Basics

The I²C (Inter-Integrated Circuit) protocol, referred to as I-squared-C, I-two-C, or IIC is two wire serial communication protocol (so it is also called as TWI ( Two Wire Protocol ) for connecting low speed peripherals to a micro-controller or computer motherboard.

You can go through I²C /TWI Basics tutorials to understand how I²C works.

Registers

TWBR ( TWI Bit Rate Register )

TWBR
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
TWBR7 TWBR6 TWBR5 TWBR4 TWBR3 TWBR2 TWBR1 TWBR0

Bits [7:0] – Bit Rate

It selects the division factor for the bit rate generator. The bit rate generator is basically a frequency divider. It generates the SCL clock frequency in the Master modes.

TWCR ( TWI Control Register )

It is used to control all TWI operations.

TWCR
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
TWBR7 TWBR6 TWBR5 TWBR4 TWBR3 TWBR2 TWBR1 TWBR0

• Bit 7 – TWINT: TWI Interrupt Flag

This bit is set by hardware when the TWI has finished its current job and expects application software response. It is not automatically cleared by hardware when executing the interrupt routine. So, you must clear TWINT Flag by writing a logic one to it.

Also note that clearing this flag starts the operation of the TWI. So before clearing this flag, all accesses to the other TWI registers must be complete .

• Bit 6 – TWEA: TWI Enable Acknowledge Bit

It controls the generation of the acknowledge pulse.

If the TWEA bit is written to one, the ACK pulse is generated on the TWI bus if the following conditions are met:

1. The device’s own slave address has been received.

2. A general call has been received, while the TWGCE bit in the TWAR is set.

3. A data byte has been received in Master Receiver or Slave Receiver mode.

You can virtually disconnect device from the Two-wire Serial Bus temporarily by writting zero to TWEA. And to resume address recognition write one to it.

• Bit 5 – TWSTA: TWI START Condition Bit

To make the micro-controller master device on the Two wire Serial Bus, you must set this bit.

• Bit 4 – TWSTO: TWI STOP Condition Bit

In Master mode, write the one TWSTO bit to generate a STOP condition. This bit is cleared automatically when the STOP condition is executed on the bus.

In slave mode, setting the TWSTO bit can be used to recover from an error condition.

• Bit 3 – TWWC: TWI Write Collision Flag

The TWWC bit is set when attempting to write to the TWI Data Register – TWDR when TWINT is low. This flag is cleared by writing the TWDR Register when TWINT is high.

• Bit 2 – TWEN: TWI Enable Bit

To start TWI interface write one to this bit.

• Bit 1 – Reserved Bit

This bit is a reserved bit and will always read as zero.

• Bit 0 – TWIE: TWI Interrupt Enable

When this bit is written to one, and the I-bit in SREG is set, the TWI interrupt request will be activated for as long as the TWINT Flag is high.

TWSR ( TWI Status Register )

TWCR
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
TWS7 TWS6 TWS5 TWS4 TWS3 - TWPS1 TWPS0

• Bits [7:3] – TWS: TWI Status

These five bits reflect the status of the TWI logic and the Two-wire Serial Bus.

• Bit 2 – Reserved Bit

This bit is reserved and will always read as zero.

• Bits [1:0] – TWPS: TWI Prescaler Bits

These bits can be read and written, and control the bit rate prescaler

TWPS1 TWPS0 Prescaler Value
0 0 1
0 1 4
1 0 16
1 1 64

TWDR ( TWI Data Register )

In Transmit mode, This register contains the next byte to be transmitted in transmission mode and in case of receive mode it has last byte received. Note that, it is writable only when the TWI is not in the process of shifting a byte.

TWDR
7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
TWD7 TWD6 TWD5 TWD4 TWD3 TWDD2 TWD1 TWD0

Practical Example

AVR Interfacing: RTC DS1307