Datasheet
DS1920 
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1-Wire BUS SYSTEM 
The 1-Wire bus is a system that has a single bus master and one or more slaves. The DS1920 behaves as a 
slave. The discussion of this bus system is broken down into three topics: hardware configuration, 
transaction sequence, and 1-Wire signaling (signal types and timing). 
HARDWARE CONFIGURATION 
The 1-Wire bus has only a single line by definition; it is important that each device on the bus be able to 
drive it at the appropriate time. To facilitate this, each device attached to the 1-Wire bus must have open-
drain or  3-state outputs. The 1-Wire port of the DS1920 (data contact) is open drain with an internal 
circuit equivalent to that shown in Figure 8. A multidrop bus consists of a 1-Wire bus with multiple 
slaves attached. The 1-Wire bus requires a pullup resistor of approximately 5kΩ. The idle state for the  
1-Wire bus is high. If for any reason a transaction needs to be suspended, the bus MUST be left in the idle 
state if the transaction is to resume. If this does not occur and the bus is left low for more than 120µs, one 
or more of the devices on the bus will be reset. 
HARDWARE CONFIGURATION Figure 8 
TRANSACTION SEQUENCE 
The protocol for accessing the DS1920 via the 1-Wire port is as follows: 
  Initialization  
  ROM Function Command 
  Memory/Control Function Command 
  Transaction/Data 
INITIALIZATION 
All transactions on the 1-Wire bus begin with an initialization sequence. The initialization sequence 
consists of a reset pulse transmitted by the bus master followed by presence pulse(s) transmitted by the 
slave(s). 
The presence pulse lets the bus master know that the DS1920 is on the bus and is ready to operate. For 
more details, see the 1-Wire Signaling section. 










