TIDUF27A February   2025  – March 2025 AMC131M03 , MSPM0G1507

 

  1.   1
  2.   Description
  3.   Resources
  4.   Features
  5.   Applications
  6.   6
  7. 1System Description
    1. 1.1 Key System Specifications
    2. 1.2 End Equipment
    3. 1.3 Electricity Meter
    4. 1.4 Power Quality Meter, Power Quality Analyzer
  8. 2System Overview
    1. 2.1 Block Diagram
    2. 2.2 Design Considerations
      1. 2.2.1 Voltage Measurement Analog Front End
      2. 2.2.2 Analog Front End for Current Measurement
      3. 2.2.3 XDS110 Emulator
      4. 2.2.4 Bluetooth® Data Transmission
      5. 2.2.5 Bluetooth® Connection Between Two Modules
      6. 2.2.6 Bluetooth® to UART Connection
      7. 2.2.7 Magnetic Tamper Detection With TMAG5273 Linear 3D Hall-Effect Sensor
    3. 2.3 Highlighted Products
      1. 2.3.1  MSPM0G3507
      2. 2.3.2  AMC131M03
      3. 2.3.3  CDC6C
      4. 2.3.4  RES60A-Q1
      5. 2.3.5  TPS3702
      6. 2.3.6  TPD4E05U06
      7. 2.3.7  ISOUSB111
      8. 2.3.8  LMK1C1104
      9. 2.3.9  MSP432E401Y
      10. 2.3.10 TPS709
      11. 2.3.11 TMAG5273
  9. 3Hardware, Software, Testing Requirements, and Test Results
    1. 3.1 Hardware Requirements
      1. 3.1.1 Clocking System
        1. 3.1.1.1 BAW Oscillator
        2. 3.1.1.2 Crystal Oscillator
        3. 3.1.1.3 PWM
        4. 3.1.1.4 Clock Buffers
      2. 3.1.2 SPI Bus Configuration
      3. 3.1.3 Jumper Settings for LED and UART
    2. 3.2 Software Requirements
      1. 3.2.1 UART for PC GUI Communication
      2. 3.2.2 Direct Memory Access (DMA)
      3. 3.2.3 ADC Setup
      4. 3.2.4 Calibration
    3. 3.3 Test Setup
      1. 3.3.1 Connections to the Test Setup
      2. 3.3.2 Power Supply Options and Jumper Settings
        1.       51
      3. 3.3.3 Cautions and Warnings
    4. 3.4 Test Results
      1. 3.4.1 Electricity Meter Metrology Accuracy Results
      2. 3.4.2 Radiated Emissions Performance
  10. 4Design and Documentation Support
    1. 4.1 Design Files
      1. 4.1.1 Schematics
      2. 4.1.2 BOM
      3. 4.1.3 PCB Layout Recommendations
        1. 4.1.3.1 Layout Prints
    2. 4.2 Tools and Software
    3. 4.3 Documentation Support
    4. 4.4 Support Resources
    5. 4.5 Trademarks
  11. 5About the Author
  12. 6Revision History

Direct Memory Access (DMA)

The MCU DMA module transfers packets between the MSPM0G3507 MCU and the four AMC131M03 devices with minimal hardware resources and timing overhead over the shared SPI bus. Two DMA channels are utilized: DMA Channel 0 is used to send SPI data (0x00) to the ADCs and DMA Channel 1 is used simultaneously to receive the measurements data from all ADCs over the shared SPI bus. Once a complete SPI data packet is received from the first ADC, an DMA Ready interrupt is generated and the CRC16 verification of the data packet starts. After the CRC16 check was successful, the data packet is disassembled into voltage and current values per each phase line. Then the second, third, and the fourth ADC devices are accessed time-multiplexed one after the other to read out the data samples for each phase and neutral. For the neutral line data from AMC131M03 only the current value gets processed. AMC131M03 transfers 15 bytes of packets.