [5] (see also Section 2.1.3.1). For more information on how to configure the RING0 line by AT^SCFG command see [1]. Possible RING0 line states are listed in Table 6. Table 6: Host wakeup lines Signal I/O Description RING0 Inactive to active low transition: 0 = The host shall wake up 1 = No wake up request els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 41 of 107 2.1 Application Interface 53 2.1.13.4 Fast Shutdown The GPIO4 interface line can be configured as fast shutdown signal line FST_SHDN. The configured FST_SHDN line is an active low control signal and must be applied for at least 1 milliseconds. If unused this line can be left open because of a configured internal pull-up resistor. Before setting the FST_SHDN line to low, the ON signal should be set to low (see Figure 19). Otherwise there might be back powering at the ON line in Power Down mode. The fast shutdown feature can be triggered using the AT command AT^SMSO=. For details see [1]. If triggered, a low impulse >1 milliseconds on the FST_SHDN line starts the fast shutdown. The fast shutdown procedure still finishes any data activities on the module's flash file system, thus ensuring data integrity, but will no longer deregister gracefully from the network, thus saving the time required for network deregistration. Fast shut down procedure Power down BATT+ VDDLP <15ms_ GPIO4/FST_SHDN ON VCORE V180 EMERG_RST Figure 19: Fast shutdown timing Please note that the normal software controlled shutdown using AT^SMSO will allow option for a fast shutdown by parameter , i.e., without network deregistration. However, in this case no URCs including shutdown URCs will be provided by the AT^SMSO command. Please also note that the fast shutdown operation does not allow the module deregister from the network, therefore, this practice is not recommended, and should not be conducted on regular basis. If it is used for energy saving reason, for instance, used in battery-driven solutions that require prompt system shutdown before battery depletion, discretion is advised in such case. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 42 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 2.2 RF Antenna Interface The ELS81-US UMTS/LTE antenna interface comprises a UMTS/LTE main antenna as well as a UMTS/LTE Rx diversity antenna to improve signal reliability and quality1. The RF interface has an impedance of 50Ω. ELS81-US is capable of sustaining a total mismatch at the antenna line without any damage, even when transmitting at maximum RF power. The external antenna must be matched properly to achieve best performance regarding radiated power, modulation accuracy and harmonic suppression. Antenna matching networks are not included on the ELS81-US module and should be placed in the host application if the antenna does not have an impedance of 50Ω. Regarding the return loss ELS81-US provides the following values in the active band: Table 7: Return loss in the active band State of module Return loss of module Recommended return loss of application Receive > 8dB > 12dB Transmit not applicable > 12dB 2.2.1 Antenna Interface Specifications For approval reasons it is mandatory to connect/apply the Rx diversity antenna to an existing antenna. Not connecting/applying the Rx diversity antenna does not necessarily impact the performance, but may result in approval failures. The minimum antenna efficiency should be better than 50%. Table 8: RF Antenna interface UMTS/LTE (at operating temperature range1) Parameter LTE connectivity Conditions Min. Typical Max. Unit -103.5 dBm -104.5 dBm LTE AWS Band 4 (ch. band- -100 width 10MHz) -103 dBm LTE 1900 Band 2 (ch. band- -98 width 10MHz) -102.5 dBm Band 2, 4, 5,12 Receiver Input Sensitivity @ LTE 700 Band 12 (ch. band- -97 width 5MHz) ARP (Dual Antenna; ch. bandwidth 5MHz) LTE 850 Band 5 (ch. band- -98 width 10MHz) 1. By delivery default the UMTS/LTE Rx diversity antenna is configured as available for the module since its usage is mandatory for LTE. Please refer to [1] for details on how to configure antenna settings. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 43 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 Table 8: RF Antenna interface UMTS/LTE (at operating temperature range1) Parameter Conditions RF Power @ ARP with 50Ω Load (Board temperature < 85°C, BW:5MHz RB:25 (DL), 1 (UL) QPSK) Min. Typical Max. Unit LTE 700 Band 12 (ch. band- +21 width 5MHz; 1RB, position low) +23 dBm LTE 850 Band 5 (ch. bandwidth 5MHz; 1RB, position low) +21 +23 dBm LTE AWS Band 4 (ch. band- +21 width 5MHz; 1RB, position low) +23 dBm LTE 1900 Band 2 (ch. band- +21 width 5MHz; 1RB, position low) +23 dBm UMTS/HSPA connectivity2 Band II, IV, V Receiver Input Sensitivity @ ARP UMTS 850 Band V -104.7 -110 dBm UMTS AWS Band IV -106.7 -108.5 dBm UMTS 1900 Band II -104.7 -110 dBm UMTS 850 Band V +21 +23.5 dBm UMTS AWS Band IV +21 +23.5 dBm UMTS 1900 Band II +21 +23.5 dBm RF Power @ ARP with 50Ω Load (Board temperature < 85°C) 1. No active power reduction is implemented - any deviations are hardware related. 2. Applies also to UMTS/LTE Rx diversity antenna. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 44 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 2.2.2 Antenna Installation The antenna is connected by soldering the antenna pad (ANT_MAIN or ANT_DRX) and its neighboring ground pads (GND) directly to the application’s PCB. The antenna pads are the antenna reference points (ARP) for ELS81-US. All RF data specified throughout this document is related to the ARP. 240 GND ANT_DRX GND ANT_MAIN GND 239 238 237 236 235 234 233 232 231 230 229 228 227 226 225 224 223 241 222 242 221 53 33 54 32 250 55 100 101 102 103 104 105 249 106 31 56 251 93 94 95 96 97 98 30 248 99 57 58 29 89 90 91 92 85 86 87 88 26 60 61 28 28 27 59 81 82 83 84 25 24 62 63 252 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 247 245 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 246 23 22 64 65 21 66 20 243 220 219 244 201 202 203 204 205 206 207 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 Figure 20: Antenna pads (bottom view) The distance between the antenna pad and its neighboring GND pads has been optimized for best possible impedance. To prevent mismatch, special attention should be paid to these pads on the application‘s PCB. The wiring of the antenna connection, starting from the antenna pad to the application‘s antenna should result in a 50Ω line impedance. Line width and distance to the GND plane needs to be optimized with regard to the PCB’s layer stack. Some examples are given in Section 2.2.3. To prevent receiver desensitization due to interferences generated by fast transients like high speed clocks on the external application PCB, it is recommended to realize the antenna connection line using embedded Stripline rather than Micro-Stripline technology. Please see Section 2.2.3.1 for examples of how to design the antenna connection in order to achieve the required 50Ω line impedance. For type approval purposes, the use of a 50Ω coaxial antenna connector (U.FL-R-SMT) might be necessary. In this case the U.FL-R-SMT connector should be placed as close as possible to ELS81-US‘s antenna pad. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 45 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 2.2.3 2.2.3.1 RF Line Routing Design Line Arrangement Examples Several dedicated tools are available to calculate line arrangements for specific applications and PCB materials - for example from http://www.polarinstruments.com/ (commercial software) or from http://web.awrcorp.com/Usa/Products/Optional-Products/TX-Line/ (free software). Embedded Stripline This figure below shows a line arrangement example for embedded stripline with 65µm FR4 prepreg (type: 1080) and 710µm FR4 core (4-layer PCB). Figure 21: Embedded Stripline with 65µm prepreg (1080) and 710µm core els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 46 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 Micro-Stripline This section gives two line arrangement examples for micro-stripline. • Micro-Stripline on 1.0mm Standard FR4 2-Layer PCB The following two figures show examples with different values for D1 (ground strip separation). Application board Ground line Antenna line Ground line Figure 22: Micro-Stripline on 1.0mm standard FR4 2-layer PCB - example 1 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 47 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 Application board Ground line Antenna line Ground line Figure 23: Micro-Stripline on 1.0mm Standard FR4 PCB - example 2 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 48 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 • Micro-Stripline on 1.5mm Standard FR4 2-Layer PCB The following two figures show examples with different values for D1 (ground strip separation). Application board Ground line Antenna line Ground line Figure 24: Micro-Stripline on 1.5mm Standard FR4 PCB - example 1 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 49 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 Application board Ground line Antenna line Ground line Figure 25: Micro-Stripline on 1.5mm Standard FR4 PCB - example 2 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 50 of 107 2.2 RF Antenna Interface 53 2.2.3.2 Routing Example Interface to RF Connector Figure 26 shows the connection of the module‘s antenna pad with an application PCB‘s coaxial antenna connector. Please note that the ELS81-US bottom plane appears mirrored, since it is viewed from ELS81-US top side. By definition the top of customer's board shall mate with the bottom of the ELS81-US module. Figure 26: Routing to application‘s RF connector - top view els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 51 of 107 2.3 Sample Application 53 2.3 Sample Application Figure 27 shows a typical example of how to integrate a ELS81-US module with an application. Usage of the various host interfaces depends on the desired features of the application. Because of the very low power consumption design, current flowing from any other source into the module circuit must be avoided, for example reverse current from high state external control lines. Therefore, the controlling application must be designed to prevent reverse current flow. Otherwise there is the risk of undefined states of the module during startup and shutdown or even of damaging the module. Because of the high RF field density inside the module, it cannot be guaranteed that no self interference might occur, depending on frequency and the applications grounding concept. The potential interferers may be minimized by placing small capacitors (47pF) at suspected lines (e.g. RXD0, VDDLP, and ON). While developing SMT applications it is strongly recommended to provide test points for certain signals, i.e., lines to and from the module - for debug and/or test purposes. The SMT application should allow for an easy access to these signals. For details on how to implement test points see [3]. The EMC measures are best practice recommendations. In fact, an adequate EMC strategy for an individual application is very much determined by the overall layout and, especially, the position of components. Depending on the micro controller used by an external application ELS81-US‘s digital input and output lines may require level conversion. Section 2.3.1 shows a possible sample level conversion circuit. Note: ELS81-US is not intended for use with cables longer than 3m. Disclaimer No warranty, either stated or implied, is provided on the sample schematic diagram shown in Figure 27 and the information detailed in this section. As functionality and compliance with national regulations depend to a great amount on the used electronic components and the individual application layout manufacturers are required to ensure adequate design and operating safeguards for their products using ELS81-US modules. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 52 of 107 2.3 Sample Application 53 Main antenna GND VDDLP ANT_MAIN For switch on circuit see Section 3.2.1 GND ON EMERG_RST ANT_DRX GND 100k RESET Diversity antenna GND VDDLP V180 PWR_IND BATT+RF VCORE 22k BATT+BB 150µF, Low ESR! 53 33pF BEAD* 204 Power supply 100k 150µF, Low ESR! 4.7k ELS6x 100k Blocking** Blocking** BEAD*: It is recommended to add the BEAD as shown to the BATT+BB line. The purpose of this is to mitigate noise from baseband power supply. GPIO20...GPIO23 Note 1: BLM15PD121SN1D MURATA Ind Chip Bead (120Ohm 25% 100MHz Ferrite 1.3A) is recommended in this case. For details please visit www.murata.com. GPIO16...GPIO19/ ASC1/ SPI ASC0 (including GPIO1...GPIO3 for DSR0, DTR0, DCD0 and GPIO24 for RING0)/ SPI_CLK (for DSR0) Note 2: The Bead should be placed as close as possible to the module. GPIO4 (FST_SHDN) GPIO5 (Status LED) GPIO6 (PWM) GPIO7 (PWM) GPIO8 (COUNTER) GPIO11...GPIO15 USB * add optional10pF for SIM protection against RF (internal Antenna) LED Blocking** Blocking** 33pF V180 *10pF *10pF CCIN CCVCC CCIO SIM V180 1nF CCCLK 2.2k*** 220nF 2.2k*** CCRST I2CCLK I2CDAT All SIM components should be close to card holder. Keep SIM wires low capacitive. GND *** I2C interface of the module already has internal 1KOhm pull up resistor to V180 inside the module. Please take this into consideration during application design. Blocking** = For more details see Section 3.7 Figure 27: Schematic diagram of ELS81-US sample application els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 53 of 107 2.3 Sample Application 53 2.3.1 Sample Level Conversion Circuit Depending on the micro controller used by an external application ELS81-US‘s digital input and output lines (i.e., ASC0, ASC1 and GPIO lines) may require level conversion. The following Figure 28 shows a sample circuit with recommended level shifters for an external application‘s micro controller (with VLOGIC between 3.0V...3.6V). The level shifters can be used for digital input and output lines with VOHmax=1.85V or VIHmax =1.85V. External application VLOGIC (3.0V...3.6V) Wireless module VCC Input lines, e.g., µRXD, µCTS Micro controller Low level input Low level input Low level input Digital output lines, e.g., RXDx, CTSx E.g., 74VHC1GT50 V180 (1.8V) VCC Digital input lines, e.g., TXDx, RTSx Output lines, e.g., µTXD, µRTS 5V tolerarant 5V tolerarant 5V tolerant E.g., NC7WZ16 74LVC2G34 Figure 28: Sample level conversion circuit els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 54 of 107 3 Operating Characteristics 77 Operating Characteristics 3.1 Operating Modes The table below briefly summarizes the various operating modes referred to throughout the document. Table 9: Overview of operating modes Mode Function Normal UMTS / HSPA / operation LTE SLEEP Power saving set automatically when no call is in progress and the USB connection is suspended by host or not present and no active communication via ASC0. UMTS / HSPA / LTE IDLE Power saving disabled or an USB connection not suspended, but no call in progress. UMTS DATA UMTS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on network settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. HSPA DATA HSPA data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on network settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. LTE DATA LTE data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on network settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. Power Down Normal shutdown after sending the power down command. Only a voltage regulator is active for powering the RTC. Software is not active. Interfaces are not accessible. Operating voltage remains applied. Airplane mode Airplane mode shuts down the radio part of the module, causes the module to log off from the network and disables all AT commands whose execution requires a radio connection. Airplane mode can be controlled by AT command (see [1]). Alarm mode Restricted operation launched by RTC alert function when the module is in Power Down mode. In Alarm mode, the module remains deregistered from the network. Limited number of AT commands is accessible. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 55 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios In general, be sure not to turn on ELS81-US while it is beyond the safety limits of voltage and temperature stated in Section 2.1.2.1. ELS81-US immediately switches off after having started and detected these inappropriate conditions. In extreme cases this can cause permanent damage to the module. 3.2.1 Turn on ELS81-US ELS81-US can be turned on as described in the following sections: • Connecting the operating voltage BATT+ (see Section 3.2.1.1). • Hardware driven switch on by ON line: Starts Normal mode (see Section 3.2.1.2). After startup or restart, the module will send the URC ^SYSSTART that notifies the host application that the first AT command can be sent to the module (see also [1]). 3.2.1.1 Connecting ELS81-US BATT+ Lines Figure 29 shows sample external application circuits that allow to connect (and also to temporarily disconnect) the module‘s BATT+ lines from the external application‘s power supply. Figure 29 illustrates the application of power employing an externally controlled microcontroller. The voltage supervisory circuit ensures that the power is disconnected and applied again depending on given thresholds. The transistor T2 mentioned in Figure 29 should have an RDS_ON value < 50mΩ in order to minimize voltage drops. Such circuits could be useful to maximize power savings for battery driven applications or to completely switch off and restart the module after a firmware update. After connecting the BATT+ lines the module can then be (re-)started as described in Section 3.2.1.2 and Section 3.2.2. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 56 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 IRML6401 3.8V 47µF,X5R 47µF,X5R 47µF,X5R 47µF,X5R C3 C4 C5 VBATT Module 10k R6 C2 100nF R1 100k C1 T2 C6 47µF,X5R VBATT_IN µcontroller R2 100k Place C2-C5 close to module BC847 R3 100k ENABLE T1 Figure 29: Sample circuit for applying power using an external µC els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 57 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 3.2.1.2 Switch on ELS81-US Using ON Signal After the operating voltage BATT+ is applied, ELS81-US can be switched on by means of the ON signal. The ON signal is an edge triggered signal and allows the input voltage level up to 5V. The module starts into normal mode on detecting the rising edge of the ON signal. The rising edge of ON signal must be applied at least 100 milliseconds later than BATT+. See Figure 31. The following Figure 30 shows recommendations for possible switch-on circuits. 1k VDDLP Option 1 Option 2 R1 RTC backup R2 ON Figure 30: ON circuit options It is recommended to set a serial 1kOhm resistor between the ON circuit and the external capacitor or battery at the VDDLP power supply (i.e., RTC backup circuit). This serial resistor protection is necessary in case the capacitor or battery has low power (is empty).With Option 2 the typical resistor values are: R1 = 150k and R2 = 3k. But the resistor values depend on the current gain from the employed PNP resistor. Please note that the ON signal is an edge triggered signal. This implies that a micro-second high pulse on the signal line suffices to almost immediately switch on the module, as shown in Figure 31. After module startup the ON signal should always be set to low to prevent possible back powering at this pad.1 1. Please take due discretion when designing the filtering circuit, especially ESD, which may cause unintended switch on. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 58 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 >100ms BATT+ VDDLP ON Rising edge only starts up the module VCORE V180 EMERG_RST Figure 31: ON timing 3.2.1.3 Automatic Power On If an automatic power on function is required for module application, circuit shown in either Figure 32 or Figure 33 is recommended. VDDLP R1 10KOhm Voltage Detector* R2 BATT+BB VCC RESET ON 0Ohm 100nF Not Assembled GND GND * It is recommended to apply the 3-pin microprocessor reset monitor MAX803SQ293T1G or MAX803SQ293D3T1G manufactured by ON Semiconductor. Details please refer to www.onsemi.com GND Figure 32: Automatic ON circuit based on voltage detector - option 1 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 59 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 VDDLP 0.1μF BATT+BB Input R1 Voltage Detector* 10KOhm 5 CD GND ON RESET Output GND * It is recommended to apply the ultra-low current voltage detector NCP303LSN28T1 manufactured by ON Semiconductor. Details please refer to www.onsemi.com GND Figure 33: Automatic ON circuit based on voltage detector - option 2 3.2.2 Restart ELS81-US After startup ELS81-US can be re-started as described in the following sections: • Software controlled reset by AT+CFUN command: Starts Normal mode (see Section 3.2.2.1). • Hardware controlled reset by EMERG_RST line: Starts Normal mode (see Section 3.2.2.2). 3.2.2.1 Restart ELS81-US via AT+CFUN Command To reset and restart the ELS81-US module use the command AT+CFUN. See [1] for details. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 60 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 3.2.2.2 Restart ELS81-US Using EMERG_RST The EMERG_RST signal is internally connected to the main module processor. A low level for more than 10ms sets the processor and with it all the other signal pads to their respective reset state. The reset state is described in Section 3.2.3 as well as in the figures showing the startup behavior of an interface. After releasing the EMERG-RST line, i.e., with a change of the signal level from low to high, the module restarts. The other signals continue from their reset state as if the module was switched on by the ON signal. Ignition System started Reset state System started again BATT+ VDDLP ON VCORE V180 EMERG_RST >10ms Figure 34: Emergency restart timing It is recommended to control this EMERG_RST line with an open collector transistor or an open drain field-effect transistor. Caution: Use the EMERG_RST line only when, due to serious problems, the software is not responding for more than 5 seconds. Pulling the EMERG_RST line causes the loss of all information stored in the volatile memory. Therefore, this procedure is intended only for use in case of emergency, e.g. if ELS81-US does not respond, if reset or shutdown via AT command fails. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 61 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 3.2.3 Signal States after Startup Table 10 lists the states each interface signal passes through during reset phase and the first firmware initialization. For further firmware startup initializations the values may differ because of different GPIO line configurations. The reset state is reached with the rising edge of the EMERG_RST signal - either after a normal module startup (see Section 3.2.1.2) or after a reset (see Section 3.2.2.2). After the reset state has been reached the firmware initialization state begins. The firmware initialization is completed as soon as the ASC0 interface lines CTS0, DSR0 and RING0 as well as the ASC1 interface line CTS1 have turned low (see Section 2.1.4 and Section 2.1.5). Now, the module is ready to receive and transmit data. Table 10: Signal states Signal name CCIO CCRST CCCLK CCIN RXD0 TXD0 CTS0 RTS0 GPIO1 GPIO2 GPIO3 GPIO4 GPIO5 GPIO6 GPIO7 GPIO8 GPIO11-GPIO15 GPIO16 GPIO17 GPIO18 GPIO19 GPIO20 GPIO21 GPIO22 GPIO23 GPIO24 I2CCLK I2CDAT Reset state T / 100k PD T / PU T / PD T / PU T / PU T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PU T / PU First start up configuration O/L O/L O/L I / PD O/H O/H I / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD T / PD OD / PU OD / PU Abbreviations used in above Table 10: L = Low level H = High level T = Tristate I = Input O = Output OD = Open Drain PD = Pull down, 200µA at 1.9V PU = Pull up, -240µA at 0V els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 62 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 3.2.4 Turn off ELS81-US To switch the module off the following procedures may be used: • Software controlled shutdown procedure: Software controlled by sending an AT command over the serial application interface. See Section 3.2.4.1. • Hardware controlled shutdown procedure: Hardware controlled by disconnecting the module‘s power supply lines BATT+ (see Section 3.2.1.1). • Automatic shutdown (software controlled): See Section 3.2.5 - Takes effect if ELS81-US board temperature or voltage levels exceed a critical limit. 3.2.4.1 Switch off ELS81-US Using AT Command The best and safest approach to powering down ELS81-US is to issue the appropriate AT command. This procedure lets ELS81-US log off from the network and allows the software to enter into a secure state and safe data before disconnecting the power supply. The mode is referred to as Power Down mode. In this mode, only the RTC stays active. After sending the switch off command AT^SMSO, be sure not to enter any further AT commands until the module was restarted. CAUTION: Be sure not to disconnect the operating voltage VBATT+ before V180 pad has gone low. Otherwise you run the risk of losing data, or in some rare cases even to render the module inoperable. To monitor the V180 line, it is recommended to implement a power indication circuit as described in Section 2.1.13.2. While ELS81-US is in Power Down mode the application interface is switched off and must not be fed from any other voltage source. Therefore, your application must be designed to avoid any current flow into any digital pads of the application interface. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 63 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 AT^SMSO System power down procedure Power down BATT+ VDDLP ON VCORE V180 EMERG_RST Figure 35: Switch off behavior els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 64 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 3.2.5 Automatic Shutdown Automatic shutdown takes effect if the following event occurs: • ELS81-US board is exceeding the critical limits of overtemperature or undertemperature (see Section 3.2.5.1) • Undervoltage or overvoltage is detected (see Section 3.2.5.2 and Section 3.2.5.3) The automatic shutdown procedure is equivalent to the power-down initiated with an AT command, i.e. ELS81-US logs off from the network and the software enters a secure state avoiding loss of data. 3.2.5.1 Thermal Shutdown The board temperature is constantly monitored by an internal NTC resistor located on the PCB. The values detected by the NTC resistor are measured directly on the board and therefore, are not fully identical with the ambient temperature. Each time the board temperature goes out of range or back to normal, ELS81-US instantly displays an alert (if enabled). • URCs indicating the level "1" or "-1" allow the user to take appropriate precautions, such as protecting the module from exposure to extreme conditions. The presentation of the URCs depends on the settings selected with the AT^SCTM write command (for details see [1]): AT^SCTM=1: Presentation of URCs is always enabled. AT^SCTM=0 (default): Presentation of URCs is enabled during the 2 minute guard period after start-up of ELS81-US. After expiry of the 2 minute guard period, the presentation of URCs will be disabled, i.e. no URCs with alert levels "1" or ''-1" will be generated. • URCs indicating the level "2" or "-2" are instantly followed by an orderly shutdown. The presentation of these URCs is always enabled, i.e. they will be output even though the factory setting AT^SCTM=0 was never changed. The maximum temperature ratings are stated in Section 3.5. Refer to Table 11 for the associated URCs. Table 11: Temperature dependent behavior Sending temperature alert (2min after ELS81-US start-up, otherwise only if URC presentation enabled) ^SCTM_B: 1 Board close to overtemperature limit. ^SCTM_B: -1 Board close to undertemperature limit. ^SCTM_B: 0 Board back to non-critical temperature range. Automatic shutdown (URC appears no matter whether or not presentation was enabled) ^SCTM_B: 2 Alert: Board equal or beyond overtemperature limit. ELS81-US switches off. ^SCTM_B: -2 Alert: Board equal or below undertemperature limit. ELS81-US switches off. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 65 of 107 3.2 Power Up/Power Down Scenarios 77 3.2.5.2 Undervoltage Shutdown The undervoltage shutdown threshold is the specified minimum supply voltage VBATT+ given in Table 2. When the average supply voltage measured by ELS81-US approaches the undervoltage shutdown threshold (i.e., 0.05V offset) the module will send the following URC: ^SBC: Undervoltage Warning The undervoltage warning is sent only once - until the next time the module is close to the undervoltage shutdown threshold. If the voltage continues to drop below the specified undervoltage shutdown threshold, the module will send the following URC: ^SBC: Undervoltage Shutdown This alert is sent only once before the module shuts down cleanly without sending any further messages. This type of URC does not need to be activated by the user. It will be output automatically when fault conditions occur. Note: For battery powered applications it is strongly recommended to implement a BATT+ connecting circuit as described in Section 3.2.1.1 in order to not only be able save power, but also to restart the module after an undervoltage shutdown where the battery is deeply discharged. Also note that the undervoltage threshold is calculated for max. 400mV voltage drops during transmit burst. Power supply sources for external applications should be designed to tolerate 400mV voltage drops without crossing the lower limit of 3.0 V. For external applications operating at the limit of the allowed tolerance the default undervoltage threshold may be adapted by subtracting an offset. For details see [1]: AT^SCFG= "MEShutdown/sVsup/threshold". 3.2.5.3 Overvoltage Shutdown The overvoltage shutdown threshold is the specified maximum supply voltage VBATT+ given in Table 2. When the average supply voltage measured by ELS81-US approaches the overvoltage shutdown threshold (i.e., 0.05V offset) the module will send the following URC: ^SBC: Overvoltage Warning The overvoltage warning is sent only once - until the next time the module is close to the overvoltage shutdown threshold. If the voltage continues to rise above the specified overvoltage shutdown threshold, the module will send the following URC: ^SBC: Overvoltage Shutdown This alert is sent only once before the module shuts down cleanly without sending any further messages. This type of URC does not need to be activated by the user. It will be output automatically when fault conditions occur. Keep in mind that several ELS81-US components are directly linked to BATT+ and, therefore, the supply voltage remains applied at major parts of ELS81-US. Especially the power amplifier linked to BATT+RF is very sensitive to high voltage and might even be destroyed. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 66 of 107 3.3 Power Saving 77 3.3 Power Saving ELS81-US can be configured to control power consumption: • Using the AT command AT^SPOW it is possible to specify a so-called power saving mode for the module ( = 2; for details on the command see [1]). The module‘s UART interfaces (ASC0 and ASC1) are then deactivated and will only periodically be activated to be able to listen to network paging messages as described in Section 3.3.1 and Section 3.3.2. See Section 3.3.3 for a description on how to immediately wake up ELS81-US again using RTS0. Please note that the AT^SPOW setting has no effect on the USB interface. As long as the USB connection is active, the module will not change into its SLEEP state to reduce its functionality to a minimum and thus minimizing its current consumption. To enable switching into SLEEP mode, the USB connection must therefore either not be present at all or the USB host must bring its USB interface into Suspend state. Also, VUSB_IN should always be kept enabled for this functionality. See “Universal Serial Bus Specification Revision 2.0”1 for a description of the Suspend state. 3.3.1 Power Saving while Attached to WCDMA Networks The power saving possibilities while attached to a WCDMA network depend on the paging timing cycle of the base station. During normal WCDMA operation, i.e., the module is connected to a WCDMA network, the duration of a power saving period varies. It may be calculated using the following formula: t = 2DRX value * 10 ms (WCDMA frame duration). DRX (Discontinuous Reception) in WCDMA networks is a value between 6 and 9, thus resulting in power saving intervals between 0.64 and 5.12 seconds. The DRX value of the base station is assigned by the WCDMA network operator. In the pauses between listening to paging messages, the module resumes power saving, as shown in Figure 36. Figure 36: Power saving and paging in WCDMA networks The varying pauses explain the different potential for power saving. The longer the pause the less power is consumed. 1. The specification is ready for download on http://www.usb.org/developers/docs/ els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 67 of 107 3.3 Power Saving 77 Generally, power saving depends on the module’s application scenario and may differ from the above mentioned normal operation. The power saving interval may be shorter than 0.64 seconds or longer than 5.12 seconds. 3.3.2 Power Saving while Attached to LTE Networks The power saving possibilities while attached to an LTE network depend on the paging timing cycle of the base station. During normal LTE operation, i.e., the module is connected to an LTE network, the duration of a power saving period varies. It may be calculated using the following formula: t = DRX Cycle Value * 10 ms DRX cycle value in LTE networks is any of the four values: 32, 64, 128 and 256, thus resulting in power saving intervals between 0.32 and 2.56 seconds. The DRX cycle value of the base station is assigned by the LTE network operator. In the pauses between listening to paging messages, the module resumes power saving, as shown in Figure 37. Figure 37: Power saving and paging in LTE networks The varying pauses explain the different potential for power saving. The longer the pause the less power is consumed. Generally, power saving depends on the module’s application scenario and may differ from the above mentioned normal operation. The power saving interval may be shorter than 0.32 seconds or longer than 2.56 seconds. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 68 of 107 3.3 Power Saving 77 3.3.3 Wake-up via RTS0 RTS0 can be used to wake up ELS81-US from SLEEP mode configured with AT^SPOW. Assertion of RTS0 (i.e., toggle from inactive high to active low) serves as wake up event, thus allowing an external application to almost immediately terminate power saving. After RTS0 assertion, the CTS0 line signals module wake up, i.e., readiness of the AT command interface. It is therefore recommended to enable RTS/CTS flow control (default setting). Figure 38 shows the described RTS0 wake up mechanism. RTS0 CTS0 TXD0 RXD0 R T S a s s e r t io n ( f a llin g e d g e ) W a k e u p fro m S L E E P m o d e R TS back R e tu rn to S L E E P m o d e A T com m and R e p ly URC Figure 38: Wake-up via RTS0 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 69 of 107 3.4 Power Supply 77 3.4 Power Supply ELS81-US needs to be connected to a power supply at the SMT application interface - 2 lines BATT+, and GND. There are two separate voltage domains for BATT+: • BATT+BB with a line mainly for the baseband power supply. • BATT+RF with a line for the UMTS/LTE power amplifier supply. Please note that throughout the document BATT+ refers to both voltage domains and power supply lines - BATT+BB and BATT+RF. The power supply of ELS81-US has to be a single voltage source at BATT+BB and BATT+RF. It must be able to provide the peak current during the uplink transmission. All the key functions for supplying power to the device are handled by the power management section of the analog controller. This IC provides the following features: • • • Stabilizes the supply voltages for the baseband using low drop linear voltage regulators and a DC-DC step down switching regulator. Switches the module's power voltages for the power-up and -down procedures. SIM switch to provide SIM power supply. 3.4.1 Power Supply Ratings Table 12 and Table 13 assemble various voltage supply and current consumption ratings of the module. Table 12: Voltage supply ratings BATT+ Description Conditions Min Typ Max Unit Supply voltage Directly measured at Module. Voltage must stay within the min/max values, including voltage drop, ripple, spikes. 3.0 Maximum allowed Normal condition, power control level voltage drop for Pout max during transmit burst Voltage ripple Normal condition, power control level for Pout max @ f <= 250 kHz @ f > 250 kHz els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 4.5 400 mV 120 90 mVpp mVpp 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 70 of 107 3.4 Power Supply 77 Table 13: Current consumption ratings (typical ratings to be confirmed) Description IVDDLP @ 1.8V OFF State supply current OFF State supply IBATT+1 current (i.e., sum of BATT+BB and Average UMTS supply current BATT+RF) Data transfer @ maximum Pout Conditions Typical rating Unit RTC backup @ BATT+ = 0V µA Power Down µA SLEEP2 @ DRX=9 (UART deactivated) SLEEP @ DRX=8 (UART deactivated) SLEEP @ DRX=6 (UART deactivated) USB disconnected mA USB suspended mA USB disconnected mA USB suspended mA USB disconnected mA USB suspended mA IDLE @ DRX=6 USB disconnected (UART active, but no USB active communication) UMTS Data transfer Band II UMTS Data transfer Band IV UMTS Data transfer Band V HSPA Data transfer Band II HSPA Data transfer Band IV HSPA Data transfer Band V els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary mA mA mA mA mA mA mA mA 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 71 of 107 3.4 Power Supply 77 Table 13: Current consumption ratings (typical ratings to be confirmed) Description IBATT+1 Conditions Average LTE sup- SLEEP2 @ “Paging ply current Occasions“ = 256 (i.e., sum of BATT+BB and Data transfer @ BATT+RF) maximum Pout SLEEP @ “Paging Occasions“ = 128 SLEEP @ “Paging Occasions“ = 64 SLEEP @ “Paging Occasions“ = 32 Typical rating Unit USB disconnected mA USB suspended mA USB disconnected mA USB suspended mA USB disconnected mA USB suspended mA USB disconnected mA USB suspended mA IDLE @ DRX=6 USB disconnected (UART active, but no USB active communication) LTE Data transfer Band 2 LTE4 Data transfer Band 4 LTE4 Data transfer Band 5 LTE4 Data transfer Band 12 mA mA mA mA mA mA 1. With an impedance of ZLOAD=50Ω at the antenna connector.Measured at 25°C at 3.8V - except for Power Down ratings that were measured at 3.0V. 2. Measurements start 6 minutes after switching ON the module, Averaging times: SLEEP mode - 3 minutes, transfer modes - 1.5 minutes Communication tester settings: no neighbour cells, no cell reselection etc., RMC (reference measurement channel). Note that SLEEP mode is enabled via AT command AT^SPOW=2, 1000, 3 3. The power save mode is disabled via AT command AT^SCFG=”MEopMode/PwrSave”, “disabled”. 4. Communication tester settings: Channel Bandwidth: 5MHz Number of Resource Blocks: 25 (DL), 1 (UL) Modulation: QPSK els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 72 of 107 3.4 Power Supply 77 3.4.2 Measuring the Supply Voltage (VBATT+) To measure the supply voltage VBATT+ it is possible to define two reference points GND and BATT+. GND should be the module’s shielding, while BATT+ should be a test pad on the external application the module is mounted on. The external BATT+ reference point has to be connected to and positioned close to the SMT application interface’s BATT+ pads 53 (BATT+RF) or 204 (BATT+BB) as shown in Figure 39. Reference point BATT+: External test pad connected to and positioned closely to BATT+ pad 53 or 204. Reference point GND: Module shielding External application Figure 39: Position of reference points BATT+ and GND 3.4.3 Monitoring Power Supply by AT Command To monitor the supply voltage you can also use the AT^SBV command which returns the value related to the reference points BATT+ and GND. The module continuously measures the voltage at intervals depending on the operating mode of the RF interface. The duration of measuring ranges from 0.5 seconds in TALK/DATA mode to 50 seconds when ELS81-US is in IDLE mode or Limited Service (deregistered). The displayed voltage (in mV) is averaged over the last measuring period before the AT^SBV command was executed. If the measured voltage drops below or rises above the voltage shutdown thresholds, the module will send an "^SBC" URC and shut down (for details see Section 3.2.5). els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 73 of 107 3.5 Operating Temperatures 77 3.5 Operating Temperatures Please note that the module’s lifetime, i.e., the MTTF (mean time to failure) may be reduced, if operated outside the extended temperature range. Table 14: Board temperature Parameter Normal operation Min Typ Max Unit -30 +25 +85 °C +90 °C >+90 °C Extended operation -40 Automatic shutdown2 Temperature measured on ELS81-US board <-40 --- 1. Extended operation allows normal mode speech calls or data transmission for limited time until automatic thermal shutdown takes effect. Within the extended temperature range (outside the normal operating temperature range) the specified electrical characteristics may be in- or decreased. 2. Due to temperature measurement uncertainty, a tolerance of ±3°C on the thresholds may occur. See also Section 3.2.5 for information about the NTC for on-board temperature measurement, automatic thermal shutdown and alert messages. Note: Within the specified operating temperature ranges the board temperature may vary to a great extent depending on operating mode, used frequency band, radio output power and current supply voltage. For more information regarding the module’s thermal behavior please refer to [4]. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 74 of 107 3.6 Electrostatic Discharge 77 3.6 Electrostatic Discharge The module is not protected against Electrostatic Discharge (ESD) in general. Consequently, it is subject to ESD handling precautions that typically apply to ESD sensitive components. Proper ESD handling and packaging procedures must be applied throughout the processing, handling and operation of any application that incorporates a ELS81-US module. An example for an enhanced ESD protection for the SIM interface is given in Section 2.1.6.1. ELS81-US has been tested according to group standard ETSI EN 301 489-1 (see Table 22) and test standard EN 61000-4-2. Electrostatic values can be gathered from the following table. Table 15: Electrostatic values Specification/Requirements Contact discharge Air discharge Antenna interfaces ±1kV n.a. Antenna interfaces with ESD protection (see Section 3.6.1) ±4kV ±8kV BATT+ ±4kV ±8kV EN 61000-4-2 JEDEC JESD22-A114D (Human Body Model, Test conditions: 1.5 kΩ, 100 pF) All other interfaces ±1kV n.a. Note: The values may vary with the individual application design. For example, it matters whether or not the application platform is grounded over external devices like a computer or other equipment, such as the Gemalto reference application described in Chapter 5. 3.6.1 ESD Protection for Antenna Interfaces The following Figure 40 shows how to implement an external ESD protection for the RF antenna interfaces (ANT_MAIN and ANT_DRX) with either a T pad or PI pad attenuator circuit (for RF line routing design see also Section 2.2.3). Main/Diversity Antenna T pad attenuator circuit ANT_MAIN/ ANT_DRX (Pad 59/56) 18pF 22nH 18pF PI pad attenuator circuit ANT_MAIN/ ANT_DRX (Pad 59/56) 18nH Main/Diversity Antenna 4.7pF 18nH Figure 40: ESD protection for RF antenna interface Recommended inductor types for the above sample circuits: Size 0402 SMD from Panasonic ELJRF series (22nH and 18nH inductors) or Murata LQW15AN18NJ00 (18nH inductors only). els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 75 of 107 3.7 Blocking against RF on Interface Lines 77 3.7 Blocking against RF on Interface Lines To reduce EMI issues there are serial resistors, or capacitors to GND, implemented on the module for the ignition, emergency restart, and SIM interface lines (cp. Section 2.3). However, all other signal lines have no EMI measures on the module and there are no blocking measures at the module’s interface to an external application. Dependent on the specific application design, it might be useful to implement further EMI measures on some signal lines at the interface between module and application. These measures are described below. There are five possible variants of EMI measures (A-E) that may be implemented between module and external application depending on the signal line (see Figure 41 and Table 16). Pay attention not to exceed the maximum input voltages and prevent voltage overshots if using inductive EMC measures. The maximum value of the serial resistor should be lower than 1kΩ on the signal line. The maximum value of the capacitor should be lower than 50pF on the signal line. Please observe the electrical specification of the module‘s SMT application interface and the external application‘s interface. SMT Application EMI measures A SMT Application EMI measures B GND SMT Application EMI measures C SMT Application EMI measures D GND SMT Application EMI measures E GND Figure 41: EMI circuits Note: In case the application uses an internal RF antenna that is implemented close to the ELS81-US module, Gemalto strongly recommends sufficient EMI measures, e.g. of type B or C, for each digital input or output. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 76 of 107 3.7 Blocking against RF on Interface Lines 77 The following table lists for each signal line at the module‘s SMT application interface the EMI measures that may be implemented. Table 16: EMI measures on the application interface Signal name EMI measures CCIN Remark CCRST CCIO CCCLK The external capacitor should be not higher than 30pF. The value of the capacitor depends on the external application. RXD0 TXD0 CTS0 RTS0 GPIO1/DTR0 GPIO2/DCD0 GPIO3/DSR0/SPI_CLK GPIO4/FST_SHDN GPIO5/LED GPIO6/PWM2 GPIO7/PWM1 GPIO8/COUNTER GPIO11-GPIO15 GPIO16/RXD1/MOSI GPIO17/TXD1/MISO GPIO18/RTS1 GPIO19/CTS1/SPI_CS GPIO20 GPIO21 GPIO22 GPIO23 GPIO24/RING0 I2CDAT I2CCLK V180 VCORE BATT+RF (pad 53) BATT+BB (pad 204) VUSB USB_DP USB_DN The rising signal edge is reduced with an additional capacitor. Measures required if BATT+RF is close to internal RF antenna e.g., 39pF blocking capacitor to ground It is not allowed to use any external ESD or EMI components at this interface signal lines. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 77 of 107 3.8 Reliability Characteristics 77 3.8 Reliability Characteristics The test conditions stated below are an extract of the complete test specifications. Table 17: Summary of reliability test conditions Type of test Conditions Standard Vibration Frequency range: 10-20Hz; acceleration: 5g Frequency range: 20-500Hz; acceleration: 20g Duration: 20h per axis; 3 axes DIN IEC 60068-2-61 Shock half-sinus Acceleration: 500g Shock duration: 1ms 1 shock per axis 6 positions (± x, y and z) DIN IEC 60068-2-27 Dry heat Temperature: +70 ±2°C Test duration: 16h Humidity in the test chamber: < 50% EN 60068-2-2 Bb ETS 300 019-2-7 Temperature change (shock) Low temperature: -40°C ±2°C High temperature: +85°C ±2°C Changeover time: < 30s (dual chamber system) Test duration: 1h Number of repetitions: 100 DIN IEC 60068-2-14 Na Damp heat cyclic High temperature: +55°C ±2°C Low temperature: +25°C ±2°C Humidity: 93% ±3% Number of repetitions: 6 Test duration: 12h + 12h DIN IEC 60068-2-30 Db Temperature: -40 ±2°C Test duration: 16h DIN IEC 60068-2-1 Cold (constant exposure) ETS 300 019-2-7 ETS 300 019-2-5 1. For reliability tests in the frequency range 20-500Hz the Standard’s acceleration reference value was increased to 20g. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 78 of 107 4 Mechanical Dimensions, Mounting and Packaging 92 Mechanical Dimensions, Mounting and Packaging 4.1 Mechanical Dimensions of ELS81-US Figure 42 shows the top and bottom view of ELS81-US and provides an overview of the board's mechanical dimensions. For further details see Figure 43. Product label Top view Bottom view Figure 42: ELS81-US– top and bottom view els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 79 of 107 4.1 Mechanical Dimensions of ELS81-US 92 Figure 43: Dimensions of ELS81-US (all dimensions in mm) els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 80 of 107 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform 92 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform This section describes how to mount ELS81-US onto the PCBs, including land pattern and stencil design, board-level characterization, soldering conditions, durability and mechanical handling. For more information on issues related to SMT module integration see also [3]. Note: To avoid short circuits between signal tracks on an external application's PCB and various markings at the bottom side of the module, it is recommended not to route the signal tracks on the top layer of an external PCB directly under the module, or at least to ensure that signal track routes are sufficiently covered with solder resist. 4.2.1 4.2.1.1 SMT PCB Assembly Land Pattern and Stencil The land pattern and stencil design as shown below is based on Gemalto characterizations for lead-free solder paste on a four-layer test PCB and a respectively 110 µm and 150 µm thick stencil. The land pattern given in Figure 44 reflects the module‘s pad layout, including signal pads and ground pads (for pad assignment see Section 2.1.1). Figure 44: Land pattern (top view) The stencil design illustrated in Figure 45 and Figure 46 is recommended by Gemalto M2M as a result of extensive tests with Gemalto M2M Daisy Chain modules. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 81 of 107 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform 92 The central ground pads are primarily intended for stabilizing purposes, and may show some more voids than the application interface pads at the module's rim. This is acceptable, since they are electrically irrelevant. Figure 45: Recommended design for 110µm thick stencil (top view) Figure 46: Recommended design for 150µm thick stencil (top view) els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 82 of 107 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform 92 4.2.1.2 Board Level Characterization Board level characterization issues should also be taken into account if devising an SMT process. Characterization tests should attempt to optimize the SMT process with regard to board level reliability. This can be done by performing the following physical tests on sample boards: Peel test, bend test, tensile pull test, drop shock test and temperature cycling. Sample surface mount checks are described in [3]. It is recommended to characterize land patterns before an actual PCB production, taking individual processes, materials, equipment, stencil design, and reflow profile into account. For land and stencil pattern design recommendations see also Section 4.2.1.1. Optimizing the solder stencil pattern design and print process is necessary to ensure print uniformity, to decrease solder voids, and to increase board level reliability. Daisy chain modules for SMT characterization are available on request. For details refer to [3]. Generally, solder paste manufacturer recommendations for screen printing process parameters and reflow profile conditions should be followed. Maximum ratings are described in Section 4.2.3. 4.2.2 Moisture Sensitivity Level ELS81-US comprises components that are susceptible to damage induced by absorbed moisture. Gemalto M2M’s ELS81-US module complies with the latest revision of the IPC/JEDEC J-STD020 Standard for moisture sensitive surface mount devices and is classified as MSL 4. For additional moisture sensitivity level (MSL) related information see Section 4.2.4 and Section 4.3.2. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 83 of 107 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform 92 4.2.3 Soldering Conditions and Temperature 4.2.3.1 Reflow Profile tP TP TL tL TSmax Temperature TSmin tS Preheat t to maximum Time Figure 47: Reflow Profile els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 84 of 107 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform 92 Table 18: Reflow temperature ratings1 Profile Feature Pb-Free Assembly Preheat & Soak Temperature Minimum (TSmin) Temperature Maximum (TSmax) Time (tSmin to tSmax) (tS) 150°C 200°C 60-120 seconds Average ramp up rate (TL to TP) 3K/second max. 2 Liquidous temperature (TL) Time at liquidous (tL) 217°C 50-90 seconds Peak package body temperature (TP) 245°C +0/-5°C Time (tP) within 5 °C of the peak package body temperature (TP) 30 seconds max. Average ramp-down rate 3 K/second max. 2 Time 25°C to maximum temperature 8 minutes max. 1. Please note that the reflow profile features and ratings listed above are based on the joint industry standard IPC/JEDEC J-STD-020D.1, and are as such meant as a general guideline. For more information on reflow profiles and their optimization please refer to [3]. 2. Temperatures measured on shielding at each corner. See also [3]. Module Temperature sensors (1-4) 4.2.3.2 Maximum Temperature and Duration The following limits are recommended for the SMT board-level soldering process to attach the module: • A maximum module temperature of 245°C. This specifies the temperature as measured at the module’s top side. • A maximum duration of 30 seconds at this temperature. Please note that while the solder paste manufacturers' recommendations for best temperature and duration for solder reflow should generally be followed, the limits listed above must not be exceeded. ELS81-US is specified for one soldering cycle only. Once ELS81-US is removed from the application, the module will very likely be destroyed and cannot be soldered onto another application. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 85 of 107 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform 92 4.2.4 Durability and Mechanical Handling 4.2.4.1 Storage Conditions ELS81-US modules, as delivered in tape and reel carriers, must be stored in sealed, moisture barrier anti-static bags. The conditions stated below are only valid for modules in their original packed state in weather protected, non-temperature-controlled storage locations. Normal storage time under these conditions is 12 months maximum. Table 19: Storage conditions Type Condition Unit Reference Air temperature: Low High -25 +40 °C IPC/JEDEC J-STD-033A Humidity relative: Low High 10 90 at 40°C Air pressure: 70 106 kPa IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 Movement of surrounding air 1.0 m/s IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1K4 Water: rain, dripping, icing and frosting Not allowed --- --- Radiation: 1120 600 W/m2 ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-2 Bb ETS 300 019-2-1: T1.2, IEC 60068-2-2 Bb Low High Solar Heat Chemically active substances Not recommended IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1C1L Mechanically active substances Not recommended IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1S1 Vibration sinusoidal: Displacement Acceleration Frequency range 1.5 2-9 9-200 Shocks: Shock spectrum Duration Acceleration semi-sinusoidal ms 50 m/s2 IPC/JEDEC J-STD-033A mm m/s2 Hz IEC TR 60271-3-1: 1M2 IEC 60068-2-27 Ea els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 86 of 107 4.2 Mounting ELS81-US onto the Application Platform 92 4.2.4.2 Processing Life ELS81-US must be soldered to an application within 72 hours after opening the moisture barrier bag (MBB) it was stored in. As specified in the IPC/JEDEC J-STD-033 Standard, the manufacturing site processing the modules should have ambient temperatures below 30°C and a relative humidity below 60%. 4.2.4.3 Baking Baking conditions are specified on the moisture sensitivity label attached to each MBB (see Figure 52 for details): • It is not necessary to bake ELS81-US, if the conditions specified in Section 4.2.4.1 and Section 4.2.4.2 were not exceeded. • It is necessary to bake ELS81-US, if any condition specified in Section 4.2.4.1 and Section 4.2.4.2 was exceeded. If baking is necessary, the modules must be put into trays that can be baked to at least 125°C. Devices should not be baked in tape and reel carriers at any temperature. 4.2.4.4 Electrostatic Discharge Electrostatic discharge (ESD) may lead to irreversable damage for the module. It is therefore advisable to develop measures and methods to counter ESD and to use these to control the electrostatic environment at manufacturing sites. Please refer to Section 3.6 for further information on electrostatic discharge. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 87 of 107 4.3 Packaging 92 4.3 Packaging 4.3.1 Tape and Reel The single-feed tape carrier for ELS81-US is illustrated in Figure 48. The figure also shows the proper part orientation. The tape width is 44mm and the ELS81-US modules are placed on the tape with a 32-mm pitch. The reels are 330mm in diameter with a core diameter of 100mm. Each reel contains 500 modules. 4.3.1.1 Orientation Figure 48: Carrier tape Reel direction of the completely equipped tape Direction into SMD machine View direction Pad 1 330mm Pad 1 44mm Figure 49: Reel direction els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 88 of 107 4.3 Packaging 92 4.3.1.2 Barcode Label A barcode label provides detailed information on the tape and its contents. It is attached to the reel. Barcode label Figure 50: Barcode label on tape reel els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 89 of 107 4.3 Packaging 92 4.3.2 Shipping Materials ELS81-US is distributed in tape and reel carriers. The tape and reel carriers used to distribute ELS81-US are packed as described below, including the following required shipping materials: • Moisture barrier bag, including desiccant and humidity indicator card • Transportation box 4.3.2.1 Moisture Barrier Bag The tape reels are stored inside a moisture barrier bag (MBB), together with a humidity indicator card and desiccant pouches - see Figure 51. The bag is ESD protected and delimits moisture transmission. It is vacuum-sealed and should be handled carefully to avoid puncturing or tearing. The bag protects the ELS81-US modules from moisture exposure. It should not be opened until the devices are ready to be soldered onto the application. Figure 51: Moisture barrier bag (MBB) with imprint The label shown in Figure 52 summarizes requirements regarding moisture sensitivity, including shelf life and baking requirements. It is attached to the outside of the moisture barrier bag. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 90 of 107 4.3 Packaging 92 Figure 52: Moisture Sensitivity Label els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 91 of 107 4.3 Packaging 92 MBBs contain one or more desiccant pouches to absorb moisture that may be in the bag. The humidity indicator card described below should be used to determine whether the enclosed components have absorbed an excessive amount of moisture. The desiccant pouches should not be baked or reused once removed from the MBB. The humidity indicator card is a moisture indicator and is included in the MBB to show the approximate relative humidity level within the bag. Sample humidity cards are shown in Figure 53. If the components have been exposed to moisture above the recommended limits, the units will have to be rebaked. Figure 53: Humidity Indicator Card - HIC A baking is required if the humidity indicator inside the bag indicates 10% RH or more. 4.3.2.2 Transportation Box Tape and reel carriers are distributed in a box, marked with a barcode label for identification purposes. A box contains two reels with 500 modules each. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 92 of 107 4.3 Packaging 92 4.3.3 Trays If small module quantities are required, e.g., for test and evaluation purposes, ELS81-US may be distributed in trays (for dimensions see Figure 54). The small quantity trays are an alternative to the single-feed tape carriers normally used. However, the trays are not designed for machine processing. They contain modules to be (hand) soldered onto an external application (for information on hand soldering see [3]). Trays are packed and shipped in the same way as tape carriers, including a moisture barrier bag with desiccant and humidity indicator card as well as a transportation box (see also Section 4.3.2). Figure 54: Tray dimensions els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 93 of 107 5 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 99 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 5.1 Directives and Standards ELS81-US is designed to comply with the directives and standards listed below. It is the responsibility of the application manufacturer to ensure compliance of the final product with all provisions of the applicable directives and standards as well as with the technical specifications provided in the "ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description”.1 Table 20: Directives 2014/53/EU Directive of the European Parliament and of the council of 16 April 2014 on the harmonization of the laws of the Member States relating to the making available on the market of radio equipment and repealing Directive 1999/ 05/EC. The product is labeled with the CE conformity mark. 2002/95/EC (RoHS 1) 2011/65/EC (RoHS 2) Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 January 2003 (and revised on 8 June 2011) on the restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment (RoHS) Table 21: Standards of North American type approval CFR Title 47 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 22 and Part 24 (Telecommunications, PCS); US Equipment Authorization FCC OET Bulletin 65 (Edition 97-01) Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radiofrequency Electromagnetic Fields UL 60 950-1 Product Safety Certification (Safety requirements) NAPRD.03 V5.15 Overview of PCS Type certification review board Mobile Equipment Type Certification and IMEI control PCS Type Certification Review board (PTCRB) RSS132 (Issue2) RSS133 (Issue5) Canadian Standard Table 22: Standards of European type approval 3GPP TS 51.010-1 Digital cellular telecommunications system (Release 9); Mobile Station (MS) conformance specification; GCF-CC V3.61.2 Global Certification Forum - Certification Criteria ETSI EN 301 511 V12.5.1 Global System for Mobile communications (GSM); Mobile Stations (MS) equipment; Harmonized Standard covering the essential requirements of article 3.2 of Directive 2014/53/EU 1. Manufacturers of applications which can be used in the US shall ensure that their applications have a PTCRB approval. For this purpose they can refer to the PTCRB approval of the respective module. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 94 of 107 5.1 Directives and Standards 99 Table 22: Standards of European type approval Draft ETSI EN 301 48901 V2.2.0 Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and services; Part 1: Common technical requirements; Harmonized Standard covering the essential requirements of article 3.1(b) of Directive 2014/53/EU and the essential requirements of article 6 of Directive 2014/30/EU Draft ETSI EN 301 489-52 Electromagnetic Compatibility (EMC) standard for radio equipment and serV1.1.0 vices; Part 52: Specific conditions for Cellular Communication Mobile and portable (UE) radio and ancillary equipment; Harmonized Standard covering the essential requirements of article 3.1(b) of Directive 2014/53/EU ETSI EN 301 908-1 V11.1.1 IMT cellular networks; Harmonized Standard covering the essential requirements of article 3.2 of the Directive 2014/53/EU; Part 1: Introduction and common requirements ETSI EN 301 908-13 V11.1.1 IMT cellular networks; Harmonized Standard covering the essential requirements of article 3.2 of the Directive 2014/53/EU; Part 13: Evolved Universal Terrestrial Radio Access (E-UTRA) User Equipment (UE) EN 60950-1: 2006 +A11:2009+A1:2010+A 12:2011+A2:2013 Safety of information technology equipment Table 23: Requirements of quality IEC 60068 Environmental testing DIN EN 60529 IP codes Table 24: Standards of the Ministry of Information Industry of the People’s Republic of China SJ/T 11363-2006 “Requirements for Concentration Limits for Certain Hazardous Substances in Electronic Information Products” (2006-06). SJ/T 11364-2006 “Marking for Control of Pollution Caused by Electronic Information Products” (2006-06). According to the “Chinese Administration on the Control of Pollution caused by Electronic Information Products” (ACPEIP) the EPUP, i.e., Environmental Protection Use Period, of this product is 20 years as per the symbol shown here, unless otherwise marked. The EPUP is valid only as long as the product is operated within the operating limits described in the Gemalto M2M Hardware Interface Description. Please see Table 25 for an overview of toxic or hazardous substances or elements that might be contained in product parts in concentrations above the limits defined by SJ/T 11363-2006. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 95 of 107 5.1 Directives and Standards 99 Table 25: Toxic or hazardous substances or elements with defined concentration limits els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 96 of 107 5.2 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles 99 5.2 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles Mobile phones, PDAs or other portable transmitters and receivers incorporating a UMTS module must be in accordance with the guidelines for human exposure to radio frequency energy. This requires the Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of portable ELS81-US based applications to be evaluated and approved for compliance with national and/or international regulations. Since the SAR value varies significantly with the individual product design manufacturers are advised to submit their product for approval if designed for portable use. For US-markets the relevant directives are mentioned below. It is the responsibility of the manufacturer of the final product to verify whether or not further standards, recommendations or directives are in force outside these areas. Products intended for sale on US markets ES 59005/ANSI C95.1 Considerations for evaluation of human exposure to Electromagnetic Fields (EMFs) from Mobile Telecommunication Equipment (MTE) in the frequency range 30MHz - 6GHz Please note that SAR requirements are specific only for portable devices and not for mobile devices as defined below: • Portable device: A portable device is defined as a transmitting device designed to be used so that the radiating structure(s) of the device is/are within 20 centimeters of the body of the user. • Mobile device: A mobile device is defined as a transmitting device designed to be used in other than fixed locations and to generally be used in such a way that a separation distance of at least 20 centimeters is normally maintained between the transmitter's radiating structure(s) and the body of the user or nearby persons. In this context, the term ''fixed location'' means that the device is physically secured at one location and is not able to be easily moved to another location. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 97 of 107 5.3 Reference Equipment for Type Approval 99 5.3 Reference Equipment for Type Approval The Gemalto M2M reference setup submitted to type approve ELS81-US (including a special approval adapter for the DSB75) is shown in the following figure1: LTE / GPRS / UMTS Base Station Main Antenna Diversity Antenna USB PC ASC0 ASC1 AH6‐Adapter SIM Card Power Supply SMA SMA DSB75 SMA USB Eval_Board ELS61 Eval_Board ELS61 Figure 55: Reference equipment for Type Approval 1. For RF performance tests a mini-SMT/U.FL to SMA adapter with attached 6dB coaxial attenuator is chosen to connect the evaluation module directly to the UMTS test equipment instead of employing the SMA antenna connectors on the ELS81-US-DSB75 adapter as shown in Figure 55. The following products are recommended: Hirose SMA-Jack/U.FL-Plug conversion adapter HRMJ-U.FLP(40) (for details see http://www.hirose-connectors.com/ or http://www.farnell.com/ Aeroflex Weinschel Fixed Coaxial Attenuator Model 3T/4T (for details see http://www.aeroflex.com/ams/weinschel/pdfiles/wmod3&4T.pdf) els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 98 of 107 5.4 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations 99 5.4 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations The Equipment Authorization Certification for the Gemalto M2M reference application described in Section 5.3 will be registered under the following identifiers: FCC Identifier: QIPELS81-US Industry Canada Certification Number: 7830A-ELS81US Granted to Gemalto M2M GmbH Manufacturers of mobile or fixed devices incorporating ELS81-US modules are authorized to use the FCC Grants and Industry Canada Certificates of the ELS81-US modules for their own final products according to the conditions referenced in these documents. In this case, an FCC/ IC label of the module shall be visible from the outside, or the host device shall bear a second label stating "Contains FCC ID: QIPELS81-US", and accordingly “Contains IC: 7830A-ELS81US“. The integration is limited to fixed or mobile categorized host devices, where a separation distance between the antenna and any person of min. 20cm can be assured during normal operating conditions. For mobile and fixed operation configurations the antenna gain, including cable loss, must not exceed the limit 2.15 dBi for 700MHz, 850MHz, 1700MHz and 1900MHz. IMPORTANT: Manufacturers of portable applications incorporating ELS81-US modules are required to have their final product certified and apply for their own FCC Grant and Industry Canada Certificate related to the specific portable mobile. This is mandatory to meet the SAR requirements for portable mobiles (see Section 5.2 for detail). Changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules and with Industry Canada license-exempt RSS standard(s). These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures: • Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. • Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. • Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver is connected. • Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 99 of 107 5.4 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations 99 If Canadian approval is requested for devices incorporating ELS81-US modules the below notes will have to be provided in the English and French language in the final user documentation. Manufacturers/OEM Integrators must ensure that the final user documentation does not contain any information on how to install or remove the module from the final product. Notes (IC): (EN) This Class B digital apparatus complies with Canadian ICES-003 and RSS-210. Operation is subject to the following two conditions: (1) this device may not cause interference, and (2) this device must accept any interference, including interference that may cause undesired operation of the device. (FR) Cet appareil numérique de classe B est conforme aux normes canadiennes ICES-003 et RSS-210. Son fonctionnement est soumis aux deux conditions suivantes: (1) cet appareil ne doit pas causer d'interférence et (2) cet appareil doit accepter toute interférence, notamment les interférences qui peuvent affecter son fonctionnement. (EN) Radio frequency (RF) Exposure Information The radiated output power of the Wireless Device is below the Industry Canada (IC) radio frequency exposure limits. The Wireless Device should be used in such a manner such that the potential for human contact during normal operation is minimized. This device has also been evaluated and shown compliant with the IC RF Exposure limits under mobile exposure conditions. (antennas at least 20cm from a person‘s body). (FR) Informations concernant l'exposltion aux fréquences radio (RF) La puissance de sortie émise par l'appareil de sans fiI est inférieure à la limite d'exposition aux fréquences radio d‘Industry Canada (IC). Utilisez l'appareil de sans fil de façon à minimiser les contacts humains lors du fonctionnement normal. Ce périphérique a également été évalué et démontré conforme aux limites d'exposition aux RF d'IC dans des conditions d'exposition à des appareils mobiles (les antennes se situent à moins de 20cm du corps d'une personne). els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 100 of 107 6 Document Information 104 Document Information 6.1 Revision History New document: "Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description" Version 01.004 Chapter What is new -- Initial document setup. 6.2 [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] Related Documents ELS81-US AT Command Set ELS81-US Release Note Application Note 48: SMT Module Integration Application Note 40: Thermal Solutions Universal Serial Bus Specification Revision 2.0, April 27, 2000 6.3 Terms and Abbreviations Abbreviation Description ADC Analog-to-digital converter AGC Automatic Gain Control ANSI American National Standards Institute ARFCN Absolute Radio Frequency Channel Number ARP Antenna Reference Point ASC0/ASC1 Asynchronous Controller. Abbreviations used for first and second serial interface of ELS81-US Thermistor Constant BER Bit Error Rate BIP Bearer Independent Protocol BTS Base Transceiver Station CB or CBM Cell Broadcast Message CE Conformité Européene (European Conformity) CHAP Challenge Handshake Authentication Protocol CPU Central Processing Unit CS Coding Scheme CSD Circuit Switched Data els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 101 of 107 6.3 Terms and Abbreviations 104 Abbreviation Description CTS Clear to Send DAC Digital-to-Analog Converter dBm0 Digital level, 3.14dBm0 corresponds to full scale, see ITU G.711, A-law DCE Data Communication Equipment (typically modems, e.g. Gemalto M2M module) DRX Discontinuous Reception DSB Development Support Box DSP Digital Signal Processor DSR Data Set Ready DTE Data Terminal Equipment (typically computer, terminal, printer or, for example, UMTS application) DTR Data Terminal Ready DTX Discontinuous Transmission EFR Enhanced Full Rate EIRP Equivalent Isotropic Radiated Power EMC Electromagnetic Compatibility ERP Effective Radiated Power ESD Electrostatic Discharge ETS European Telecommunication Standard ETSI European Telecommunication Standards Institute FCC Federal Communications Commission (U.S.) FDMA Frequency Division Multiple Access FR Full Rate GMSK Gaussian Minimum Shift Keying GPIO General Purpose Input/Output HiZ High Impedance HR Half Rate I/O Input/Output IC Integrated Circuit IMEI International Mobile Equipment Identity ISO International Standards Organization ITU International Telecommunications Union kbps kbits per second LED Light Emitting Diode Li-Ion/Li+ Lithium-Ion Li battery Rechargeable Lithium Ion or Lithium Polymer battery LPM Link Power Management Mbps Mbits per second MMI Man Machine Interface els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 102 of 107 6.3 Terms and Abbreviations 104 Abbreviation Description MO Mobile Originated MS Mobile Station (UMTS module), also referred to as TE MSISDN Mobile Station International ISDN number MT Mobile Terminated NTC Negative Temperature Coefficient OEM Original Equipment Manufacturer PA Power Amplifier PAP Password Authentication Protocol PBCCH Packet Switched Broadcast Control Channel PCB Printed Circuit Board PCL Power Control Level PDU Protocol Data Unit PLL Phase Locked Loop PPP Point-to-point protocol PSK Phase Shift Keying PSU Power Supply Unit PWM Pulse Width Modulation R&TTE Radio and Telecommunication Terminal Equipment RAM Random Access Memory RF Radio Frequency RLS Radio Link Stability RMS Root Mean Square (value) RoHS Restriction of the use of certain hazardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment. ROM Read-only Memory RTC Real Time Clock RTS Request to Send Rx Receive Direction SAR Specific Absorption Rate SAW Surface Accoustic Wave SELV Safety Extra Low Voltage SIM Subscriber Identification Module SMD Surface Mount Device SMS Short Message Service SMT Surface Mount Technology SPI Serial Peripheral Interface SRAM Static Random Access Memory TA Terminal adapter (e.g. UMTS module) els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 103 of 107 6.3 Terms and Abbreviations 104 Abbreviation Description TDMA Time Division Multiple Access TE Terminal Equipment, also referred to as DTE TLS Transport Layer Security Tx Transmit Direction UART Universal asynchronous receiver-transmitter URC Unsolicited Result Code USSD Unstructured Supplementary Service Data VSWR Voltage Standing Wave Ratio els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 104 of 107 6.4 Safety Precaution Notes 104 6.4 Safety Precaution Notes The following safety precautions must be observed during all phases of the operation, usage, service or repair of any cellular terminal or mobile incorporating ELS81-US. Manufacturers of the cellular terminal are advised to convey the following safety information to users and operating personnel and to incorporate these guidelines into all manuals supplied with the product. Failure to comply with these precautions violates safety standards of design, manufacture and intended use of the product. Gemalto M2M assumes no liability for customer’s failure to comply with these precautions. When in a hospital or other health care facility, observe the restrictions on the use of mobiles. Switch the cellular terminal or mobile off, if instructed to do so by the guidelines posted in sensitive areas. Medical equipment may be sensitive to RF energy. The operation of cardiac pacemakers, other implanted medical equipment and hearing aids can be affected by interference from cellular terminals or mobiles placed close to the device. If in doubt about potential danger, contact the physician or the manufacturer of the device to verify that the equipment is properly shielded. Pacemaker patients are advised to keep their hand-held mobile away from the pacemaker, while it is on. Switch off the cellular terminal or mobile before boarding an aircraft. Make sure it cannot be switched on inadvertently. The operation of wireless appliances in an aircraft is forbidden to prevent interference with communications systems. Failure to observe these instructions may lead to the suspension or denial of cellular services to the offender, legal action, or both. Do not operate the cellular terminal or mobile in the presence of flammable gases or fumes. Switch off the cellular terminal when you are near petrol stations, fuel depots, chemical plants or where blasting operations are in progress. Operation of any electrical equipment in potentially explosive atmospheres can constitute a safety hazard. Your cellular terminal or mobile receives and transmits radio frequency energy while switched on. Remember that interference can occur if it is used close to TV sets, radios, computers or inadequately shielded equipment. Follow any special regulations and always switch off the cellular terminal or mobile wherever forbidden, or when you suspect that it may cause interference or danger. Road safety comes first! Do not use a hand-held cellular terminal or mobile when driving a vehicle, unless it is securely mounted in a holder for speakerphone operation. Before making a call with a hand-held terminal or mobile, park the vehicle. Speakerphones must be installed by qualified personnel. Faulty installation or operation can constitute a safety hazard. IMPORTANT! Cellular terminals or mobiles operate using radio signals and cellular networks. Because of this, connection cannot be guaranteed at all times under all conditions. Therefore, you should never rely solely upon any wireless device for essential communications, for example emergency calls. Remember, in order to make or receive calls, the cellular terminal or mobile must be switched on and in a service area with adequate cellular signal strength. Some networks do not allow for emergency calls if certain network services or phone features are in use (e.g. lock functions, fixed dialing etc.). You may need to deactivate those features before you can make an emergency call. Some networks require that a valid SIM card be properly inserted in the cellular terminal or mobile. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 105 of 107 7 Appendix 106 Appendix 7.1 List of Parts and Accessories Table 26: List of parts and accessories Description Supplier Ordering information ELS81-US Gemalto M2M Standard module Gemalto M2M IMEI: Packaging unit (ordering) number: L30960-N5450-A100 Module label number: L30960-N5450-A100-11 ELS81-US Evaluation Mod- Gemalto M2M Ordering number: TBD ule DSB75 Evaluation Kit Gemalto M2M Ordering number: L36880-N8811-A100 DSB Mini Compact Evaluation Board Gemalto M2M Ordering number: L30960-N0030-A100 Starter Kit B80 Gemalto M2M Ordering Number L30960-N0040-A100 Multi-Adapter R1 for mount- Gemalto M2M Ordering number: L30960-N0010-A100 ing ELS81-US evaluation modules onto DSB75 Approval adapter for mount- Gemalto M2M Ordering number: L30960-N2301-A100 ing ELS81-US evaluation modules onto DSB75 SIM card holder incl. push button ejector and slide-in tray Molex Ordering numbers: 91228 91236 Sales contacts are listed in Table 27. 1. Note: At the discretion of Gemalto M2M, module label information can either be laser engraved on the module’s shielding or be printed on a label adhered to the module’s shielding. els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 Cinterion® ELS81-US Hardware Interface Description Page 106 of 107 7.1 List of Parts and Accessories 106 Table 27: Molex sales contacts (subject to change) Molex For further information please click: http://www.molex.com Molex Deutschland GmbH Otto-Hahn-Str. 1b 69190 Walldorf Germany Phone: +49-6227-3091-0 Fax: +49-6227-3091-8100 Email: mxgermany@molex.com American Headquarters Lisle, Illinois 60532 U.S.A. Phone: +1-800-78MOLEX Fax: +1-630-969-1352 Molex China Distributors Beijing, Room 1311, Tower B, COFCO Plaza No. 8, Jian Guo Men Nei Street, 100005 Beijing P.R. China Phone: +86-10-6526-9628 Fax: +86-10-6526-9730 Molex Singapore Pte. Ltd. 110, International Road Jurong Town, Singapore 629174 Molex Japan Co. Ltd. 1-5-4 Fukami-Higashi, Yamato-City, Kanagawa, 242-8585 Japan Phone: +65-6-268-6868 Fax: +65-6-265-6044 Phone: +81-46-265-2325 Fax: +81-46-265-2365 els81-us_hid_v01.004 Confidential / Preliminary 2017-09-27 107 About Gemalto Since 1996, Gemalto has been pioneering groundbreaking M2M and IoT products that keep our customers on the leading edge of innovation. We work closely with global mobile network operators to ensure that Cinterion® modules evolve in sync with wireless networks, providing a seamless migration path to protect your IoT technology investment. Cinterion products integrate seamlessly with Gemalto identity modules, security solutions and licensing and monetization solutions, to streamline development timelines and provide cost efficiencies that improve the bottom line. For more information please visit www.gemalto.com/m2m, www.facebook.com/gemalto, or Follow@gemaltoIoT on Twitter. Gemalto M2M GmbH Werinherstrasse 81 81541 Munich Germany GEMALTO.COM/M2M © Gemalto 2017. All rights reserved. Gemalto, the Gemalto logo, are trademarks and service marks of Gemalto and are registered in certain countries. As an experienced software provider, we help customers manage connectivity, security and quality of service for the long lifecycle of IoT solutions.
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