![Texas Instruments TMS320TCI6482 Скачать руководство пользователя страница 21](http://html.mh-extra.com/html/texas-instruments/tms320tci6482/tms320tci6482_design-manual_1094767021.webp)
www.ti.com
7.7
Discrete and Module Power Supply Solutions
7.8
Power Saving Options
7.8.1
Clock Gating unused Unused Peripherals
7.8.2
Power Down Peripherals
7.8.3
General Power Saving Techniques
8
I/O Buffers
I/O Buffers
Table 9. Capacitor Recommendations (continued)
DVDD18
8 * 560pF
661.2uF
1.8V I/O
12 * 100nF
PLLs
2 * 330uF
DLLs
DVDD15
4 * 560pF
20.4uF
RGMII
4 * 100nF
2 * 10uF
DVDD12
4 * 560pF
30.8uF
SRIO
8 * 100nF
3 * 10uF
TI can supply recommended power supply designs for discrete or module based solutions upon request.
The TCI6482 can keep (or put) inactive/unused peripherals into a low power state. This capability is
discussed in the TCI6482 data manual. All peripherals that are not enabled are clock gated in order to
conserve power. After power-up, only those peripherals that are needed should be enabled.
Peripherals can also be disabled and put back into a lower power state. However, this should only be
done if no accesses to the peripheral will occur. Once a peripheral has been disabled it cannot be
re-enabled until after a reset.
Some peripherals that are disabled via the reset configuration can have their dedicated power planes be
connected to VSS. This achieves the lowest possible power dissipation. These peripherals are:
•
SRIO: All SRIO power planes (DVDDRM, DVDDR, DVDD12, AVDDA, AVDDT) connect to VSS
•
RGMII: DVDD15, VREFHSTL, RSV07, RSV08, RSV13, RSV14 connected to VSS
•
DDR2: VREFSSTL, RSV11, RSV12 connect to VSS
Connecting these interfaces to VSS will prohibit the use of boundary scan to test the signals on these
interfaces.
For details on how to handle disabled peripherals refer to the peripheral specific chapters at the end of
this document.
The following are some additional methods for reducing power:
•
Lower frequency operation means lower power. The core and peripherals should be operated at the
lowest frequency that meets the user’s requirements.
•
SRIO link power does not scale linearly with data rate. So a single 3.125Gbps link consumes less
power than three 1.25Gbps links. Generally, running fewer high speed links is more power efficient
than multiple slower links.
•
RGMII operation at 1.5V will have lower power consumption than at 1.8V.
SPRAAC7B – April 2006
TMS320TCI6482 Design Guide and Migration from TMS320TCI100
21
Submit Documentation Feedback