General Description
( G( C! k* |7 V3 B8 p
The MAX30100 is an integrated pulse oximetry and heartrate
' E' U9 \% F0 i4 S) Pmonitor sensor solution. It combines two LEDs, a
0 Q; Z3 B3 `2 b& f, z2 Hphotodetector, optimized optics, and low-noise analog
4 P& `9 i. b% U0 i/ s* B+ k7 R
signal processing to detect pulse oximetry and heart-rate
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signals.
- v% s8 f2 ]$ q. \% _4 N" o; @; fThe MAX30100 operates from 1.8V and 3.3V power supplies
3 n8 ` p2 V) G2 _6 d
and can be powered down through software with
0 I" U9 |( J" w: {/ _negligible standby current, permitting the power supply to
" \+ c& m5 X1 W3 J* S3 U
remain connected at all times.
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Applications
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●● Wearable Devices
" a) w+ k& ^) u, |) F: v7 b●● Fitness Assistant Devices
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●● Medical Monitoring Devices
4 Q$ a+ e( w+ K) `4 K4 |& wBenefits and Features
; R/ S: [. H0 M1 @# B●● Complete Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor
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Solution Simplifies Design
$ M7 c$ \1 b" g% d& L p. l; Y. O. W6 x• Integrated LEDs, Photo Sensor, and
' N: P9 Z9 R' Y0 {7 M! y) C& [' E/ dHigh-Performance Analog Front -End
; u& f4 F3 ?$ \8 B) \& d: D• Tiny 5.6mm x 2.8mm x 1.2mm 14-Pin Optically
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Enhanced System-in-Package
+ u, ]/ s: I0 A y) a. q8 P●● Ultra-Low-Power Operation Increases Battery Life for
) Z& A2 P' I/ L5 n9 c+ d) f+ N/ D
Wearable Devices
$ l! f6 T$ P# a! `( d( I• Programmable Sample Rate and LED Current for
% P; ~& ]7 _: C! X! ?Power Savings
+ a: p n6 T% j• Ultra-Low Shutdown Current (0.7μA, typ)
$ v T+ Q7 B9 J* @/ L7 L2 x●● Advanced Functionality Improves Measurement
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Performance
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• High SNR Provides Robust Motion Artifact Resilience
0 k" W: g3 ^$ G% b6 |• Integrated Ambient Light Cancellation
3 u$ G3 T- ?, j4 @' ^; m X• High Sample Rate Capability
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• Fast Data Output Capability
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Ordering Information appears at end of data sheet.
D- ^2 A9 s5 x e! a1 h19-7065; Rev 0; 9/14
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ADC
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CONTROL SIGNAL
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PROCESSING
) k3 K) S8 }. C1 \- \6 t# uCOVER GLASS
, F" f" l4 o5 p, Q+ x10
9 z8 A# _% u( }9 s/ a6 q) D x
0.1
3 H/ s! I1 B# M6 qRED IR
. `6 v- R F2 y7 W/ w
HbO2
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Hb
# A- n, M! d7 ?3 yNO INK
l4 G, h) l6 H6 D: b! d( pMAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
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for Wearable Health
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System Block Diagram
9 |% ?( |% Y& [. V& k9 \EVALUATION KIT AVAILABLE
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VDD to GND..........................................................-0.3V to +2.2V
E( K) w$ b% o& v" l' C) VGND to PGND.......................................................-0.3V to +0.3V
9 {! E$ w8 q( B& g8 W2 s1 L( Q sx_DRV, x_LED+ to PGND.....................................-0.3V to +6.0V
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All Other Pins to GND...........................................-0.3V to +6.0V
- z! w% P8 v1 sOutput Short-Circuit Current Duration........................Continuous
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Continuous Input Current into Any Terminal.....................±20mA
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Continuous Power Dissipation (TA = +70°C)
! Y. @$ ~+ \8 B4 r- COESIP (derate 5.8mW/°C above +70°C).....................464mW
h3 F: s4 i' dOperating Temperature Range............................ -40°C to +85°C
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Soldering Temperature (reflow)........................................+260°C
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Storage Temperature Range............................. -40°C to +105°C
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OESIP
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Junction-to-Ambient Thermal Resistance (θJA).........150°C/W
~/ K# K. f6 s) U4 b; H" Z! TJunction-to-Case Thermal Resistance (θJC)..............170°C/W
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(Note 1)
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(VDD = 1.8V, VIR_LED+ = VR_LED+ = 3.3V, TA = +25°C, min/max are from TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 2)
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PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
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POWER SUPPLY
3 z7 a6 t6 W7 N" k. b' f; o/ Y/ jPower-Supply Voltage VDD Guaranteed by RED and IR count tolerance 1.7 1.8 2.0 V
6 S/ q# x4 d( ]LED Supply Voltage
3 j- d# A5 r: w# z( H( o% \# i(R_LED+ or IR_LED+ to PGND) VLED+ Guaranteed by PSRR of LED Driver 3.1 3.3 5.0 V
# z2 _* G' Q, a: N* aSupply Current IDD
, ?9 t" h6 k6 C7 p# B/ sSpO2 and heart rate modes,
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PW = 200μs, 50sps 600 1200
- A) C( Q( P0 Y2 J7 V" S6 R+ [μA
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Heart rate only mode,
/ M. Y6 w1 v6 @; e; }PW = 200μs, 50sps 600 1200
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Supply Current in Shutdown ISHDN TA = +25°C, MODE = 0x80 0.7 10 μA
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SENSOR CHARACTERISTICS
q U* v* M4 T. y# cADC Resolution 14 bits
$ }0 \2 _9 v9 H' uRed ADC Count
- J+ F0 ^- q, S H2 j(Note 3) REDC
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Propriety ATE setup
5 h( X5 T+ B4 @8 Q+ ]9 `, FRED_PA = 0x05, LED_PW = 0x00,
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SPO2_SR = 0x07, TA = +25°C
- E# |9 } z$ [2 \# i" A
23,000 26,000 29,000 Counts
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IR ADC Count
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(Note 3) IRC
) ~1 ]9 r8 z7 d6 I# ]Propriety ATE setup
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IR_PA = 0x09, LED_PW = 0x00,
4 i5 v" q! e* C9 tSPO2_SR = 0x07, TA = +25°C
W M+ L( I; U. l+ s23,000 26,000 29,000 Counts
6 t: l/ B* t" C; _2 d0 Z3 H+ \. jDark Current Count DCC
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RED_PA = IR_PA = 0x00,
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LED_PW = 0x03, SPO2_SR = 0x01 0 3 Counts
2 T5 x7 O0 I8 d, A) LDC Ambient Light Rejection
Z" u% X- r# A3 W0 b E! x(Note 4) ALR
- T! [6 b9 [# x8 c1 A7 xNumber of ADC counts with
2 M9 s7 e, w% @$ m" L ~7 zfinger on sensor under direct
9 m% X/ x; }) ?! e4 [$ ssunlight (100K lux)
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LED_PW = 0x03,
) V3 v' \/ c$ N: O9 O) h- l" fSPO2_SR = 0x01
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RED LED 0
) B5 N! c6 O& g7 H! zCounts
5 l, x" _; j& i5 z$ d1 U9 hIR LED 0
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* |1 @/ F' H4 g6 H( I! Y- a* zMAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
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Note 1: Package thermal resistances were obtained using the method described in JEDEC specification JESD51-7, using a four-layer
8 S) T+ u3 u+ r" tboard. For detailed information on package thermal considerations, refer to
www.maximintegrated.com/thermal-tutorial.7 X" y$ z( f, Q/ m9 e
Absolute Maximum Ratings
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Package Thermal Characteristics
& ^: C# g3 A3 V5 L4 W/ rElectrical Characteristics
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(VDD = 1.8V, VIR_LED+ = VR_LED+ = 3.3V, TA = +25°C, min/max are from TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 2)
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PARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
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IR ADC Count—PSRR (VDD) PSRRVDD
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Propriety ATE setup
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1.7V < VDD < 2.0V,
5 H% n# n O Q6 \5 c% @ RLED_PW = 0x03, SPO2_SR = 0x01,
[1 t7 g8 c& Z7 KIR_PA = 0x09, IR_PA = 0x05, TA = +25°C
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0.25 2 %
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Frequency = DC to 100kHz, 100mVP-P 10 LSB
- K! p! w/ y. S4 E/ Z. l8 ^RED/IR ADC Count—PSRR
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(X_LED+) PSRRLED
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Propriety ATE setup
2 B4 O; m9 P4 F5 }3.1V < X_LED+ < 5V,
# ~2 A1 }4 X; {6 ?LED_PW = 0x03, SPO2_SR = 0x01,
; _4 U" Y( o. A' ^' {2 G/ JIR_PA = 0x09, IR_PA = 0x05, TA = +25°C
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0.05 2 %
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Frequency = DC to 100kHz, 100mVP-P 10 LSB
, j% e4 ?/ ?' n; mADC Integration Time INT
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LED_PW = 0x00 200 μs
/ O8 I6 N+ g9 l3 lLED_PW = 0x03 1600 μs
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IR LED CHARACTERISTICS (Note 4)
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LED Peak Wavelength λP ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 870 880 900 nm
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Full Width at Half Max Δλ ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 30 nm
- D6 A7 p# w: ~& NForward Voltage VF ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 1.4 V
8 X# g1 i2 Q9 h; N) n- [9 q! TRadiant Power PO ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 6.5 mW
, l) d' D7 y# VRED LED CHARACTERISTICS (Note 4)
9 u6 ~. H' e3 p: T @5 JLED Peak Wavelength λP ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 650 660 670 nm
8 m: m. C. {) \. Q; H* T0 pFull Width at Half Max Δλ ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 20 nm
% r- r; R- l( c# a" M% K
Forward Voltage VF ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 2.1 V
% k& b1 g5 ^ @) M3 X: V+ o: vRadiant Power PO ILED = 20mA, TA = +25°C 9.8 mW
0 Q% F0 d. {2 C! T; r$ ~- N( _TEMPERATURE SENSOR
- a5 T% N0 u( q/ B) PTemperature ADC Acquisition
+ d/ Z" V& D9 A7 WTime TT TA = +25°C 29 ms
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Temperature Sensor Accuracy TA TA = +25°C ±1 °C
; i" _6 x1 Q8 WTemperature Sensor Minimum
: Z4 z& H7 v6 F$ cRange TMIN -40 °C
( J- w7 A# u% |! c& B3 U* R9 p0 sTemperature Sensor Maximum
* O$ {5 |8 R! G+ gRange TMAX 85 °C
2 D# l* u& v" ^- k7 } gwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 3
% N, J) Z2 Q# t) k8 C9 B
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
- I( Y1 R( a& p% pfor Wearable Health
9 C" i! [. f6 w, j7 C3 y9 RElectrical Characteristics (continued)
5 U% B( f0 t; {. \5 T. v6 s9 h/ n! x" q(VDD = 1.8V, VIR_LED+ = VR_LED+ = 3.3V, TA = +25°C, min/max are from TA = -40°C to +85°C, unless otherwise noted.) (Note 2)
4 X: B* F; h/ D6 b5 m( CNote 2: All devices are 100% production tested at TA = +25°C. Specifications over temperature limits are guaranteed by Maxim
: X3 C5 l- N) v I
Integrated’s bench or proprietary automated test equipment (ATE) characterization.
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Note 3: Specifications are guaranteed by Maxim Integrated’s bench characterization and by 100% production test using proprietary
! V4 S* M1 P8 i i! aATE setup and conditions.
/ m* U9 k5 B4 Z L$ |# ^+ U* BNote 4: For design guidance only. Not production tested.
7 h4 X* `/ ^9 t! SPARAMETER SYMBOL CONDITIONS MIN TYP MAX UNITS
- D1 f2 q+ M: b9 c0 Z: jDIGITAL CHARACTERISTICS (SDA, SDA, INT)
& N, W' A. D7 U7 { UOutput Low Voltage SDA, INT VOL ISINK = 6mA 0.4 V
. _7 p, ]1 V# r8 ~1 ^2 F) f+ TI2C Input Voltage Low VIL_I2C SDA, SCL 0.4 V
% }/ @) F2 [. E+ F; b; I
I2C Input Voltage High VIH_I2C SDA, SCL 1.4 V
8 c4 g9 [( _+ `7 r4 m- q+ `2 tInput Hysteresis VHYS SDA, SCL 200 mV
5 ~/ ]& B$ u, a5 b9 E( w/ I( RInput Capacitance CIN SDA, SCL 10 pF
. O9 W8 T. V I6 P6 ~Input Leakage Current IIN
# @% N) x( s! }1 q) I8 w1 K
VIN = 0V, TA = +25°C
3 U# A- x+ \2 p( I, q) d4 W
(SDA, SCL, INT) 0.01 1 μA
/ \% Y. g- z# u( u
VIN = 5.5V, TA = +25°C
V6 O) e6 z( X% n4 `
(SDA, SCL, INT) 0.01 1 μA
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I2C TIMING CHARACTERISTICS (SDA, SDA, INT)
- b, S7 I) B/ x2 X0 ?
I2C Write Address AE Hex
+ }% h3 W3 h1 J: OI2C Read Address AF Hex
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Serial Clock Frequency fSCL 0 400 kHz
" j# ?2 i! a* C2 H. iBus Free Time Between STOP
' [& t# N2 K% @! ]. Z( _
and START Conditions tBUF 1.3 μs
+ b8 n& F, Y( u) THold Time (Repeated) START
4 I7 R$ ^/ l# T* eCondition tHD,START 0.6 μs
. g! i$ R( P) USCL Pulse-Width Low tLOW 1.3 μs
& ~; t" D" q8 \; Z x; d- ASCL Pulse-Width High tHIGH 0.6 μs
3 \. b; I4 t9 Y: {# }' ZSetup Time for a Repeated START
H: w0 W2 ~- q( X6 t
Condition tSU,START 0.6 μs
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Data Hold Time tHD,DAT 0 900 ns
# M9 n o& W! r& d& eData Setup Time tSU,DAT 100 ns
% w6 w& l% ?1 ~' \+ [7 m' F9 U( JSetup Time for STOP Condition tSU,STOP 0.6 μs
- L( b0 b" V) u: l4 d4 dPulse Width of Suppressed Spike tSP 0 50 ns
3 g: [3 [; X5 P; K7 o @Bus Capacitance CB 400 pF
+ u) p; ]8 W& I5 ?) _SDA and SCL Receiving Rise
$ z' t, c9 T' N0 YTime tR 20 + 0.1CB 300 ns
( ^" j* `* N2 B) y8 O l. w
SDA and SCL Receiving Fall Time tRF 20 + 0.1CB 300 ns
6 _3 Z& P- M" I1 h) D
SDA Transmitting Fall Time tTF 20 + 0.1CB 300 ns
- j( h6 t1 }* e/ C6 bwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 4
/ T" m% m: u# j1 w# k2 `2 q
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
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for Wearable Health
0 b$ Q9 J$ z( Y! ]6 c& m* d9 D* {# }- XElectrical Characteristics (continued)
$ ^5 z# ~' e9 J5 O0 O+ a' s6 Z4 VFigure 1. I2C-Compatible Interface Timing Diagram
& E. J2 P9 B. S& p2 F; w2 C. CSDASCLtHD,STASTART CONDITIONtRtFtLOWtSU,DATtHD,DATtSU,STAtHD,STAREPEATED START CONDITIONtSPtSU,STOtBUFSTOPCONDITIONSTARTCONDITIONtHIGH
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www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 5
+ a! G3 B8 N z& h6 Y6 i- i
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
2 s1 E4 n, @* f7 R
for Wearable Health
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(VDD = 1.8V, VIR_LED+ = VR_LED+ = 3.3V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.)
! a) M5 a, Y2 l, k. | b
0.0
K2 z& q$ }! b' C( {0.1
$ A# |+ [2 W# L8 Z G3 P
0.2
$ U9 T. I/ z; X- N0 s0 n0.3
5 `+ V, n- u; U* j4 C& e6 ~5 W9 X
0.4
" y0 ^4 S. s! e3 g3 v0.5
$ i4 j6 C9 X- p1 {. \3 j
0.6
f+ x$ K, F; p" z; B0.7
$ u4 H: ?+ e R4 Q& Y! L% Z0.8
]1 w* W$ F- M F7 D3 q8 _0.9
& L1 ~8 G! g- B
1.0
" w3 p* e# P( B/ M/ o% |1 d- O
0.00 0.50 1.00 1.50 2.00 2.50
_5 M" m6 ^: ?+ O* {0 [* J
SUPPLY CURRENT (mA)
/ }& l" H) M% }% E S0 \SUPPLY VOLTAGE (V)
- Y9 @$ y: N7 {; O& [ x# }VDD SUPPLY CURRENT vs.
3 i) R+ I; ^! ^) U! _4 Y+ T: s& v
SUPPLY VOLTAGE toc03
/ G- v( y# L0 X" k# b. a- d
MODE 0
s* C5 q' x) _MODE 2
# i8 W! [8 S) l [% H0 v
MODE 3
( _4 Q# X! S3 e7 `6 ]! X5 ]1 k0.04
% W u2 ?# G2 M( x; T- v
0.05
3 Q6 c+ K' E2 I5 q, Y1 D0.06
* V) b1 L# K, F$ s( {* R
0.07
# d6 Y! x3 W" O9 K5 ?9 }* n
0.08
' q2 N1 P; c$ \; |0 C% E0.09
% ^2 k# Q1 r( H( g) _" r5 ?
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70
y" R3 j9 A. m R& N5 p# LDRV PIN COMPLIANCE VOLTAGE (V)
# X7 h& a) f0 k }& BLED PULSE CURRENT (mA)
4 V) ?0 F X0 n/ {& aIR LED SUPPLY HEADROOM
' n3 [0 w9 R- W$ H8 i
(-10% CURRENT)
& F' z. \4 b6 g* ~4 a" f1 Atoc02
5 |3 ?" P( L+ X* RTA = +25°C
" a( p% D5 P( W0
4 R3 Q T$ f6 t$ U% B" N
10000
% M/ [9 a- b. a- q- l ?$ A; Y20000
& `6 U) S0 E6 [' w
30000
/ |5 m# }4 e& D0 g1 {( a40000
; K$ g) m# A7 n! G
50000
" u# z( b. X+ B5 b; w
60000
6 l; N) W/ H* F$ M2 R+ D70000
( e* _: k, b! O: X# T# {
0 5 10 15 20
3 m4 A) n7 T$ M. S5 j# Y& a4 `
COUNTS (SUM)
8 b0 j$ ~% Y" H" }" x! F5 _) p, d" ]& IDISTANCE (mm)
: J0 @: _. G* p* \4 B- f2 v' l
DC COUNTS vs. DISTANCE FOR
/ q! D, M, v" m& J# tWHITE HIGH IMPACT STYRENE CARD toc04
# r* t& G+ M% E) TRED
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IR
6 o4 o C: i' G4 cMODE[2:0] = 011
3 R$ A2 g' f" Z" a# ?0 t: @SPO2_HI_RES_EN = 1
8 k0 A# b. @) w6 C( {0 m2 x/ B: H
SPO2_ADC_RGE = 0
! ]3 l! ?- Z' s" l5 |
SPO2_SR[2:0] = 001
* q. k( v; _. ?0 `! h4 ~6 [/ X3 v8 M
RED or IR_PA[3:0] =
) e5 e( U7 h4 _, Z) Y0101
; f! x1 ?7 J7 y0
$ g4 I" X' }- H3 s2 [
1
* ]( E$ o8 U3 P2
1 n1 U* p9 T# x/ S: c1 T2 E: j, e2 |
3
( d# |* e5 A! {
4
6 F" O: j0 S0 e& L
5
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6
5 Z; {9 B+ w( H8 H
7
- Z/ K2 P" x7 {# q( w
-50 0 50 100 150
* D8 Y1 w* b2 j% y! P9 N
VDD SHUTDOWN CURRENT (μA)
4 S* q# }4 `3 \9 S) Q
TEMPERATURE (°C)
9 `: |! }; O4 h9 u
VDD SHUTDOWN CURRENT
. }' g" G* f, W5 S7 Q& Y& n. q+ r5 `) W
vs. TEMPERATURE
' z1 T7 A* r3 n5 x7 d+ K
VDD = 1.7V
; r3 c; ]/ r8 M6 K; }
toc05
3 @, G6 i- u, {3 W* n* W( [VDD = 2.0V
" A- @8 d# e( j3 R1 SVDD = 1.8V
& y; n: k( w% j- v m' x0.06
3 ~' c m- i. f- ~3 ^! T3 R/ V0.07
0 |# o" b- k/ G; ^0.08
2 N1 ?; z/ @$ q8 p8 F8 X0.09
7 a- P; C3 p' q8 E) O, h2 [+ x `0.10
5 M" U' p! D+ s) B" l1 V, L* Y* {0.11
% s" M2 e) \% P" Q8 m# W% m
0.12
, M, S/ n/ a% w( y
0.13
( M2 E0 T+ x- t9 u6 R. W; P# D! I0.14
' }8 I$ V \/ W. N
-50 0 50 100 150
0 i# {4 K1 J4 X5 a- s9 QLED SHUTDOWN CURRENT (μA)
2 e: T l) H6 I6 Z( z/ x
TEMPERATURE (°C)
" z2 j# Q H9 ^0 E5 z, HLED SHUTDOWN CURRENT
, z* ]3 g5 m* d# S& c, w+ }9 t8 Nvs. TEMPERATURE
0 r7 V+ _ a" iVDD = 3.1V
' B' V) i9 S6 |: \
toc06
( Q) t( K, K% j$ o9 {, c1 a# z5 XVDD = 3.6V
" B6 U8 G2 ^1 d/ O
VDD = 3.3V
% I$ T9 I7 p7 d% C; d8 s, c G
-4
4 @8 a* R* H+ S: y-3
7 |5 Y9 k2 E: E5 A7 D
-2
2 v% @ H* `8 r8 ], Z$ H% G-1
" {6 T# i, s" z2 o6 [, A }% v
0
$ k4 F; h4 _; e9 G1
* c& G! _3 |3 c0 m" K* |' x! \2
3 Q: v' Q7 J* X5 [4 N( \3 X- g+ O3
; S! K3 X1 K2 ]1 f( {& p. F7 s" D' S
-40 10 60 110
, T9 ]' ~" _& n Y# Z9 Z) MTEMPERATURE ERROR (°C)
6 O* S8 I& s; f
ACTUAL TEMPERATURE (°C)
9 p. t" W, C# O+ M$ j# s* v qON-BOARD TEMPERATURE vs. ERROR
4 h( t$ c8 y4 f, U) qtoc07
, ?$ S1 k) F( V$ j-20
2 _2 ]- C& t* f) g/ ]1 K! Z0
+ v9 v1 ~$ ~5 r9 @3 M9 O
20
7 A2 ]6 t9 m) U( B* H. j2 d
40
1 W, g! w2 w% @6 M9 _/ s
60
4 R- w) x7 F0 N, D
80
- d# ]* W- _* Z: ~: {, X+ K100
7 r, Z, K6 j2 M, `3 ]120
5 I# t+ f% D3 e3 a# K' W, t
500 600 700 800
+ v% Y, ]. h# z% I% s; ?7 t0 \" XNORMALIZE POWER (%)
6 _! V5 I' m) m( _: Q
WAVELENGTH (nm)
n2 k' n/ a6 {4 n
RED LED SPECTRA at +30°C
" Q2 c$ D7 h2 P
toc08
/ j2 U! h/ _# @; _1 d( P0.05
, `8 U; E1 ]9 Z( L6 E$ |% M2 S+ `4 d# J
0.06
8 i4 x( }: V' h0.07
1 R- q) O, l% j
0.08
6 s8 E1 ]% t$ c! T& j0.09
# j2 ?/ ^7 ^+ d" N! n4 o6 x0.10
9 [9 l8 |5 f1 v4 U
0.11
! Y# ]! ^4 d# K7 T4 U0 l4 M; K
0.12
]! h& k" \8 c/ t/ t
0.13
8 a, W# U% B% D+ U; F0.14
1 D$ y" H( x ~% {3 L Q \0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
" U5 r9 t9 b' i- u7 i5 \0 wDRV PIN COMPLIANCE VOLTAGE (V)
6 f2 }' O% x# c9 V3 k" f
LED PULSE CURRENT (mA)
" C' N& ~2 g" I9 J* h" JRED LED SUPPLY HEADROOM
8 i& e8 D- R8 Z7 M. C* D7 k! j! t(-10% CURRENT)
0 M" e! w/ W& p
toc01
( Z# `. _# ~6 i. X! E- H
TA = +25°C
# W" _0 h* ~0 h# zwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 6
$ w+ a2 a6 t" qMAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
% C2 p: r! |* r& H, [6 ~2 z+ |# Zfor Wearable Health
: y0 u/ ^2 ]/ P- \/ N, F$ x$ L3 c" oTypical Operating Characteristics
9 C7 U2 i" w- s7 X9 O% n(VDD = 1.8V, VIR_LED+ = VR_LED+ = 3.3V, TA = +25°C, unless otherwise noted.)
' s$ [7 B- |( Z$ o
860
2 j# X/ U; ]( V& U7 i! d
865
7 J0 N& a0 H$ R- |# Z e$ N! ?870
}; P p3 |) A( e1 S0 ^
875
. M5 q* C8 U7 ?! p7 Z0 Q/ _; o880
6 C* b: x7 q9 u7 R
885
% d0 F" m4 R3 p, |1 Z9 D$ `2 m
890
7 J9 D; X$ E# v7 c895
3 I2 W+ u, T" a2 f; t7 U900
3 @: q& U9 S( Z5 A6 i& @' W; Q0 A
-40 10 60 110
, ]" K; L- Y0 M4 P* K; ]8 v
PEAK WAVELENGTH (nm)
5 s: g& t* k- {& uTEMPERATURE (°C)
$ ]- |; k4 f7 wIR LED WAVELENGTH vs. TEMPERATURE
7 s& Z6 V$ L/ U9 D9 i. h' ]AT LED CURRENT = 25mA
9 b3 [/ m* T" W- @toc11
! F5 T$ m5 ?4 f, p: b+ f, j5 ^$ A650
# B/ u- X) p/ a655
5 S8 O' C$ y9 P6 i) y, |/ d' F4 v
660
- n& n' |: A' m
665
+ A8 I, _4 |3 X1 h9 M
670
) I. E9 m3 ^9 U9 q: U7 U/ ~- w675
/ v4 H- x- u6 w7 [1 _; U- `
-40 10 60 110
# K# ]: @& p5 z: w/ i7 S" H3 \) rPEAK WAVELENGTH (nm)
. U- K2 A; D1 O/ ETEMPERATURE (°C)
9 U2 y) R5 g8 o# o4 l& r7 |
RED LED WAVELENGTH vs. TEMPERATURE
( |# g2 q; s* m' {$ J7 n$ w. _5 M
AT LED CURRENT = 25mA
" Z: r1 S5 o$ G4 y) o; ]
toc10
0 X8 P* Y. S; F: q1 J5 E- x0
6 l' N) h |2 m, A10
# m1 N- Y2 q+ W20
% V. a( i3 E) R m0 N30
4 `! q8 I. ]( ^* u/ r% {3 I40
2 r6 x/ F5 u8 t) g: {9 |$ Y2 W/ P50
0 a8 G/ w: \5 d1 b: b6 u8 q60
, M/ t; J& j- O, C/ s70
1 f) G5 S! }: D$ i* G1.30 1.35 1.40 1.45 1.50 1.55
$ @& |8 e& c ?5 N0 o$ KFORWARD CURRENT (mA)
3 ?+ t% e- L( b" z: |1 C% a/ ^' q
FORWARD VOLTAGE (V)
$ S5 n( C- E: }+ V1 GRED LED FORWARD VOLTAGE vs.
, m5 s8 l0 V( t4 y7 JFORWARD CURRENT toc12
6 w$ R& O$ t9 P0 m
0
& i( t. D+ A5 J, |9 a
10
( J% o/ [% w, O0 W9 K7 h20
0 R+ ^* h+ [, q+ I3 u5 p30
& d7 v# b) L7 V- e40
& A2 E; Y2 R+ t50
& R9 [4 Q, k/ e60
$ n6 y, t: p$ w2 j) K70
/ L0 P. _0 z( k2 F8 p* q% ?- q
80
( ]. K1 f G2 G2 T7 @& x; b1.70 1.80 1.90 2.00 2.10 2.20 2.30 2.40
- B: {1 i0 W' G. c
FORWARD CURRENT (mA)
1 v& I: R5 H; o. ^$ a% R$ u7 v
FORWARD VOLTAGE (V)
( P/ V9 k V, S$ d- Z( y
IR LED FORWARD VOLTAGE vs.
% T) ^ { d) F8 N/ d9 y' }1 IFORWARD CURRENT toc13
% [) O9 |. y+ _
-20
! b+ @- t% r% N" r0
8 T* a) ^7 W0 m' p20
' V! t8 b0 @! U
40
- {2 F( X- C$ V9 X60
* T7 S' a( C! i) |+ F A0 t80
9 A' V ?% [3 D+ Y! R* |100
* c3 n9 Q5 x5 ^$ m0 q0 d9 ]120
9 z( e/ [% U5 [) o) e
700 800 900 1000
9 W7 S/ T) s) A! m, J lNORMALIZE POWER (%)
0 K4 i- `# l9 N( E1 u2 j4 v0 HWAVELENGTH (nm)
$ M9 n! v1 ~) A
IR LED SPECTRA at +30°C
0 l/ h* r- [8 B. D7 J- D
toc09
0 h( g! `: ]6 Y4 E/ E% e5 G& N- _) L
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 7
8 [8 r1 }/ D K5 n+ d9 s$ K- p) m( r
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
+ g' B( e2 D1 J! g8 L$ Q5 m; R
for Wearable Health
9 h; x- w! [" v4 e n' F
Typical Operating Characteristics (continued)
+ A6 r2 S8 h7 j/ E: i: sPIN NAME FUNCTION
! W6 h( s3 z$ ~) D8 w1, 7, 8, 14 N.C. No Connection. Connect to PCB Pad for Mechanical Stability.
% l0 j5 t3 H5 n
2 SCL I2C Clock Input
, b1 N; t' O4 j- n0 s/ t) e5 p7 X3 SDA I2C Clock Data, Bidirectional (Open-Drain)
* M" w8 X$ t( Y' H4 PGND Power Ground of the LED Driver Blocks
5 c, ^3 p: n9 F8 J$ t5 IR_DRV IR LED Cathode and LED Driver Connection Point. Leave floating in circuit.
; M4 g4 Z% P! ?1 Z1 g9 A
6 R_DRV Red LED Cathode and LED Driver Connection Point. Leave floating in circuit.
0 x& q* M! x2 A: h5 t) ]
9 R_LED+ Power Supply (Anode Connection) for Red LED. Bypass to PGND for best performance.
B' a! k. q& q* A% a& vConnected to IR_LED+ internally.
0 b' i5 K# C% O+ O% H7 v
10 IR_LED+ Power Supply (Anode Connection) for IR LED. Bypass to PGND for best performance. Connected
" B5 |& `) o$ l* w
to R_LED+ internally.
/ n) U, q( i& y6 h4 Z2 z/ z+ Z7 b: g2 ?# e11 VDD Analog Power Supply Input. Bypass to GND for best performance.
9 P. M: T5 A1 D2 y! s P8 g12 GND Analog Ground
& n0 m8 w. Y* h" x- L% Z" V- D8 x5 ^13 INT Active-Low Interrupt (Open-Drain)
& {6 \1 K/ n5 u- ]N.C. 1
+ `% Z9 c) O" q; Z, F
SCL 2
3 c" Y$ d6 B9 a6 l' J
SDA 3
8 o9 d8 F- @+ s U5 ], JPGND 4
/ A, u3 e; C0 D+ x$ N
IR_DRV 5
/ J% H2 c4 j& k) h( c
R_DRV 6
$ Z/ v) w5 \3 |. SN.C. 7
- \$ |5 _( e2 `7 U/ E14 N.C.
0 n2 Q( z" b. ~ o" f2 @13 INT
2 ^' m5 v6 z% f: l7 p12 GND
5 t& H( Q- k. g$ |! @5 K; V
11 VDD
( G6 L- o$ L3 ~1 t10 IR_LED+
6 B1 l8 _- J5 C/ T4 r
9 R_LED+
) A- [, m# ?8 D2 {( c6 E: n9 L8 N.C.
! g% t' ?, u$ r4 Z# e I) D2 H9 UMAX30100
' S/ N' e! f4 hSENSOR
" x/ T8 F& O4 G
LED
) {4 v* ]8 _/ Jwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 8
" _$ V5 o2 X2 }5 C
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
! j% d% {! m% I9 R3 P' d0 Dfor Wearable Health
- b/ F! X0 J4 ]$ I+ j bPin Description
; I$ J6 b' E" D: q# U; Y1 E: T. Z
Pin Configuration
( F+ E9 P& n& ]& L& I+ f660nm 880nm
R' q# h: Y, m$ LADC
- A3 ~1 C0 t$ ~! J
AMBIENT LIGHT
4 ?$ u2 b$ G' O( N) m% e1 g
CANCELLATION ANALOG
" Q4 }4 n0 g( s
TEMP ADC
# R Y# U# G& n+ ^ j; gOSCILLATOR
) Y. o1 [/ M7 u' VDIGITAL
* O) S }9 t ]: t# }; U$ pFILTER
* O& B( b& c+ N: Z( `4 T) C6 Q" iDIGITAL
3 z9 C) z9 G8 c8 C1 iDATA
7 `* f8 |/ { M- r# V5 g; mREGISTER
8 `* Y! }! { b) J; l7 l: B
LED DRIVERS
$ [2 D- X: Z- uI2C
. y& b1 y5 I+ N) e2 V# }# X7 ^% Q
COMMUNICATION
& c9 u8 b, K+ L$ }9 F
INT
+ W; z, q0 @1 h- y
SDA
" h* E1 a* A8 a: S, h, x
SCL
! F2 v8 T9 J' C# pR_LED+ IR_LED+ VDD
9 K6 f: e5 U, C7 G+ J: m" W6 Z. QR_DRV IR_DRV GND PGND
: w! W7 h3 p, O6 V6 E3 ]" y! T/ lRED IR
$ p% Z% T9 B G
RED+IR
& @* A, ^1 x; o$ G* p! O bwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 9
, t. [0 N% Z6 ~
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
" c& z- B/ I1 A/ dfor Wearable Health
" a- }4 \6 N# c0 ^- ODetailed Description
- I1 `2 I8 u0 ?8 ~. U; e9 J1 a( {9 ]
The MAX30100 is a complete pulse oximetry and heartrate
) w5 s' K' K1 s
sensor system solution designed for the demanding
6 U2 c; H5 {: _3 G, Zrequirements of wearable devices. The MAX30100 provides
5 ^( |( g2 S1 }1 n; E# m2 yvery small total solution size without sacrificing optical
% u- J. S* Y# F/ w/ ?* K( zor electrical performance. Minimal external hardware
2 R; Y3 x0 W$ v$ w% C* ^
components are needed for integration into a wearable
* }3 Q# I$ \1 o ~ P7 J
device.
7 t, U' z+ O1 O) UThe MAX30100 is fully configurable through software registers,
; B( L6 v0 _- ]+ }4 K$ dand the digital output data is stored in a 16-deep
( _1 B# A6 v$ G- V/ j
FIFO within the device. The FIFO allows the MAX30100
8 U; z1 c8 ` i% Cto be connected to a microcontroller or microprocessor on
& o# j( J$ Y( e, w& x) v6 e+ G
a shared bus, where the data is not being read continuously
+ C/ S6 r) i$ Lfrom the device’s registers.
5 S# d# x6 m; V0 K* Q2 L: z
SpO2 Subsystem
* f, r9 H, `) p# I# K/ l9 J
The SpO2 subsystem in the MAX30100 is composed of
N9 F+ W- c% `2 U! |! s
ambient light cancellation (ALC), 16-bit sigma delta ADC,
! k: ^7 j [ f2 wand proprietary discrete time filter.
2 L% Q' O; F3 L" |6 U' o3 p
The SpO2 ADC is a continuous time oversampling sigma
, ]& Z6 d. h) }7 H
delta converter with up to 16-bit resolution. The ADC output
. s9 n% e2 b" D0 f7 j4 {9 [data rate can be programmed from 50Hz to 1kHz. The
: K! M- @- g0 S% {0 pMAX30100 includes a proprietary discrete time filter to
2 G% u/ [) ~( a( \/ i, R
reject 50Hz/60Hz interference and low-frequency residual
2 q4 R, n' P$ [& p* i4 pambient noise.
( n( Q5 S, b/ s) P0 s
Temperature Sensor
# L; g! h' ?" Q" i1 }6 ^9 { tThe MAX30100 has an on-chip temperature sensor for
7 V" w# [# D& z) f* k8 o( x(optionally) calibrating the temperature dependence of the
4 I m2 Y) P3 A' E
SpO2 subsystem.
6 N- A) a V& l9 t2 {
The SpO2 algorithm is relatively insensitive to the wavelength
) J* ?$ L' q/ R7 W" V& [' q& b
of the IR LED, but the red LED’s wavelength is critical
- D8 @! i: i F* A5 h: `7 T2 [to correct interpretation of the data. The temperature
! F' d& t/ {& h
sensor data can be used to compensate the SpO2 error
5 S( i8 J, E. [( q5 x6 {with ambient temperature changes.
1 U6 `7 f5 [2 U% N" q
LED Driver
' ~) v, U3 u4 w& ]
The MAX30100 integrates red and IR LED drivers to drive
Y, [# O, N8 T
LED pulses for SpO2 and HR measurements. The LED
. ]/ L% T" j0 a% h" i% bcurrent can be programmed from 0mA to 50mA (typical
6 R, U" I9 P+ f& }' r$ m
only) with proper supply voltage. The LED pulse width
$ \) J T* Q' v- pcan be programmed from 200μs to 1.6ms to optimize
+ j$ W. ~( R7 kmeasurement accuracy and power consumption based
. Y/ s9 P3 y* G# t5 o* s2 j
on use cases.
* |3 b* B% O* f6 }6 KFunctional Diagram
# s; D! S+ v8 D% s* l6 G
Table 1. Register Maps and Descriptions
$ v' f" G7 W Z8 T# I; L, ^. UREGISTER
* ?4 a" i$ Y, TB7
& l8 u6 V: U( M) XB6
+ }& o! v6 n6 A! D4 T8 t
B5
9 e4 y( v( z6 c8 ]B4
9 f2 T: j' `! K. w4 CB3
- }* ^! G% i: G6 [
B2
& {( r1 d: A, X1 QB1
. f+ T: o2 [/ VB0
8 S3 f* A$ X; J9 e: yREG
3 N4 x3 p( o7 y B
ADDR
* H7 h- g! C( c; a+ F( h) ?% M( P& yPOR
( T% i: b. k( o; M. X3 N4 ?, k2 ^STATE
; j3 G1 w/ W0 _
R/W
( t1 Y; `) D( L+ D- a, t" p4 iSTATUS
7 v, o& ?, \ F, K
Interrupt
' O' g$ E }2 Y2 o1 `2 C, E
Status
7 D$ ~8 A: l* c1 P* r2 a. m- z9 [2 ~A_FULL
+ \& L" F- `- o
TEMP_
, m1 S. @- z2 W3 x: K4 ]
RDY
5 \0 P. e4 Q' O9 l
HR_RDY
- ]; W: H0 B% M2 _, j' z
SPO2_
! G' X" K* k4 w# B+ W# r+ URDY
/ o; c' U( L+ ]9 ~# p
PWR_
) V o1 Z/ \3 m, |, FRDY
: w( R$ b3 {, H+ k: [2 A0x00
" F1 P" w& A: d4 m: ? t3 S. g z, O0X00
7 J- e0 U* t( r- j$ h$ e
R
" i- J1 h; m& N1 U
Interrupt Enable
6 @8 V. ~. m: }6 L* d$ _ENB_A_FULL
0 v# X ^) e6 D. I b+ y( A+ EENB_TE
: \# E0 C" Q7 l* q8 \2 I! iP_RDY
3 w, d) b1 U3 jENB_HR_RDY
, b8 b, Z0 U. T, N( y) cENB_S
- U2 A" x7 p! G3 R. K) E$ a2 WO2_RDY
0 F% Y8 e3 n' {2 P" U- q0x01
: w7 b7 y2 q1 q/ w
0X00
( }# `. i% Y/ U' x& H, {R/W
9 j( s6 I8 u' _( N0 CFIFO
% W p/ x! [4 D# zFIFO Write Pointer
' T- a* S: _/ u- t1 i% t9 t2 n, xFIFO_WR_PTR[3:0]
! J4 m: t$ u3 m$ E! N: \0 I! g! M0x02
/ K2 V4 k% V7 q( H8 I2 Y0x00
$ u3 Q3 s6 |! aR/W
. S0 y) }: ~9 T8 FOver Flow Counter
0 Z7 v2 x! [0 T4 T% @" @
OVF_COUNTER[3:0]
! i( Z$ k f# m6 l0x03
; x1 G3 K( e. W
0x00
: b8 v1 b3 }7 n4 W/ |" R
R/W
1 L4 o6 h% r) k% Y5 z. @FIFO Read Pointer
" p+ S+ ?9 _ X4 M: ]
FIFO_RD_PTR[3:0]
4 g# L. t! d# x: D* ?0x04
( ^4 n! M. [" C d0x00
. ^1 e S# j* K% `: V1 z* aR/W
# W5 _" f3 m& [* N. ^9 ]FIFO Data Register
% {% r) ]" U# h2 WFIFO_DATA[7:0]
/ Q& d" d2 s ^5 R! s i9 ^
0x05
! z+ M( {# P" Z/ q2 @3 s& h5 O0x00
1 N) u0 U# p8 L3 @
R/W
1 r7 t7 v- z3 s
CONFIGURATION
' a* V8 y! `8 C/ L/ D, Q8 b) r
Mode Configuration
. j0 s" }- e2 Y# hSHDN
* g$ k! X2 w, rRESET
! @1 Q; d3 g% _: X0 ~" n
TEMP_EN
5 h: i) q0 i C
MODE[2:0]
: I3 M0 _6 J! X. [% l0 p
0x06
( w4 e- H) D r- z6 X
0x00
1 F) P6 {5 z* o9 T! d8 o$ M6 N; V7 QR/W
8 M# M' M" d* |5 [% z; H& ?* k
SPO2 Configuration
( k: L$ S9 S6 }
SPO2_HI_
( y) d" {% J0 e$ G/ pRES_EN
! N+ d4 r5 K* G. _8 [
RESERVED
" S( K: g. f4 P1 y# ?SPO2_SR[2:0]
% x" s$ O& Y' X7 g- \
LED_PW[1:0]
, ~6 M3 E0 L% [* q4 x* y6 W/ ~) D0x07
* y/ L$ L* x2 m( D1 _' A3 }
0x00
: ?# S8 R5 T$ J: D: lR/W
$ c3 Y; B$ _& _" d; |8 L
RESERVED
9 ^ g5 B8 y1 y6 S0 V# ?# Y
0x08
V, i) p# x, ~( v9 w
0x00
- O: n1 I* v( ~
R/W
% t# R) q# m8 w, V+ c% @8 GLED Configuration
. r2 x8 O+ j( E
RED_PA[3:0]
* C8 }0 h+ B4 d0 i# Y2 R# JIR_PA[3:0]
4 @5 T% M& Z) k0x09
* [% T2 k; [2 ?: @ R& {' ?; N" k0x00
/ J: c9 ~: @& `* d
R/W
7 u/ h) f. [2 Z) R |0 b, MRESERVED
! a+ l Z+ `8 u' I8 ~0x0A
5 d; \& ?2 Q% _8 H. D, K( G
– 0x15
2 e$ t6 v) t/ \8 \: M4 ?8 ]
0x00
# \" h1 Z( [. o# o& l" k* K ^R/W
$ G9 D* r: Y& H3 B/ j( n! MTEMPERATURE
, h) |8 \: u6 h0 lTemp_Integer
0 }( l+ p6 A/ ]! d
TINT[7:0]
( M" @/ X6 v) o2 o1 \
0x16
q& Q4 V9 Y2 }% ]7 T0x00
& `- K0 O: A' N3 c5 j, r* m
R/W
- _4 }* ?) H. |/ C" O' }
Temp_Fraction
$ O$ J) A5 w, ]8 E& u- f8 vTFRAC[3:0]
5 T C+ R6 @4 v* J% D0x17
* Z; ?; j# J7 D/ E" q/ ]7 }
0x00
# g+ Q7 \; x9 W+ LR/W
6 {7 ~% M2 L7 A* Q1 O
RESERVED
0 J" ?4 }: o) f
0x8D
' l( w! r- g5 E4 |4 H1 I: B
0x00
! h- {: f" M% m' H2 d" Z
R/W
3 d4 L9 t: `% H: Y! gPART ID
5 _( M: q" d! s- {2 [Revision ID
6 d" Z* ~1 p- i! H
REV_ID[7:0]
. r* T4 Q2 f, {8 f/ l
0xFE
9 w+ K- S$ I2 s1 o. t) i0 @
0xXX*
, E, B/ ?8 T# ]5 RR
5 _4 z3 ^" x% I# ?* P+ V+ o
Part ID
7 ]2 T& M1 m' X- R
PART_ID[7]
% Y6 t* Z. Z f' ] }: b5 j) z
0xFF
6 c0 f( J1 |; M- n
0x11
7 u$ [% r( y, \1 BR/W
$ N8 @$ L7 Q0 w' z7 p+ Q, W*XX denotes any 2-digit hexidecimal number (00 to FF). Contact Maxim Integrated for the Revision ID number assigned for your product.
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 10
" j' I B) ~* K; R4 Z0 c! y6 p' wMAX30100Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
( w, z9 u1 Y6 N4 ?) u9 T# ^
for Wearable Health
+ C8 Z' m+ g% { \* ^2 c# U
Interrupt Status (0x00)
2 `; z3 x$ e. |4 i9 m3 b! B
There are 5 interrupts and the functionality of each is exactly the same: pulling the active-low interrupt pin into its low state until the interrupt is cleared.
& d" \6 A9 R) S# S
The interrupts are cleared whenever the interrupt status register is read, or when the register that triggered the interrupt is read. For example, if the SpO2 sensor triggers an interrupt due to finishing a conversion, reading either the FIFO data register or the interrupt register clears the interrupt pin (which returns to its normal high state), and also clears all the bits in the interrupt status register to zero.
) U, f5 P9 c7 E# f2 B, `& z* NBit 7: FIFO Almost Full Flag (A_FULL)
) k v' y; R9 I- V4 S
In SpO2 and heart-rate modes, this interrupt triggers when the FIFO write pointer is the same as the FIFO read pointer minus one, which means that the FIFO has only one unwritten space left. If the FIFO is not read within the next conversion time, the FIFO becomes full and future data is lost.
0 N5 N& b7 v P
Bit 6: Temperature Ready Flag (TEMP_RDY)
( w+ N" b C5 m, NWhen an internal die temperature conversion is finished, this interrupt is triggered so the processor can read the temperature data registers.
4 _* ^. Z) W& Z/ W( }% cBit 5: Heart Rate Data Ready (HR_RDY)
+ O4 ^0 s" i, L+ Y3 g4 rIn heart rate or SPO2 mode, this interrupt triggers after every data sample is collected. A heart rate data sample consists of one IR data point only. This bit is automatically cleared when the FIFO data register is read.
( z+ @: c- K4 @Bit 4: SpO2 Data Ready (SPO2_RDY)
) X: m; h$ T5 C# I# s+ V
In SpO2 mode, this interrupt triggers after every data sample is collected. An SpO2 data sample consists of one IR and one red data points. This bit is automatically cleared when the FIFO data register is read.
5 }" F- ^6 \* W+ B
Bit 3: RESERVED
z$ b% q. {# i% N- kThis bit should be ignored and always be zero in normal operation.
: X; S4 _3 |/ e2 r
Bit 2: RESERVED
3 b; x* s$ G* H8 @0 _9 tThis bit should be ignored and always be zero in normal operation.
" K4 r3 h+ [+ l9 v) ~
Bit 1: RESERVED
* U1 d3 A. [$ ]/ t. L
This bit should be ignored and always be zero in normal operation.
* k) Z# x& u3 ?( Q6 k) L% p- K
Bit 0: Power Ready Flag (PWR_RDY)
9 \+ I! V& u+ K
On power-up or after a brownout condition, when the supply voltage VDD transitions from below the UVLO voltage to above the UVLO voltage, a power-ready interrupt is triggered to signal that the IC is powered up and ready to collect data.
" |5 y. G; k* S& }7 K: X8 FREGISTER
3 X: t" O8 }; [# t8 _+ f, SB7
. k4 A$ ]* G0 EB6
% @0 u* C% \3 l. J" W( u: |+ T/ H% wB5
5 L, t/ L e: V4 b1 v4 u, Z
B4
! O7 N0 B4 g% m' HB3
: l& J6 I) Q; i7 E8 w
B2
$ C# e% V* x/ h0 RB1
( F: v7 r5 ]7 p) n6 q
B0
) s) l1 l) h: r5 q- L; [3 eREG
, s% h4 c# i! G8 y2 B' e) XADDR
2 o6 A- E3 w/ I
POR
. @0 u3 u) Y' S* Z# ZSTATE
+ Z1 L2 ?, t! J( ]: Q! p4 Z
R/W
4 }2 O x# a* g6 V1 h$ T: D
Interrupt
7 P' H6 l# X+ bStatus
, r3 L7 s. y8 W! M; O6 l" r8 ^
A_FULL
7 F: V$ B' W0 a3 w- w1 d5 K8 C0 j- @TEMP_
_- l! s1 m; g# O: bRDY
" b, E, z5 E0 vHR_RDY
8 {/ E2 m4 j; E/ H5 {+ kSPO2_
2 T' A: c! |$ I- \, v/ ^
RDY
( K# L) v5 }; B( o: N1 SPWR_
c4 Y/ P& ?$ ?3 t
RDY
3 V, H' d, h( h2 h
0x00
" n4 W2 P! g- ?0 p0X00
$ m- R: ^9 l0 u, P+ n" _/ U5 S; JR
, |% p: _% x* g) \, z$ E
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 11
3 b- _/ `; f' j) h4 ?' i+ mMAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
9 d2 c! w4 F* M: j: sfor Wearable Health
5 \& I# @$ x0 w8 S) B- N: t$ Y( X, HInterrupt Enable (0x01)
# c* n* x4 E @# M' `% _ REach source of hardware interrupt, with the exception of power ready, can be disabled in a software register within the MAX30100 IC. The power-ready interrupt cannot be disabled because the digital state of the MAX30100 is reset upon a brownout condition (low power-supply voltage), and the default state is that all the interrupts are disabled. It is important for the system to know that a brownout condition has occurred, and the data within the device is reset as a result.
& U" e: f4 R0 b( v" bWhen an interrupt enable bit is set to zero, the corresponding interrupt appears as 1 in the interrupt status register, but the INT pin is not pulled low.
8 e$ `3 O Z# S5 j4 }The four unused bits (B3:B0) should always be set to zero (disabled) for normal operation.
) }$ l9 o$ i; h+ JFIFO (0x02–0x05)
4 T3 C. {3 o) y/ N2 R4 N! e R0 IFIFO Write Pointer
+ f9 ~2 b" W: Q7 s6 {" g5 O
The FIFO write pointer points to the location where the MAX30100 writes the next sample. This pointer advances for each sample pushed on to the FIFO. It can also be changed through the I2C interface when MODE[2:0] is nonzero.
8 D8 [4 S1 k, [' [
FIFO Overflow Counter
]$ K0 k7 @, O* }& NWhen the FIFO is full, samples are not pushed on to the FIFO, samples are lost. OVF_COUNTER counts the number of samples lost. It saturates at 0xF. When a complete sample is popped from the FIFO (when the read pointer advances), OVF_COUNTER is reset to zero.
+ c& M2 Z" O2 Q+ M% ]5 Z; cFIFO Read Pointer
0 Y7 L/ I! }% }7 m k
The FIFO read pointer points to the location from where the processor gets the next sample from the FIFO via the I2C interface. This advances each time a sample is popped from the FIFO. The processor can also write to this pointer after reading the samples, which would allow rereading samples from the FIFO if there is a data communication error.
% J5 |9 C. b& t1 b) M' M/ Y4 AFIFO Data
. s3 X$ O. ?/ ~' |; _1 e! ~
The circular FIFO depth is 16 and can hold up to 16 samples of SpO2 channel data (Red and IR). The FIFO_DATA register in the I2C register map points to the next sample to be read from the FIFO. FIFO_RD_PTR points to this sample. Reading FIFO_DATA register does not automatically increment the register address; burst reading this register reads the same address over and over. Each sample is 4 bytes of data, so this register has to be read 4 times to get one sample.
2 d: p5 c$ N% w; I p: x$ u
The above registers can all be written and read, but in practice, only the FIFO_RD_PTR register should be written to in operation. The others are automatically incremented or filled with data by the MAX30100. When starting a new SpO2
" O. G q. X* Q# pREGISTER
. z/ V, u+ f3 _$ D; F: U+ OB7
0 x" F0 A2 [ x6 W6 kB6
- ]' E! x* }1 t1 iB5
* ?" k; k$ f5 J. s: AB4
9 C: ~- l+ d/ t
B3
; v$ S+ I. |1 N# \( aB2
2 b: o1 t, _* B& c" [
B1
3 w8 M/ ^+ L" H) }+ c
B0
1 }7 H: ?6 Y! k# M# @; aREG
6 [5 P- }7 `4 T! p2 K& j4 |
ADDR
8 Q. u4 N+ J' S e [% {; R
POR
) u( L3 a# J9 T3 ^! U1 r0 ~STATE
: B7 H& }9 k) g5 M
R/W
1 A" Z! d6 R( y0 l# O* M& X
Interrupt
1 R% i$ k6 V2 T l# b4 I( W8 VEnable
( z @+ m) j- T4 j6 e3 U* h
ENB_A_FULL
; T7 e5 k0 h+ z8 w1 j( Q
ENB_TE
6 Y$ v$ a( C1 D; G9 Y8 l
P_RDY
, b3 S3 O0 |) `/ ~: y7 GENB_HR_RDY
0 E: Z2 i( Z7 a+ \7 ^1 gENB_S
3 p7 v5 r1 L& P, a( H
O2_RDY
$ _: [" p& ?5 H1 r
0x01
2 c. E# v7 N4 k3 {5 r
0X00
1 }/ ?' W+ o0 i, [( UR/W
, X5 U) K" ^4 N0 n! B N- ^: y
REGISTER
, k* g# A7 [5 ^& iB7
8 k6 e7 d2 L6 J p" l# Y
B6
4 L! j! P+ K F
B5
- \+ f. Y' B" u
B4
* O4 `- n' b& A2 W, X5 kB3
( d. v2 A. m" @5 u* rB2
# q" l a4 s+ ]* q) ^B1
; z( O9 f5 O. p9 B7 M: L* gB0
7 o( R2 {5 Z* J" `REG
. C6 j" V' ~& K' O9 }1 e
ADDR
! E; Q% y2 F' {; [
POR
5 n5 q1 ^. \5 }3 p/ }, WSTATE
. F0 D _3 @8 M& a$ i/ E0 o) u
R/W
. [9 O+ p. ~! y" f/ o
FIFO Write Pointer
) S# o/ K. D: M z2 R& j
FIFO_WR_PTR[3:0]
! [# U/ } T8 `! L a2 b* X
0x02
" c/ J9 |3 h; s* |6 _* K
0x00
2 Y$ V8 \1 c1 T) |9 }: C# _& P Y
R/W
* z+ c/ q1 O0 C8 X' a+ V, rOver Flow Counter
. Q8 M# {# _( {' ^( p$ R; J
OVF_COUNTER[3:0]
! E. ?* k6 W4 B
0x03
& }+ O9 h' |4 o$ ]# C0x00
% t. D. E- i6 c, F0 A
R/W
% F0 P* G* E( R
FIFO Read Pointer
: [ S; }2 @2 a- L: F+ f9 F' LFIFO_RD_PTR[3:0]
6 d" H V# f3 R: N8 k
0x04
9 O5 P; a4 O; S' I
0x00
1 h5 `; g7 J: z) O) F$ i( T9 M
R/W
! f6 K% F, p: k! u0 NFIFO Data Register
- Y, Z+ P0 ]5 G. x- v, X. C4 q6 ]
FIFO_DATA[7:0]
9 c4 h Y4 m! O& c
0x05
$ D+ j0 L# p9 v) ]0 R5 t3 d0x00
5 Y" O5 x. F$ t7 ~' ]' _8 HR/Wwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 12
7 M! U, `' W0 w: {MAX30100Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
% S+ u F2 V# ^
for Wearable Health
' ^% `( x. V8 j. M. j" Ior heart-rate conversion, it is recommended to first clear the FIFO_WR_PTR, OVF_COUNTER, and FIFO_RD_PTR registers to all zeros (0x00) to ensure the FIFO is empty and in a known state. When reading the MAX30100 registers in one burst-read I2C transaction, the register address pointer typically increments so that the next byte of data sent is from the next register, etc. The exception to this is the FIFO data register, register 0x05. When reading this register, the address pointer does not increment, but the FIFO_RD_PTR does. So the next byte of data sent will represent the next byte of data available in the FIFO.
0 [, \/ W, p8 hReading from the FIFO
( H' C* g" W0 h. k; Y* {4 h8 ENormally, reading registers from the I2C interface autoincrements the register address pointer, so that all the registers can be read in a burst read without an I2C restart event. In the MAX30100, this holds true for all registers except for the FIFO_DATA register (0x05).
( |4 N' S4 i0 d, b% Z$ X! c
Reading the FIFO_DATA register does not automatically increment the register address; burst reading this register reads the same address over and over. Each sample is 4 bytes of data, so this register has to be read 4 times to get one sample.
+ h( G% I- j/ D0 d, F7 ]8 N) k! uThe other exception is 0xFF, reading more bytes after the 0xFF register does not advance the address pointer back to 0x00, and the data read is not meaningful.
7 N/ {- _$ k; O2 }8 z- Y, P( u! iFIFO Data Structure
% D: {( N/ G s% V# X
The data FIFO consists of a 16-sample memory bank that stores both IR and RED ADC data. Since each sample consists of one IR word and one RED word, there are 4 bytes of data for each sample, and therefore, 64 total bytes of data can be stored in the FIFO. Figure 2 shows the structure of the FIFO graphically.
6 y" y" @9 j. V9 P/ L# h' C
The FIFO data is left-justified as shown in Table 1; i.e. the MSB bit is always in the bit 15 position regardless of ADC resolution.
4 g+ v* X# d6 H/ c+ Y4 kEach data sample consists of an IR and a red data word (2 registers), so to read one sample requires 4 I2C byte reads in a row. The FIFO read pointer is automatically incremented after each 4-byte sample is read.
* m$ \1 Q# b+ j' i8 ^
In heart-rate only mode, the 3rd and 4th bytes of each sample return zeros, but the basic structure of the FIFO remains the same.
6 B, S. {* F" ], d/ R9 \* lWrite/Read Pointers
]9 V9 ?4 r$ @0 |) F
Table 2. FIFO Data
: v/ x. A7 q- A+ S9 `' P/ Q
Figure 2. Graphical Representation of the FIFO Data Register
# u" J6 s" S+ W: M7 D( |ADC
* v. n: }* E# j
RESOLUTION
% \3 P( J) t/ D) K+ q& _4 u) r
IR
8 Q2 Q1 Q' Z& [1 Q# J6 I[15]
! R1 v- t) ]' m" K* Q# H/ ^) A
IR
8 h: c! j( o3 u J% Z: A* E
[14]
8 o4 O- Q4 ^+ g) c# F9 n& Q$ i
IR
3 f% {, z1 {4 D[13]
* ~+ @6 j. ]9 X) `
IR
: m G% h7 F9 Q7 N, ]- ^; c+ C' l
[12]
2 f: k% i) r9 Z( h3 S
IR
, x) ?) y9 x* X- l$ h: u- I
[11]
, ]1 ^4 A' F" e; x
IR
3 @' p4 s q5 Y5 r
[10]
" l1 U0 e& X& zIR
- C/ J, `7 h* K, b; F6 l' j
[9]
" A9 \* i/ y* I8 h) AIR
% t! ^- g& W& L5 F[8]
5 A+ y, `4 R; f- gIR
3 O' Y0 K! R1 q% n; L+ d[7]
2 z' \, I* ]7 W9 P- J- ~# |& V6 a
IR
8 O, a9 T, H* M( K[6]
' c& ?0 l# t4 S$ Z8 }IR
: {1 i8 s" C3 e4 p8 |[5]
+ s( T5 ]6 B, j H
IR
; J9 S. L4 R: T9 q5 r% p$ x[4]
4 Z( v! i) H C) w7 w4 D5 [IR
2 b$ e e9 P4 I0 r( h% S- r$ V- C
[3]
8 T6 y$ F: [7 [6 `8 m/ L
IR
- h- e/ N- Q: X9 E/ p1 Y
[2]
- L0 B* ^* p! b2 D
IR
- s* Y C! w$ M% y% S[1]
3 D& } O" c+ Y& e* @2 }
IR
* g) i+ z0 ]$ p7 o
[0]
# ]+ S& j. v) t% Q1 C
16-bit
- i6 z$ d8 g' _ e
14-bit
- r7 a6 r9 b/ |6 \: y12-bit
. O- ~9 `# Q# k
10-bit
' [" k5 S( \1 b$ Z; X4 G/ xIR[15:8]IR[7:0]RED[15:8]RED[7:0]NEWER SAMPLESOLDER SAMPLESREGISTER 0x05IR[15:8](START OF SAMPLE #2)
: T/ [0 }1 s( K& ^. ~: G: f
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 13
5 Z/ d @. v) L+ ~, V
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
7 N j$ z- n5 P" F$ d
for Wearable Health
9 c F8 ?' F- }* a+ z. zThe locations to store new data, and the read pointer for reading data, are used to control the flow of data in the FIFO. The write pointer increments every time a new sample is added to the FIFO. The read pointer is incremented automatically every time a sample is read from the FIFO. To reread a sample from the FIFO, decrement its value by one and read the data register again.
- x& @, J$ [9 R4 qThe SpO2 write/read pointers should be cleared (back to 0x0) upon entering SpO2 mode or heart-rate mode, so that there is no old data represented in the FIFO. The pointers are not automatically cleared when changing modes, but they are cleared if VDD is power cycled so that the VDD voltage drops below its UVLO voltage.
! ~$ M, p3 h' U9 ^$ W' B$ O5 IPseudo-Code Example of Reading Data from FIFO
+ \; J3 \, f/ C9 ~1 n i- e, WFirst transaction: Get the FIFO_WR_PTR:
& z) {3 Q A( Y: S
START;
- ?0 K( R# y0 u4 h0 {: p. |
Send device address + write mode
0 Q/ l6 v$ n3 O
Send address of FIFO_WR_PTR;
6 B/ r3 }6 B% M
REPEATED_START;
: K; {% y3 g$ o6 Z' a0 DSend device address + read mode
" K& N. p# _3 t2 a& E/ }+ QRead FIFO_WR_PTR;
1 I! ^2 {+ `: \; O% {5 T0 {; ASTOP;
# o$ J7 ~( B9 x, ?4 s
The central processor evaluates the number of samples to be read from the FIFO:
m* V( K& X1 F9 h
NUM_AVAILABLE_SAMPLES = FIFO_WR_PTR – FIFO_RD_PTR
, ?& N2 N1 k% _, q(Note: pointer wrap around should be taken into account)
$ V+ j& o; ]6 d5 W) CNUM_SAMPLES_TO_READ = < less than or equal to NUM_AVAILABLE_SAMPLES >
+ Y, [* s, F* U& Z0 _; U" l
Second transaction: Read NUM_SAMPLES_TO_READ samples from the FIFO:
& I* J- X7 }( b6 X" U$ X6 jSTART;
) _7 D! r$ t& h$ u0 W9 iSend device address + write mode
% V9 N4 E% j0 ]
Send address of FIFO_DATA;
7 G4 n$ z& O2 z- Z/ H) g% U3 ]
REPEATED_START;
# K6 I* U+ g: a- G* G* U/ d* t5 x
Send device address + read mode
7 x7 y8 @& F( s: `7 @, i
for (i = 0; i < NUM_SAMPLES_TO_READ; i++) {
9 m: g/ p' F; ? t; s0 h6 zRead FIFO_DATA;
% x& V/ C! a9 |; nSave IR[15:8];
! g6 S# F( G! `Read FIFO_DATA;
4 G: }: s. J' a9 D- k
Save IR[7:0];
( ?2 p: ^1 z: HRead FIFO_DATA;
' A* O: y! |! T4 H$ ]4 g' MSave R[15:8];
3 z9 C( E$ }( n& ?7 {
Read FIFO_DATA;
- e* q3 e1 w! H. }
Save R[7:0];
( ] c* x8 C/ Y n, R6 v
}
C" \+ ? Q' x9 u5 S
STOP;
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 14
8 j6 X3 {3 ]# `1 D" ^
MAX30100Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
/ w: [- G, ^, D# E; k& x6 }7 gfor Wearable Health
) [( a0 ^4 R; l- ~( \
Third transaction: Write to FIFO_RD_PTR register. If the second transaction was successful, FIFO_RD_PTR points to the next sample in the FIFO, and this third transaction is not necessary. Otherwise, the processor updates the
( I7 \) ?, }3 z1 B1 h6 oFIFO_RD_PTR appropriately, so that the samples are reread.
+ [0 z0 \2 Z( k& {: W
START;
; {" ~# P1 F$ D9 k
Send device address + write mode
' N6 L' T; {+ [- d' q# ^% [
Send address of FIFO_RD_PTR;
8 f/ i1 n* a3 i% }0 B! WWrite FIFO_RD_PTR;
" R7 x1 l0 i* K& A
STOP;
+ |" Y# @9 L" P5 CMode Configuration (0x06)
7 l) [; b& A: `( xBit 7: Shutdown Control (SHDN)
5 G( t! ?+ E0 S& |The part can be put into a power-save mode by setting this bit to one. While in power-save mode, all registers retain their values, and write/read operations function as normal. All interrupts are cleared to zero in this mode.
+ O; p: r& H( y6 J* E4 ]" hBit 6: Reset Control (RESET)
- p$ e/ F- h9 x: P& WWhen the RESET bit is set to one, all configuration, threshold, and data registers are reset to their power-on-state. The only exception is writing both RESET and TEMP_EN bits to one at the same time since temperature data registers 0x16 and 0x17 are not cleared. The RESET bit is cleared automatically back to zero after the reset sequence is completed.
6 r7 m3 w: O& Q K! h$ H2 V/ u
Bit 3: Temperature Enable (TEMP_EN)
) L1 e. ^" c( z. e: A
This is a self-clearing bit which, when set, initiates a single temperature reading from the temperature sensor. This bit is cleared automatically back to zero at the conclusion of the temperature reading when the bit is set to one in heart rate or SpO2 mode.
: K Z7 X2 b) XBits 2:0: Mode Control
# l I: J; i/ b: y/ \These bits set the operating state of the MAX30100. Changing modes does not change any other setting, nor does it erase any previously stored data inside the data registers.
9 s+ E2 t- M" d8 gTable 3. Mode Control
4 B5 T' Q4 A. NREGISTER
% ^) s* [# z& ^' g8 A$ z. s6 Z- ?
B7
7 i! d8 |, W/ D. P, t( {
B6
/ z9 t* }8 m' y7 h
B5
# s/ u$ H0 `+ ~
B4
) y7 D% K. t x, N$ x/ z% Z5 c
B3
; T3 P2 |1 z8 ]) {* C; o1 X
B2
% G3 V) d4 j' UB1
. g6 d8 I' L0 Y7 w+ a/ K
B0
( c# I2 z7 ~+ _: ^: S$ p+ B DREG
8 M0 X7 {7 W! h5 F+ l* u- a
ADDR
3 _1 T" ^6 R+ ?* }8 z
POR
5 H( g7 h7 |; q; K7 ~
STATE
9 q* p0 L' g, H9 J
R/W
/ J3 p0 i+ K, `, S; UMode Configuration
, n" L" p# @+ R, V" l |
SHDN
6 ^6 J0 _: Y. j4 qRESET
9 s6 ~, J' h/ m/ ~0 a* a! L) t0 cTEMP_EN
2 T' S; w/ b+ A/ T+ B8 I7 f5 p. r
MODE[2:0]
$ u5 k9 d( k. l$ @: s1 I0x06
1 s: _2 H0 o! c: K1 W; Z, X! G0x00
" ^( |( f6 _$ }( K* H0 K2 C& N. cR/W
' x( ^( _+ I/ B/ G: |
MODE[2:0]
! V6 p0 l4 M3 K- TMODE
+ `, c _4 H" D5 h) E1 @# M
000
" j0 S/ ?. p9 I! N1 t; G u& w
Unused
1 L, W/ N/ f9 W
001
8 u1 G, U4 S: p$ I0 ?6 f+ lReserved
# m/ s% q- [( u5 T$ h
(Do not use)
5 a& n1 M% g3 _010
, w, J( o6 y \7 S9 x
HR only enabled
- i# g& H. l2 X; P" @' V" \/ e1 W/ w5 t
011
" T7 ~1 U8 F9 ~; ~; h, v" t
SPO2 enabled
8 E; Q; b! S0 \( |# n
100–111
# J1 n. D% M G f9 DUnused
9 H. Y; R! X- w. w
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 15
0 k: V: S6 t% F0 I9 C
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
; K+ A: S8 Z$ c3 X
for Wearable Health
( f! {& b5 J5 F/ G& y
SpO2 Configuration (0x07)
, w5 j7 H. q) b& ?1 T/ M _
Bit 6: SpO2 High Resolution Enable (SPO2_HI_RES_EN)
0 J1 u2 n" q3 _% SSet this bit high. The SpO2 ADC resolution is 16-bit with 1.6ms LED pulse width.
1 z+ H9 c. \$ y/ BBit 5: Reserved. Set low (default).
/ y( U8 P+ N0 r0 rBit 4:2: SpO2 Sample Rate Control
+ P3 i! X4 ]: j, W5 ?These bits define the effective sampling rate, with one sample consisting of one IR pulse/conversion and one RED pulse/conversion.
n) I) c8 U. G
The sample rate and pulse width are related, in that the sample rate sets an upper bound on the pulse width time. If the user selects a sample rate that is too high for the selected LED_PW setting, the highest possible sample rate will instead be programmed into the register.
+ q( H8 d1 f/ ~( e6 c' s
Bits 1:0: LED Pulse Width Control
: c& W* X5 F* b: |! pThese bits set the LED pulse width (the IR and RED have the same pulse width), and therefore, indirectly set the integration time of the ADC in each sample. The ADC resolution is directly related to the integration time.
0 a( g; K/ ~4 ^3 U0 F. [) r4 b; MTable 4. SpO2 Sample Rate Control
! A x0 I7 M6 T0 vREGISTER
, x8 ]: F3 f; ^7 L$ v# D
B7
4 Z1 M8 H# X, F7 x* s M
B6
5 y1 \0 }& \0 U# `6 HB5
5 {) V- N1 r0 @" t6 T, iB4
( _4 t# s) H3 I6 O
B3
; j) z5 f7 v4 J' u! \( qB2
, _) C- K( K( x6 U- U$ v
B1
' n, L6 s `, L* y# v% AB0
- Y2 K$ [" }% mREG
, K- _ O; s+ Q* f- e0 UADDR
' J% N, U: `! v- Z( c3 o5 b
POR
& \9 b2 x' n7 b- T2 C! o
STATE
' G E: i u6 W1 `/ T( r' e
R/W
( w3 P- j" U# i5 NSPO2
( U0 j! L6 G1 j5 _
Configuration
: h6 q+ r0 l* ZSPO2_HI_
# Y% W" p9 K) }
RES_EN
1 b# A% _, J8 z# B& V1 j" d
Reserved
+ k, d3 x( y5 lSPO2_SR[2:0]
6 L- `& ~' X8 K2 m8 G6 l0 {
LED_PW[1:0]
! ]# j) [$ d* B( r0x07
2 v# K/ |7 q: G( U5 W" ^
0x00
, l! y. L o( x ?( E0 tR/W
) {8 |$ N F; i$ n& g5 _- _
SPO2_SR[2:0]
8 Z7 u$ [; `4 y- `7 U7 b$ ~$ ?
SAMPLES (PER SECOND)
5 K4 Y. _+ f! S: |0 n0 H000
! M8 s: X, p9 ^
50
" [3 _3 Q9 ~7 I; n" y q( p' H& _
001
7 q. f2 P& x% A9 L) N
100
8 _7 k" q7 ]. N" B; Q
010
: e G+ T2 t. z& D6 C167
3 t: B0 G+ \1 _, Z9 k; Q0 _9 b
011
' R! V2 C$ d" F& K200
. T' w, p2 I, o: J3 J- R+ e- V) |. x100
" F/ ^" K5 F5 Z7 j2 N
400
0 W S; ~* j; ?% G
101
7 U4 K2 ^) g" l+ q
600
$ u# C( _7 a* _$ h$ O( ^
110
% G. `3 P# Y$ o4 `
800
4 M2 N/ Q0 f" N- Q! ] p0 `111
6 i( Y1 Z- I W1000www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 16
) \ g J& ~9 j+ V% r, uMAX30100Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
) M% i. }! w4 g1 @8 W3 E& Afor Wearable Health
6 P2 @. l0 C8 |" s1 F4 ZLED Configuration (0x09)
6 J/ z, p( ]* l& K* ~
Bits 7:4: Red LED Current Control
4 M0 ?- T, S w
These bits set the current level of the Red LED as in Table 6.
: W1 H/ [) w3 N/ ]4 m. A/ R
Bits 3:0: IR LED Current Control
0 E/ D1 t, B" z0 c1 V
These bits set the current level of the IR LED as in Table 6.
- k; ^- a# g+ s; J. VTable 5. LED Pulse Width Control
, Z$ O% j4 O1 }' c, \Table 6. LED Current Control
' u& x. _# j3 I2 @*Actual measured LED current for each part can vary widely due to the proprietary trim methodology.
/ p: G: i' _$ |. ^( X2 l kREGISTER
( w! ?( y1 n' K+ B, G: i% B
B7
" y* \; x' }1 G% Z3 ?+ U
B6
0 m8 V4 m' ~" g! I7 _( `) q3 w: c
B5
# C5 p' f) m/ Z1 `2 c
B4
0 Y K3 b7 i. Q( {( Z' MB3
& f) v$ t) m, i0 z- I; EB2
. F0 `: R0 l0 F( W
B1
+ v. Y7 c, P: x3 x9 h
B0
: Y$ v1 m d: @% PREG
6 x' G4 y& L& s# [% G9 ]( {8 {+ j8 jADDR
9 e$ j, ]( @8 y+ ~: lPOR
' z8 ]+ u$ A$ F! Q
STATE
" }8 R5 G9 Y; q# ]4 n- \9 a/ g
R/W
8 k C9 D( T1 j% G
LED Configuration
" Z8 O( m, n4 g; J; ^0 i. B
RED_PA[3:0]
+ v* \% j7 A1 L! m' y5 V, o3 v5 b
IR_PA[3:0]
0 {+ x1 J! o7 c0 v% g, N1 s0x09
/ s3 \5 Y/ ^& x+ R9 j- g- U0x00
+ F, z4 K0 M3 N( d
R/W
- n: G- D, t6 H# }LED_PW[1:0]
( F8 x. G: g, W1 RPULSE WIDTH (μs)
& }. J6 X* ]; D8 HADC RESOLUTION (BITS)
/ \- t, R+ @( V0 T00
5 N' G* b: y, J a2 p5 M200
* R( n8 G ^+ }7 j, L% I6 Q8 ?5 x13
' H E2 h" R3 g' K8 w* A9 ~01
% u _* Y& H8 a- k1 J9 n$ `. H& c
400
: p; e5 G( Q' O; }6 B
14
2 F7 o9 i6 r# L& c
10
! @% L' r+ G' j! R+ u" s800
! l, R& ?9 a) O- q9 x* u15
5 ?; C) I; |. o7 C: p, O11
8 J& E4 ~0 q8 ~4 D: m
1600
) T3 }4 X, X9 x5 J% c. Z16
8 Y; ^, m; x/ K% G/ D+ G& Y
Red_PA[3:0] OR IR_PA[3:0]
- w' D, |- D% V+ H6 Y8 Q
TYPICAL LED CURRENT (mA)*
0 Z1 a2 `9 \6 e0 }0000
+ R6 Z8 u8 [8 @- D$ Z
0.0
% d1 h, [! |' c# J' J0001
: z# R% R/ z4 c/ Q# n0 n
4.4
0 T- h/ o" Q+ O2 W/ |! E& C2 G* b! N0010
: O, Z# p, X1 a' b" g% G7.6
( j# ^. P1 R0 `0011
. ]2 ~+ B, [+ \' H' f11.0
: t! i' v7 M! S: ~- p" O
0100
& u' K) F) Z: r14.2
' \ R* q5 ?2 o0 C
0101
8 \* |& f4 R6 `+ K/ H17.4
7 ~3 C& y& f% e0110
" T8 f3 G; o _' I
20.8
1 H+ P! r: C+ V+ E0 \3 T% s
0111
x6 v) Y5 D0 s; n( m4 K9 r24.0
$ v/ s; c! w) p, f# U1000
% k; A( f( j2 }" y
27.1
! _3 L( M0 n1 D4 b0 P0 h
1001
/ s! b! v( Z: J& S1 C
30.6
+ h. i/ `' X6 B5 q+ U1010
& f" ?& x, T y% c6 u33.8
; g% s9 a+ t7 m, i# d$ ?1011
* H2 t, v1 L0 X8 b) ?3 o
37.0
5 c% q J) R* P) i1100
% f$ y9 p5 v! m; i7 B
40.2
4 ?- n8 I- U- h: {/ Q4 }6 k& w
1101
& A: A, L, p+ b0 c4 k
43.6
3 O, Q& P. M5 q1 f$ q; t/ ]7 L
1110
4 u0 `; p& y z* s& G- b46.8
5 G9 ~# n3 S) C4 H" x% P$ Z
1111
4 L6 C$ I a5 E50.0
- _( e% D- ?. t& pwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 17
& L3 F) |# b; G: b
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
; S2 @3 m2 k) w: ?# C' C7 q* c
for Wearable Health
7 X# k1 s- \8 B: ~+ h0 x
Temperature Data (0x16–0x17)
, _6 v7 s: F1 ?+ wREGISTERB7B6B5B4B3B2B1B0REGADDRPORSTATER/WTemp_IntegerTINT[7:0]0x160x00R/WTemp_FractionTFRAC[3:0]0x170x00R/W
5 C- M* `3 G& U O T" l7 R1 }+ j
Temperature Integer
S( r8 K* w1 P/ OThe on-board temperature ADC output is split into two registers, one to store the integer temperature and one to store the fraction. Both should be read when reading the temperature data, and the following equation shows how to add the two registers together:
+ ^5 U- {5 P; J5 w, S; ^/ [
TMEASURED = TINTEGER + TFRACTION
e4 r8 A8 @# N3 |* O3 m+ {This register stores the integer temperature data in two’s complement format, where each bit corresponds to degree Celsius.
/ b1 J$ t! B3 ~5 n+ p) I( f, u+ O* PTemperature Fraction
$ b7 G5 ?- O% ^. A& ?
This register stores the fractional temperature data in increments of 0.0625NC (1/16th of a degree).
* N: e$ ^8 @: \2 D: { _If this fractional temperature is paired with a negative integer, it still adds as a positive fractional value
+ _+ q1 N( Z/ w: J- P4 w/ d) c/ C
(e.g., -128°C + 0.5°C = -127.5°C).
- k2 ?+ u c6 J- U. aTable 7. Temperature Integer
: d4 S2 D" Z! K8 @REGISTER VALUE (hex)
& E5 V7 K% J1 m2 K+ qTEMPERATURE (°C)
0 z" ]- }, Z7 @& ~+ b& e' w
0x00
. I0 c7 q; R, q. N- s
0
/ _$ P; e. w0 ~% u$ v" l& K
0x00
7 V. n2 e- c/ c& x" [
+1
0 P7 W# h. v4 Z9 g...
6 J+ `2 L' M) i$ U...
, l. o7 F; V5 Q! k
0x7E
: w' D5 W) \' \! ?" W6 f' v/ `
+126
5 M; n, b. N9 M7 B% I0 z
0x7F
* ^3 W/ U; \+ n8 U X. j: Z
+127
! C# E$ W" ?9 u' }7 G
0x80
; T( p& u$ O$ l- L& l3 S1 O-128
, a: s4 T5 Q! k; y$ u0x81
% {+ N. E0 A. X9 G6 q" z1 G8 l-127
: R7 ^2 p5 m" F) l" _- O! ?
...
! z2 I8 d' ?- [6 s8 q0 z9 O...
; }' k' r5 j6 W
0xFE
7 ~* l( Q: R& p+ h7 r
-2
4 l% _/ }! ?* K- k N
0xFF
& T* N- w& E; c) u) k8 S: D
-1www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 18
1 x+ o. v- i; @MAX30100Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
) Z1 i0 U% x/ e& E
for Wearable Health
! U5 X' L2 i* R$ H1 h5 w+ tApplications Information
: X2 v+ D- n3 v1 y/ T9 L6 [) p1 q' K
Sampling Rate and Performance
9 S- x8 g2 w- r) d# e" OThe MAX30100 ADC is a 16-bit sigma delta converter. The ADC sampling rate can be configured from 50sps to 1ksps. The maximum sample rate for the ADC depends on the selected pulse width, which in turn, determines the ADC resolution. For instance, if the pulse width is set to 200μs, then the ADC resolution is 13 bits and all sample rates from 50sps to 1ksps are selectable. However, if the pulse width is set to 1600μs, then only sample rates of 100sps and 50sps can be set. The allowed sample rates for both SpO2 and HR mode are summarized in Table 8 and Table 9.
/ O7 a& Z; N) E/ f& g5 X! u* NPower Considerations
4 y; x( E! B2 w8 I0 p- l0 P" y6 ^
The LEDs in MAX30100 are pulsed with a low duty cycle for power savings, and the pulsed currents can cause ripples in the LED power supply. To ensure these pulses do not translate into optical noise at the LED outputs, the power supply must be designed to handle peak LED current. Ensure that the resistance and inductance from the power supply (battery, DC/DC converter, or LDO) to the device LED+ pins is much smaller than 1Ω, and that there is at least 1μF of power-supply bypass capacitance to a low impedance ground plane. The decoupling capacitor should be located physically as close as possible to the MAX30100 device.
( b" p0 I3 p9 d0 `In the heart-rate only mode, the red LED is inactive, and only the IR LED is used to capture optical data and determine the heart rate. This mode allows power savings due to the red LED being off; in addition, the IR_LED+ power supply can be reduced to save power because the forward voltage of the IR LED is significantly less than that of the red LED.
3 Y& n O# |3 X, I5 ]5 L
The average IDD and LED current as function of pulse width and sampling rate is summarized in Table 10 to Table 13.
# I! Z. v/ w; z0 G
Table 8. SpO2 Mode (Allowed Settings)
: H5 N R+ W) ^" U) x1 s1 P# R+ l
Table 9. Heart-Rate Mode
7 ^! d8 W5 @6 X" j! \
(Allowed Settings)
* x6 B% W; f4 s7 N2 O! v
SAMPLES (per second)
2 N! A- J" U& S1 APULSE WIDTH (μs)
9 z+ F* M% C% ^! ~3 n |; u3 e
200
" `9 U5 B) E5 U
400
a! s+ k$ Z! R
800
+ d7 @8 Z! d- n. O+ m! V1600
" E4 }; \2 s R; w1 R50
* e) F4 P1 Z( l& k
O
0 m, A. z/ F* T5 _7 r0 b. OO
$ Z6 V/ `$ }$ H! d: \1 U4 s
O
" Y- ?# J0 h: m/ i
O
( v- Y2 J- ?- ?! _
100
$ s/ Q( J# F8 X3 n6 PO
% x6 G: ^% n$ e: eO
; g* T- Q M/ a% H6 {O
' v3 T& t; L; g# Z5 z- Z+ |O
, j* w% M* j) F# f& {1 y0 ~167
9 D' }- F3 J) o9 F( `O
3 V4 b/ s. K1 G1 m& s) W ^O
! x& O C9 V [; O+ L* N
O
; d4 X9 A% A+ Z- x; W
200
$ @/ n$ q) B$ T! O3 q
O
4 L3 R" E r0 f0 s
O
' |& p: k) n, a9 D% z& a
O
' l' {2 n4 E# a4 E( P& H' n! F" Y( m400
1 {3 Z) E) i/ o" F' ~; ZO
% z. H& u- z% g3 qO
: O# J9 Z: d- s) O600
" d' p9 R" a# A4 I! k# ~
O
0 Q+ s* W+ M; f }6 {+ k' G
800
7 s, W7 E8 e, L! N% a& D* J# Y! \, OO
$ o/ H0 l8 i1 O+ X/ n+ d: K
1000
2 L4 h# A9 m0 q; b9 d
O
) W; ~6 b' e- T; @% yResolution
+ ?# h8 `! r' w+ E4 ](bits)
/ E5 y2 U' d( @13
2 C5 x( r# a$ S( D
14
2 g' r! u/ K" D; |( U7 J
15
: g ?/ q' ^+ y' L0 m7 y16
% B$ Q$ K: H- L# _$ ?
SAMPLES (per second)
- r# N' r1 R! h s' V! b1 gPULSE WIDTH (μs)
; @1 `2 a5 E9 C1 h200
8 f e9 e, `9 l
400
$ C% { e, C3 x$ S3 e3 Z& }! C800
4 R9 I/ v& z( f$ e! E! ]$ K( I
1600
! h: _* |# ~) n) k, M$ {3 z50
# a9 c% J* J' e5 q! N, Z( S
O
) R& \9 J8 S* I/ F y3 @O
0 a( w! s2 f9 {3 W
O
+ ?$ I9 Z {5 y9 X+ j" i% |
O
2 j7 H1 [8 @" S/ A+ J) P100
+ G5 h) N, D: T1 m9 s0 L7 \O
7 m+ R" q1 x$ n! m: W! ?O
/ x9 |+ G* [: f0 g8 T& N) E' o& B# cO
- _! E+ g. o" j- A4 H) R5 J8 SO
& X% b6 h2 l3 |1 a" J/ `167
, A0 V: o" a8 k) K
O
- I3 F, D, d9 ^* s! v
O
5 L% x9 F8 ?$ Q
O
- D5 q+ Q0 {0 ?0 t G! U( w200
( z5 M9 c+ O' T1 L6 B' K
O
$ [; d" l" D' B9 \* i9 s5 PO
. a2 U* Q2 m, N! X" L& `O
! r1 }' X& e/ c# N$ m, F400
" Y* s( z$ e' f. k; X4 o
O
6 J3 e* y. q6 y9 c: i" z
O
+ c2 v: G# z+ k" n- z7 u6 ^600
9 Q) l8 p9 D# e/ OO
9 v: k; r; A" @, ^* rO
& W8 H n% i% c
800
4 ]+ Q; T0 C4 Q5 `) j
O
3 }; m" \2 J0 U" ]4 K2 j% M3 ?
O
* ^) ]" Y0 i# c' H9 O1000
' M% P$ _ H2 R; \
O
9 o3 E( B& L2 G/ `. [, c0 i, {# DO
3 d' U0 k c: t! [" u2 e, t3 D
Resolution
6 a4 d2 x1 N3 j6 S% _: Z8 P$ m- ?(bits)
5 d6 b! o* K* @) W! R6 ~
13
' @+ K+ e! j, B2 ^$ W
14
! M# B# a3 w4 J, ?& g15
8 ?- k$ J5 r$ C6 V. W; F" v
16
# Y! j" ?! D4 s0 B. B% U
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 19
- U$ O v ^9 P; P+ [: y- O, `MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
, U+ ]+ d/ Q }" }; t; |9 u
for Wearable Health
0 n* S0 J: ]! Z: m9 C# O
Hardware Interrupt
/ z6 g4 h0 y" }+ gThe active-low interrupt pin pulls low when an interrupt is triggered. The pin is open-drain and requires a pullup resistor or current source to an external voltage supply (up to +5V from GND). The interrupt pin is not designed to sink large currents, so the pullup resistor value should be large, such as 4.7kΩ.
7 A0 m: ^6 e$ ]) l, B- ^) e0 r
The internal FIFO stores up to 16 samples, so that the system processor does not need to read the data after every sample. Temperature data may be needed to properly interpret SpO2 data, but the temperature does not need to be sampled very often—once a second or every few seconds should be sufficient. In heart-rate mode temperature information is not necessary.
+ ?7 d+ z8 j3 A$ |Table 12. Heart-Rate Mode: Average IDD Current (μA) IR_PA = 0x3
" c5 G$ e# p* w- i& mTable 13. Heart-Rate Mode: Average LED Current (mA) IR_PA = 0x3
, ~" s4 P" b8 x+ L) G6 Y
Table 10. SpO2 Mode: Average IDD Current (μA) R_PA = 0x3, IR_PA = 0x3
" `7 i2 i' f6 a V7 [/ ^+ R( STable 11. SpO2 Mode: Average LED Current (mA) R_PA = 0x3, IR_PA = 0x3
! p* d, ?" v* ]0 W$ P
SAMPLES (per second)
' w; n' L- Z' l& k: nPULSE WIDTH (μs)
7 u' [+ J0 c! N* l; _. k
200
* M. i5 r% m4 J0 ]9 j400
$ }. O, l) Z8 w( q; p9 n! O
800
7 K! V0 w- z" ]9 m
1600
5 a" H1 W+ u1 T" R50
( m. m: f& U7 B6 D# k, G8 T6 X, E
608
+ o0 v$ q" ?: z" x q! u
616
3 ?2 Z2 K( r7 D8 c; l633
8 G; @, K; \" x6 r# {: H7 V9 }& \# q667
" G1 D& N6 p4 H. c) d! x6 a! I0 u100
4 \1 I$ k; t' v# N: c617
5 z. W" B! b* p1 v0 s& r4 P634
3 b7 t `% ]. @* h' X3 H. R4 U! A4 @5 V669
- Z+ K' Y% V7 i6 o- r9 G P R O740
, l( ~( s# F8 q1 \+ E/ `# d' B$ ^. S* q167
* f+ h! _6 [ y628
6 o# W( Z& [# I! u( Z
658
7 b& V1 H4 s) y3 ?! n3 ]: {/ h
716
5 _4 x6 y* g( e5 l+ T
831
2 u2 i; V* [" e+ U8 f- E
200
$ d' P" C9 Y! Y! Q# R635
* }' ]# b$ J; \$ Y6 ]+ W670
: s/ a4 b3 x/ Y, @# j3 G739
# W Z6 J4 v; O2 g876
8 i) }8 v, X8 }% l/ F) S5 C
400
) V8 |/ _; ^3 s
671
4 v; p4 [4 L, @, M# d740
5 W; m/ I. D* G% Q: \
878
/ t; _ d; { Z( y U8 `+ Y
600
1 O. i9 a; t: \* O% B( [) W% ~8 z/ e/ v
707
+ Q4 m' H+ P/ t2 b3 O ?
810
) Z; R$ H! |: D800
. s$ u& U' \- U; `
743
( [# [5 m4 n7 J. |4 K7 ?( n881
% m( H+ ^9 P7 D0 p( @ o6 M( {& z1000
+ G, F, e" i+ }5 x! V# V' G1 u779
: j0 P- L E- A951
6 I- G8 O1 s5 s5 R
SAMPLES (per second)
5 w z6 C' ^0 @6 |PULSE WIDTH (μs)
! R- \5 F1 Q# ]- P9 a+ r200
" n7 G& c9 v) L7 H: z3 T2 w
400
' k5 f& X! ?- n r- H7 r0 K1 S0 c800
2 I- k" U) d$ C' G' c) _& [) e
1600
1 k& H' L' W2 I1 j: J" E
50
0 ?: ?0 m$ v3 y! l$ s
628
! o, f2 Y {0 h, W3 N% X650
2 h( ?8 k6 O6 {
695
# o" x: |* ~9 M r* O5 B# v' ` D4 ~9 L782
$ y7 k/ L& h0 f. N% q+ ?7 b100
f. J( t% l* N; U3 m/ Y* x649
* b' F4 J+ N: Z
691
, H8 W. ~3 u5 d3 Z# L776
E' ^, m; ~+ }/ e+ ^1 x
942
4 O9 S. x7 M4 F# O4 d; u7 H167
( D# _( j B3 n$ q" m/ x678
f! x6 A; K) f
748
7 L7 c3 ~8 B4 P4 f; X887
, `: S4 L' n# I% \2 I
200
7 O( R% e: Z' l) e692
; w: o4 t6 W: P( E2 \' S
775
6 `" p+ O- u/ I$ A940
8 Z2 o7 E, n9 O O. {- |1 C' m400
5 @1 N" l+ I$ j7 {; _# L. q; q
779
' u5 b$ e7 l# Z7 D! R x- V, |
944
6 v( w `) E" H- B4 e600
+ w( {, w& [ c6 R+ F9 `
865
! m# ~8 P% g8 z% {. [800
$ r, ^0 ]9 Y3 M* N$ w952
& H* f" X0 S" k$ }# h4 v1000
9 A' K! \5 P+ e; \7 K8 q1037
9 h/ [5 F) \! @: uSAMPLES (per second)
: }1 ~0 D; `; d" u( P% R; @
PULSE WIDTH (μs)
& Q! {' C s" A1 U' k9 @, ?: E7 `
200
0 \2 d9 `! r; r; I' ^- W; ?
400
3 }9 b* \# W% F( j; f2 Z$ H: S# j3 C800
6 v+ K5 d6 B+ E- |1600
6 a2 R2 E9 t1 H$ Y" E' ?' C50
, |0 q7 t. q) I0.256
% d0 d% R- I+ G. p4 a0.511
- }" ~) v2 D% o+ u. r# m' _
1.020
, S5 b2 ?/ p5 ~2.040
# ?7 w6 X2 R6 P0 o) l" {0 T$ r
100
7 A9 U" v- p* q* d1 U" ?
0.512
$ t5 ]0 J3 b! V7 ^% E+ q: t- y1.022
% C6 k) [2 ]- q2 d" N
2.040
% i' u4 I6 L5 S9 F3 x6 b7 z! I4.077
! G( V" M' f" J# F: J/ o167
* S5 Q; g' Y( i1 S; w- q% S5 ?
0.854
) g% {; Y2 v7 U, K! `: u& z
1.705
) _* z3 `- L1 }' _2 s" e+ E3.404
) P1 _$ |; Q+ G3 Y7 N* V: B
6.795
9 l% n& g0 ?9 ?4 i' j u+ o200
; }& O, s$ w# Q) N. q: z
1.023
* Z" A, `; y% H3 }
2.041
& w& j G9 }1 _8 X
4.074
& Z4 W0 J5 Y1 Q& B' V2 N8.130
: F; M) ?+ ^& U& j# w400
& p! b }9 N9 }1 O2.042
/ G- \; B$ d0 ?( o& t
4.074
. H/ O! m" n( X# u
8.123
3 {4 r3 Z. _ [( L$ a
600
# |% o2 N% ~+ `; B, y v3.054
. M1 u( P, j& L/ t8 [
6.089
4 ~/ ?9 R6 S7 \: a# M% `
800
( x$ K4 D4 o }/ y4.070
9 N5 v8 h m* ^% |- e! U8.109
$ J4 m1 f" c* V8 n6 C1000
t3 r. n E! A0 D7 g5.079
1 X6 S& @1 {" \. U: C: B
10.11
7 t6 P; v S2 [SAMPLES (per second)
/ n" u5 ?8 J8 e6 GPULSE WIDTH (μs)
2 S& }+ `! \1 Z- y/ _+ }1 U
200
5 x: b3 R( e; G9 d! D& ]! o9 q' Z) s
400
" ?" X0 E* g* j; }" F4 A, O
800
0 \* m' G9 V* C! Z
1600
+ w. Y% d0 w2 O4 ~+ |8 X% D50
3 b3 H/ [; B: n w" a
0.667
: `9 b. ^3 K' n* L1.332
, M1 L$ G" h- G" ?' R" \( j
2.627
2 J7 j6 G4 T7 X1 g5.172
8 D, V. t, w6 {' |100
+ l( Z# b9 I8 z+ g- B, z1.26
7 ^& }: ^- B% \# K# H* |+ a2.516
8 @( n0 I) l1 w' L" J" P4.96
. \; L) d% Y: v
9.766
% q. V# Q1 q+ i+ A# q3 m* E/ X167
+ D6 Z6 ]* q9 m$ g4 D- N2.076
* J6 G) m' h1 s9 K, D
4.145
f9 m" S: q! h: ?( p0 e% B
8.173
" u/ f! h# _2 V$ O& L/ q- q200
# u. |& ?" H U8 q# o* z: u" [* X2 ]
2.491
; k/ U! o: ~' A" A) q+ Y
4.93
+ Y/ q3 I5 c& y9.687
0 x: r% m6 e4 m$ K400
3 c3 ^ j7 F7 f2 v/ K: M4.898
; {9 l. `1 z3 q& ~9.765
, Z: X2 P! B7 [) \7 K% Y3 P( x
600
" S6 M, u! j5 I7.319
' Z n+ F) ?1 u$ J800
0 @, f# E+ J Y% [2 Q- D
9.756
5 Y7 z+ z% s% G5 R: h1000
! g/ T$ G+ u) A6 h k% m
12.17www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 20
" M" z d8 I/ Q/ k0 O1 g& K4 X, gMAX30100Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
! |- M/ D% E' z* C9 [6 d H
for Wearable Health
; S; a* p: ]& q; m
Table 14. Red LED Current Settings vs. LED Temperature Rise
1 w5 Z7 D, ]! oFigure 3. Timing for Data Acquisition and Communication When in SpO2 Mode
5 @) w* t3 R) X3 |RED LED CURRENT SETTING
* s1 s! f! p8 a& _" mRED LED DUTY CYCLE
+ f3 l: ?, s5 l2 F, z) C
(% OF LED PULSE WIDTH
" R! P |% S: B; w+ l. E% }0 F) H
TO SAMPLE TIME)
% J+ d4 b8 u, i1 k* q
ESTIMATED TEMPERATURE RISE
: _/ _( Z; V- Z" s5 B- K
(ADD TO TEMPERATURE SENSOR
2 M( r" k" i7 QMEASUREMENT) (°C)
* L# W8 m! |: F9 @ U* g+ t$ @0001 (3.1mA) 8 0.1
; G% x3 h0 k6 c& @5 s$ x1111 (35mA) 8 2
" g8 q w8 f% ~
0001 (3.1mA) 16 0.3
8 K; _+ J' L" v6 V/ k
1111 (35mA) 16 4
. P; [' E0 r2 J) @6 U
0001 (3.1mA) 32 0.6
0 \7 y/ x6 A; a$ n! p1 x1111 (35mA) 32 8
1 ]1 M3 t! w( a) a5 ^
INT
7 z1 W2 w, S7 ]' A
I2C BUS
, ]6 k) d0 |+ _( j1 eLED OUTPUTS
# X# M& W! l+ G, q. ~! HRED
! Z; s: V* G& P" v- N }
IR
$ f/ t$ |& u) F" M& T
RED
3 v$ ~3 a& U, HIR
3 [6 o6 I! \$ @) j( G
RED
! _; f3 b1 z) M9 w
IR
' Q+ I7 L6 w5 C
~
$ y, u" B+ a# ]$ a! m
~
# H* r9 x; F. V: }" V1 F1 i) C~
' w+ H2 S* ], D3 Y- ^
RED
$ o% E9 L0 W3 W0 |, e9 m+ g4 C6 o
IR
+ y0 P8 p* I* ORED
: [! I( w1 t$ g
IR
, f3 k8 Z- D5 U. Q G! U5 qRED
7 p/ E* _& [3 |6 Y; [3 D
IR
+ ?' o9 X7 H8 B4 L/ W
RED
8 ^/ N3 K5 J$ ?
IR
3 H( | M5 {4 Y( |4 j x2 k
SAMPLE #1 SAMPLE #2 SAMPLE #3 SAMPLE #14 SAMPLE #15
) j" f" R3 y" U, `: O7 F, g
1 4 5 6
4 E& w8 o: V& H8 Y: o: [TEMP SENSOR TEMPERATURE SAMPLE
, t3 x7 K( @5 n8 c2 3
& Z% }6 a! F. {0 f, R5 c29ms
+ e; T, M$ {* ?, V+ m9 W, U+ U/ F, b
15ms TO 300ms
* Z! ?7 Y3 ?# m. ~- d7 R; R
www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 21
U* ?" o4 C) {7 h) Y$ i% E: U! ]
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
" d8 I3 F& B6 q
for Wearable Health
) p1 C) u9 d/ L2 g- {& y2 f. I+ c
Timing for Measurements and Data Collection
, l: D% T) Y; k8 k/ v f
Timing in SpO2 Mode
, x1 ?6 m4 _) [. ~. N# H( Z0 gTable 15. Events Sequence for Figure 3 in SpO2 Mode
U: D' y E; g u/ ~2 ^5 Q) dFigure 4. Timing for Data Acquisition and Communication When in Heart Rate Mode
% _4 j+ j+ C% }' S+ gEVENT DESCRIPTION COMMENTS
" k8 W( a4 O5 m& h$ ?! |1 _
1 Enter into SpO2 mode. Initiate a temperature
; a& q5 X8 u6 M7 a$ ]5 K7 S- |measurement.
y w, ?& n0 b7 t- p1 z* S0 H
I2C Write Command Sets MODE[2:0] = 0x03. At the same time,
* X% Q) [7 |: `- t9 t: ~set the TEMP_EN bit to initiate a single temperature measurement.
& \8 H4 z' E8 r( g2 ^
Mask the SPO2_RDY Interrupt.
, ~3 @5 o0 h, n0 P+ S: p
2 Temperature measurement complete,
7 R) m8 b6 W* V+ s9 h. ~; cinterrupt generated
+ N+ O. @1 N' Q5 t! |$ p
TEMP_RDY interrupt triggers, alerting the central processor to
( M, k# u( @$ u, \ O9 N1 I1 @/ l) K
read the data.
S9 @: c; E" U' U3 D- L3 Temp data is read, interrupt cleared
* ^8 h; r; X r8 l( P4 FIFO is almost full, interrupt generated Interrupt is generated when the FIFO has only one empty space left.
& s; a9 d7 q+ n5 \0 l- M
5 FIFO data is read, interrupt cleared
- q! d; c c% @7 C1 S) o
6 Next sample is stored New sample is stored at the new read pointer location. Effectively,
3 a) Q+ ~1 X% n2 { _
it is now the first sample in the FIFO.
& |( M& r; z+ {, @9 q* k1 ~
INT
# f) C( D7 Y0 Q" n/ n6 L6 yI2C BUS
, k+ u d9 r' s; ~6 h) [8 LLED OUTPUTS
0 w1 G3 f- ^- r( g1 X8 `* tIR
0 b: ~$ H% j3 H* n2 E# {
IR
. Y2 S+ e4 c5 ]$ `, z- D4 YIR
1 ]' d0 \. n+ n8 [- f9 ]
~
Y1 I. b" d, u* x. v {~
' W- n" a/ |3 K$ R/ @
~
' W- l* z, G" Z7 l
IR
( l! p/ q+ N5 I+ d& Q
IR
0 g* L7 p# {% j, \. [IR
6 v p: a" `" s' S8 j9 u8 X( s: g
IR
: u4 N6 `; H% b8 w4 w4 B
SAMPLE #1 SAMPLE #2 SAMPLE #3 SAMPLE #14 SAMPLE #15
, e: W2 O) K( ~' ]1 f1 2 3 4
3 w4 Q9 l. ?! ^- }15ms to 300ms
" Q; K }+ k; e v2 Ywww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 22
+ u( u2 k0 ?4 i
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
! `! P) g) _$ Q; y8 @9 E$ Y; Xfor Wearable Health
1 s K% N; B4 ?* j
Timing in Heart-Rate Mode
6 b! s0 Y3 D3 Z+ m% gPower Sequencing and Requirements
9 y: M7 U/ x7 S4 U# ~& p3 ^: M( c
Power-Up Sequencing
: `3 `% d& Z+ B' ` ~
Figure 5 shows the recommended power-up sequence for the MAX30100.
* w3 p' r; Y: \' `8 C+ x+ W$ x
It is recommended to power the VDD supply first, before the LED power supplies (R_LED+, IR_LED+). The interrupt and I2C pins can be pulled up to an external voltage even when the power supplies are not powered up.
8 p- n! J2 s3 i( b3 q% ]After the power is established, an interrupt occurs to alert the system that the MAX30100 is ready for operation. Reading the I2C interrupt register clears the interrupt, as shown in Figure 5.
/ S; c5 ^5 U2 R" w7 ~% N9 B1 ^
Power-Down Sequencing
% g; k3 a* L* h: k7 |4 P' ~The MAX30100 is designed to be tolerant of any power- supply sequencing on power-down.
! o3 E9 N2 j% @! g' T" q) @7 h
I2C Interface
* L* a9 z: i5 f/ dThe MAX30100 features an I2C/SMBus-compatible, 2-wire serial interface consisting of a serial data line (SDA) and a serial clock line (SCL). SDA and SCL facilitate communication between the MAX30100 and the master at clock rates up to 400kHz. Figure 1 shows the 2-wire interface timing diagram. The master generates SCL and initiates data transfer on the bus. The master device writes data to the MAX30100 by transmitting the proper slave address followed by data. Each transmit sequence is framed by a START (S) or REPEATED START (Sr) condition and a STOP (P) condition. Each word transmitted to the MAX30100 is 8 bits long and is followed by an acknowledge clock pulse. A master reading data from the MAX30100 transmits the proper slave address followed by a series of nine SCL pulses.
" x% X5 x' M* \The MAX30100 transmits data on SDA in sync with the master-generated SCL pulses. The master acknowledges receipt of each byte of data. Each read sequence is framed by a START (S) or REPEATED START (Sr) condition, a not acknowledge, and a STOP (P) condition. SDA operates as both an input and an open-drain output. A pullup resistor, typically greater than 500Ω, is required on SDA. SCL operates only as an input. A pullup resistor, typically greater than 500Ω, is required on SCL if there are multiple masters on the bus, or if the single master has an open-drain SCL output.
8 u" g2 C# i, H' L# ^9 b2 l1 G
Bit Transfer
, p7 {, j% v6 \3 `: {One data bit is transferred during each SCL cycle. The data on SDA must remain stable during the high period of the SCL pulse. Changes in SDA while SCL is high are control signals. See the START and STOP Conditions section.
/ G- {% P2 ~* A2 m* y+ O3 V1 _
Table 16. Events Sequence for Figure 4 in Heart-Rate Mode
" M+ M6 `1 Q! b( R4 R9 ZFigure 5. Power-Up Sequence of the Power-Supply Rails
7 ]2 L$ Y& U" P# qEVENT
9 E$ N4 d3 G! k6 w; S' h: u& z4 H
DESCRIPTION
! [- u: x9 x$ l3 f- j* ICOMMENTS
0 ]- c+ R' M' B1
! L# J% L( a0 n! ]
Enter into heart rate mode
3 R6 c4 K0 _. t. ?# g
I2C Write Command Sets MODE[2:0] = 0x02. Mask the HR_RDY interrupt.
- V; ]4 d$ @ K
2
' i: @$ N4 ]# e+ \7 `" V& c9 qFIFO is almost full, interrupt generated
2 D9 P8 D! r& ~+ g2 i- h7 w7 a! g6 v
Interrupt is generated when the FIFO has only one empty space left.
8 T% W9 {% F7 H2 p8 K$ B3
! l, |: R$ l- `% b# |FIFO data is read, interrupt cleared
9 G* V) L7 b& e" D6 k4
- W y' P) e# _3 A! w0 r5 J
Next sample is stored
% U. U5 Z5 f' g5 O
New sample is stored at the new read pointer location. Effectively, it is now the first sample in the FIFO.
$ P/ M+ V4 Y9 ^! R/ j; KR_LED+, IR_LED+VDDINTSDA, SCLHIGH (I/O PULLUP)HIGH (I/O PULLUP)PWR_RDY INTERRUPTREAD TO CLEAR INTERRUPT
% t5 a# l" v+ b* i! |8 Uwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 23
' _. @: P' X0 S$ u1 t" L3 X; uMAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
" t' R9 i! ?# N7 r: |7 ?for Wearable Health
+ F* X- _1 N$ }6 t& m+ d" p4 BSTART and STOP Conditions
1 D$ S9 N( {0 v2 [+ K
SDA and SCL idle high when the bus is not in use. A master initiates communication by issuing a START condition. A START condition is a high-to-low transition on SDA with SCL high. A STOP condition is a low-to-high transition on SDA while SCL is high (Figure 6). A START condition from the master signals the beginning of a transmission to the MAX30100. The master terminates transmission, and frees the bus, by issuing a STOP condition. The bus remains active if a REPEATED START condition is generated instead of a STOP condition.
# w/ y! @ N- z N* S
Early STOP Conditions
' P* l) n5 Z8 [2 @9 [4 [
The MAX30100 recognizes a STOP condition at any point during data transmission except if the STOP condition occurs in the same high pulse as a START condition. For proper operation, do not send a STOP condition during the same SCL high pulse as the START condition.
3 G$ `7 ?$ o# J! R
Slave Address
0 G- G9 d' W+ jA bus master initiates communication with a slave device by issuing a START condition followed by the 7-bit slave ID. When idle, the MAX30100 waits for a START condition followed by its slave ID. The serial interface compares each slave ID bit by bit, allowing the interface to power down and disconnect from SCL immediately if an incorrect slave ID is detected. After recognizing a START condition followed by the correct slave ID, the MAX30100 is ready to accept or send data. The LSB of the slave ID word is the Read/Write (R/W) bit. R/W indicates whether the master is writing to or reading data from the MAX30100. R/W = 0 selects a write condition, R/W = 1 selects a read condition). After receiving the proper slave ID, the MAX30100 issues an ACK by pulling SDA low for one clock cycle.
) ?- V5 Q7 Z+ eThe MAX30100 slave ID consists of seven fixed bits, B7–B1 (set to 0b1010111). The most significant slave ID bit (B7) is transmitted first, followed by the remaining bits. Table 18 shows the possible slave IDs of the device.
) m% \$ i& p( K7 `4 LAcknowledge
/ c! ^2 F! G* Z0 a6 V% ]1 ?. VThe acknowledge bit (ACK) is a clocked 9th bit that the MAX30100 uses to handshake receipt each byte of data when in write mode (Figure 7). The MAX30100 pulls down SDA during the entire master-generated 9th clock pulse if the previous byte is successfully received. Monitoring ACK allows for detection of unsuccessful data transfers. An unsuccessful data transfer occurs if a receiving device is busy or if a system fault has occurred. In the event of an unsuccessful data transfer, the bus master will retry communication. The master pulls down SDA during the 9th clock cycle to acknowledge receipt of data when the MAX30100 is in read mode. An acknowledge is sent by the master after each read byte to allow data transfer to continue. A not-acknowledge is sent when the master reads the final byte of data from the MAX30100, followed by a STOP condition.
! ]. f) ^/ _$ U4 J1 r9 s
Table 17. Slave ID Description
* P/ g# ?: `# Z% p" ^
Figure 6. START, STOP, and REPEATED START Conditions
( v+ r- I: E) B9 J1 n; A) k; }
Figure 7. Acknowledge
" g( U: _/ t5 k2 g' e, T6 S. NB7
/ ?- ~& `# ]! `6 P% w
B6
/ N% z5 I0 L5 [
B5
9 ^2 m* E: m" L9 }
B4
( z" y5 n2 K) k* _2 {/ u: w
B3
5 H8 j' Q1 |$ B7 d3 T7 oB2
) O; Y- d1 c& y4 i% j7 [! F$ c) z2 S
B1
$ S" b- p" d6 d. Q; J1 \B0
J" Y3 w& h& t6 zWRITE ADDRESS
) d2 n8 k4 Z) R
READ ADDRESS
5 l1 r' {* a$ @
1
, g" I3 k: b' c0 W1 F7 m0
8 F) _& X4 [3 L6 v; a
1
' I" w4 p9 D& x* q% ^# d$ `# h
0
4 J% c, d6 q" W0 i9 Z* b1
% y; e5 J- v$ b6 r+ |1
6 } `, |, E8 Z, p. D$ W& B7 I/ f1
3 s% r' h2 h# ]/ P$ O6 bR/W
4 m+ x0 O0 J9 f0xAE
1 T: S9 Z. Q5 n& p) t; p0xAF
4 h) y3 q9 u- D1 J+ h3 a4 ^SSrPSCL1SDA1SCL1SDA1START CONDITION1289CLOCK PULSE FORACKNOWLEDGMENTNOT ACKNOWLEDGEACKNOWLEDGE
* V! h) }& B6 e2 |( N; W
Figure 7www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 24
- a0 L6 U: Z! D& H1 HMAX30100Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
! f; Q% G4 p# h) m/ ?; e9 {# P; yfor Wearable Health
, _; y ]* c; p: X
Write Data Format
3 X" M: a7 }( n0 d
For the write operation, send the slave ID as the first byte followed by the register address byte and then one or more data bytes. The register address pointer increments automatically after each byte of data received. For example, the entire register bank can be written by at one time. Terminate the data transfer with a STOP condition. The write operation is shown in Figure 8.
/ Z5 {% D" d% C1 r/ B1 C6 t* v: L6 d! YThe internal register address pointer increments automatically, so writing additional data bytes fill the data registers in order.
" {8 A7 J" T: I
Read Data Format
" R4 ?7 \( Z: u2 tFor the read operation, two I2C operations must be performed. First, the slave ID byte is sent followed by the I2C register that you wish to read. Then a REPEATED START (Sr) condition is sent, followed by the read slave ID. The MAX30100 then begins sending data beginning with the register selected in the first operation. The read pointer increments automatically, so the MAX30100 continues sending data from additional registers in sequential order until a STOP (P) condition is received. The exception to this is the FIFO_DATA register, at which the read pointer no longer increments when reading additional bytes. To read the next register after FIFO_DATA, an I2C write command is necessary to change the location of the read pointer.
9 H- b. K1 e! _ w0 ]
An initial write operation is required to send the read register address.
1 C$ s+ _. n& s+ ^
Data is sent from registers in sequential order, starting from the register selected in the initial I2C write operation. If the FIFO_DATA register is read, the read pointer does not automatically increment, and subsequent bytes of data contain the contents of the FIFO.
; `! n! o( w' H5 m) uFigure 8. Writing One Data Byte to the MAX30100
2 M( E: V: q. P7 k
Figure 9. Reading One Byte of Data from the MAX30100
# `8 m" O% U, @' ?
SR/W = 01010001ACKA7A6A5A4A3A2A1A0ACKSLAVE IDREGISTER ADDRESSD7D6D5D4D3D2D1D0ACKPDATA BYTES = START CONDITIONP = STOP CONDITIONACK = ACKNOWLEDGE BY THE RECEIVERINTERNAL ADDRESS POINTER AUTO-INCREMENT (FOR WRITING MULTIPLE BYTES)SR/W = 01010001ACKA7A6A5A4A3A2A1A0ACKSLAVE IDREGISTER ADDRESSS = START CONDITIONSr = REPEATED START CONDITIONP = STOP CONDITIONACK = ACKNOWLEDGE BY THE RECEIVERNACK = NOT ACKNOWLEDGESR/W = 01010001ACKD7D6D5D4D3D2D1D0NACKSLAVE IDDATA BYTEP
/ G; n0 J9 G, L, o0 TFigure 9
% O% M8 d3 E' G" hwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 25
9 r3 s/ b2 e( {
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
7 v# L+ V9 R+ V6 ?) I: ]1 P2 E: nfor Wearable Health
9 n0 M/ \( g2 u# gFigure 10. Reading Multiple Bytes of Data from the MAX30100
. {3 Z! A* N+ b5 `2 O+Denotes a lead(Pb)-free/RoHS-compliant package.
7 q/ r5 Y) I, oPART TEMP RANGE PIN-PACKAGE
+ D) a; X6 H. m8 ]6 v: {) F
MAX30100EFD+ -40°C to +85°C 14 OESIP
% t8 r3 |" f" u
(0.8mm pitch)
9 j: u4 X: a: w/ r3 Z4 }, S' Z: _660nm 880nm
9 F ]+ {- D6 {" x1 Y5 c
ADC
( W! f% U1 J- w b8 P4 DAMBIENT LIGHT
' e' |3 n& E' ]% t, R: ^
CANCELLATION ANALOG
+ O; W9 S2 `+ P; H T6 s& mTEMP ADC
( `5 f% E X! yOSCILLATOR
' \; v. Q; W1 i. a9 u. PDIGITAL
- }3 d9 y7 g# g6 C; U
FILTER
1 v3 y( i. E b0 m& b- U
DIGITAL
. o% X3 o( n' h) U% Y1 z+ R
DATA
5 D/ J) H. y8 @- ?
REGISTER
6 L4 c# I9 _4 n3 aLED DRIVERS
* S Y+ h3 k/ M4 f, ]I2C
$ B: e0 ]9 x2 ~8 ?8 V- _: p: D
COMMUNICATION
3 [) i F. b# `' p0 \/ ~1 HINT
& _3 \4 V" Y4 b
SDA
I) e* {% R* C
SCL
& K* w1 P8 W* O7 u) ]
IR_LED+ IR_LED+ VDD
* E- y. |0 O$ G6 w" BR_DRV IR_DRV GND PGND
/ \2 C+ j5 _7 I: _. }
RED IR
% M6 _; N% K! Y3 iRED+IR
! e% L/ x `( q& d10μF
' y7 f" _9 ?4 N" y+3.3V
, j$ B2 z( \4 r
50mA PEAK
0 c* K/ Q" B- k" i! ^) D(TYPICAL)
8 l0 h" m! r9 F7 Q3 {/ ?& G
1μF
. Z# \ {0 [1 X5 U, L1 j+1.8V
- X$ k" |; t( o7 d4.7kΩ 4.7kΩ 4.7kΩ
) T: ^8 t* H7 \! g% q% q. ?: \
VDDIO
: S. V6 g! ~2 U6 _( R3 d2 P1 [
μc
, q" a' F) [$ s C4 M- f7 TOR
' i8 V, @( A% f2 _7 J! t
APPS
; n/ {, ]3 \6 ?$ o. S/ Q- s5 zPROC
" M- i7 f' P. y$ i8 fS 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 R/W = 0 ACK A7 A6 A5 A4 A3 A2 A1 A0 ACK
- E+ x3 t1 n; J
SLAVE ID REGISTER ADDRESS
1 o: _% j3 M( L2 q$ m' @) w% P
S = START CONDITION
7 N2 B& e4 y9 t/ r% C2 {' b# n. x* kSr = REPEATED START CONDITION
! N+ w4 k$ t+ h& g2 Z! ^$ ]* E
P = STOP CONDITION
- [ e: F" I# y3 R9 PACK = ACKNOWLEDGE BY THE RECEIVER
3 p& p0 n1 A7 \8 S
AM = ACKNOWLEDGE BY THE MASTER
' u2 O7 ?- p d+ f1 C
NACK = NOT ACKNOWLEDGE
" `2 t3 X" u! G) Q
Sr 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 R/W = 0 ACK D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 AM
& t. F( N6 q) ^; VSLAVE ID DATA 1
" V+ i$ w% f8 s0 m( S @D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 AM D7 D6 D5 D4 D3 D2 D1 D0 NACK
1 J( x) Y! ]1 E& o$ \6 E+ [DATA n-1 DATA n
" S& P* |' H* l E( R: k; F
P
( J$ b& o9 [: E0 Qwww.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 26
, ?9 J6 Y$ v0 p+ S+ u$ `; b$ d( C
MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
% U7 S4 l3 r1 {. d' _
for Wearable Health
) a+ G0 |+ l* K4 n8 r* E
Ordering Information Chip Information
, {* Y$ `) @4 r. |PROCESS: BiCMOS
1 h2 `* W2 F% U" t' k6 v/ nTypical Application Circuit
% {+ v* {3 W$ |' P, Y* @7 r- w% j
PACKAGE TYPE PACKAGE CODE OUTLINE NO. LAND PATTERN NO.
, I" s& J j7 M9 w! I14 OESIP F142D5+2 21-0880 90-0461
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+ m) q" j" z- X/ R1 ZMAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
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for Wearable Health
1 |" W4 o" u7 O& t0 L$ OPackage Information
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For the latest package outline information and land patterns (footprints), go to
www.maximintegrated.com/packages. Note that a “+”,
: `% K0 `8 Q7 ]9 @* G& P“#”, or “-” in the package code indicates RoHS status only. Package drawings may show a different suffix character, but the drawing
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pertains to the package regardless of RoHS status.
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www.maximintegrated.com Maxim Integrated │ 28
% W# ~* s/ Q$ a$ P# _8 p2 f FMAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
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for Wearable Health
+ F/ X9 o% \5 \Package Information (continued)
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For the latest package outline information and land patterns (footprints), go to
www.maximintegrated.com/packages. Note that a “+”,
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“#”, or “-” in the package code indicates RoHS status only. Package drawings may show a different suffix character, but the drawing
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pertains to the package regardless of RoHS status.
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REVISION
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NUMBER
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REVISION
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CHANGED
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$ T) _) O2 s. y$ b* k/ Q6 JMaxim Integrated cannot assume responsibility for use of any circuitry other than circuitry entirely embodied in a Maxim Integrated product. No circuit patent licenses
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are implied. Maxim Integrated reserves the right to change the circuitry and specifications without notice at any time. The parametric values (min and max limits)
+ Q7 o# x$ t7 ^. y5 q9 `& Fshown in the Electrical Characteristics table are guaranteed. Other parametric values quoted in this data sheet are provided for guidance.
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Maxim Integrated and the Maxim Integrated logo are trademarks of Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. © 2014 Maxim Integrated Products, Inc. │ 29
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MAX30100 Pulse Oximeter and Heart-Rate Sensor IC
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for Wearable Health
( u9 H- T# K, v" P" J# W2 m5 XRevision History
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For pricing, delivery, and ordering information, please contact Maxim Direct at 1-888-629-4642, or visit Maxim Integrated’s website at
www.maximintegrated.com.
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