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The human and physical interfaces

The human and physical interfaces. Chapter Eight 8.1 – 8.9. Outline. Introduction Keypads Seven-segment displays LCDs Sensors Actuators Summary. Introduction. A human interface is an important part of most embedded systems.

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The human and physical interfaces

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  1. The human and physical interfaces Chapter Eight 8.1 – 8.9 Dr. Gheith Abandah

  2. Outline • Introduction • Keypads • Seven-segment displays • LCDs • Sensors • Actuators • Summary Dr. Gheith Abandah

  3. Introduction • A human interface is an important part of most embedded systems. • Users need to conveniently get information from the embedded system. • They also need to conveniently control the operation of this system. • Examples: • Domestic fridge • Photocopier • Car dashboard Dr. Gheith Abandah

  4. Human Interface - Examples Dr. Gheith Abandah

  5. Human Interface - Examples Dr. Gheith Abandah

  6. Human interface types • Input: • Switch • Push button • Keypad • Output: • light-emitting diode (LED) • Seven-segment LED • Liquid crystal display (LCD) Dr. Gheith Abandah

  7. The LED version of the Derbot AGV Dr. Gheith Abandah

  8. The LCD version of the Derbot AGV Dr. Gheith Abandah

  9. The Keypad Dr. Gheith Abandah

  10. Flow diagram Reading a keypad with a microcontroller port Dr. Gheith Abandah

  11. Outputs for the keypad Dr. Gheith Abandah

  12. Flow diagram of program example Dr. Gheith Abandah

  13. Keypad Example – Initialization ;Initialize bsf status,rp0 ;select memory bank 1 movlw B'11110000' ;Port B initially Row bits ;are input, column output movwf trisb bcf status,rp0 ;select bank 0 ... clrf portb ;initialize keypad value bcf intcon,rbif ;enable interrupt bsf intcon,rbie bsf intcon,gie loop goto loop ;await keypad entries Dr. Gheith Abandah

  14. Keypad Example – ISR kpad_to_lcd call kpad_rd call kp_code_conv bsf portc,lcd_RS ;set for character op movwf lcd_op call lcd_write rel_test ;test now for keypad release call kpad_rd movf kpad_pat,0 andlw 0fe ;suppress lsb, not used sublw 0fe ;test if inactive btfss status,z goto rel_test bcf intcon,rbif ;clear interrupt flag retfie Dr. Gheith Abandah

  15. Keypad Example – Read keypad kpad_rd movf portb,w ;read portb value, row pattern andlw B'11110000' ;suppress unwanted bits movwf kpad_pat bsf status,rp0 ;set row to op, column to ip movlw B'00001110' movwf trisb bcf status,rp0 movlw 00 movwf portb ;ensure output values still 0 movf portb,w ;read portb value, col. pattern andlw B'00001110' ;suppress unwanted bits iorwf kpad_pat,1 ;OR results into the pattern Dr. Gheith Abandah

  16. Keypad Example – Read keypad 2 ;reset keypad interface bsf status,rp0 ;set row to ip, column to op movlw B'11110000' movwf trisb bcf status,rp0 clrf portb ;ensure output values still 0 return Dr. Gheith Abandah

  17. Seven-segment displays Common Anode Common Cathode Dr. Gheith Abandah

  18. Connecting multiple digits Need 1.2 kΩ line resistors Dr. Gheith Abandah

  19. Timing diagram Dr. Gheith Abandah

  20. 7-seg. display example – page 1 Dr. Gheith Abandah

  21. 7-seg. display example – page 2 ;Initialise bcf status,rp1 bsf status,rp0;bank 1 movlw B’00000000’ ;out movwf trisa movwf trisb movwf trisc bcf status,rp0;bank 0 ; loop ;set digit 1 movlw B'00011101' ;H movwf porta bcf portc,6 ;seg a bsf portc,7 ;seg b bsf portc,1 ;dig 1 call delay5 bcf portc,1 ;set digit 2 … goto loop Dr. Gheith Abandah

  22. Liquid crystal displays (LCDs) • Liquid crystal responds to an applied electric field by changing the alignment of its molecules, and in so doing changing the direction of the light polarization that it introduces. • Liquid crystal can be trapped between two parallel sheets of glass, with a matching pattern of transparent electrode on each sheet. • When a voltage is applied to the electrodes, the optical character of the crystal changes and the electrode pattern appears in the crystal. Dr. Gheith Abandah

  23. Interfacing with LCDs • Hitachi developed a special microcontroller (HD44780) for interfacing LCDs. • This microcontroller is usually integrated with LCDs. • Features: • 8- or 4-bit data transfer • Simple instruction set to initialize, clear, display, and position cursor • Has instruction register and data register Dr. Gheith Abandah

  24. HD44780 timing diagram Dr. Gheith Abandah

  25. Derbot’s LCD Each digit is a liquid crystal dot matrix Dr. Gheith Abandah

  26. LCD Drive Example – Page 1 lcd_write call busy_check bcf portc,lcd_rw bcf status,c rrf lcd_op,1 bcf portc,6 btfsc status,c bsf portc,6 bcf status,c rrf lcd_op,1 bcf portc,7 btfsc status,c bsf portc,7 movf lcd_op,0 movwf porta bsf portc,lcd_E bcf portc,lcd_E return Dr. Gheith Abandah

  27. LCD Drive Example – Page 2 busy_check bsf status,rp0 ;bank 1 movlw B'00111111' ;set port A all ip movwf trisa bcf status,rp0 bcf flags,0 btfsc portc,lcd_RS ;save RS in flags, 0 bsf flags,0 bcf portc,lcd_RS ;access instr register bsf portc,lcd_RW ;set to read Dr. Gheith Abandah

  28. LCD Drive Example – Page 3 busy_loop bcf portc,lcd_E bsf portc,lcd_E btfsc porta,lcd_busy ;test the busy flag goto busy_loop bcf portc,lcd_E bsf status,rp0 ;select memory bank 1 movlw B'00000000‘ ;set port A all op movwf trisa bcf status,rp0 bcf portc,lcd_RS btfsc flags,0 ;reinstate RS bit bsf portc,lcd_RS return Dr. Gheith Abandah

  29. Sensors • Convert physical variables to electrical. • Examples: • The microswitch • Light-dependent resistor • Ultrasonic object sensor Dr. Gheith Abandah

  30. The Microswitch Dr. Gheith Abandah

  31. Light-dependent resistors • A light-dependent resistor (LDR) is made from a piece of exposed semiconductor material. When light falls on it, it creates hole–electron pairs in the material, which improve the conductivity. • 20M Ω to a few hundred ohms Dr. Gheith Abandah

  32. Optical object sensingInfrared LED and phototransistor Dr. Gheith Abandah

  33. The opto-sensor applied as a shaft encoder Dr. Gheith Abandah

  34. Ultrasonic object sensor Dr. Gheith Abandah

  35. Digital input If a microcontroller is to receive logic signals, then it is essential that those signals are at voltage levels which are recognized by it as being either Logic 0 or Logic 1. Dr. Gheith Abandah

  36. Forms of signal corruption (a) Spikes in signal, potentially harmful to device input. (b) Spikes in signal. (c) Excessively slow edges. (d) DC offset in signal. Dr. Gheith Abandah

  37. Input protection • For Rprot = 1KΩ and max. diode current =20 mA • What is the maximum voltage spike? Vmax = [(20mA × 1 k Ω) + 5.3] = 25V Dr. Gheith Abandah

  38. Ensuring legal logic levels • Can use Schmitt trigger for speeding up slow logic edges. • Schmitt trigger with RC filter can be used to filter voltage spikes. • Digital filtering: sample the input three times and use a majority vote. Dr. Gheith Abandah

  39. Isolation or level shifting with the opto-isolator Dr. Gheith Abandah

  40. Switch bouncing Dr. Gheith Abandah

  41. Hardware switch debouncing Dr. Gheith Abandah

  42. Software switch debouncing Typically 10 ms Dr. Gheith Abandah

  43. Actuators: motors and servos • Often need to cause physical movement • For linear movement use solenoids • For angular movement, use ‘servos’ • For angular or rotary, use DC or stepper motors Dr. Gheith Abandah

  44. Comparison DC Motors Stepper Motors Simple interface with digital systems Can control speed and position Awkward start-up characteristics Lose torque at high speed Limited top speed Less efficient More complex to drive • Range from the extremely powerful to the very small • Wide speed range • Controllable speed • Good efficiency • Can provide accurate angular positioning with angular shafts • Only the armature winding needs to be driven Dr. Gheith Abandah

  45. Derbot DC Motor Dr. Gheith Abandah

  46. Servo input and output characteristics Dr. Gheith Abandah

  47. Interfacing to actuators • Simple DC switching • Bipolar transistors • MOSFET transistors • Reversible switching • The H-bridge Dr. Gheith Abandah

  48. Bipolar transistor switching of DC resistive loads Dr. Gheith Abandah

  49. MOSFET transistor switching of DC resistive loads Dr. Gheith Abandah

  50. MOSFET transistor switching of DC inductive loads Dr. Gheith Abandah

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