SILICON LABS EFM8 BB50 8-bit MCU Pro Kit Microcontroller User Guide
- June 15, 2024
- SILICON LABS
Table of Contents
- LABS EFM8 BB50 8-bit MCU Pro Kit Microcontroller
- Introduction
- Kit Block Diagram
- Kit Hardware Layout
- Connectors
- Power Supply and Reset
- Peripherals
- Advanced Energy Monitor
- On-Board Debugger
- Kit Configuration and Upgrades
- Schematics, Assembly Drawings, and BOM
- Kit Revision History and Errata
- Document Revision History
- References
- Read User Manual Online (PDF format)
- Download This Manual (PDF format)
LABS EFM8 BB50 8-bit MCU Pro Kit Microcontroller
User Guide
LABS EFM8 BB50 8-bit MCU Pro Kit Microcontroller
The BB50 Pro Kit is an excellent starting point to become familiar with the
EFM8BB50™ Busy Bee Microcontroller.
The pro kit contains sensors and peripherals demonstrating some of the
EFM8BB50’s many capabilities. The kit provides all necessary tools for
developing an EFM8BB50 Busy Bee application.
TARGET DEVICE
- EFM8BB50 Busy Bee Microcontroller (EFM8BB50F16I-A-QFN16)
- CPU: 8-bit CIP-51 8051 Core
- Memory: 16 kB flash and 512 bytes RAM
- Oscillators: 49 MHz, 10 MHz, and 80 kHz
KIT FEATURES
- USB connectivity
- Advanced Energy Monitor (AEM)
- SEGGER J-Link on-board debugger
- Debug Multiplexer supporting external hardware as well as on-board MCU
- User push button and LED
- Silicon Labs’ Si7021 Relative Humidity and Temperature Sensor
- Ultra-low power 128×128 pixel Memory
LCD
- 8-direction analog joystick
- 20-pin 2.54 mm header for expansion boards
- Breakout pads for direct access to I/O pins
- Power sources include USB and CR2032 coin cell battery
SOFTWARE SUPPORT
- Simplicity Studio™
Introduction
1.1 Description
The BB50 Pro Kit is an ideal starting point for application development on the
EFM8BB50 Busy Bee Microcontrollers. The board features sensors and
peripherals, demonstrating some of the many capabilities of the EFM8BB50 Busy
Bee
Microcontroller. Additionally, the board is a fully featured debugger and
energy monitoring tool that can be used with external applications.
1.2 Features
- EFM8BB50 Busy Bee Microcontroller
- 16 kB Flash
- 512 bytes RAM
- QFN16 package
- Advanced Energy Monitoring system for precise current and voltage tracking
- Integrated Segger J-Link USB debugger/emulator with the possiblity to debug external Silicon Labs devices
- 20-pin expansion header
- Breakout pads for easy access to I/O pins
- Power sources include USB and CR2032 battery
- Silicon Labs’ Si7021 Relative Humidity and Temperature Sensor
- Ultra-low power 128×128 pixel Memory-LCD
- 1 push button and 1 LED connected to EFM8 for user interaction
- 8-direction analog joystick for user interaction
1.3 Getting Started
Detailed instructions for how to get started with your new BB50 Pro Kit can be
found on the Silicon Labs Web pages: silabs.com/development-
tools/mcu/8-bit
Kit Block Diagram
An overview of the BB50 Pro Kit is shown in the figure below.
Kit Hardware Layout
The BB50 Pro Kit layout is shown below.
Connectors
4.1 Breakout Pads
Most of the EFM8BB50’s GPIO pins are available on two pin header rows at the
top and bottom edges of the board. These have a standard 2.54 mm pitch, and
pin headers can be soldered in if required. In addition to the I/O pins,
connections to power rails and ground are also provided. Note that some of the
pins are used for kit peripherals or features and may not be available for a
custom application without tradeoffs.
The figure below shows the pinout of the breakout pads and the pinout of the
EXP header on the right edge of the board. The EXP header is further explained
in the next section. The breakout pad connections are also printed in
silkscreen next to each pin for easy reference. The table below shows the pin
connections of the breakout pads. It also shows which kit peripherals or
features are connected to the different pins.
Table 4.1. Bottom Row (J101) Pinout
Pin | EFM8BB50 I/O pin | Shared Feature |
---|---|---|
1 | VMCU | EFM8BB50 voltage domain (measured by AEM) |
2 | GND | Ground |
3 | NC | |
4 | NC | |
5 | NC | |
6 | NC | |
7 | P0.7 | EXP7, UIF_JOYSTICK |
8 | P0.6 | MCU_DISP_SCLK |
9 | P0.5 | EXP14, VCOM_RX |
Pin | EFM8BB50 I/O pin | Shared Feature |
--- | --- | --- |
10 | P0.4 | EXP12, VCOM_TX |
11 | P0.3 | EXP5, UIF_LED0 |
12 | P0.2 | EXP3, UIF_BUTTON0 |
13 | P0.1 | MCU_DISP_CS |
14 | P0.0 | VCOM_ENABLE |
15 | GND | Ground |
16 | 3V3 | Board controller supply |
Table 4.2. Top Row (J102) Pinout
Pin | EFM8BB50 I/O pin | Shared Feature |
---|---|---|
1 | 5V | Board USB voltage |
2 | GND | Ground |
3 | NC | |
4 | RST | DEBUG_RESETN (DEBUG_C2CK Shared Pin) |
5 | C2CK | DEBUG_C2CK (DEBUG_RESETN Shared Pin) |
6 | C2D | DEBUG_C2D (DEBUG_C2DPS, MCU_DISP_ENABLE Shared Pin) |
7 | NC | |
8 | NC | |
9 | NC | |
10 | NC | |
11 | P1.2 | EXP15, SENSOR_I2C_SCL |
12 | P1.1 | EXP16, SENSOR_I2C_SDA |
13 | P1.0 | MCU_DISP_MOSI |
14 | P2.0 | MCU_DISP_ENABLE (DEBUG_C2D, DEBUG_C2DPS Shared Pin) |
15 | GND | Ground |
16 | 3V3 | Board controller supply |
4.2 EXP Header
On the right side of the board, an angled 20-pin EXP header is provided to
allow connection of peripherals or plugin boards. The connector contains a
number of I/O pins that can be used with most of the EFM8BB50 Busy Bee’s
features. Additionally, the VMCU, 3V3, and 5V power rails are also exposed.
The connector follows a standard which ensures that commonly used peripherals
such as a SPI, UART, and I C bus are available on fixed locations on the
connector. The rest of the pins are used for general purpose I/O. This layout
allows the definition of expansion boards that can plug into a number of
different Silicon Labs kits.
The figure below shows the EXP header pin assignment for the BB50 Pro Kit.
Because of limitations in the number of available GPIO pins, some of the EXP
header pins are shared with kit features. Table 4.3. EXP Header Pinout
Pin| Connection| EXP Header Function| Shared Feature|
Peripheral Mapping
---|---|---|---|---
20| 3V3| Board controller supply
18| 5V| Board controller USB voltage
16| P1.1| I2C_SDA| SENSOR_I2C_SDA| SMB0_SDA
14| P0.5| UART_RX| VCOM_RX| UART0_RX
12| P0.4| UART_TX| VCOM_TX| UART0_TX
10| NC| GPIO| |
8| NC| GPIO| |
6| NC| GPIO| |
4| NC| GPIO| |
2| VMCU| EFM8BB50 voltage domain, included in AEM measurements.
19| BOARD_ID_SDA| Connected to Board Controller for identification of add-on
boards.
17| BOARD_ID_SCL| Connected to Board Controller for identification of add-on
boards.
15| P1.2| I2C_SCL| SENSOR_I2C_SCL| SMB0_SCL
13| NC| GPIO| |
11| NC| GPIO| |
9| NC| GPIO| |
Pin| Connection| EXP Header Function| Shared Feature|
Peripheral Mapping
---|---|---|---|---
7| P0.7| JOYSTICK| UIF_JOYSTICK|
5| P0.3| LED| UIF_LED0|
3| P0.2| BTN| UIF_BUTTON0|
1| GND| Ground
4.3 Debug Connector (DBG)
The debug connector serves a dual purpose, based on the debug mode, which can
be set up using Simplicity Studio. If the “Debug IN” mode is selected, the
connector allows an external debugger to be used with the on-board EFM8BB50.
If the “Debug OUT” mode is selected, the connector allows the kit to be used
as a debugger towards an external target. If the “Debug MCU” mode (default) is
selected, the connector is isolated from the debug interface of both the board
controller and the on-board target device.
Because this connector is automatically switched to support the different
operating modes, it is only available when the board controller is powered
(J-Link USB cable connected). If debug access to the target device is required
when the board controller is unpowered, this should be done by connecting
directly to the appropriate pins on the breakout header.
The pinout of the connector follows that of the standard ARM Cortex Debug
19-pin connector. The pinout is described in detail below. Note that even
though the connector supports JTAG in addition to Serial Wire Debug, it does
not necessarily mean that the kit or the on-board target device supports this.
Even though the pinout matches the pinout of an ARM Cortex Debug connector,
these are not fully compatible as pin 7 is physically removed from the Cortex
Debug connector. Some cables have a small plug that prevents them from being
used when this pin is present. If this is the case, remove the plug, or use a
standard 2×10 1.27 mm straight cable instead.
Table 4.4. Debug Connector Pin Descriptions
Pin Number(s) | Function | Note |
---|---|---|
1 | VTARGET | Target reference voltage. Used for shifting logical signal levels |
between target and debugger.
2| TMS / SDWIO / C2D| JTAG test mode select, Serial Wire data or C2 data
4| TCK / SWCLK / C2CK| JTAG test clock, Serial Wire clock or C2 clock
6| TDO/SWO| JTAG test data out or Serial Wire output
8| TDI / C2Dps| JTAG test data in, or C2D “pin sharing” function
10| RESET / C2CKps| Target device reset, or C2CK “pin sharing” function
12| NC| TRACECLK
14| NC| TRACED0
16| NC| TRACED1
18| NC| TRACED2
20| NC| TRACED3
9| Cable detect| Connect to ground
11, 13| NC| Not connected
3, 5, 15, 17, 19| GND|
4.4 Simplicity Connector
The Simplicity Connector featured on the BB50 Pro Kit enables advanced
debugging features such as the AEM and Virtual COM port to be used towards an
external target. The pinout is illustrated in the figure below. The signal
names in the figure and the pin description table are referenced from the
board controller. This means that VCOM_TX should be connected to the RX pin on
the external target, VCOM_RX to the target’s TX pin, VCOM_CTS to the target’s
RTS pin, and VCOM_RTS to the target’s CTS pin.
Note: Current drawn from the VMCU voltage pin is included in the AEM
measurements, while the 3V3 and 5V voltage pins are not. To monitor the
current consumption of an external target with the AEM, put the on-board MCU
in its lowest energy mode to minimize its impact on the measurements.
Table 4.5. Simplicity Connector Pin Descriptions
Pin Number(s) | Function | Description |
---|---|---|
1 | VMCU | 3.3 V power rail, monitored by the AEM |
3 | 3V3 | 3.3 V power rail |
5 | 5V | 5 V power rail |
2 | VCOM_TX | Virtual COM TX |
4 | VCOM_RX | Virtual COM RX |
6 | VCOM_CTS | Virtual COM CTS |
8 | VCOM_RTS | Virtual COM RTS |
17 | BOARD_ID_SCL | Board ID SCL |
19 | BOARD_ID_SDA | Board ID SDA |
10, 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 | NC | Not connected |
7, 9, 11, 13, 15 | GND | Ground |
Power Supply and Reset
5.1 MCU Power Selection
The EFM8BB50 on the pro kit can be powered by one of these sources:
- The debug USB cable
- 3 V coin cell battery
The power source for the MCU is selected with the slide switch in the lower
left corner of the pro kit. The figure below shows how the different power
sources can be selected with the slide switch. With the switch in the AEM
position, a low noise 3.3 V LDO on the pro kit is used to power the EFM8BB50.
This LDO is again powered from the debug USB cable. The Advanced Energy
Monitor is now connected in series, allowing accurate high-speed current
measurements and energy debugging/profiling.
With the switch in the BAT position, a 20 mm coin cell battery in the CR2032
socket can be used to power the device. With the switch in this position, no
current measurements are active. This is the recommended switch position when
powering the MCU with an external power source.
Note: The Advanced Energy Monitor can only measure the current consumption of
the EFM8BB50 when the power selection switch is in the AEM position.
5.2 Board Controller Power
The board controller is responsible for important features, such as the
debugger and the AEM, and is powered exclusively through the USB port in the
top left corner of the board. This part of the kit resides on a separate power
domain, so a different power source can be selected for the target device
while retaining debugging functionality. This power domain is also isolated to
prevent current leakage from the target power domain when power to the board
controller is removed.
The board controller power domain is not influenced by the position of the
power switch.
The kit has been carefully designed to keep the board controller and the
target power domains isolated from each other as one of them powers down. This
ensures that the target EFM8BB50 device will continue to operate in the BAT
mode.
5.3 EFM8BB50 Reset
The EFM8BB50 MCU can be reset by a few different sources:
- A user pressing the RESET button
- The on-board debugger pulling the #RESET pin low
- An external debugger pulling the #RESET pin low
In addition to the reset sources mentioned above, a reset to the EFM8BB50 will also be issued during board controller boot-up. This means that removing power to the board controller (unplugging the J-Link USB cable) will not generate a reset but plugging the cable back in will as the board controller boots up.
Peripherals
The pro kit has a set of peripherals that showcase some of the EFM8BB50
features.
Note that most EFM8BB50 I/Os routed to peripherals are also routed to the
breakout pads or the EXP header, which must be taken into consideration when
using these I/Os.
6.1 Push Button and LED
The kit has a user push button marked BTN0, which is connected directly to the
EFM8BB50 and is denounced by RC filters with a time constant of 1ms. The
button is connected to pin P0.2.
The kit also features a yellow LED marked LED0, which is controlled by a GPIO
pin on the EFM8BB50. The LED is connected to pin P0.3 in an active-high
configuration. 6.2 Joystick
The kit has an analog joystick with 8 measurable positions. This joystick is
connected to the EFM8 on the P0.7 pin and uses different resistor values to
create voltages measurable by the ADC0. Table 6.1. Joystick Resistor
Combinations
Direction| Resistors Combinations (kΩ)| Expected UIF_JOYSTICK
Voltage (V) 1
---|---|---
Center press| | 0.033
Up (N)| | 2.831
Up-Right (NE)| | 2.247
Right (E)| | 2.533
Down-Right (SE)| | 1.433
Down (S)| | 1.650
Down-Left (SW)| | 1.238
Left (W)| | 1.980
Up-Left (NW)| | 1.801
Note: 1. These calculated values assume a VMCU of 3.3 V.
6.3 Memory LCD-TFT Display
A 1.28-inch SHARP Memory LCD-TFT is available on the kit to enable interactive
applications to be developed. The display has a high resolution of 128 x 128
pixels and consumes very little power. It is a reflective monochrome display,
so each pixel can only be light or dark, and no backlight is needed in normal
daylight conditions. Data sent to the display is stored in the pixels on the
glass, which means no continuous refreshing is required to maintain a static
image.
The display interface consists of a SPI-compatible serial interface and some
extra control signals. Pixels are not individually addressable, instead data
is sent to the display one line (128 bits) at a time.
The Memory LCD-TFT display is shared with the kit’s board controller, allowing
the board controller application to display useful information when the user
application is not using the display. The user application always controls
ownership of the display with the DISP_ENABLE signal:
- DISP_ENABLE = LOW: The board controller has control of the display
- DISP_ENABLE = HIGH: The user application (EFM8BB50) has control of the display
Power to the display is sourced from the target application power domain when the EFM8BB50 controls the display and from the board controller’s power domain when the DISP_ENABLE line is low. Data is clocked in on DISP_SI when DISP_CS is high, and the clock is sent on DISP_SCLK. The maximum supported clock speed is 1.1 MHz.
6.4 Si7021 Relative Humidity and Temperature Sensor
The Si7021 1°Crelative humidity and temperature sensor is a monolithic CMOS IC
integrating humidity and temperature sensor elements, an analog-to-digital
converter, signal processing, calibration data, and an 1 The Si7021 I C
Interface. The patented use of industry-standard, low-K polymeric dielectrics
for sensing humidity enables the construction of low-power, monolithic CMOS
Sensor ICs with low drift and hysteresis, and excellent long term stability.
The humidity and temperature sensors are factory-calibrated and the
calibration data is stored in the on-chip non-volatile memory. This ensures
that the sensors are fully interchangeable with no recalibration or software
changes required.
The Si7021 is available in a 3×3 mm DFN package and is reflow solder able. It
can be used as a hardware and software-compatible drop-in upgrade for existing
RH/temperature sensors in 3×3 mm DFN-6 packages, featuring precision sensing
over a wider range and lower power consumption. The optional factory-installed
cover offers a low profile, convenient means of protecting the sensor during
assembly (e.g., reflow soldering) and throughout the life of the product,
excluding liquids (hydrophobic/oleophobic) and particulates.
The Si7021 offers an accurate, low-power, factory-calibrated digital solution
ideal for measuring humidity, dew point, and temperature in applications
ranging from HVAC/R and asset tracking to industrial and consumer platforms.
The 1°C bus used for the Si7021 is shared with the EXP header. The sensor is
powered by VMCU, which means the sensor’s current consumption is included in
the AEM measurements. Refer to the Silicon Labs web pages for more
information: http://www.silabs.com/humidity-sensors.
6.5 Virtual COM Port
An asynchronous serial connection to the board controller is provided for
application data transfer between a host PC and the target EFM8BB50, which
eliminates the need for an external serial port adapter. The Virtual COM port
consists of a physical UART between the target device and the board
controller, and a logical function in the board controller that makes the
serial port available to the host PC over USB. The UART interface consists of
two pins and an enable signal.
Table 6.2. Virtual COM Port Interface Pins
Signal | Description |
---|---|
VCOM_TX | Transmit data from the EFM8BB50 to the board controller |
VCOM_RX | Receive data from the board controller to the EFM8BB50 |
VCOM_ENABLE | Enables the VCOM interface, allowing data to pass through to the |
board controller
Note: The VCOM port is only available when the board controller is powered, which requires the J-Link USB cable to be inserted.
Advanced Energy Monitor
7.1 Usage
The Advanced Energy Monitor (AEM) data is collected by the board controller
and can be displayed by the Energy Profiler, available through Simplicity
Studio. By using the Energy Profiler, current consumption and voltage can be
measured and linked to the actual code running on the EFM8BB50 in realtime.
7.2 Theory of Operation
To accurately measure current ranging from 0.1 µA to 47 mA (114 dB dynamic
range), a current sense amplifier is utilized together with a dual gain stage.
The current sense amplifier measures the voltage drop over a small series
resistor. The gain stage further amplifies this voltage with two different
gain settings to obtain two current ranges. The transition between these two
ranges occurs around 250 µA. Digital filtering and averaging is done within
the board controller before the samples are exported to the Energy Profiler
application. During kit startup, an automatic calibration of the AEM is
performed, which compensates for the offset error in the sense amplifiers.
7.3 Accuracy and Performance
The AEM is capable of measuring currents in the range of 0.1 µA to 47 mA. For
currents above 250 µA, the AEM is accurate within 0.1 mA. When measuring
currents below 250 µA, the accuracy increases to 1 µA. Although the absolute
accuracy is 1 µA in the sub 250 µA range, the AEM is able to detect changes in
the current consumption as small as 100 nA. The AEM produces 6250 current
samples per second.
On-Board Debugger
The BB50 Pro Kit contains an integrated debugger, which can be used to
download code and debug the EFM8BB50. In addition to programming the EFM8BB50
on the kit, the debugger can also be used to program and debug external
Silicon Labs EFM32, EFM8,
EZR32, and EFR32 devices.
The debugger supports three different debug interfaces used with Silicon Labs
devices:
- Serial Wire Debug, which is used with all EFM32, EFR32, and EZR32 devices
- JTAG, which can be used with EFR32 and some EFM32 devices
- C2 Debug, which is used with EFM8 devices
To ensure accurate debugging, use the appropriate debug interface for your
device. The debug connector on the board supports all three of these modes.
8.1 Debug Modes
To program external devices, use the debug connector to connect to a target
board and set the debug mode to [Out]. The same connector can also be used to
connect an external debugger to the
EFM8BB50 MCU on the kit by setting debug mode to [In].
Selecting the active debug mode is done in Simplicity Studio. Debug
MCU: In this mode, the on-board debugger is connected to the EFM8BB50 on
the kit. Debug OUT: In this mode, the on-board debugger can be used to
debug a supported Silicon Labs device mounted on a custom board. Debug IN:
In this mode, the on-board debugger is disconnected and an external debugger
can be connected to debug the EFM8BB50 on the kit. Note: For “Debug IN” to
work, the kit board controller must be powered through the Debug USB
connector.
8.2 Debugging During Battery Operation
When the EFM8BB50 is battery-powered and the J-Link USB is still connected,
the on-board debug functionality is available. If the USB power is
disconnected, the Debug IN mode will stop working.
If debug access is required when the target is running off another energy
source, such as a battery, and the board controller is powered down, make
direct connections to the GPIOs used for debugging, which are exposed on the
breakout pads.
Kit Configuration and Upgrades
The kit configuration dialog in Simplicity Studio allows you to change the
J-Link adapter debug mode, upgrade its firmware, and change other
configuration settings. To download Simplicity Studio, go to
silabs.com/simplicity.
In the main window of the Simplicity Studio’s Launcher perspective, the debug
mode and firmware version of the selected J-Link adapter are shown. Click the
[Change] link next to any of these settings to open the kit configuration
dialog. 9.1 Firmware Upgrades
You can upgrade the kit firmware through Simplicity Studio. Simplicity Studio
will automatically check for new updates on startup.
You can also use the kit configuration dialog for manual upgrades. Click the
[Browse] button in the [Update Adapter] section to select the correct file
ending in.emz. Then, click the [Install Package] button.
Schematics, Assembly Drawings, and BOM
Schematics, assembly drawings, and bill of materials (BOM) are available through Simplicity Studio when the kit documentation package has been installed. They are also available from the kit page on the Silicon Labs website: silabs.com.
Kit Revision History and Errata
11.1 Revision History
The kit revision can be found printed on the box label of the kit, as outlined
in the figure below.
Kit Revision | Released | Description |
---|---|---|
A01 | 9-Jun-23 | Initial kit revision. |
Document Revision History
Revision 1.0
June 2023 Initial document version.
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Characterization data, available modules and peripherals, memory sizes and
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References
- Silicon Labs
- 8-bit MCU - Silicon Labs
- Simplicity Studio - Silicon Labs
- Silicon Labs
- Relative Humidity and Temperature Sensors - Silicon Labs
- Simplicity Studio - Silicon Labs
- 8-bit MCU - Silicon Labs
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