EVAL-ADXL375Z-S [ADI]

3-Axis, 200 g Digital Accelerometer; 3轴200克数字加速度计
EVAL-ADXL375Z-S
型号: EVAL-ADXL375Z-S
厂家: ADI    ADI
描述:

3-Axis, 200 g Digital Accelerometer
3轴200克数字加速度计

文件: 总32页 (文件大小:534K)
中文:  中文翻译
下载:  下载PDF数据表文档文件
3-Axis, 200 g  
Digital Accelerometer  
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
FEATURES  
GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Low power: as low as 35 µA in measurement mode and  
0.1 µA in standby mode at VS = 2.5 V  
Power consumption scales automatically with bandwidth  
Embedded, 32-level FIFO buffer minimizes processor load  
Bandwidth of up to 1 kHz  
The ADXL375 is a small, thin, 3-axis accelerometer that provides  
low power consumption and high resolution measurement up  
to 200 g. The digital output data is formatted as 16-bit, twos  
complement data and is accessible through a SPI (3- or 4-wire)  
or I2C digital interface.  
Bandwidth selectable via serial command  
Shock event detection  
Activity/inactivity monitoring  
Supply voltage range: 2.0 V to 3.6 V  
I/O voltage range: 1.7 V to VS  
SPI (3- or 4-wire) and I2C digital interfaces  
Wide temperature range: −40°C to +85°C  
10,000 g shock survival  
An integrated memory management system with a 32-level first in,  
first out (FIFO) buffer can be used to store data to minimize host  
processor activity and lower overall system power consumption.  
Low power modes enable intelligent motion-based power  
management with threshold sensing and active acceleration  
measurement at extremely low power dissipation.  
The ADXL375 is supplied in a small, thin, 3 mm × 5 mm ×  
1 mm, 14-lead LGA.  
Pb free/RoHS compliant  
Small and thin: 3 mm × 5 mm × 1 mm LGA package  
APPLICATIONS  
Concussion and head trauma detection  
High force event detection  
FUNCTIONAL BLOCK DIAGRAM  
V
V
DD I/O  
S
ADXL375  
POWER  
MANAGEMENT  
INT1  
INT2  
CONTROL  
AND  
INTERRUPT  
LOGIC  
SENSE  
ELECTRONICS  
ADC  
DIGITAL  
FILTER  
3-AXIS  
SENSOR  
SDA/SDI/SDIO  
32-LEVEL  
FIFO  
SERIAL I/O  
SDO/ALT  
ADDRESS  
SCL/SCLK  
GND  
CS  
Figure 1.  
Rev. 0  
Document Feedback  
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rightsof third parties that may result fromits use. Specifications subject to change without notice. No  
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Trademarks andregisteredtrademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
One Technology Way, P.O. Box 9106, Norwood, MA 02062-9106, U.S.A.  
Tel: 781.329.4700  
Technical Support  
©2013 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved.  
www.analog.com  
 
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
TABLE OF CONTENTS  
Features .............................................................................................. 1  
Serial Communications ................................................................. 15  
SPI Mode ..................................................................................... 15  
I2C Mode...................................................................................... 18  
Register Map ................................................................................... 20  
Register Descriptions................................................................. 21  
Applications Information .............................................................. 26  
Power Supply Decoupling ......................................................... 26  
Mechanical Considerations for Mounting.............................. 26  
Shock Detection ......................................................................... 26  
Threshold Detection and Bandwidth ...................................... 27  
Link Mode................................................................................... 27  
Sleep Mode vs. Low Power Mode............................................. 28  
Offset Calibration....................................................................... 28  
Applications....................................................................................... 1  
General Description ......................................................................... 1  
Functional Block Diagram .............................................................. 1  
Revision History ............................................................................... 2  
Specifications..................................................................................... 3  
Absolute Maximum Ratings............................................................ 4  
Thermal Resistance ...................................................................... 4  
ESD Caution.................................................................................. 4  
Soldering Profile........................................................................... 5  
Pin Configuration and Function Descriptions............................. 6  
Typical Performance Characteristics ............................................. 7  
Theory of Operation ...................................................................... 10  
Power Sequencing ...................................................................... 10  
Current Consumption and Output Data Rate........................ 10  
Power Saving Modes .................................................................. 11  
FIFO Buffer ................................................................................. 11  
Self-Test........................................................................................ 12  
Interrupts ......................................................................................... 13  
Enabling and Disabling Interrupts........................................... 13  
Clearing Interrupts..................................................................... 13  
Bits in the Interrupt Registers................................................... 13  
Data Formatting at Output Data Rates of 3200 Hz  
and 1600 Hz ................................................................................ 28  
Using Self-Test ............................................................................ 29  
Axes of Acceleration Sensitivity ............................................... 30  
Layout and Design Recommendations ................................... 31  
Package Information.................................................................. 31  
Outline Dimensions....................................................................... 32  
Ordering Guide .......................................................................... 32  
REVISION HISTORY  
8/13—Revision 0: Initial Version  
Rev. 0 | Page 2 of 32  
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
SPECIFICATIONS  
TA = 25°C, VS = 2.5 V, VDD I/O = 2.5 V, acceleration = 0 g, CS = 10 µF tantalum, CI/O = 0.1 µF, output data rate (ODR) = 800 Hz, unless  
otherwise noted.  
Table 1.  
Parameter  
SENSOR INPUT  
Measurement Range2  
Test Conditions/Comments  
Min  
180  
Typ 1  
Max  
Unit  
Each axis  
200  
0.25  
2.5  
g
%
%
Nonlinearity  
Percentage of full scale  
Cross-Axis Sensitivity3  
SENSITIVITY  
Each axis  
ODR ≤ 800 Hz  
ODR ≤ 800 Hz  
2, 4  
Sensitivity at XOUT, YOUT, ZOUT  
Scale Factor at XOUT, YOUT, ZOUT  
18.4  
44  
20.5  
49  
22.6  
54  
LSB/g  
mg/LSB  
%/°C  
2, 4  
Sensitivity Change Due to Temperature  
0 g OFFSET  
0.02  
Each axis  
0 g Output for XOUT, YOUT, ZOUT  
0 g Offset vs. Temperature  
NOISE  
OUTPUT DATA RATE AND BANDWIDTH5  
Output Data Rate (ODR)4, 6  
SELF-TEST7  
−6000  
0.1  
400  
10  
+6000  
3200  
mg  
mg/°C  
mg/√Hz  
X-, y-, and z-axes  
User selectable  
5
Hz  
Output Change in Z-Axis  
POWER SUPPLY  
6.4  
g
Operating Voltage Range (VS)  
Interface Voltage Range (VDD I/O  
Supply Current  
2.0  
1.7  
2.5  
1.8  
3.6  
VS  
V
V
)
Measurement Mode  
ODR ≥ 100 Hz  
ODR ≤ 3 Hz  
145  
35  
0.1  
1.4  
µA  
µA  
µA  
ms  
Standby Mode  
Turn-On and Wake-Up Time8  
TEMPERATURE  
ODR = 3200 Hz  
Operating Temperature Range  
WEIGHT  
−40  
+85  
°C  
Device Weight  
30  
mg  
1 Typical specifications are for at least 68% of the population of parts and are based on the worst case of mean 1 σ distribution, except for sensitivity, which represents  
the target value.  
2 Minimum and maximum specifications represent the worst case of mean ± 3 σ distribution and are not guaranteed in production.  
3 Cross-axis sensitivity is defined as coupling between any two axes.  
4 The output format for the 1600 Hz and 3200 Hz output data rates is different from the output format for the other output data rates. For more information, see the  
Data Formatting at Output Data Rates of 3200 Hz and 1600 Hz section.  
5 Bandwidth is the −3 dB frequency and is half the output data rate: bandwidth = ODR/2.  
6 Output data rates < 6.25 Hz exhibit additional offset shift with increased temperature.  
7 Self-test change is defined as the output (g) when the SELF_TEST bit = 1 (DATA_FORMAT register, Address 0x31) minus the output (g) when the SELF_TEST bit = 0.  
Due to device filtering, the output reaches its final value after 4 × τ when enabling or disabling self-test, where τ = 1/(data rate). For the self-test to operate correctly,  
the part must be in normal power operation (LOW_POWER bit = 0 in the BW_RATE register, Address 0x2C).  
8 Turn-on and wake-up times are determined by the user-defined bandwidth. At a 100 Hz data rate, the turn-on and wake-up times are each approximately 11.1 ms. For  
other data rates, the turn-on and wake-up times are each approximately τ + 1.1 ms, where τ = 1/(data rate).  
Rev. 0 | Page 3 of 32  
 
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
ABSOLUTE MAXIMUM RATINGS  
THERMAL RESISTANCE  
Table 2.  
θJA is specified for the worst-case conditions, that is, a device  
soldered in a circuit board for surface-mount packages.  
Parameter  
Acceleration, Any Axis  
Unpowered  
Powered  
VS  
VDD I/O  
Rating  
10,000 g  
10,000 g  
−0.3 V to +3.9 V  
−0.3 V to +3.9 V  
Table 3. Package Characteristics  
Package Type  
θJA  
θJC  
Unit  
14-Terminal LGA  
150  
85  
°C/W  
Digital Pins  
−0.3 V to VDD I/O + 0.3 V or 3.9 V,  
whichever is less  
ESD CAUTION  
Output Short-Circuit Duration  
(Any Pin to Ground)  
Indefinite  
Temperature Range  
Powered  
Storage  
−40°C to +105°C  
−40°C to +105°C  
Stresses above those listed under Absolute Maximum Ratings  
may cause permanent damage to the device. This is a stress  
rating only; functional operation of the device at these or any  
other conditions above those indicated in the operational  
section of this specification is not implied. Exposure to absolute  
maximum rating conditions for extended periods may affect  
device reliability.  
Rev. 0 | Page 4 of 32  
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
SOLDERING PROFILE  
Figure 2 and Table 4 provide information about the recommended soldering profile.  
CRITICAL ZONE  
TO T  
tP  
T
L
P
T
P
RAMP-UP  
T
L
tL  
T
SMAX  
T
SMIN  
tS  
RAMP-DOWN  
PREHEAT  
t
25°C TO PEAK  
TIME  
Figure 2. Recommended Soldering Profile  
Table 4. Recommended Soldering Profile Limits1, 2  
Profile Feature  
Sn63/Pb37  
Pb-Free  
Average Ramp Rate (TL to TP)  
Preheat  
3°C/sec maximum  
3°C/sec maximum  
Minimum Temperature (TSMIN  
)
100°C  
150°C  
Maximum Temperature (TSMAX  
Time from TSMIN to TSMAX (tS)  
Ramp-Up Rate (TSMAX to TL)  
Liquidous Temperature (TL)  
Time Maintained Above TL (tL)  
Peak Temperature (TP)  
Time Within 5°C of Actual TP (tP)  
Ramp-Down Rate  
Time 25°C (t25°C) to Peak Temperature  
)
150°C  
200°C  
60 sec to 120 sec  
3°C/sec maximum  
183°C  
60 sec to 150 sec  
240°C +0°C/−5°C  
10 sec to 30 sec  
6°C/sec maximum  
6 minutes maximum  
60 sec to 180 sec  
3°C/sec maximum  
217°C  
60 sec to 150 sec  
260°C +0°C/−5°C  
20 sec to 40 sec  
6°C/sec maximum  
8 minutes maximum  
1 Based on JEDEC Standard J-STD-020D.1.  
2 For best results, the soldering profile should be in accordance with the recommendations of the manufacturer of the solder paste used.  
Rev. 0 | Page 5 of 32  
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
PIN CONFIGURATION AND FUNCTION DESCRIPTIONS  
ADXL375  
TOP VIEW  
(Not to Scale)  
SCL/SCLK  
1
2
3
4
5
6
13  
12  
11  
10  
9
V
SDA/SDI/SDIO  
SDO/ALT ADDRESS  
RESERVED  
NC  
14  
DD I/O  
GND  
RESERVED  
GND  
+X  
+Y  
+Z  
INT2  
GND  
7
8
V
INT1  
S
CS  
NOTES  
1. NC = NOT INTERNALLY CONNECTED.  
Figure 3. Pin Configuration  
Table 5. Pin Function Descriptions  
Pin No.  
Mnemonic  
Description  
1
VDD I/O  
Digital Interface Supply Voltage.  
2
3
4
5
GND  
RESERVED  
GND  
GND  
VS  
Ground. This pin must be connected to ground.  
Reserved. This pin must be connected to VS or left open.  
Ground. This pin must be connected to ground.  
Ground. This pin must be connected to ground.  
Supply Voltage.  
6
7
CS  
Chip Select.  
8
INT1  
Interrupt 1 Output.  
9
INT2  
Interrupt 2 Output.  
10  
11  
12  
13  
14  
NC  
Not Internally Connected.  
Reserved. This pin must be connected to ground or left open.  
SPI 4-Wire Serial Data Output (SDO)/I2C Alternate Address Select (ALT ADDRESS).  
I2C Serial Data (SDA)/SPI 4-Wire Serial Data Input (SDI)/SPI 3-Wire Serial Data Input and Output (SDIO).  
I2C Serial Communications Clock (SCL)/SPI Serial Communications Clock (SCLK).  
RESERVED  
SDO/ALT ADDRESS  
SDA/SDI/SDIO  
SCL/SCLK  
Rev. 0 | Page 6 of 32  
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
TYPICAL PERFORMANCE CHARACTERISTICS  
25  
1.0  
0.8  
20  
15  
10  
5
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
–0.2  
–0.4  
–0.6  
–0.8  
–1.0  
0
–50 –35 –20  
–5  
10  
25  
40  
55  
70  
85  
100  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
OFFSET (g)  
Figure 7. X-Axis Offset Drift, 15 Parts Soldered to PCB, VS = 2.5 V  
Figure 4. X-Axis Zero g Offset at 25°C, VS = 2.5 V  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
–0.2  
–0.4  
–0.6  
–0.8  
–1.0  
0
–50 –35 –20  
–5  
10  
25  
40  
55  
70  
85  
100  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
OFFSET (g)  
Figure 5. Y-Axis Zero g Offset at 25°C, VS = 2.5 V  
Figure 8. Y-Axis Offset Drift, 15 Parts Soldered to PCB, VS = 2.5 V  
16  
14  
12  
10  
8
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
–0.2  
–0.4  
–0.6  
–0.8  
–1.0  
6
4
2
0
–50 –35 –20  
–5  
10  
25  
40  
55  
70  
85  
100  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
OFFSET (g)  
Figure 6. Z-Axis Zero g Offset at 25°C, VS = 2.5 V  
Figure 9. Z-Axis Offset Drift, 15 Parts Soldered to PCB, VS = 2.5 V  
Rev. 0 | Page 7 of 32  
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
23.0  
22.5  
22.0  
21.5  
21.0  
20.5  
20.0  
19.5  
19.0  
18.5  
18.0  
0
–50 –35 –20  
–5  
10  
25  
40  
55  
70  
85  
100  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
SENSITIVITY (LSB/g)  
Figure 10. X-Axis Sensitivity at 25°C, VS = 2.5 V  
Figure 13. X-Axis Sensitivity vs. Temperature, 16 Parts Soldered to PCB,  
VS = 2.5 V  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
23.0  
22.5  
22.0  
21.5  
21.0  
20.5  
20.0  
19.5  
19.0  
18.5  
18.0  
0
–50 –35 –20  
–5  
10  
25  
40  
55  
70  
85  
100  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
SENSITIVITY (LSB/g)  
Figure 11. Y-Axis Sensitivity at 25°C, VS = 2.5 V  
Figure 14. Y-Axis Sensitivity vs. Temperature, 16 Parts Soldered to PCB,  
VS = 2.5 V  
16  
14  
12  
10  
8
23.0  
22.5  
22.0  
21.5  
21.0  
20.5  
20.0  
19.5  
19.0  
18.5  
18.0  
6
4
2
0
–50 –35 –20  
–5  
10  
25  
40  
55  
70  
85  
100  
TEMPERATURE (°C)  
SENSITIVITY (LSB/g)  
Figure 15. Z-Axis Sensitivity vs. Temperature, 16 Parts Soldered to PCB,  
VS = 2.5 V  
Figure 12. Z-Axis Sensitivity at 25°C, VS = 2.5 V  
Rev. 0 | Page 8 of 32  
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
200  
150  
100  
50  
0
0
2.0  
2.4  
2.8  
3.2  
3.6  
SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)  
SELF-TEST RESPONSE (LSB)  
Figure 19. Supply Current vs. Supply Voltage (VS) at 25°C  
Figure 16. Z-Axis Self-Test Response at 25°C, VS = 2.5 V  
25  
20  
15  
10  
5
200  
X-AXIS, DUT1  
X-AXIS, DUT2  
Y-AXIS, DUT1  
Y-AXIS, DUT2  
Z-AXIS, DUT1  
Z-AXIS, DUT2  
150  
100  
50  
0
0
100 110 120 130 140 150 160 170 180 190 200  
CURRENT CONSUMPTION (µA)  
0
50  
100  
150  
200  
REFERENCE ACCELERATION (g)  
Figure 20. Output Linearity over the Dynamic Range  
Figure 17. Current Consumption at 25°C, 100 Hz Output Data Rate, VS = 2.5 V  
160  
140  
120  
100  
80  
1.2  
1.0  
0.8  
0.6  
0.4  
0.2  
0
X-AXIS  
Y-AXIS  
Z-AXIS  
60  
40  
20  
0
1.60 3.12 6.25 12.50 25 50 100 200 400 800 1600 3200  
OUTPUT DATA RATE (Hz)  
10  
100  
1000  
FREQUENCY (Hz)  
Figure 18. Current Consumption vs. Output Data Rate at 25°C,  
10 Parts Soldered to PCB, VS = 2.5 V  
Figure 21. Frequency Response  
Rev. 0 | Page 9 of 32  
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
THEORY OF OPERATION  
The ADXL375 is a complete 3-axis acceleration measurement  
system with a measurement range of 200 g. It measures both  
dynamic acceleration resulting from motion or shock and static  
acceleration, such as gravity.  
When the device is in standby mode, any register can be written  
to or read from. It is recommended that the device be configured  
in standby mode before enabling measurement mode. Clearing  
the measure bit returns the device to standby mode.  
The sensor is a polysilicon surface-micromachined structure  
built on top of a silicon wafer. Polysilicon springs suspend the  
structure over the surface of the wafer and provide resistance  
against forces due to applied acceleration.  
CURRENT CONSUMPTION AND OUTPUT DATA RATE  
The ADXL375 automatically modulates its current consumption  
in proportion to its output data rate (see Table 6). The device  
bandwidth and output data rate are specified using the rate bits  
(Bits[D3:D0]) in the BW_RATE register (Address 0x2C).  
Deflection of the structure is measured using differential capac-  
itors that consist of independent fixed plates and plates attached  
to the moving mass. Acceleration deflects the proof mass and  
unbalances the differential capacitor, resulting in a sensor output  
whose amplitude is proportional to acceleration. Phase sensitive  
demodulation is used to determine the magnitude and polarity  
of the acceleration.  
Table 6. Typical Current Consumption vs. Data Rate  
(TA = 25°C, VS = 2.5 V, VDD I/O = 1.8 V)  
Output Data  
Rate (Hz)  
Bandwidth  
(Hz)  
Rate Bits  
1111  
1110  
1101  
1100  
1011  
1010  
1001  
1000  
0111  
0110  
0101  
0100  
0011  
0010  
0001  
0000  
IDD (µA)  
145  
90  
140  
140  
140  
140  
90  
60  
50  
40  
35  
3200  
1600  
800  
400  
200  
100  
50  
1600  
800  
400  
200  
100  
50  
POWER SEQUENCING  
Power can be applied to VS or VDD I/O in any sequence without  
damaging the ADXL375. Table 7 provides a description of all  
the power modes. The interface voltage level is set using the  
interface supply voltage, VDD I/O, which must be present to ensure  
that the ADXL375 does not create a conflict on the communi-  
cation bus. For single-supply operation, VDD I/O can be the same  
as the main supply, VS. In a dual-supply application, however,  
25  
25  
12.5  
6.25  
3.13  
1.56  
0.78  
0.39  
0.20  
0.10  
0.05  
12.5  
6.25  
3.13  
1.56  
0.78  
0.39  
0.20  
0.10  
V
DD I/O can differ from VS to accommodate the desired interface  
voltage, as long as VS is greater than or equal to VDD I/O  
.
35  
35  
35  
35  
After VS is applied, the device enters standby mode. In standby  
mode, power consumption is minimized; the device waits for  
VDD I/O to be applied and for the command to enter measurement  
mode. This command can be initiated by setting the measure bit  
35  
(Bit D3) in the POWER_CTL register (Address 0x2D).  
Table 7. Power Modes  
Power Mode  
VS  
VDD I/O Description  
Power Off  
Off  
Off  
The device is completely off, but it is still possible for the device to create a conflict on the  
communication bus.  
Bus Disabled  
On  
Off  
The device is on in standby mode, but communication is unavailable and the device can create  
a conflict on the communication bus. Minimize the duration of the bus disabled state during  
power-up to prevent a conflict on the communication bus.  
Bus Enabled  
Standby or Measurement On  
Off  
On  
On  
No functions are available, but the device does not create a conflict on the communication bus.  
At power-up, the device is in standby mode, awaiting a command to enter measurement  
mode, and all sensor functions are off. After the device is instructed to enter measurement  
mode, all sensor functions are available.  
Rev. 0 | Page 10 of 32  
 
 
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
POWER SAVING MODES  
FIFO BUFFER  
Low Power Mode  
The ADXL375 contains patented technology for an embedded  
memory management system with a 32-level FIFO buffer that  
can be used to minimize host processor burden. This buffer has  
four modes: bypass, FIFO, stream, and trigger. Each mode can  
be selected by setting the FIFO_MODE bits (Bits[D7:D6]) in  
the FIFO_CTL register (Address 0x38; see Table 9).  
A low power mode is available for additional power savings. In  
low power mode, the internal sampling rate is reduced, allowing  
for power savings in the 12.5 Hz to 400 Hz data rate range at the  
expense of slightly greater noise. To enter low power mode, set  
the LOW_POWER bit (Bit D4) in the BW_RATE register  
(Address 0x2C). Table 8 shows the current consumption in low  
power mode for output data rates where there is an advantage to  
using low power mode.  
Table 9. FIFO Modes (FIFO_CTL Register, Address 0x38)  
Setting  
FIFO  
D7  
0
0
D6  
Mode  
Description  
Table 8. Typical Current Consumption vs. Data Rate,  
Low Power Mode (TA = 25°C, VS = 2.5 V, VDD I/O = 1.8 V)  
0
1
Bypass FIFO buffer is bypassed.  
FIFO FIFO buffer collects up to 32 samples and  
then stops collecting data, collecting new  
data only when the buffer is not full.  
Output Data  
Rate (Hz)  
Bandwidth  
(Hz)  
Rate Bits  
1100  
1011  
1010  
1001  
IDD (µA)  
90  
60  
50  
45  
1
1
0
1
Stream FIFO buffer holds the last 32 samples.  
When the buffer is full, the oldest data  
is overwritten with newer data.  
Trigger FIFO buffer holds the last samples before  
the trigger event and continues to collect  
data until full. New data is collected only  
when the buffer is not full.  
400  
200  
100  
50  
200  
100  
50  
25  
12.5  
6.25  
1000  
25  
40  
35  
0111  
12.5  
For an in-depth description of the FIFO buffer and FIFO modes,  
see the AN-1025 Application Note, Utilization of the First In, First  
Out (FIFO) Buffer in Analog Devices, Inc., Digital Accelerometers.  
For data rates not shown in Table 8, the use of low power mode  
does not provide any advantage over normal power mode. There-  
fore, it is recommended that low power mode be used only for  
the data rates shown in Table 8.  
Bypass Mode  
Autosleep Mode  
In bypass mode, the FIFO buffer is not operational and, there-  
fore, remains empty.  
Additional power can be saved if the ADXL375 automatically  
switches to sleep mode during periods of inactivity. To enable  
the autosleep mode feature,  
FIFO Mode  
In FIFO mode, data from measurements of the x-, y-, and z-axes  
is stored in the FIFO buffer. When the number of samples in the  
FIFO buffer equals the level specified by the samples bits of the  
FIFO_CTL register (Address 0x38), the watermark interrupt is  
set (see the Watermark Bit section). The FIFO buffer continues  
to accumulate samples until it is full (32 samples from measure-  
ments of the x-, y-, and z-axes) and then stops collecting data.  
1. Set the THRESH_INACT register (Address 0x25) and  
the TIME_INACT register (Address 0x26) to values that  
signify inactivity. The appropriate values depend on the  
application.  
2. Set the AUTO_SLEEP bit (Bit D4) and the link bit (Bit D5)  
in the POWER_CTL register (Address 0x2D).  
Current consumption at the sub-12.5 Hz data rates that are used  
in autosleep mode is typically 35 µA for VS = 2.5 V.  
After the FIFO buffer stops collecting data, the device continues  
to operate; therefore, features such as shock detection can be used  
after the FIFO buffer is full. The watermark interrupt bit remains  
set until the number of samples in the FIFO buffer is less than  
the value stored in the samples bits of the FIFO_CTL register.  
For information about the advantages of using low power  
mode vs. autosleep mode, see the Sleep Mode vs. Low Power  
Mode section.  
Stream Mode  
Standby Mode  
In stream mode, data from measurements of the x-, y-, and z-axes  
is stored in the FIFO buffer. When the number of samples in the  
FIFO buffer equals the level specified by the samples bits of the  
FIFO_CTL register (Address 0x38), the watermark interrupt is set  
(see the Watermark Bit section). The FIFO buffer continues to  
accumulate samples; the buffer stores the latest 32 samples from  
measurements of the x-, y-, and z-axes, discarding older data as  
new data arrives. The watermark interrupt bit remains set until  
the number of samples in the FIFO buffer is less than the value  
stored in the samples bits of the FIFO_CTL register.  
For even lower power operation, standby mode can be used. In  
standby mode, current consumption is reduced to 0.1 µA (typical).  
In this mode, no measurements are made, but the contents of the  
FIFO buffer are preserved. To enter standby mode, clear the  
measure bit (Bit D3) in the POWER_CTL register (Address 0x2D).  
Rev. 0 | Page 11 of 32  
 
 
 
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
Trigger Mode  
When SPI operation is enabled at a frequency of 1.6 MHz or  
lower, the register addressing portion of the transmission provides  
a sufficient delay to ensure that the FIFO buffer has completely  
emptied. When SPI operation is enabled at a frequency higher  
In trigger mode, the FIFO buffer accumulates samples, storing  
the latest 32 samples from measurements of the x-, y-, and z-axes.  
After a trigger event occurs, an interrupt is sent to the INT1 or  
INT2 pin (determined by the trigger bit in the FIFO_CTL register),  
and the FIFO_TRIG bit (Bit D7) is set in the FIFO_STATUS  
register (Address 0x39).  
CS  
than 1.6 MHz, the  
pin must be deasserted to ensure a total  
delay of 5 µs; otherwise, the delay is not sufficient. When SPI  
operation is enabled at 5 MHz, the total delay necessary is at  
most 3.4 µs.  
When I2C mode is enabled on the part, the communication rate  
is low enough to ensure a sufficient delay between FIFO reads.  
The FIFO buffer keeps the last n samples (n is the value specified  
by the samples bits in the FIFO_CTL register) and then operates  
in FIFO mode, collecting new samples only when the FIFO buffer  
is not full. A delay of at least 5 µs must elapse between the occur-  
rence of the trigger event and the start of data readback from the  
FIFO buffer to allow the buffer to discard and retain the necessary  
samples.  
SELF-TEST  
The ADXL375 incorporates a self-test feature that effectively  
tests its mechanical and electronic systems simultaneously. When  
the self-test function is enabled (via the SELF_TEST bit in the  
DATA_FORMAT register, Address 0x31), an electrostatic force  
is exerted on the mechanical sensor.  
Additional trigger events cannot be recognized until the part is  
reset to trigger mode. To reset the part to trigger mode,  
1. If desired, read data from the FIFO buffer (see the Retrieving  
Data from the FIFO Buffer section).  
This electrostatic force moves the mechanical sensing element in  
the same manner as acceleration, and it is additive to the external  
acceleration experienced by the device. This added electrostatic  
force results in an output change in the x-, y-, and z-axes. Because  
the electrostatic force is proportional to VS , the output change  
varies with VS.  
Before resetting the part to trigger mode, read back the  
FIFO data; placing the device into bypass mode clears the  
FIFO buffer.  
2
2. Configure the device for bypass mode by setting Bits[D7:D6]  
at Address 0x38 to 00.  
3. Configure the device for trigger mode by setting Bits[D7:D6]  
at Address 0x38 to 11.  
The self-test response in the x- and y-axes exhibits bimodal  
behavior and, therefore, is not always a reliable indicator of  
sensor health or potential shift in device sensitivity. For this  
reason, perform the self-test check in the z-axis.  
Retrieving Data from the FIFO Buffer  
When the FIFO buffer operates in FIFO, stream, or trigger mode,  
FIFO data can be read from the data registers (Address 0x32 to  
Address 0x37). Each time data is read from the FIFO buffer, the  
oldest x-, y-, and z-axis data is moved into the DATAX, DATAY,  
and DATAZ registers.  
Use of the self-test feature at data rates of less than 100 Hz or at  
1600 Hz may yield values outside the limits shown in Figure 16.  
For the self-test function to operate correctly, the part must be in  
normal power operation (LOW_POWER bit = 0 in the BW_RATE  
register, Address 0x2C) and be configured for a data rate from  
100 Hz to 800 Hz, or for a data rate of 3200 Hz (see Table 6).  
If a single-byte read operation is performed, the remaining bytes  
of data for the current FIFO sample are lost. Therefore, data for  
all axes of interest must be read in a burst (multiple-byte) read  
operation. To ensure that the FIFO buffer is empty (that is, all  
new data has moved into the data registers), an interval of at  
least 5 µs must elapse between the end of the readback from the  
data registers and the start of a new read of the data registers or  
the FIFO_STATUS register (Address 0x39). The end of a read  
operation from the data registers is signified by the transition  
For more information about the self-test feature, see the Using  
Self-Test section.  
CS  
from Register 0x37 to Register 0x38 or by the  
pin going high.  
Rev. 0 | Page 12 of 32  
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
INTERRUPTS  
The ADXL375 provides two output pins for driving interrupts:  
INT1 and INT2. Both interrupt pins are push-pull, low impedance  
pins (see Table 10 for output specifications). The default config-  
uration of the interrupt pins is active high. The polarity can be  
changed to active low by setting the INT_INVERT bit (Bit D5)  
in the DATA_FORMAT register (Address 0x31). All interrupt  
functions can be enabled simultaneously, but some functions  
may need to share the same interrupt pin.  
BITS IN THE INTERRUPT REGISTERS  
This section describes the interrupts that can be set in the  
INT_ENABLE register (Address 0x2E) and monitored in the  
INT_SOURCE register (Address 0x30).  
For an in-depth description of the FIFO buffer and the inter-  
rupt bits, see the AN-1025 Application Note, Utilization of the  
First In, First Out (FIFO) Buffer in Analog Devices, Inc., Digital  
Accelerometers.  
ENABLING AND DISABLING INTERRUPTS  
DATA_READY Bit  
Interrupts are enabled by setting the appropriate bits in the  
INT_ENABLE register (Address 0x2E); the interrupt is mapped  
to the INT1 pin or the INT2 pin based on the contents of the  
INT_MAP register (Address 0x2F). When the user configures  
the interrupt pins for the first time, it is recommended that the  
functions and interrupt mapping be configured before the  
interrupts are enabled.  
The DATA_READY bit is set when new data is available and  
is cleared when no new data is available.  
SINGLE_SHOCK Bit  
The SINGLE_SHOCK bit is set when a single acceleration event  
that is greater than the value in the THRESH_SHOCK register  
(Address 0x1D) occurs for less time than is specified by the DUR  
register (Address 0x21). For more information, see the Shock  
Detection section.  
When changing the configuration of an interrupt, follow this  
procedure.  
DOUBLE_SHOCK Bit  
1. Disable the interrupt by clearing the bit corresponding  
to the function in the INT_ENABLE register.  
The DOUBLE_SHOCK bit is set when two acceleration events  
that are greater than the value in the THRESH_SHOCK register  
(Address 0x1D) occur for less time than is specified by the DUR  
register (Address 0x21). The second shock event starts after the  
time specified by the latent register (Address 0x22) but within  
the time specified by the window register (Address 0x23). For  
more information, see the Shock Detection section.  
2. Reconfigure the interrupt function.  
3. Reenable the interrupt in the INT_ENABLE register.  
Configuration of the functions while the interrupts are disabled  
helps to prevent the accidental generation of an interrupt.  
CLEARING INTERRUPTS  
The interrupt functions are latched and can be cleared as follows:  
Activity Bit  
1. Read the data registers (Address 0x32 to Address 0x37)  
to clear the data-related interrupts.  
2. Read the INT_SOURCE register (Address 0x30) to clear  
the remaining interrupts.  
The activity bit is set when acceleration greater than the value  
stored in the THRESH_ACT register (Address 0x24) is experi-  
enced on any participating axis. Participating axes are specified  
by the ACT_INACT_CTL register (Address 0x27).  
Table 10. Interrupt Pin Digital Output Specifications  
Limit1  
Parameter  
Test Conditions/Comments  
Min  
Max  
Unit  
DIGITAL OUTPUT  
Low Level Output Voltage (VOL)  
High Level Output Voltage (VOH)  
Low Level Output Current (IOL)  
High Level Output Current (IOH)  
PIN CAPACITANCE  
IOL = 300 µA  
IOH = −150 µA  
VOL = VOL, MAX  
0.2 × VDD I/O  
V
V
µA  
µA  
pF  
0.8 × VDD I/O  
300  
VOH = VOH, MIN  
−150  
8
fIN = 1 MHz, VS = 2.5 V  
CLOAD = 150 pF  
RISE/FALL TIME  
Rise Time (tR)2  
210  
150  
ns  
ns  
Fall Time (tF)3  
1 Limits based on characterization results; not production tested.  
2 Rise time is measured as the transition time from VOL, MAX to VOH, MIN of the interrupt pin.  
3 Fall time is measured as the transition time from VOH, MIN to VOL, MAX of the interrupt pin.  
Rev. 0 | Page 13 of 32  
 
 
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
Inactivity Bit  
Overrun Bit  
The inactivity bit is set when acceleration less than the value stored  
in the THRESH_INACT register (Address 0x25) is experienced  
for more time than is specified by the TIME_INACT register  
(Address 0x26) on all participating axes. Participating axes are  
specified by the ACT_INACT_CTL register (Address 0x27). The  
maximum value for TIME_INACT is 255 sec.  
The overrun bit is set when new data replaces unread data. The  
precise operation of the overrun function depends on the FIFO  
mode (see the FIFO Buffer section).  
In bypass mode, the overrun bit is set when new data  
replaces unread data in the data registers (Address 0x32  
to Address 0x37).  
Watermark Bit  
In FIFO mode, stream mode, and trigger mode, the  
overrun bit is set when the FIFO buffer is full.  
The watermark bit is set when the number of samples in the FIFO  
buffer equals the value stored in the samples bits (Bits[D4:D0])  
of the FIFO_CTL register (Address 0x38). The watermark bit  
is cleared automatically when the FIFO buffer is read and the  
FIFO contents return to a value below the value specified by the  
samples bits.  
The overrun bit is automatically cleared when the FIFO buffer  
contents are read.  
Rev. 0 | Page 14 of 32  
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
SERIAL COMMUNICATIONS  
The ADXL375 supports I2C and SPI digital communications. In  
To read or write multiple bytes in a single transmission, the  
multiple-byte bit (MB in Figure 25 to Figure 27), located after  
CS  
both cases, the ADXL375 operates as a slave device. When the  
2
CS  
pin is tied high to VDD I/O, I C mode is enabled. The  
pin must  
W
the R/ bit in the first byte transfer, must be set. After the  
be tied high to VDD I/O or be driven by an external controller. If the  
register address byte and the first byte of data, each subsequent  
set of eight clock pulses causes the ADXL375 to point to the next  
register for a read or write. This shifting continues until the clock  
CS  
pin is left unconnected, the user may not be able to communi-  
CS  
cate with the part. In SPI mode, the  
pin is controlled by the  
bus master. In both SPI and I2C modes of operation, ignore data  
transmitted from the ADXL375 to the master device during writes  
to the ADXL375.  
CS  
pulses cease and  
is deasserted. To perform reads or writes on  
CS  
different, nonsequential registers,  
must be deasserted between  
transmissions and the new register must be addressed separately.  
SPI MODE  
Figure 25 and Figure 26 show the timing diagrams for 4-wire  
SPI writes and reads, respectively. Figure 27 shows the timing  
diagram for 3-wire SPI reads or writes. For correct operation of  
the part, the logic thresholds and timing parameters in Table 11  
and Table 12 must be met at all times.  
The ADXL375 can be configured for 3-wire SPI mode or 4-wire  
SPI mode, as shown in Figure 22 and Figure 23. Clearing the SPI  
bit (Bit D6) in the DATA_FORMAT register (Address 0x31) selects  
4-wire mode; setting the SPI bit selects 3-wire mode. The maxi-  
mum SPI clock speed is 5 MHz with 100 pF maximum loading.  
The timing scheme requires clock polarity (CPOL) = 1 and clock  
phase (CPHA) = 1. If power is applied to the ADXL375 before the  
clock polarity and phase of the host processor are configured, take  
Use of the 3200 Hz and 1600 Hz output data rates is recom-  
mended only with SPI communication speeds greater than or  
equal to 2 MHz. The 800 Hz output data rate is recommended  
only with communication speeds greater than or equal to 400 kHz,  
and the remaining data rates scale proportionally. For example,  
the minimum recommended communication speed for a 200 Hz  
output data rate is 100 kHz. Operation at an output data rate above  
the recommended maximum value may result in undesirable  
effects on the acceleration data, including missing samples or  
additional noise.  
CS  
the  
pin high before changing the clock polarity and phase.  
When using 3-wire SPI mode, it is recommended that the SDO  
pin be either pulled up to VDD I/O or pulled down to GND via a  
10 kΩ resistor.  
ADXL375  
PROCESSOR  
CS  
SDIO  
SDO  
D OUT  
Preventing Bus Traffic Errors  
D IN/OUT  
CS  
The ADXL375  
and for enabling I2C mode. When the ADXL375 is used on a SPI  
CS  
pin is used both for initiating SPI transactions  
SCLK  
D OUT  
Figure 22. 3-Wire SPI Connection Diagram  
bus with multiple devices, its  
pin is held high while the master  
communicates with the other devices. There may be conditions  
where a SPI command transmitted to another device looks like  
a valid I2C command. In this case, the ADXL375 interprets this  
command as an attempt to communicate in I2C mode and may  
interfere with other bus traffic. Unless bus traffic can be ade-  
quately controlled to ensure that such a condition never occurs,  
it is recommended that a logic gate be added in front of Pin 13  
(SDA/SDI/SDIO), as shown in Figure 24. This OR gate holds the  
ADXL375  
PROCESSOR  
CS  
SDI  
D OUT  
D OUT  
D IN  
SDO  
SCLK  
D OUT  
Figure 23. 4-Wire SPI Connection Diagram  
CS  
is the serial port enable line and is controlled by the SPI master.  
CS  
SDA line high when  
is high to prevent SPI bus traffic at the  
This line must go low at the start of a transmission and high at the  
end of a transmission, as shown in Figure 25 to Figure 27. SCLK  
is the serial port clock and is supplied by the SPI master. SCLK  
should idle high during a period of no transmission. In 4-wire  
SPI mode, SDI and SDO are the serial data input and output,  
respectively. In 3-wire SPI mode, SDIO functions as both the  
serial data input and output. Data is updated on the falling edge  
of SCLK and should be sampled on the rising edge of SCLK.  
ADXL375 from appearing as an I2C start command.  
ADXL375  
PROCESSOR  
CS  
SDA/SDI/SDIO  
SDO  
D OUT  
D IN/OUT  
D IN  
SCLK  
D OUT  
Figure 24. Recommended SPI Connection Diagram  
When Using Multiple SPI Devices on a Single Bus  
Rev. 0 | Page 15 of 32  
 
 
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
CS  
tM  
tS  
tSCLK  
tQUIET  
tCS, DIS  
tDELAY  
SCLK  
SDI  
tHOLD  
tSETUP  
W
MB  
A5  
A0  
D7  
D0  
tSDO  
tDIS  
ADDRESS BITS  
X
DATA BITS  
X
SDO  
X
X
X
X
Figure 25. SPI 4-Wire Write Timing Diagram  
CS  
SCLK  
SDI  
tSCLK  
tM  
tS  
tCS, DIS  
tQUIET  
tDELAY  
tHOLD  
tSETUP  
R
MB  
A5  
A0  
X
X
tSDO  
tDIS  
ADDRESS BITS  
X
X
X
X
D7  
D0  
SDO  
DATA BITS  
Figure 26. SPI 4-Wire Read Timing Diagram  
CS  
tDELAY  
tM  
tS  
tSCLK  
tQUIET  
tCS, DIS  
SCLK  
tHOLD  
tSETUP  
tSDO  
R/W  
MB  
A5  
A0  
D7  
D0  
SDIO  
ADDRESS BITS  
DATA BITS  
NOTES  
1. tSDO IS ONLY PRESENT DURING READS.  
Figure 27. SPI 3-Wire Read/Write Timing Diagram  
Rev. 0 | Page 16 of 32  
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
Table 11. SPI Digital Input/Output Specifications  
Limit1  
Max  
Parameter  
Test Conditions/Comments  
Min  
Unit  
DIGITAL INPUT  
Low Level Input Voltage (VIL)  
High Level Input Voltage (VIH)  
Low Level Input Current (IIL)  
High Level Input Current (IIH)  
DIGITAL OUTPUT  
0.3 × VDD I/O  
0.1  
V
V
µA  
µA  
0.7 × VDD I/O  
−0.1  
VS = VDD I/O  
VS = 0 V  
Low Level Output Voltage (VOL)  
High Level Output Voltage (VOH)  
Low Level Output Current (IOL)  
High Level Output Current (IOH)  
PIN CAPACITANCE  
IOL = 10 mA  
IOH = −4 mA  
VOL = VOL, MAX  
VOH = VOH, MIN  
0.2 × VDD I/O  
V
V
mA  
mA  
pF  
0.8 × VDD I/O  
10  
−4  
8
fIN = 1 MHz, VS = 2.5 V  
1 Limits based on characterization results; not production tested.  
Table 12. SPI Timing (TA = 25°C, VS = 2.5 V, VDD I/O = 1.8 V)1  
Limit2, 3  
Parameter  
fSCLK  
tSCLK  
tDELAY  
tQUIET  
tDIS  
Min  
Max  
Unit  
MHz  
ns  
Description  
5
SPI clock frequency  
Mark-space ratio (1/(SPI clock frequency)) for the SCLK input is 40/60 to 60/40  
CS falling edge to SCLK falling edge  
200  
5
ns  
5
ns  
SCLK rising edge to CS rising edge  
10  
ns  
CS rising edge to SDO/SDIO disabled  
tCS, DIS  
tS  
150  
ns  
CS deassertion between SPI communications  
SCLK low pulse width (space)  
0.3 × tSCLK  
ns  
tM  
0.3 × tSCLK  
ns  
SCLK high pulse width (mark)  
tSETUP  
tHOLD  
tSDO  
5
5
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
SDI/SDIO valid before SCLK rising edge  
SDI/SDIO valid after SCLK rising edge  
SCLK falling edge to SDO/SDIO output transition  
SDO/SDIO output high to output low transition  
SDO/SDIO output low to output high transition  
40  
20  
20  
4
tR  
4
tF  
ns  
1
CS  
The , SCLK, SDI, and SDO pins are not internally pulled up or down; they must be driven for proper operation.  
2 Limits based on characterization results, with fSCLK = 5 MHz and bus load capacitance of 100 pF; not production tested.  
3 The timing values are referred to the input thresholds (VIL and VIH) given in Table 11.  
4 Output rise and fall times measured with capacitive load of 150 pF. tR and tF are not shown in Figure 25 to Figure 27.  
Rev. 0 | Page 17 of 32  
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
V
I2C MODE  
DD I/O  
CS  
When the  
pin is tied high to VDD I/O, the ADXL375 is  
R
R
P
configured for I2C mode. I2C mode requires a simple 2-wire  
connection, as shown in Figure 28. The ADXL375 conforms to  
the UM10204 I2C-Bus Specification and User Manual, Rev. 03—  
19 June 2007, available from NXP Semiconductors. The ADXL375  
supports standard (100 kHz) and fast (400 kHz) data transfer  
modes if the bus parameters given in Table 13 and Table 14 are met.  
ADXL375  
PROCESSOR  
P
CS  
SDA  
ALT ADDRESS  
SCL  
D IN/OUT  
D OUT  
Figure 28. I2C Connection Diagram (Address 0x53)  
Single- or multiple-byte reads and writes are supported, as shown  
in Figure 29. When the ALT ADDRESS pin (Pin 12) is tied high  
to VDD I/O, the 7-bit I2C address for the device is 0x1D, followed  
Due to communication speed limitations, the maximum output  
data rate when using 400 kHz I2C mode is 800 Hz, which scales  
linearly with a change in the I2C communication speed. For  
example, using I2C mode at 100 kHz limits the maximum ODR  
to 200 Hz. Operation at an output data rate above the recom-  
mended maximum value may result in undesirable effects on the  
acceleration data, including missing samples or additional noise.  
W
by the R/ bit. In this configuration, the write address is 0x3A,  
and the read address is 0x3B. An alternate I2C address of 0x53 can  
be selected by grounding the ALT ADDRESS pin (see Figure 28).  
In this configuration, the write address is 0xA6, and the read  
address is 0xA7.  
If other devices are connected to the same I2C bus, the nominal  
operating voltage level of the other devices cannot exceed VDD I/O  
by more than 0.3 V. External pull-up resistors, RP, are necessary  
for proper I2C operation (see Figure 28). To ensure proper opera-  
tion, refer to the UM10204 I2C-Bus Specification and User Manual,  
Rev. 03—19 June 2007, when selecting pull-up resistor values.  
Unused pins have no internal pull-up or pull-down resistors;  
CS  
therefore, the  
and ALT ADDRESS pins have no known state  
or default state if the pins are left floating or unconnected. When  
2
CS  
using I C mode, it is required that the  
pin be connected to  
V
V
DD I/O and that the ALT ADDRESS pin be connected to either  
DD I/O or GND.  
SINGLE-BYTE WRITE  
MASTER START  
SLAVE  
SLAVE ADDRESS + WRITE  
REGISTER ADDRESS  
REGISTER ADDRESS  
REGISTER ADDRESS  
REGISTER ADDRESS  
DATA  
DATA  
STOP  
ACK  
ACK  
ACK  
ACK  
ACK  
ACK  
ACK  
ACK  
ACK  
MULTIPLE-BYTE WRITE  
MASTER START  
SLAVE  
SLAVE ADDRESS + WRITE  
DATA  
STOP  
ACK  
ACK  
SINGLE-BYTE READ  
MASTER START  
SLAVE  
SLAVE ADDRESS + WRITE  
START1  
START1  
SLAVE ADDRESS + READ  
NACK  
STOP  
ACK  
ACK  
DATA  
DATA  
MULTIPLE-BYTE READ  
MASTER START  
SLAVE  
ACK  
SLAVE ADDRESS + WRITE  
SLAVE ADDRESS + READ  
NACK  
STOP  
DATA  
1
THIS START IS EITHER A REPEATED START OR A STOP FOLLOWED BY A START.  
NOTES  
1. THE SHADED AREAS REPRESENT WHEN THE DEVICE IS LISTENING.  
Figure 29. I2C Device Addressing  
Table 13. I2C Digital Input/Output Specifications  
Limit1  
Parameter  
Test Conditions/Comments  
Min  
Max  
Unit  
DIGITAL INPUT  
Low Level Input Voltage (VIL)  
High Level Input Voltage (VIH)  
Low Level Input Current (IIL)  
High Level Input Current (IIH)  
DIGITAL OUTPUT  
0.3 × VDD I/O  
0.1  
V
V
µA  
µA  
0.7 × VDD I/O  
−0.1  
VS = VDD I/O  
VS = 0 V  
Low Level Output Voltage (VOL)  
VDD I/O < 2 V, IOL = 3 mA  
VDD I/O ≥ 2 V, IOL = 3 mA  
VOL = VOL, MAX  
0.2 × VDD I/O  
400  
V
mV  
mA  
pF  
Low Level Output Current (IOL)  
PIN CAPACITANCE  
3
fIN = 1 MHz, VS = 2.5 V  
8
1 Limits based on characterization results; not production tested.  
Rev. 0 | Page 18 of 32  
 
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
Table 14. I2C Timing (TA = 25°C, VS = 2.5 V, VDD I/O = 1.8 V)  
Limit1, 2  
Parameter  
Min  
Max  
Unit  
kHz  
µs  
µs  
µs  
µs  
ns  
µs  
Description  
fSCL  
t1  
t2  
t3  
t4  
400  
SCL clock frequency  
SCL cycle time  
SCL high time  
SCL low time  
Hold time for start/repeated start condition  
Data setup time  
Data hold time  
2.5  
0.6  
1.3  
0.6  
100  
0
t5  
t6  
3, 4, 5  
0.9  
t7  
t8  
t9  
t10  
0.6  
0.6  
1.3  
µs  
µs  
µs  
ns  
ns  
ns  
ns  
pF  
Setup time for repeated start condition  
Setup time for stop condition  
Bus-free time between a stop condition and a start condition  
Rise time of SCL and SDA when receiving  
Rise time of SCL and SDA when receiving or transmitting  
Fall time of SCL and SDA when receiving  
Fall time of SCL and SDA when transmitting  
Capacitive load for each bus line  
300  
0
t11  
Cb  
300  
250  
400  
1 Limits based on characterization results, with fSCL = 400 kHz and a 3 mA sink current; not production tested.  
2 The timing values are referred to the input thresholds (VIL and VIH) given in Table 13.  
3 t6 is the data hold time that is measured from the falling edge of SCL. It applies to data during the transmission and acknowledge phases.  
4 To bridge the undefined region of the falling edge of SCL, a transmitting device must internally provide an output hold time of at least 300 ns for the SDA signal (with  
respect to VIH, MIN of the SCL signal).  
5 The maximum value for t6 must be met only if the device does not stretch the low period (t3) of the SCL signal. The maximum value for t6 is a function of the clock low  
time (t3), the clock rise time (t10), and the minimum data setup time (t5(MIN)). This value is calculated as t6(MAX) = t3 − t10 − t5(MIN)  
.
SDA  
t3  
t4  
t9  
t10  
t11  
SCL  
t2  
t7  
t1  
t8  
t4  
t6  
t5  
START  
CONDITION  
REPEATED  
START  
CONDITION  
STOP  
CONDITION  
Figure 30. I2C Timing Diagram  
Rev. 0 | Page 19 of 32  
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
REGISTER MAP  
All registers in the ADXL375 are eight bits in length.  
Table 15. Register Map  
Address  
Hex  
Decimal  
Register Name  
DEVID  
Reserved  
THRESH_SHOCK  
OFSX  
Access Type  
R
Reset Value Description  
0x00  
0
11100101  
N/A  
Device ID  
0x01 to 0x1C 1 to 28  
N/A  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R/W  
R
R/W  
R
R
Reserved; do not access  
Shock threshold  
X-axis offset  
0x1D  
0x1E  
0x1F  
0x20  
0x21  
0x22  
0x23  
0x24  
0x25  
0x26  
0x27  
0x2A  
0x2B  
0x2C  
0x2D  
0x2E  
0x2F  
0x30  
0x31  
0x32  
0x33  
0x34  
0x35  
0x36  
0x37  
0x38  
0x39  
29  
30  
31  
32  
33  
34  
35  
36  
37  
38  
39  
42  
43  
44  
45  
46  
47  
48  
49  
50  
51  
52  
53  
54  
55  
56  
57  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00001010  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000010  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
00000000  
OFSY  
Y-axis offset  
OFSZ  
Z-axis offset  
DUR  
Shock duration  
Shock latency  
Shock window  
Activity threshold  
Inactivity threshold  
Inactivity time  
Latent  
Window  
THRESH_ACT  
THRESH_INACT  
TIME_INACT  
ACT_INACT_CTL  
SHOCK_AXES  
ACT_SHOCK_STATUS  
BW_RATE  
Axis enable control for activity and inactivity detection  
Axis control for single shock/double shock  
Source of single shock/double shock  
Data rate and power mode control  
Power saving features control  
Interrupt enable control  
Interrupt mapping control  
Interrupt source  
POWER_CTL  
INT_ENABLE  
INT_MAP  
INT_SOURCE  
DATA_FORMAT  
DATAX0  
DATAX1  
DATAY0  
DATAY1  
DATAZ0  
DATAZ1  
FIFO_CTL  
FIFO_STATUS  
Data format control  
X-Axis Data 0  
X-Axis Data 1  
Y-Axis Data 0  
Y-Axis Data 1  
R
R
R
R
R/W  
R
Z-Axis Data 0  
Z-Axis Data 1  
FIFO control  
FIFO status  
Rev. 0 | Page 20 of 32  
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
Register 0x25—THRESH_INACT (Read/Write)  
REGISTER DESCRIPTIONS  
The THRESH_INACT register contains the unsigned threshold  
value for detecting inactivity. The magnitude of the inactivity  
event is compared with the value in the THRESH_INACT  
register. The scale factor is 780 mg/LSB. A value of 0 may result  
in undesirable behavior if the inactivity interrupt is enabled.  
All registers in the ADXL375 are eight bits in length.  
Register 0x00—DEVID (Read Only)  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
1
1
1
0
0
1
0
1
The read-only DEVID register holds the fixed device ID code  
of 0xE5 (345 octal).  
Register 0x26—TIME_INACT (Read/Write)  
The TIME_INACT register contains an unsigned time value  
representing the amount of time that acceleration must be less  
than the value in the THRESH_INACT register for inactivity  
to be detected. The scale factor is 1 sec/LSB. Unlike the other  
interrupt functions, which use unfiltered output data (see the  
Threshold Detection and Bandwidth section), the inactivity  
function uses filtered output data.  
Register 0x1D—THRESH_SHOCK (Read/Write)  
The THRESH_SHOCK register contains the unsigned threshold  
value for shock interrupts. The magnitude of the shock event is  
compared with the value in the THRESH_SHOCK register for  
shock detection. The scale factor is 780 mg/LSB. A value of 0 may  
result in undesirable behavior if single shock/double shock inter-  
rupts are enabled.  
At least one output sample must be generated for the inactivity  
interrupt to be triggered. For this reason, the inactivity function  
may appear to be unresponsive if the TIME_INACT register is  
set to a value less than the time constant of the output data rate.  
A value of 0 results in an interrupt when the output data is less  
than the value in the THRESH_INACT register. The maximum  
value for TIME_INACT is 255 sec.  
Register 0x1E, Register 0x1F, Register 0x20—OFSX,  
OFSY, OFSZ (Read/Write)  
The OFSX, OFSY, and OFSZ registers contain user-configured  
offset adjustments in twos complement format with a scale factor  
of 1.56 g/LSB. The value stored in the offset registers is automat-  
ically added to the acceleration data, and the resulting value is  
stored in the output data registers (Address 0x32 to Address 0x37).  
For more information about offset calibration and the use of the  
offset registers, see the Offset Calibration section.  
Register 0x27—ACT_INACT_CTL (Read/Write)  
D7  
ACT AC/DC ACT_X enable ACT_Y enable ACT_Z enable  
D3 D2 D1 D0  
D6  
D5  
D4  
Register 0x21—DUR (Read/Write)  
INACT AC/DC INACT_X enable INACT_Y enable INACT_Z enable  
The DUR register contains an unsigned time value representing  
the maximum time that an event must be above the THRESH_  
SHOCK threshold to qualify as a shock event. The scale factor  
is 625 μs/LSB. A value of 0 disables the single shock and double  
shock functions.  
The ACT_INACT_CTL register selects dc-coupled or ac-coupled  
operation and selects the axes that participate in activity and  
inactivity detection.  
ACT AC/DC and INACT AC/DC Bits  
Register 0x22—Latent (Read/Write)  
A setting of 0 for the ACT AC/DC and INACT AC/DC bits  
selects dc-coupled operation; a setting of 1 selects ac-coupled  
operation. In dc-coupled operation, the current acceleration  
magnitude is compared directly with the values in the THRESH_  
ACT and THRESH_INACT registers to determine whether  
activity or inactivity is detected.  
The latent register contains an unsigned time value representing  
the wait time from the detection of a shock event to the start of  
the time window (specified by the window register) during which  
a possible second shock event can be detected. The scale factor  
is 1.25 ms/LSB. A value of 0 disables the double shock function.  
In ac-coupled operation for activity detection, the acceleration  
value at the start of activity detection is taken as a reference value.  
New samples of acceleration data are then compared to this ref-  
erence value and, if the magnitude of the difference exceeds the  
THRESH_ACT value, an activity interrupt is triggered.  
Register 0x23—Window (Read/Write)  
The window register contains an unsigned time value repre-  
senting the amount of time after the expiration of the latency  
time (specified by the latent register) during which a second  
valid shock can begin. The scale factor is 1.25 ms/LSB. A value  
of 0 disables the double shock function.  
Similarly, in ac-coupled operation for inactivity detection, a refer-  
ence value is used for comparison and is updated whenever the  
device exceeds the inactivity threshold. After the reference value  
is selected, the device compares the magnitude of the difference  
between the reference value and the current acceleration with the  
THRESH_INACT value. If the difference is less than the value  
in the THRESH_INACT register for the time specified in the  
TIME_INACT register, the device is considered inactive, and  
the inactivity interrupt is triggered.  
Register 0x24—THRESH_ACT (Read/Write)  
The THRESH_ACT register contains the unsigned threshold  
value for detecting activity. The magnitude of the activity event  
is compared with the value in the THRESH_ACT register. The  
scale factor is 780 mg/LSB. A value of 0 may result in undesirable  
behavior if the activity interrupt is enabled.  
Rev. 0 | Page 21 of 32  
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
ACT_x Enable and INACT_x Enable Bits  
Asleep Bit  
A setting of 1 for the ACT_x enable and INACT_x enable bits  
enables x-, y-, or z-axis participation in detecting activity or  
inactivity. A setting of 0 excludes the selected axis from participa-  
tion. If all axes are excluded, the function is disabled. For activity  
detection, all participating axes are logically ORed, causing the  
activity function to be triggered when any participating axis  
exceeds the activity threshold. For inactivity detection, all parti-  
cipating axes are logically ANDed, causing the inactivity function  
to be triggered only if all participating axes are below the inactivity  
threshold for the specified time.  
A setting of 1 in the asleep bit indicates that the part is asleep; a  
setting of 0 indicates that the part is not asleep. This bit toggles  
only if the device is configured for autosleep. For more informa-  
tion about the autosleep mode, see the AUTO_SLEEP Bit section.  
Register 0x2C—BW_RATE (Read/Write)  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
D1  
Rate  
D0  
0
0
0
LOW_POWER  
The BW_RATE register configures the device bandwidth  
and output data rate; this register also enables and disables  
low power mode.  
Register 0x2A—SHOCK_AXES (Read/Write)  
LOW_POWER Bit  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
0
0
0
0
A setting of 0 in the LOW_POWER bit selects normal opera-  
tion; a setting of 1 selects reduced power operation, which has  
somewhat higher noise. For more information, see the Low  
Power Mode section.  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
Suppress SHOCK_X enable SHOCK_Y enable SHOCK_Z enable  
The SHOCK_AXES register specifies the participation of each  
of the three axes in single shock/double shock detection.  
Rate Bits  
The rate bits select the device bandwidth and output data rate  
(see Table 6 and Table 8). The default value for these bits is 0x0A,  
which translates to a 100 Hz output data rate. The selected output  
data rate must be appropriate for the communication protocol  
and frequency selected. Selecting an output data rate that is too  
high for the communication speed may result in samples being  
discarded (for more information, see the Serial Communications  
section).  
Suppress Bit  
Setting the suppress bit suppresses double shock detection if  
acceleration greater than the value in the THRESH_SHOCK  
register is present during the latency time between shocks. For  
more information, see the Shock Detection section.  
SHOCK_x Enable Bits  
A setting of 1 in the SHOCK_X enable, SHOCK_Y enable, or  
SHOCK_Z enable bit enables x-, y-, or z-axis participation in  
shock detection. A setting of 0 excludes the selected axis from  
participation in shock detection.  
Register 0x2D—POWER_CTL (Read/Write)  
D7 D6 D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
0
0
Link  
AUTO_SLEEP Measure Sleep  
Wakeup  
Register 0x2B—ACT_SHOCK_STATUS (Read Only)  
The POWER_CTL register can be used to configure the device  
for autosleep mode; this register is also used to set the device to  
measurement mode or standby mode.  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
0
ACT_X source  
ACT_Y source  
ACT_Z source  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
Link Bit  
Asleep SHOCK_X source SHOCK_Y source SHOCK_Z source  
The link bit serially links the activity and inactivity functions. If  
both the activity and inactivity functions are enabled, a setting of  
1 in the link bit delays the start of the activity detection function  
until inactivity is detected. After activity is detected, inactivity  
detection begins, preventing the detection of activity. When this  
bit is set to 0, the inactivity and activity functions are concurrent.  
For more information about the link feature, see the Link Mode  
section.  
The read-only ACT_SHOCK_STATUS register indicates the  
first axis involved in an activity or shock event.  
ACT_x Source and SHOCK_x Source Bits  
The ACT_x source and SHOCK_x source bits indicate the  
first axis involved in an activity or shock event. A setting of 1  
corresponds to involvement in the event; a setting of 0 corre-  
sponds to no involvement. When new data is available, these  
bits are not cleared but are overwritten by the new data. Read  
the ACT_SHOCK_STATUS register before clearing the inter-  
rupt. Disabling an axis from participation in activity or shock  
events clears the corresponding source bit in this register when  
the next activity or single shock/double shock event occurs.  
Before clearing the link bit, it is recommended that the part be  
placed in standby mode (set the measure bit, Bit D3, to 0). After  
clearing the link bit, reset the part to measurement mode (set the  
measure bit, Bit D3, to 1). This configuration sequence ensures  
that the device is properly biased if sleep mode is manually  
disabled; otherwise, the first few samples of data after the link  
bit is cleared may have additional noise, especially if the device  
is asleep when the bit is cleared.  
Rev. 0 | Page 22 of 32  
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
Table 16. Sampling Rate in Sleep Mode  
AUTO_SLEEP Bit  
Setting  
If the link bit is set, a setting of 1 in the AUTO_SLEEP bit  
enables the autosleep function. In autosleep mode, the ADXL375  
automatically switches to sleep mode if the inactivity function is  
enabled and inactivity is detected (that is, when acceleration is  
below the THRESH_INACT value for at least the time specified  
by the TIME_INACT value). If activity detection is also enabled,  
the ADXL375 automatically wakes up from sleep after detecting  
activity and returns to operation at the output data rate set in  
the BW_RATE register. A setting of 0 in the AUTO_SLEEP bit  
disables automatic switching to sleep mode.  
D1  
0
0
1
1
D0  
0
1
0
1
Frequency (Hz)  
8
4
2
1
Register 0x2E—INT_ENABLE (Read/Write)  
D7 D6 D5  
D4  
DATA_READY SINGLE_SHOCK DOUBLE_SHOCK Activity  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
If the link bit is not set, the AUTO_SLEEP feature is disabled and  
setting the AUTO_SLEEP bit has no effect on device operation.  
For more information about the link feature, see the Link Bit  
section and the Link Mode section. For more information about  
autosleep mode, see the Autosleep Mode section.  
Inactivity  
0
Watermark  
Overrun  
A setting of 1 for any bit in the INT_ENABLE register enables  
the specified function to generate interrupts; a setting of 0 for  
any bit in this register prevents the function from generating  
interrupts. The DATA_READY, watermark, and overrun bits  
enable only the interrupt output; the functions are always  
enabled. It is recommended that interrupts be configured in  
Register 0x2F before their outputs are enabled in this register.  
For more information about the interrupts, see the Bits in the  
Interrupt Registers section.  
Before clearing the AUTO_SLEEP bit, it is recommended that the  
part be placed in standby mode (set the measure bit, Bit D3, to 0).  
After clearing the AUTO_SLEEP bit, reset the part to measure-  
ment mode (set the measure bit, Bit D3, to 1). This configuration  
sequence ensures that the device is properly biased if sleep mode  
is manually disabled; otherwise, the first few samples of data after  
the AUTO_SLEEP bit is cleared may have additional noise,  
especially if the device is asleep when the bit is cleared.  
Register 0x2F—INT_MAP (Read/Write)  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
DATA_READY SINGLE_SHOCK DOUBLE_SHOCK Activity  
Measure Bit  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
A setting of 0 in the measure bit places the part into standby  
mode; a setting of 1 places the part into measurement mode.  
The ADXL375 powers up in standby mode with minimum  
power consumption (see the Power Sequencing section).  
Inactivity  
0
Watermark  
Overrun  
A setting of 0 for any bit in the INT_MAP register causes the  
specified interrupt to be sent to the INT1 pin; a setting of 1 for  
any bit in this register causes the specified interrupt to be sent to  
the INT2 pin. All selected interrupts for a given pin are ORed.  
Sleep Bit  
A setting of 0 in the sleep bit places the part into the normal  
mode of operation; a setting of 1 places the part into sleep mode.  
Sleep mode suppresses the DATA_READY interrupt, stops trans-  
mission of data to the FIFO buffer, and switches the sampling  
rate to the rate specified by the wakeup bits (Bits[D1:D0]). In  
sleep mode, only the activity function can be used. When the  
DATA_READY interrupt is suppressed, the output data registers  
(Register 0x32 to Register 0x37) are still updated at the sampling  
rate set by the wakeup bits.  
Register 0x30—INT_SOURCE (Read Only)  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
DATA_READY SINGLE_SHOCK DOUBLE_SHOCK Activity  
D3  
D2  
X1  
D1  
D0  
Inactivity  
Watermark  
Overrun  
1 X = ignore this bit.  
A setting of 1 for any bit in the INT_SOURCE register indicates  
that the specified function has triggered an interrupt; a setting of  
0 for any bit in this register indicates that the specified function  
has not triggered an interrupt. The DATA_READY, watermark,  
and overrun bits are always set if the corresponding interrupt  
occurs, regardless of the settings in the INT_ENABLE register;  
these bits are cleared by reading data from the data registers  
(Address 0x32 to Address 0x37). The DATA_READY and water-  
mark bits may require multiple reads to be cleared. Other bits,  
and their corresponding interrupts, are cleared by reading the  
INT_SOURCE register.  
Before clearing the sleep bit, it is recommended that the part be  
placed in standby mode (set the measure bit, Bit D3, to 0). After  
clearing the sleep bit, reset the part to measurement mode (set the  
measure bit, Bit D3, to 1).  
Wakeup Bits  
The wakeup bits control the sampling rate during sleep mode  
(see Table 16).  
Rev. 0 | Page 23 of 32  
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
Register 0x31—DATA_FORMAT (Read/Write)  
Register 0x38—FIFO_CTL (Read/Write)  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4 D3 D2  
D1 D0  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
SELF_TEST SPI  
INT_INVERT  
0
1
Justify  
1
1
FIFO_MODE  
Trigger  
Samples  
The DATA_FORMAT register controls the presentation of data  
to Register 0x32 through Register 0x37.  
The FIFO_CTL register is used to configure the FIFO buffer for  
the device. For more information, see the FIFO Buffer section.  
For an in-depth description of the FIFO buffer, see the AN-1025  
Application Note, Utilization of the First In, First Out (FIFO) Buffer  
in Analog Devices, Inc., Digital Accelerometers.  
SELF_TEST Bit  
A setting of 1 in the SELF_TEST bit applies a self-test force to the  
sensor, causing a shift in the output data. A value of 0 disables the  
self-test force. For more information about the self-test function,  
see the Self-Test section and the Using Self-Test section.  
FIFO_MODE Bits  
These bits set the FIFO mode, as described in Table 17.  
SPI Bit  
Table 17. FIFO Modes  
A value of 1 in the SPI bit configures the device for 3-wire SPI  
mode; a value of 0 configures the device for 4-wire SPI mode.  
Setting  
FIFO  
D7  
0
0
D6  
Mode  
Description  
INT_INVERT Bit  
0
1
Bypass FIFO buffer is bypassed.  
FIFO FIFO buffer collects up to 32 samples and  
A value of 0 in the INT_INVERT bit sets the polarity of the  
interrupt pins to active high; a value of 1 sets the polarity of  
the interrupt pins to active low.  
then stops collecting data, collecting new  
data only when the buffer is not full.  
1
1
0
1
Stream FIFO buffer holds the last 32 samples.  
When the buffer is full, the oldest data  
is overwritten with newer data.  
Trigger FIFO buffer holds the last samples before  
the trigger event and continues to collect  
data until full. New data is collected only  
when the buffer is not full.  
Justify Bit  
A setting of 1 in the justify bit selects left justified (MSB) mode; a  
setting of 0 selects right justified (LSB) mode with sign extension.  
Register 0x32 to Register 0x37—DATAX0, DATAX1,  
DATAY0, DATAY1, DATAZ0, DATAZ1 (Read Only)  
Trigger Bit  
These six bytes (Register 0x32 to Register 0x37) are each eight  
bits in length and contain the output data for each axis.  
A value of 0 in the trigger bit links the trigger event of trigger  
mode to the INT1 pin, and a value of 1 links the trigger event  
to the INT2 pin.  
Register 0x32 and Register 0x33 contain the output data  
for the x-axis.  
Register 0x34 and Register 0x35 contain the output data  
for the y-axis.  
Register 0x36 and Register 0x37 contain the output data  
for the z-axis.  
Samples Bits  
The function of the samples bits depends on the FIFO mode  
selected (see Table 18). Entering a value of 0 in the samples bits  
immediately sets the watermark bit in the INT_SOURCE register,  
regardless of the FIFO mode selected. Undesirable operation may  
occur if a value of 0 is used for the samples bits when trigger  
mode is used.  
The output data is in twos complement format. DATAx0 is  
the least significant byte, and DATAx1 is the most significant  
byte (x represents X, Y, or Z). The DATA_FORMAT register  
(Address 0x31) controls the format of the data. It is recommended  
that a multiple-byte read of all six registers be performed to  
prevent a change in data between reads of sequential registers.  
Table 18. Samples Bits Functions  
FIFO Mode Samples Bits Function  
Bypass  
FIFO  
None.  
When using the 3200 Hz or 1600 Hz output data rate, the LSB of  
the output data-word is always 0. When the data is right justified,  
the LSB corresponds to Bit D0 of the DATAx0 register; when the  
data is left justified, the LSB corresponds to Bit D3 of the DATAx0  
register.  
Specifies how many FIFO entries are needed to  
trigger a watermark interrupt.  
Specifies how many FIFO entries are needed to  
trigger a watermark interrupt.  
Specifies how many FIFO samples are retained in  
the FIFO buffer before a trigger event.  
Stream  
Trigger  
Rev. 0 | Page 24 of 32  
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
Register 0x39—FIFO_STATUS (Read Only)  
Entries Bits  
D7  
D6  
D5  
D4  
D3  
D2  
D1  
D0  
The entries bits report how many data values are stored in the  
FIFO buffer. The data stored in the FIFO buffer is accessed by  
reading the data registers (Address 0x32 to Address 0x37). FIFO  
reads must be done in burst mode (multiple-byte mode) because  
each FIFO level is cleared after any read (single- or multiple-  
byte) of the FIFO buffer. The FIFO buffer stores a maximum of  
32 entries, which equates to a maximum of 33 entries available  
at any given time because an additional entry is available at the  
output filter of the device.  
FIFO_TRIG  
0
Entries  
The read-only FIFO_STATUS register indicates whether a  
trigger event has occurred and reports the number of data  
values stored in the FIFO buffer.  
FIFO_TRIG Bit  
When the FIFO_TRIG bit is set to 1, a trigger event has occurred;  
when the FIFO_TRIG bit is set to 0, no trigger event has occurred.  
Rev. 0 | Page 25 of 32  
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
APPLICATIONS INFORMATION  
POWER SUPPLY DECOUPLING  
SHOCK DETECTION  
A 1 µF tantalum capacitor (CS) at VS and a 0.1 µF ceramic capac-  
itor (CI/O) at VDD I/O placed close to the ADXL375 supply pins are  
recommended to adequately decouple the accelerometer from  
noise on the power supply. If additional decoupling is necessary,  
a resistor or ferrite bead (no larger than 100 Ω) in series with VS  
may be helpful. Additionally, increasing the bypass capacitance  
on VS to a 10 µF tantalum capacitor in parallel with a 0.1 µF  
ceramic capacitor may also improve noise performance.  
The shock interrupt function can detect mechanical shock events  
based on amplitude and pulse width. Figure 33 illustrates the  
following parameters for a valid single shock event and a valid  
double shock event.  
Shock detection threshold—defined by the THRESH_  
SHOCK register (Address 0x1D).  
Maximum shock duration time (time limit for shocks)—  
defined by the DUR register (Address 0x21).  
Shock latency time—defined by the latent register (Address  
0x22). The latency time is the waiting period from the end  
of the first shock until the start of the time window, when a  
second shock can be detected.  
Make sure that the connection from the ADXL375 ground to  
the power supply ground has low impedance because noise trans-  
mitted through ground has an effect similar to noise transmitted  
through VS. It is recommended that VS and VDD I/O be separate  
supplies to minimize digital clocking noise on the VS supply. If  
it is not possible to use separate supplies, additional filtering of  
the supplies, as previously mentioned, may be necessary.  
Time window for second shock—defined by the window  
register (Address 0x23). The time window is the interval  
after the latency time (set by the latent register). Although  
a second shock must begin after the latency time expires, it  
need not finish before the end of the time defined by the  
window register.  
V
V
S
DD I/O  
C
C
I/O  
S
V
V
S
DD I/O  
ADXL375  
FIRST SHOCK  
SECOND SHOCK  
SDA/SDI/SDIO  
3- OR 4-WIRE  
SPI OR I C  
INTERFACE  
SDO/ALT ADDRESS  
SCL/SCLK  
INT1  
INT2  
INTERRUPT  
CONTROL  
2
CS  
GND  
THRESHOLD  
(THRESH_SHOCK)  
Figure 31. Application Diagram  
TIME LIMIT FOR  
SHOCKS (DUR)  
MECHANICAL CONSIDERATIONS FOR MOUNTING  
TIME WINDOW FOR  
LATENCY  
TIME  
(LATENT)  
SECOND SHOCK  
(WINDOW)  
Mount the ADXL375 on the PCB in a location close to a hard  
mounting point of the PCB to the case. Mounting the ADXL375  
at an unsupported PCB location, as shown in Figure 32, may result  
in large, apparent measurement errors due to undampened PCB  
vibration. Locating the accelerometer near a hard mounting point  
ensures that any PCB vibration at the accelerometer is above the  
mechanical sensor resonant frequency of the accelerometer and  
is, therefore, effectively invisible to the accelerometer. Multiple  
mounting points, close to the sensor, and/or a thicker PCB also  
help to reduce the effects of system resonance on the performance  
of the sensor.  
SINGLE SHOCK  
INTERRUPT  
DOUBLE SHOCK  
INTERRUPT  
Figure 33. Shock Interrupt Function with Valid Single and Double Shocks  
If only the single shock function is in use, the single shock  
interrupt is triggered when the acceleration goes below the  
threshold, as long as the duration time is not exceeded. If  
both the single and double shock functions are in use, the  
single shock interrupt is triggered when the double shock  
event is either validated or invalidated.  
ACCELEROMETERS  
PCB  
MOUNTING POINTS  
Figure 32. Incorrectly Placed Accelerometers  
Rev. 0 | Page 26 of 32  
 
 
 
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
Several events invalidate the second shock of a double shock event.  
Single shocks, double shocks, or both can be detected by setting  
the appropriate bits in the INT_ENABLE register (Address 0x2E).  
Participation of each of the three axes in single shock/double  
shock detection is controlled by setting the appropriate bits in  
the SHOCK_AXES register (Address 0x2A). For the double  
shock function to operate, both the latent and window registers  
must be set to a nonzero value.  
If the suppress bit in the SHOCK_AXES register (Bit D3,  
Address 0x2A) is set, any acceleration spike above the  
threshold during the latency time (set by the latent register)  
invalidates the double shock detection (see Figure 34).  
INVALIDATES DOUBLE SHOCK IF  
SUPPRESS BIT SET  
Every mechanical system has somewhat different shock responses  
based on the mechanical characteristics of the system. Therefore,  
some experimentation with values for the DUR, latent, window,  
and THRESH_SHOCK registers is required.  
Setting a very low value in the latent, window, or THRESH_  
SHOCK register can result in unpredictable responses due to  
the accelerometer picking up echoes of the shock inputs.  
TIME LIMIT  
FOR SHOCKS  
(DUR)  
LATENCY  
TIME (LATENT)  
TIME WINDOW FOR SECOND  
SHOCK (WINDOW)  
After a shock interrupt is received, the first axis to exceed the  
THRESH_SHOCK level is reported in the ACT_SHOCK_  
STATUS register (Address 0x2B). This register is never cleared  
but is overwritten with new data.  
Figure 34. Double Shock Event Invalid Due to High g Event  
When the Suppress Bit Is Set  
A double shock event can be invalidated if acceleration  
above the threshold is detected at the start of the time  
window for the second shock (set by the window register),  
resulting in an invalid double shock at the start of this  
window (see Figure 35).  
A double shock event can be invalidated if acceleration  
exceeds the time limit for shocks (set by the DUR register),  
resulting in an invalid double shock at the end of the DUR  
time limit for the second shock event (see Figure 35).  
THRESHOLD DETECTION AND BANDWIDTH  
Lower output data rates are achieved by decimating a common  
sampling frequency inside the device. The activity and single  
shock/double shock detection functions are performed using  
undecimated data. Because the bandwidth of the output data  
varies with the data rate and is lower than the bandwidth of the  
undecimated data, the high frequency and high g data that is used  
to determine activity and single shock/double shock events may  
not be present if the output of the accelerometer is examined. This  
may result in the triggering of these functions when acceleration  
data does not appear to meet the conditions set by the user for  
the corresponding function.  
INVALIDATES DOUBLE SHOCK  
AT START OF WINDOW  
LINK MODE  
The link bit (Bit D5) in the POWER_CTL register (Address 0x2D)  
can be used to reduce the number of activity interrupts that the  
processor must service. The link bit configures the device to look  
for activity only after inactivity.  
TIME LIMIT  
FOR SHOCKS  
(DUR)  
TIME LIMIT  
FOR SHOCKS  
LATENCY  
TIME  
(LATENT)  
TIME WINDOW FOR  
SECOND SHOCK (WINDOW)  
(DUR)  
For proper operation of this feature, the processor must still  
respond to the activity and inactivity interrupts by reading the  
INT_SOURCE register (Address 0x30) and, therefore, clearing  
the interrupts. If an activity interrupt is not cleared, the part  
cannot enter autosleep mode. The asleep bit (Bit D3) in the  
ACT_SHOCK_STATUS register (Address 0x2B) indicates  
whether the part is asleep.  
TIME LIMIT  
FOR SHOCKS  
(DUR)  
INVALIDATES  
DOUBLE SHOCK AT  
END OF DUR  
Figure 35. Shock Interrupt Function with Invalid Double Shocks  
Rev. 0 | Page 27 of 32  
 
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
The number of samples averaged is selected by the system  
SLEEP MODE vs. LOW POWER MODE  
designer, but a recommended starting point is 0.1 sec worth of  
data for data rates of 100 Hz or greater—that is, 10 samples at  
the 100 Hz data rate. For data rates less than 100 Hz, it is recom-  
mended that at least 10 samples be averaged. These values are  
stored as X0g, Y0g, and Z+1g for the 0 g measurements on the x-  
and y-axes and the 1 g measurement on the z-axis, respectively.  
In applications where a low data rate and low power consumption  
are desired (at the expense of noise performance), it is recom-  
mended that low power mode be used. Low power mode preserves  
the functionality of the DATA_READY interrupt and the FIFO  
buffer for postprocessing of the acceleration data. To enable low  
power mode, set the LOW_POWER bit (Bit D4) in the BW_RATE  
register (Address 0x2C).  
The values measured for X0g and Y0g correspond to the x- and  
y-axis offsets, and compensation is performed by subtracting  
these values from the output of the accelerometer to obtain the  
actual acceleration, as follows:  
Sleep mode also provides a low data rate and low power consump-  
tion, but it is not intended for data acquisition. However, when  
sleep mode is used in conjunction with the autosleep and link  
modes, the part can automatically switch to a low power, low  
sampling rate mode when inactivity is detected. To prevent the  
generation of redundant inactivity interrupts, the inactivity  
interrupt is automatically disabled and the activity interrupt is  
enabled. To enable autosleep mode, set the AUTO_SLEEP bit  
(Bit D4) and the link bit (Bit D5) in the POWER_CTL register  
(Address 0x2D).  
X
ACTUAL = XMEAS X0g  
YACTUAL = YMEAS Y0g  
Because the z-axis measurement is performed in a +1 g field,  
a no-turn or single-point calibration scheme assumes an ideal  
sensitivity, SZ, for the z-axis. This value is subtracted from Z+1g  
to obtain the z-axis offset, which is then subtracted from future  
measured values to obtain the actual value, as follows:  
When the ADXL375 is in sleep mode, the host processor can also  
be placed into sleep mode or low power mode to save significant  
system power. When activity is detected, the accelerometer auto-  
matically switches back to the original data rate of the application  
and provides an activity interrupt that can be used to wake up the  
host processor. Similar to when inactivity occurs, detection of  
activity events is disabled and detection of inactivity is enabled.  
Z0g = Z+1g SZ  
ZACTUAL = ZMEAS Z0g  
The ADXL375 can automatically compensate the output for offset  
by using the offset registers (Register 0x1E, Register 0x1F, and  
Register 0x20). These registers contain an 8-bit, twos complement  
value that is automatically added to all measured acceleration  
values; the result is then placed into the data registers. Because  
the value placed in an offset register is additive, a negative value  
in the register eliminates a positive offset, and a positive value in  
the register eliminates a negative offset. The register has a scale  
factor of 1.56 g/LSB.  
OFFSET CALIBRATION  
Accelerometers are mechanical structures containing elements  
that are free to move. These moving parts can be very sensitive  
to mechanical stresses, much more so than solid-state electronics.  
The 0 g bias, or offset, is an important accelerometer metric  
because it defines the baseline for measuring acceleration.  
Additional stresses can be applied during assembly of a system  
containing an accelerometer. These stresses can come from, but  
are not limited to, component soldering, board stress during  
mounting, and application of any compounds on or over the  
component. If calibration is deemed necessary, it is recommended  
that it be performed after system assembly to compensate for  
these effects.  
As with all registers in the ADXL375, the offset registers do not  
retain the values written into them when power is removed from  
the part. Power cycling the ADXL375 returns the offset registers  
to their default value of 0x00.  
Because the no-turn or single-point calibration method assumes  
an ideal sensitivity in the z-axis, any error in the sensitivity results  
in offset error.  
DATA FORMATTING AT OUTPUT DATA RATES OF  
3200 HZ AND 1600 HZ  
A simple method of calibration is to measure the offset while  
assuming that the sensitivity of the ADXL375 is as specified in  
Table 1. The offset can then be automatically accounted for by  
using the built-in offset registers. The result of this calibration is  
that the data acquired from the data registers already compensates  
for any offset.  
When using the 3200 Hz or 1600 Hz output data rate, the  
LSB of the output data-word is always 0. When the data is right  
justified, the LSB corresponds to Bit D0 of the DATAx0 register;  
when the data is left justified, the LSB corresponds to Bit D3 of  
the DATAx0 register.  
In a no-turn or single-point calibration scheme, the part is  
oriented such that one axis, typically the z-axis, is in the 1 g field  
of gravity, and the remaining axes, typically the x- and y-axes, are  
in a 0 g field. The output is then measured by taking the average  
of a series of samples.  
Rev. 0 | Page 28 of 32  
 
 
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
7. Store the averaged values and label them appropriately  
USING SELF-TEST  
as the values with self-test enabled, that is, XST_ON,  
YST_ON, and ZST_ON.  
8. Disable self-test by clearing the SELF_TEST bit (Bit D7)  
in the DATA_FORMAT register (Address 0x31).  
The self-test change is defined as the difference between the  
acceleration output of an axis with self-test enabled and the  
acceleration output of the same axis with self-test disabled. Due  
to device filtering, the output reaches its final value after 4 × τ  
when enabling or disabling self-test, where τ = 1/(data rate).  
This definition assumes that the sensor does not move between  
these two measurements; if the sensor moves, a non-self-test  
related shift corrupts the test.  
With the stored values for self-test enabled and disabled, the  
self-test change is as follows:  
X
Y
ST = XST_ON XST_OFF  
ST = YST_ON YST_OFF  
Proper configuration of the ADXL375 is necessary for an  
accurate self-test measurement. To configure the part for self-  
test, follow this procedure.  
ZST = ZST_ON ZST_OFF  
Because the measured output for each axis is expressed in LSBs,  
XST, YST, and ZST are also expressed in LSBs. These values can be  
converted to acceleration (g) by multiplying each value by the  
49 mg/LSB scale factor.  
1. Set the data rate from 100 Hz to 800 Hz, or set the data rate  
to 3200 Hz by writing to the rate bits (Bits[D3:D0]) in the  
BW_RATE register (Address 0x2C). Write a value from  
0x0A to 0x0D, or write 0x0F to the BW_RATE register.  
2. For accurate self-test measurements, configure the part for  
normal power operation by clearing the LOW_POWER bit  
(Bit D4) in the BW_RATE register (Address 0x2C).  
3. After the part is configured for accurate self-test measure-  
ment, retrieve samples of x-, y-, and z-axis acceleration  
data from the sensor and average them together.  
The number of samples averaged is selected by the system  
designer, but a recommended starting point is 0.1 sec worth  
of data for data rates of 100 Hz or greater—that is, 10 samples  
at the 100 Hz data rate.  
4. Store the averaged values and label them appropriately  
as the values with self-test disabled, that is, XST_OFF,  
YST_OFF, and ZST_OFF.  
5. Enable self-test by setting the SELF_TEST bit (Bit D7)  
in the DATA_FORMAT register (Address 0x31).  
The output requires some time (approximately four samples)  
to settle after self-test is enabled.  
If the self-test change is within the valid range, the test is considered  
successful. Generally, a part is considered to pass if the minimum  
magnitude of change is achieved. However, a part that changes by  
more than the maximum magnitude is not necessarily a failure.  
The self-test response in the x- and y-axes exhibits bimodal  
behavior and, therefore, is not always a reliable indicator of  
sensor health or potential shift in device sensitivity. For this  
reason, perform the self-test check in the z-axis.  
Another effective method for using the self-test to verify accel-  
erometer functionality is to toggle the self-test at a certain rate  
and then perform an FFT on the output. The FFT should have  
a corresponding tone at the frequency where the self-test was  
toggled. Using an FFT in this way removes the dependency of  
the test on supply voltage and self-test magnitude, which can  
vary within a rather wide range.  
6. After allowing the output to settle, retrieve samples of x-, y-,  
and z-axis acceleration data and average them together.  
It is recommended that the same number of samples be taken  
for the self-test average as was done for the non-self-test  
average.  
Rev. 0 | Page 29 of 32  
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
AXES OF ACCELERATION SENSITIVITY  
A
Z
A
Y
A
X
Figure 36. Axes of Acceleration Sensitivity (Corresponding Output Voltage Increases When Accelerated Along the Sensitive Axis)  
X
Y
Z
= 1g  
= 0g  
= 0g  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
TOP  
GRAVITY  
X
Y
Z
= 0g  
= –1g  
= 0g  
X
Y
Z
= 0g  
= 1g  
= 0g  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
T O P  
X
Y
Z
= –1g  
= 0g  
= 0g  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
X
Y
Z
= 0g  
= 0g  
= 1g  
X
Y
Z
= 0g  
= 0g  
= –1g  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
OUT  
Figure 37. Output Response vs. Orientation to Gravity  
Rev. 0 | Page 30 of 32  
 
Data Sheet  
ADXL375  
LAYOUT AND DESIGN RECOMMENDATIONS  
Figure 38 shows the recommended printed wiring board land pattern.  
3.3400  
1.0500  
0.5500  
0.2500  
3.0500  
5.3400  
0.2500  
1.1450  
Figure 38. Recommended Printed Wiring Board Land Pattern (Dimensions shown in millimeters)  
PACKAGE INFORMATION  
Figure 39 and Table 19 provide information about the package branding for the ADXL375.  
3 7 5 B  
# y w w  
v v v v  
C N T Y  
Figure 39. Product Information on Package (Top View)  
Table 19. Package Branding Information  
Branding Key  
Field Description  
375B  
#
yww  
vvvv  
CNTY  
Part identifier for the ADXL375  
RoHS-compliant designation  
Date code  
Factory lot code  
Country of origin  
Rev. 0 | Page 31 of 32  
 
 
 
 
 
ADXL375  
Data Sheet  
OUTLINE DIMENSIONS  
3.00  
BSC  
PAD A1  
CORNER  
0.49  
BOTTOM VIEW  
0.813 × 0.50  
1
13  
14  
0.80  
BSC  
5.00  
BSC  
0.50  
8
6
7
TOP VIEW  
END VIEW  
1.01  
0.49  
0.79  
0.74  
0.69  
1.00  
0.95  
0.85  
1.50  
SEATING  
PLANE  
Figure 40. 14-Terminal Land Grid Array [LGA]  
(CC-14-1)  
Dimensions shown in millimeters  
ORDERING GUIDE  
Temperature  
Range  
Measurement Specified  
Package  
Option  
Model1  
Range (g)  
Voltage (V) Package Description  
ADXL375BCCZ  
ADXL375BCCZ-RL  
ADXL375BCCZ-RL7  
EVAL-ADXL375Z  
EVAL-ADXL375Z-M  
−40°C to +85°C  
−40°C to +85°C  
−40°C to +85°C  
−40°C to +85°C  
200  
200  
200  
2.5  
2.5  
2.5  
14-Terminal Land Grid Array [LGA]  
CC-14-1  
CC-14-1  
CC-14-1  
14-Terminal Land Grid Array [LGA]  
14-Terminal Land Grid Array [LGA]  
Evaluation Board  
Inertial Sensor Evaluation System, Includes  
ADXL375 Satellite  
EVAL-ADXL375Z-S  
ADXL375 Satellite, Standalone (can be used  
with other inertial sensor evaluation systems)  
1 Z = RoHS Compliant Part.  
I2C refers to a communications protocol originally developed by Philips Semiconductors (now NXP Semiconductors).  
©2013 Analog Devices, Inc. All rights reserved. Trademarks and  
registered trademarks are the property of their respective owners.  
D11669-0-8/13(0)  
Rev. 0 | Page 32 of 32  
 
 

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