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©2018 Integrated Device Technology, Inc.
August 30, 2018
VersaClock
®
6E Family Register Descriptions and Programming Guide
OTP Control Register
The I
2
C slave address can be changed from the default 0xD4 to 0xD0 by programming the I2C_ADDR bit D0. Note that the I
2
C address
change occurs on the I
2
C ACK of the write transaction. An I
2
C write sequence to register 0x00 that changes the value of I2C_ADDR bit
D0 should be followed by an I
2
C STOP condition. Further I
2
C transactions to the part use the new address.
In the OTP Control Register (
) bits can be set for the OTP Burn and OTP Trim status, VC6E or MEMS use and I
2
C address setting.
Four bits are left unused.
* The trim values are commonly written with default values and the OTP_TRIM bit is left at “1”.
Factory Reserved Registers for Internal Use Only
* Configuration Lock bits can be used to prevent future OTP burning that can modify OTP content.
Table 7. RAM0 0x00 – OTP Control Register
Bits
Default Value
Name
Function
D7
1
OTP_burned
It's an active low state that indicates all the OTP burn process is done.
D7 = 1 tells the chip that OTP is not burned and it will run the default mode.
D7 = 0 tells the chip that OTP is burned and it will transfer OTP content to the registers for
operating settings.
D6
1
OTP_TRIM
An active low state that indicates OTP trim part is burned.*
D5
1
Unused
Unused.
D4
1
Unused
Unused.
D3
1
Unused
Unused.
D2
1
Unused
Unused.
D1
1
Unused
Unused.
D0
1
Device I2C_ADDR
If I2C_ADDR = 0 then D0 and if I2C_ADDR = 1 then D4.
Table 8. RAM0 – 0x01: Factory Reserved Bits - Device ID for Chip Identification
Bits
Default Value
Name
Function
D7
1
CFG0_LOCK*
Set to “0” to disable burning OTP of Configuration 0.
D6
1
CFG1_LOCK*
Set to “0” to disable burning OTP of Configuration 1.
D5
1
CFG2_LOCK*
Set to “0” to disable burning OTP of Configuration 2.
D4
1
CFG3_LOCK*
Set to “0” to disable burning OTP of Configuration 3.
D3
1
Unused
Unused.
D2
1
Unused
Unused.
D1
1
Reserved
Factory reserved, leave at “1”.
D0
1
Reserved
Factory reserved, leave at “1”.