Datasheet
Section 17 Serial Communication Interface 3 (SCI3) 
Rev. 3.00 Mar. 15, 2006 Page 318 of 526 
REJ09B0060-0300   
17.4  Operation in Asynchronous Mode 
Figure 17.2 shows the general format for asynchronous serial communication. One character (or 
frame) consists of a start bit (low level), followed by data (in LSB-first order), a parity bit (high or 
low level), and finally stop bits (high level). Inside the SCI3, the transmitter and receiver are 
independent units, enabling full-duplex. Both the transmitter and the receiver also have a double-
buffered structure, so data can be read or written during transmission or reception, enabling 
continuous data transfer. 
LSB
Start
bit
MSB
Mark state
Stop bit
Transmit/receive data
1
Serial
data
Parity
bit
1 bit 1 or
2 bits
7 or 8 bits
1 bit,
or none
One unit of transfer data (character or frame)
Figure 17.2 Data Format in Asynchronous Communication 
17.4.1 Clock 
Either an internal clock generated by the on-chip baud rate generator or an external clock input at 
the SCK3 pin can be selected as the SCI3's serial clock, according to the setting of the COM bit in 
SMR and the CKE0 and CKE1 bits in SCR3. When an external clock is input at the SCK3 pin, the 
clock frequency should be 16 times the bit rate used. 
When the SCI3 is operated on an internal clock, the clock can be output from the SCK3 pin. The 
frequency of the clock output in this case is equal to the bit rate, and the phase is such that the 
rising edge of the clock is in the middle of the transmit data, as shown in figure 17.3. 
0
1 character (frame)
D0 D1 D2 D3 D4 D5 D6 D7 0/1
11
Clock
Serial data
Figure 17.3 Relationship between Output Clock and Transfer Data Phase 
(Asynchronous Mode) (Example with 8-Bit Data, Parity, Two Stop Bits) 










