Intermediate
30 min

Detect the press of an inductive touch button using LDC3114 and PIC18LF45K50

Inductive sensing

LDC Touch Click with EasyPIC v8

Published Mar 06, 2023

Click board™

LDC Touch Click

Dev. board

EasyPIC v8

Compiler

NECTO Studio

MCU

PIC18LF45K50

Sense the presence and position of a conductive target object

A

A

Hardware Overview

How does it work?

LDC Touch Click is based on the LDC3114-Q1, a hybrid multichannel, high-resolution inductance-to-digital converter from Texas Instruments. This inductive sensing device enables touch button design for a human-machine interface (HMI) by measuring small deflections of conductive targets using a coil implemented on a printed circuit board. Button presses form micro-deflection in the conductive targets, which cause frequency shifts in the resonant sensors, and measures such frequency shifts determining when button press occurs. With adjustable sensitivity per input channel, the LDC3114-Q1 can reliably operate with a wide range of physical button structures and materials. The LDC3114-Q1 offers two main modes of operations: raw data access mode and button algorithm mode, which is controlled by register settings. The button mode can automatically correct any deformation in the conductive targets and offers well-matched channels allowing for differential and ratiometric measurements, which enable compensation of environmental and aging conditions

such as temperature and mechanical drift. On the other hand, it also implements a raw data access mode, where MCU can directly read the data representing the effective inductance of the sensor and implement further post-processing. This Click board™ communicates with MCU using the standard I2C 2-Wire interface to read data and configure settings, supporting a Fast Mode operation up to 400kHz. Also, the LDC3114-Q1 requires a voltage of 1.8V for its power supply to work correctly. Therefore, a small regulating LDO, the TLV700, provides a 1.8V out of 3V3 mikroBUS™ power rail. As mentioned earlier, this board contains four touch buttons, representing the only elements on the upper-top side of the board. Each button has its own LED indicator representing the activity in that field. If a touch event is detected on one of these onboard pads, the state of the corresponding LED will be changed, indicating an activated channel; more precisely, touch has been detected on that specific field. Alongside LED indicators, data from these channels can be

processed via the MCU through four pins labeled from S0 to S3, routed to the AN, RST, CS, and PWM pins of the mikroBUS™ socket, respectively. Besides, an additional interrupt signal is routed on the INT pin of the mikroBUS™ socket, indicating when a specific interrupt event occurs (touch detection, available new data, and more) alongside two power modes of operation. A Normal Power Mode for active sampling at 10, 20, 40, or 80SPS, and a Low Power Mode for reduced current consumption at 0.625, 1.25, 2.5, or 5SPS selectable through an onboard switch labeled as MODE SEL. This Click board™ can only be operated from a 3.3V logic voltage level. Therefore, the board must perform appropriate logic voltage conversion before using MCUs with different logic levels. However, the Click board™ comes equipped with a library containing functions and an example code that can be used as a reference for further development.

LDC Touch Click top side image
LDC Touch Click lateral image
LDC Touch Click bottom side image

Features overview

Development board

EasyPIC v8 is a development board specially designed for the needs of rapid development of embedded applications. It supports many high pin count 8-bit PIC microcontrollers from Microchip, regardless of their number of pins, and a broad set of unique functions, such as the first-ever embedded debugger/programmer. The development board is well organized and designed so that the end-user has all the necessary elements, such as switches, buttons, indicators, connectors, and others, in one place. Thanks to innovative manufacturing technology, EasyPIC v8 provides a fluid and immersive working experience, allowing access anywhere and under any

circumstances at any time. Each part of the EasyPIC v8 development board contains the components necessary for the most efficient operation of the same board. In addition to the advanced integrated CODEGRIP programmer/debugger module, which offers many valuable programming/debugging options and seamless integration with the Mikroe software environment, the board also includes a clean and regulated power supply module for the development board. It can use a wide range of external power sources, including a battery, an external 12V power supply, and a power source via the USB Type-C (USB-C) connector.

Communication options such as USB-UART, USB DEVICE, and CAN are also included, including the well-established mikroBUS™ standard, two display options (graphical and character-based LCD), and several different DIP sockets. These sockets cover a wide range of 8-bit PIC MCUs, from the smallest PIC MCU devices with only eight up to forty pins. EasyPIC v8 is an integral part of the Mikroe ecosystem for rapid development. Natively supported by Mikroe software tools, it covers many aspects of prototyping and development thanks to a considerable number of different Click boards™ (over a thousand boards), the number of which is growing every day.

EasyPIC v8 horizontal image

Microcontroller Overview

MCU Card / MCU

PIC18LF45K50

Architecture

PIC

MCU Memory (KB)

32

Silicon Vendor

Microchip

Pin count

40

RAM (Bytes)

2048

Used MCU Pins

mikroBUS™ mapper

Channel 0 Data
RA2
AN
Channel 1 Data
RE1
RST
Channel 2 Data
RE0
CS
NC
NC
SCK
NC
NC
MISO
NC
NC
MOSI
Power Supply
3.3V
3.3V
Ground
GND
GND
Channel 3 Data
RC0
PWM
Interrupt
RB0
INT
NC
NC
TX
NC
NC
RX
I2C Clock
RC3
SCL
I2C Data
RC4
SDA
NC
NC
5V
Ground
GND
GND
1

Take a closer look

Click board™ Schematic

LDC Touch Click Schematic schematic

Step by step

Project assembly

EasyPIC v8 front image hardware assembly

Start by selecting your development board and Click board™. Begin with the EasyPIC v8 as your development board.

EasyPIC v8 front image hardware assembly
Buck 22 Click front image hardware assembly
MCU DIP 40 hardware assembly
EasyPIC v8 DIP MB 1 - upright/background hardware assembly
Necto image step 2 hardware assembly
Necto image step 3 hardware assembly
Necto image step 4 hardware assembly
NECTO Compiler Selection Step Image hardware assembly
NECTO Output Selection Step Image hardware assembly
Necto image step 6 hardware assembly
Necto DIP image step 7 hardware assembly
Necto image step 8 hardware assembly
Necto image step 9 hardware assembly
Necto image step 10 hardware assembly
Necto PreFlash Image hardware assembly

Track your results in real time

Application Output

1. Application Output - In Debug mode, the 'Application Output' window enables real-time data monitoring, offering direct insight into execution results. Ensure proper data display by configuring the environment correctly using the provided tutorial.

2. UART Terminal - Use the UART Terminal to monitor data transmission via a USB to UART converter, allowing direct communication between the Click board™ and your development system. Configure the baud rate and other serial settings according to your project's requirements to ensure proper functionality. For step-by-step setup instructions, refer to the provided tutorial.

3. Plot Output - The Plot feature offers a powerful way to visualize real-time sensor data, enabling trend analysis, debugging, and comparison of multiple data points. To set it up correctly, follow the provided tutorial, which includes a step-by-step example of using the Plot feature to display Click board™ readings. To use the Plot feature in your code, use the function: plot(*insert_graph_name*, variable_name);. This is a general format, and it is up to the user to replace 'insert_graph_name' with the actual graph name and 'variable_name' with the parameter to be displayed.

Software Support

Library Description

This library contains API for LDC Touch Click driver.

Key functions:

  • ldctouch_get_int_pin This function returns the INT pin logic state.

  • ldctouch_get_data This function reads status, out_state, and all buttons raw data.

  • ldctouch_set_operation_mode This function sets the operation mode.

Open Source

Code example

The complete application code and a ready-to-use project are available through the NECTO Studio Package Manager for direct installation in the NECTO Studio. The application code can also be found on the MIKROE GitHub account.

/*!
 * @file main.c
 * @brief LDCTouch Click example
 *
 * # Description
 * This example demonstrates the use of LDC Touch Click board by configuring 
 * the buttons to trigger on finger press, and reading the buttons state in the loop.
 *
 * The demo application is composed of two sections :
 *
 * ## Application Init
 * Initializes the driver and configures the buttons to be active on finger press.
 *
 * ## Application Task
 * Waits for the button active event interrupt and then reads and displays the buttons
 * state and their raw data on the USB UART every 200ms approximately.
 *
 * @author Stefan Filipovic
 *
 */

#include "board.h"
#include "log.h"
#include "ldctouch.h"

static ldctouch_t ldctouch;
static log_t logger;

void application_init ( void ) 
{
    log_cfg_t log_cfg;  /**< Logger config object. */
    ldctouch_cfg_t ldctouch_cfg;  /**< Click config object. */

    /** 
     * Logger initialization.
     * Default baud rate: 115200
     * Default log level: LOG_LEVEL_DEBUG
     * @note If USB_UART_RX and USB_UART_TX 
     * are defined as HAL_PIN_NC, you will 
     * need to define them manually for log to work. 
     * See @b LOG_MAP_USB_UART macro definition for detailed explanation.
     */
    LOG_MAP_USB_UART( log_cfg );
    log_init( &logger, &log_cfg );
    log_info( &logger, " Application Init " );

    // Click initialization.
    ldctouch_cfg_setup( &ldctouch_cfg );
    LDCTOUCH_MAP_MIKROBUS( ldctouch_cfg, MIKROBUS_1 );
    if ( I2C_MASTER_ERROR == ldctouch_init( &ldctouch, &ldctouch_cfg ) ) 
    {
        log_error( &logger, " Communication init." );
        for ( ; ; );
    }
    
    if ( LDCTOUCH_ERROR == ldctouch_default_cfg ( &ldctouch ) )
    {
        log_error( &logger, " Default configuration." );
        for ( ; ; );
    }
    
    log_info( &logger, " Application Task " );
}

void application_task ( void ) 
{
    static bool button_active = true;
    if ( !ldctouch_get_int_pin ( &ldctouch ) )
    {
        ldctouch_data_t button_data;
        if ( LDCTOUCH_OK == ldctouch_get_data ( &ldctouch, &button_data ) )
        {
            button_active = true;
            log_printf ( &logger, " Active button: -" ); 
            for ( uint8_t cnt = 0; cnt < 4; cnt++ )
            {
                if ( button_data.out_state & ( 1 << cnt ) )
                {
                    log_printf ( &logger, " %u - ", ( uint16_t ) cnt ); 
                }
            }
            log_printf ( &logger, "\r\n Button 0 raw data: %d\r\n", button_data.ch0_raw_button );
            log_printf ( &logger, " Button 1 raw data: %d\r\n", button_data.ch1_raw_button );
            log_printf ( &logger, " Button 2 raw data: %d\r\n", button_data.ch2_raw_button );
            log_printf ( &logger, " Button 3 raw data: %d\r\n\n", button_data.ch3_raw_button );
            Delay_ms ( 200 );
        }
    }
    else
    {
        if ( button_active )
        {
            button_active = false;
            log_printf ( &logger, " Active button: - none -\r\n" ); 
        }
    }
}

int main ( void ) 
{
    /* Do not remove this line or clock might not be set correctly. */
    #ifdef PREINIT_SUPPORTED
    preinit();
    #endif
    
    application_init( );
    
    for ( ; ; ) 
    {
        application_task( );
    }

    return 0;
}

// ------------------------------------------------------------------------ END

Additional Support

Resources

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