SLYT822 March   2022 ISO7710 , ISOUSB211 , TPS25910 , TUSB320LAI

 

  1. 1Introduction
  2. 2Traditional host and peripheral implementations
  3. 3USB Type-C DRP
  4. 4Implementing an isolated USB Type-C DRP
  5. 5Implementation with actual components
  6. 6Demonstration of DRP operation with the ISOUSB211 EVM
  7. 7Conclusion

Traditional host and peripheral implementations

Figure 2-1 shows the traditional implementation of isolated host and peripheral ports in industrial equipment. This implementation uses a USB isolator that has fixed upstream- and downstream-facing definitions. The downstream-facing (host) port powers a 5-V supply to the VBUS and includes 15-kΩ pulldown resistors, as specified by the USB standard. The upstream-facing (peripheral) port does not provide power to the USB VBUS. Once this port connects to a host, it detects the presence of VBUS and pulls up either DP (for full speed and high-speed operation) or DM (for low-speed operation) with a 1.5-kΩ resistor. Here, DP refers to DPLUS/D+ or the positive terminal of the USB data differential pair, and DM refers to DMINUS/D-. Since a DRP must expect to either pull up DP and DM in peripheral mode (upstream facing), or offer a 15-kΩ pulldown resistor to ground and expect an external 1.5-kΩ pullup on DP and DM in host mode (downstream facing), it is clear that traditional isolated USB repeaters that have fixed upstream- and downstream-facing sides cannot support a DRP.

Figure 2-1 Traditional implementation offering dedicated host and peripheral ports with two isolated USB repeaters