Power Domain and Module Topology
166
SPRUH82C – April 2013 – Revised September 2016
Copyright © 2013–2016, Texas Instruments Incorporated
Power and Sleep Controller (PSC)
Table 8-2. PSC1 Default Module Configuration (continued)
LPSC
Number
Module Name
Power Domain
Default Module
State
Auto Sleep/
Wake Only
24
SCR F0
AlwaysON (PD0)
Enable
Yes
25
SCR F1
AlwaysON (PD0)
Enable
Yes
26
SCR F2
AlwaysON (PD0)
Enable
Yes
27
SCR F6
AlwaysON (PD0)
Enable
Yes
28
SCR F7
AlwaysON (PD0)
Enable
Yes
29
SCR F8
AlwaysON (PD0)
Enable
Yes
30
BR F7
AlwaysON (PD0)
Enable
Yes
31
On-chip RAM
PD_SHRAM
Enable
—
8.2.1 Power Domain States
A power domain can only be in one of the two states: ON or OFF, defined as follows:
•
ON: power to the domain is on
•
OFF: power to the domain is off
In this device, for both PSC0 and PSC1, the Always ON domain (or PD0 power domain), is always in the
ON state when the chip is powered-on. This domain is not programmable to OFF state (See details on
PDCTL register).
Additionally, for both PSC0 and PSC1, the PD1 power domains, the internal/pseudo power domain can
either be in the ON state or OFF state. Furthermore, for these power domains the transition from ON to
OFF state is further qualified by the PSC0/1.PDCTL1.PDMODE settings. The PDCTL1.PDMODE settings
determines the various sleep mode for the on-chip RAM associated with module in the PD1 domain.
•
On PSC1 PD1/PD_SHRAM Domain: Controls the sleep state for the 128KB On-chip RAM
NOTE:
Currently programming the PD1 power domain state to OFF is not supported. You should
leave both the PDCTL1.NEXT and PDCTL1.PDMODE values at default/power on reset
values.
Both PD0 and PD1 power domains in PSC0 and PSC1 are powered by the CVDD pins of
the device. There is no capability to individually remove voltage/power from the on-chip RAM
power domains.