hardware design v1.00

Table Of Contents
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Figure 7: VBAT voltage drop during transmit burst
4.1.1 Minimizing Voltage Drop of VBAT
When designing the power supply in user’s application, pay special attention to power losses. Ensure that the
input voltage never drops below 3.1V even when current consumption rises to 2A in the transmit burst. If the
power voltage drops below 3.1V, the module may be shut down automatically. The PCB traces from the VBAT
pins to the power supply must be wide enough (at least 60mil) to decrease voltage drops in the transmit burst. The
power IC and the bypass capacitor should be placed to the module as close as possible.
Figure 8: The minimal VBAT voltage requirement at VBAT drop
4.1.2 Monitoring Power Supply
The AT command “AT+CBC” can be used to monitor the VBAT voltage. For detail, please refer to
document [1].
4.2 Power on/down Scenarios
4.2.1 Power on SIM968
4.2.1.1 Turn on SIM968 Using the PWRKEY Pin (Power on)
User can power on SIM968 by pulling down the PWRKEY pin for at least 1 second and release. This pin is
already pulled up to 3V in the module internal, so external pull up is not necessary. Reference circuit is shown as
below.
Figure 9: Powered on/down module using transistor
SIM968_Hardware Design_V1.00 2013.02.25
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