
Overview
Information | High Output 18V Tolerant RS-485/RS-422 +5V Transceivers |
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Supported Protocols | RS-422, RS-485 |
Supply Voltage (Nom) (V) | 5 |
No. of Tx | 1 |
No. of Rx | 1 |
Duplex | Full |
Data Rate (MAX) (Mbps) | 20 |
The XR3080-88X family of high performance RS-485/422 devices are designed for improved performance in noisy industrial environments and increased tolerance to system faults.
The analog bus pins can survive direct shorts up to ±18V, and are protected against ESD events up to ±15kV. The Profibus compliant differential output delivers 40% higher SNR than standard RS-485/422 devices, affording additional noise margin or extended cable lengths.
The receivers include full fail-safe circuitry, guaranteeing a logic-high receiver output when the receiver inputs are open, shorted, or undriven. The receiver input impedance is at minimum 96kΩ (1/8 unit load), allowing up to 256 devices on the bus while preserving the full signal margin.
The drivers are protected by short circuit detection as well as thermal shutdown, and maintain high impedance in shutdown or when powered off. The XR3080-85X drivers are slew limited for reduced EMI and error-free communication over long or unterminated data cables.
The devices with DE and RE pins include hot swap circuitry to prevent false transitions on the bus during powerup or live insertion, and can enter a 1nA low current shutdown mode for extreme power savings.
The transceivers draw less than 600µA from a +5.0V supply, and typically only 300µA when idling with the receivers active.
- 40% Higher SNR (Signal-to-Noise Ratio) compared to other RS-485 devices (2.1V vs. 1.5V)
- ±18V Fault Tolerance on Analog Bus pins
- 2.1V Driver Output (Profibus Compliant)
- Robust ESD (ElectroStatic Discharge) Protection:
- ±15kV IEC 61000-4-2 Air Gap Discharge
- ±8kV IEC 61000-4-2 Contact Discharge
- ±15kV Human Body Model
- ±4kV Human Body Model on non-bus pins
- +4.5V to +5.5V Operation (5V ±10%)
- 300µA Idle Current, 1nA Shutdown Current
- Enhanced Receiver Fail-Safe Protection for Open, Shorted, or Terminated but Idle Data Lines
- Hot-Swap Glitch Protection on DE and RE Pins
- Driver Short Circuit Current Limit and Thermal Shutdown for Overload Protection
- 1/8th Unit Load Allows up to 256 Devices on Bus
- Industry Standard 8 and 14 NSOIC Packages
- Motor Control
- Security Systems
- Building and Process Automation
- Remote Utility Meter Reading
- Energy Monitoring and Control
- Long or Unterminated Transmission Lines
- Profibus DP Fieldbus Networks
Documentation & Design Tools
Type | Title | Version | Date | File Size |
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Data Sheets | XR3080-88X High Output 18V Tolerant RS-485/RS-422 +5V Transceivers | 1.0.2 | November 2015 | 828.9 KB |
Application Notes | Signaling Common Mode Voltage Operating Range Application Note | R00 | March 2025 | 2.3 MB |
Application Notes | RS-485 Transceivers in Fieldbus Networks | R00 | October 2024 | 2.4 MB |
Application Notes | AN-291, RS-485 Advanced Fail-Safe Feature | R01 | May 2023 | 3.7 MB |
Application Notes | RS-232 and RS-485 PCB Layout Application Note | R00 | December 2022 | 2.8 MB |
Application Notes | AN-292, RS-485 Cable Lengths vs Data Signaling Rate | R01 | July 2022 | 2.7 MB |
Product Brochures | Interface Brochure | R02 | November 2024 | 3.6 MB |
Quality & RoHS
Parts & Purchasing
Part Number | Pkg Code | Min Temp | Max Temp | Status | Buy Now | Order Samples |
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XR3087XIDTR-F | NSOIC8 | -40 | 85 | Active | Order |
Active - the part is released for sale, standard product.
EOL (End of Life) - the part is no longer being manufactured, there may or may not be inventory still in stock.
CF (Contact Factory) - the part is still active but customers should check with the factory for availability. Longer lead-times may apply.
PRE (Pre-introduction) - the part has not been introduced or the part number is an early version available for sample only.
OBS (Obsolete) - the part is no longer being manufactured and may not be ordered.
NRND (Not Recommended for New Designs) - the part is not recommended for new designs.
Packaging
Pkg Code | Details | Quantities | Dimensions |
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NSOIC8 |
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Notifications
FAQs & Support
Search our list of FAQs for answers to common technical questions.
For material content, environmental, quality and reliability questions review the Quality tab or visit our Quality page.
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Submit a Technical Support Question As a New Question
For RS-232 it is 50 feet (15 meters), or the cable length equal to a capacitance of 2500 pF, at a maximum transmission rate of 19.2kbps. When we reduce the baud rate, it allows for longer cable length. For Example:
Baud Rate (bps) | Maximum RS-232 Cable Length (ft) |
19200 | 50 |
9600 | 500 |
4800 | 1000 |
2400 | 3000 |
Fail Safe is an attempt to keep the output of the RS-485 receiver to a known state. Transceivers may have standard fail safe or advanced / enhanced receiver fail safe features. Standard fail safe supports open inputs while enhanced fail safe transceivers such as the SP339 and XR34350 support open input, shorted input and undriven terminated lines without external biasing. See Application Note ANI-22 for more detail.
Yes, this is possible using one RS-485 transceiver. The microcontrollers will have to be addressable and have tri-state outputs. The RS-485 device can be controlled by the host via the DE/RE pin. The micros will have to be in either receiving mode or tri-state mode when the RS-485 transceiver is transmitting data. When the host transmits it will have to send an address to the specific micro. If any micro transmits the transceiver will have to be in receiving mode and all other micros will have to be in receive or tri-state. So the host would have to initiate this sequence by addressing the micro first then switch the transceiver to receive.
The half duplex system would have a bus with one transceiver and multiple microcontrollers all tied to the bus. For 5V systems the SP485 family can be used. For 3V systems the SP3070 family can be used. The require speed will determine the part number. The SP3078 part runs up to speeds of 16Mbps. See the parametric search on https://www.exar.com/products/interface/serial-transceivers/rs485-422 for more options.
Care must be taken to assure the transceiver can drive the multiple micros in RX mode.
ESD tests are “destructive tests.” The part is tested until it suffers damage. Therefore parts cannot be 100% tested in production, instead a sample of parts are characterized during the product qualification. The test procedure consists of “zapping” pins with a given voltage using the appropriate model and then running the part through electrical tests to check for functionality or performance degradation.
ESD is caused by static electricity. In order for an ESD event to occur there must be a buildup of static charge. Very high charge levels are actually quite rare. In a normal factory environment, taking basic ESD precautions (grounding-straps, anti-static smocks, ionizers, humidity control, etc.) static levels can be kept below a few tens of volts. In an uncontrolled environment, like an office, static levels rarely get above 2000 volts. Under some worstcase conditions (wearing synthetic fabrics, rubbing against synthetic upholstered furniture, extremely low humidity)
levels can go as high as 12 to 15 thousand volts. Actually to get to 15000 volts or higher you would need to be in an uncomfortably dry environment (humidity below 10%) otherwise static charge will naturally dissipate through corona discharge. It would definitely be considered a “bad hair day.” Humans can generally feel a static shock only above 3000 volts. A discharge greater than 4000 volts can cause an audible “pop.” But repeated lower level discharges can be imperceptible and still may have a cumulative damaging effect on sensitive ICs. All ICs, even those with robust protection, can be damaged if they are hit hard enough or often enough.
Most ICs in a typical system are at greatest risk of ESD damage in the factory when the PCB is assembled and the system is being built. After the system is put together they are soldered onto the PCB and shielded within a metal or plastic system enclosure. Interface ICs are designed to attach to an external connector that could be exposed to ESD when a cable is plugged in or when a person or object touches the connector. These interface pins are most likely to see ESD exposure and therefore benefit from additional protection.
Actually the letter “E” could have two different meanings, depending on where it is in the part number. Most of our interface devices are available in different temperature grades. Commercial temperature (0 to 70C) has a “C” after the numeric part number. Industrial-extended temperature (-40 to +85C) use the letter E. So for example SP485CN is commercial and SP485EN is industrial. The second letter indicates the package type, in this case N for narrow-SOIC. Another E in the suffix indicates that this device has enhanced ESD protection, typically of ±15000Volts on the interface pins. Devices that do not have the enhanced ESD still contain built-in ESD protection of at least ±2000Volts. For example the SP485ECN is ESD rated up to ±15kV, and the SP485CN is rated for ±2kV HBM.
https://www.exar.com/quality-assurance-and-reliability/lead-free-program
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Videos
RS-485 Transceivers - Advance vs. Standard Failsafe
MaxLinear offers RS-485 transceivers with both standard and advanced receiver failsafe features. This video will show the main differences and advantages between advanced failsafe receivers and standard failsafe receivers in a typical RS485 installation.
Tips to Maintain a Successful RS-485 Link
This video provides four tips to help maintain RS-485 serial communication without data loss