SLOA101B August   2002  – May 2016 SN55HVD233-SEP , SN65HVDA1040A-Q1 , SN65HVDA1050A-Q1 , SN65HVDA540-5-Q1 , SN65HVDA540-Q1 , SN65HVDA541-5-Q1 , SN65HVDA541-Q1 , SN65HVDA542-5-Q1 , SN65HVDA542-Q1

 

  1.   Introduction to the Controller Area Network (CAN)
    1.     Trademarks
    2. 1 Introduction
    3. 2 The CAN Standard
    4. 3 Standard CAN or Extended CAN
      1. 3.1 The Bit Fields of Standard CAN and Extended CAN
        1. 3.1.1 Standard CAN
        2. 3.1.2 Extended CAN
    5. 4 A CAN Message
      1. 4.1 Arbitration
      2. 4.2 Message Types
        1. 4.2.1 The Data Frame
        2. 4.2.2 The Remote Frame
        3. 4.2.3 The Error Frame
        4. 4.2.4 The Overload Frame
      3. 4.3 A Valid Frame
      4. 4.4 Error Checking and Fault Confinement
    6. 5 The CAN Bus
      1. 5.1 CAN Transceiver Features
        1. 5.1.1  3.3-V Supply Voltage
        2. 5.1.2  ESD Protection
        3. 5.1.3  Common-Mode Voltage Operating Range
        4. 5.1.4  Common-Mode Noise Rejection
        5. 5.1.5  Controlled Driver Output Transition Times
        6. 5.1.6  Low-Current Bus Monitor, Standby and Sleep Modes
        7. 5.1.7  Bus Pin Short-Circuit Protection
        8. 5.1.8  Thermal Shutdown Protection
        9. 5.1.9  Bus Input Impedance
        10. 5.1.10 Glitch-Free Power Up and Power Down
        11. 5.1.11 Unpowered Node Protection
        12. 5.1.12 Reference Voltage
        13. 5.1.13 V-Split
        14. 5.1.14 Loopback
        15. 5.1.15 Autobaud Loopback
      2. 5.2 CAN Transceiver Selection Guide
    7. 6 Conclusion
    8. 7 Additional Reading
  2.   Revision History

Reference Voltage

Reference voltage on a CAN transceiver is the Vref pin (pin 5) of what is considered to be the standard CAN transceiver footprint. This is the footprint of the first CAN transceiver to market, the NXP PCA82C250.

When first introduced, the Vcc/2 Vref pin served a particular NXP CAN controller as a voltage reference used to compare the bus voltage of a remaining single bus line in the event of an accident. If the voltages were the same, it was a recessive bit; if different, it was a dominant bit.

Although some users consider it handy for use as an actual voltage reference at the node, it is typically unused.