RS-485 Transceiver Tutorial: 1 Intersil
RS-485 Transceiver Tutorial: 1 Intersil
RS-485 Transceiver Tutorial: 1 Intersil
Introduction
TIA/EIA-485 and TIA/EIA-422 (also known as RS-485 and RS-422) are wired communication standards
published by the Telecommunications Industry Association/Electronic Industries Alliance (TIA/EIA). They use
differential signaling to enable data transmission over long distances and in noisy industrial and factory
automation environments. Differential signaling rejects common mode noise, and the recommended twisted
pair cable ensures that most received interference is common mode. Long transmission distances increase
the chance for ground potential differences, but the standards wide common mode range (CMR) ensures
that the network operates properly, even in the presence of fairly large common mode voltages.
As shown in Figure 1, the transmitter (Tx) and receiver (Rx) both have non-inverting (Y and A) and inverting
(Z and B) pins. Half-duplex devices are used for bidirectional communication over a single cable, so the
corresponding Rx and Tx terminals connect to the same IC package pin. Networks that utilize two cables for
bidirectional communication employ full-duplex devices, where the Rx and Tx terminals connect to separate
pins.
With the plethora of transceivers on the market, it can be challenging to pick the best, most cost effective
device for your application. This in-depth white paper guides you through the choices and weighs key design
considerations to help you pick the right transceiver. First, well review the most typical RS-485 ICs and
explore the most common design considerations. Then, well examine electrostatic discharge (ESD)
protection and compare the Human Body Model (HBM) and IEC61000-4-2 (IEC) standards. Finally, well
discuss over voltage protection (OVP) and provide a snapshot of very high-speed transceivers (above
25Mbps) where data skew is critical.
Intersil
RS-485 Requirements
The published RS-485 standard is 14 pages long. Here are some of its most important requirements:
Differential signaling with a very sensitive (200mV) Rx, and a healthy 1.5V Tx differential output
voltage (VOD). This combination ensures a robust noise margin that tolerates the attenuation from
long cables.
The Tx must have an enable pin. RS-485 allows multiple drivers on the bus for true bidirectional
transmission over a single cable, so each Tx must have tri-state output capability.
High Tx output current to drive double terminated cables and long cables. High-speed bidirectional
transmission over a single cable requires two terminations.
Wide CMR of at least -7V to +12V. RS-485 enables networks up to 4000 feet long (1220m). A large
CMR handles the ground potential differences that may occur over long distances, and tolerates
larger induced bus voltages in noisy environments. This CMR also allows devices with different
supply voltages to communicate on the same bus.
A receiver input resistance of approximately 12k. The standard allows up to 32 one unit load
devices on the bus, and the load from each device (Tx or Rx) must be 1mA with a 12V bias on the
bus.
Intersil
cables arent frequently connected and disconnected, then ESD protection may not be required.
Nevertheless, some basic devices do include 8kV to 15kV Human Body Model ESD protection. RS-422
networks have a single, always enabled driver, so the bus is constantly driven, and bus biasing isnt
required. If the bus is electrically short, meaning it doesnt need to be treated as a transmission line, or if the
data rate is very slow, then bus terminations may not be required, and basic RS-485 transceivers work fine.
However, problems may arise when terminations are required for multi-driver RS-485 systems.
Consider what happens in the circuit shown in Figure 2 when the bus is idle (no Tx actively driving the bus)
as occurs when switching between Tx on the bus. With all Tx on the bus tri-stated, the differential
termination resistor(s) collapse the bus voltage to nearly a 0V differential, which as previously described is
an indeterminate voltage level. Presented with this voltage on the bus, an individual Rx may drive its output
(Ro) to a 1, or to a 0, or worse yet it might oscillate. This is problematic because the microcontroller (MCU)
monitoring Ro might interpret any high to low transition as a message start-bit, and an oscillating Ro
wastes valuable MCU bandwidth as it tries to service an endless stream of phantom messages.
Intersil
Figure 3. Bus biasing fixes idle problem, but introduces new issues
Intersil
maximum load current requirement. 1/4th UL devices have input currents 250A, so 128 transceivers
(128*250A = 32mA) are allowed on the bus. 1/8th UL devices have input currents 125A, so you can
have 256 devices on a bus. Disabled Tx load currents are usually negligible, so the Rx input resistance
dominates the load calculation. The unit load concept is strictly a DC load constraint, so AC considerations
(e.g., length of cable, spacing of nodes, or capacitance of nodes) may limit the node count to values less
than what the UL allows.
IEC61000-4-2
Intersil
HBM
IEC61000
1-3
10
100pF
150pF
1.5k
330
10A
45A
10ns
1ns
Pulse duration
450ns
180ns
HBM
CONTACT METHOD
Level 1
2kV
2kV
2kV
Level 2
4kV
4kV
4kV
Level 3
8kV
8kV
6kV
Level 4
N/A
15kV
8kV
As shown in Table 2, there are three classification levels for HBM and four levels for IEC ESD. The special
ESD structures utilized in full featured transceivers allow them to meet the highest level for each of the
standards. These high ESD structures protect the IC whether or not it is powered up, and without interfering
with the RS-485 standards -7V to +12V CMR. Adding IEC61000 ESD protection to interface ICs saves
designers time and money by eliminating the need for board level protection, and minimizes field returns
due to ESD damage.
Intersil
transceiver, which is designed such that the RS-485 bus pins can survive voltages much higher than those
required by the RS-485 standard. OVP devices like the ISL3243XE and ISL3249XE offer over-voltage levels
of 40 to 60V and a wide common mode voltage range thats up to two times the range required by the
RS-485 standard. Wider CMR allows for the common mode voltage pick-up that frequently occurs in long
networks or noisy environments. Intersil OVP ICs are specified with CMRs from 15V to 25V, meaning that
a transmitter and receiver continue communicating even when faced with large common mode voltages.
A key advantage of high voltage tolerant bus pins is that they ease the design of bus pin protection networks.
If DC or transient bus voltages can exceed a transceivers bus pin voltage rating, then external protection
devices like transient voltage suppressor (TVS) ICs must be added to the transceiver design. The
asymmetrical nature of the -7V to +12V standard CMR makes it difficult to use basic bidirectional TVS ICs.
Choosing a 12V TVS allows negative voltages to exceed the transceivers -7V limit, while utilizing a 7V TVS
cuts off 40% of the standards +CMR. Conversely, the symmetrical bus pin voltages of the OVP transceivers
easily accommodate bidirectional TVS protection, and the protection is more robust because of the extra
headroom between the TVS hard clamping voltage and the bus pin damage voltage. For example, when
trying to protect an OVP device with a 25V CMR, you simply pick a bidirectional TVS with a standoff voltage
above 25V, and below the OVP level. Keep in mind that TVS devices typically hard clamp at voltages 50%
higher than their standoff voltage, so select the lowest TVS voltage that allows the needed CMR. TVS
voltages in the range of 25V to 40V have been shown to give good protection for 60V OVP ICs.
Coupled with the 16.5kV HBM ESD, the OVP and wide CMR features make these devices some of the most
robust RS-485 transceivers on the market. These are also full featured devices, so they are FFS, and present
only a 1/4th UL to the bus.
Table 3. Intersil offers three 5V OVP families and two wide supply voltage 3-5V OVP families
FAMILY
CMR
DATA RATE
MORE INFO
ISL3247XE 60V,
basic 5V family
15V
250kbps, 1Mbps
or 15Mbps
ISL3249XE 60V,
premier 5V family
25V
250kbps, 1Mbps
or 15Mbps
ISL3248XE 60V,
premier 5V family
25V
1Mbps
ISL3243XE 40V,
basic 3V-5V family
15V
250kbps or
1Mbps
ISL3245XE 60V,
premier 3V-5V family
20V
250kbps or
1Mbps
Intersil
A transceiver with a polarity reversal function operates as a normal transceiver with the polarity reversal
input in the inactive state, but the transceiver flips the polarity of the bus pins when the polarity select input
is switched to the active state. Thus, the B/Z pins become the non-inverting pins, while A/Y become the
inverting pins, so the transceiver now communicates properly, even though its bus connections are reversed.
The ISL3248XE 5V family, and the 3-5V ISL32437E and ISL32457E all include the cable invert function.
One problem with prior cable invert functions is that the previously described inversion also inverts the full
failsafe output state. Thus, activating the cable invert function causes the receiver to output a logic low when
its inputs are floating or shorted together, which is the opposite of what the MCU expects. Intersil has solved
this problem by implementing a patented function that maintains FFS whether the receiver is in normal or
inverted polarity, making the Intersil devices easy to use.
Summary
Despite the large number of RS-485/RS-422 devices on the market, understanding common design
problems and the transceiver features developed to solve those problems simplifies the designers task
of choosing the best RS-485 device for a particular application.
Next Steps
Use our parametric search to find the best RS-485 device for your application
###
About Intersil
Intersil Corporation is a leader in the design and manufacture of high-performance analog, mixed-signal and power management
semiconductors for the industrial and infrastructure, personal computing and high-end consumer markets. For more information
about Intersil, visit our website at www.intersil.com.
+1 408-432-8888 | 2015 Intersil Americas LLC. All rights reserved. Intersil (and design) is a trademark owned by Intersil
Corporation or one of its subsidiaries. All other trademarks mentioned are the property of their respective owners.
8
Intersil