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PHS8-US Version:
DocId:
01.000 PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 i w e v r e v O e c a f r e n t I e r a w d r a H PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 2 Document Name:
Version:
Date:
DocId:
Status PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 01.000 2012-01-06 PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released GENERAL NOTE THE USE OF THE PRODUCT INCLUDING THE SOFTWARE AND DOCUMENTATION (THE "PROD-
UCT") IS SUBJECT TO THE RELEASE NOTE PROVIDED TOGETHER WITH PRODUCT. IN ANY EVENT THE PROVISIONS OF THE RELEASE NOTE SHALL PREVAIL. THIS DOCUMENT CON-
TAINS INFORMATION ON CINTERION PRODUCTS. THE SPECIFICATIONS IN THIS DOCUMENT ARE SUBJECT TO CHANGE AT CINTERION'S DISCRETION. CINTERION WIRELESS MODULES GMBH GRANTS A NON-EXCLUSIVE RIGHT TO USE THE PRODUCT. THE RECIPIENT SHALL NOT TRANSFER, COPY, MODIFY, TRANSLATE, REVERSE ENGINEER, CREATE DERIVATIVE WORKS;
DISASSEMBLE OR DECOMPILE THE PRODUCT OR OTHERWISE USE THE PRODUCT EXCEPT AS SPECIFICALLY AUTHORIZED. THE PRODUCT AND THIS DOCUMENT ARE PROVIDED ON AN
"AS IS" BASIS ONLY AND MAY CONTAIN DEFICIENCIES OR INADEQUACIES. TO THE MAXIMUM EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW, CINTERION WIRELESS MODULES GMBH DIS-
CLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES AND LIABILITIES. THE RECIPIENT UNDERTAKES FOR AN UNLIMITED PERIOD OF TIME TO OBSERVE SECRECY REGARDING ANY INFORMATION AND DATA PRO-
VIDED TO HIM IN THE CONTEXT OF THE DELIVERY OF THE PRODUCT. THIS GENERAL NOTE SHALL BE GOVERNED AND CONSTRUED ACCORDING TO GERMAN LAW. Copyright Transmittal, reproduction, dissemination and/or editing of this document as well as utilization of its con-
tents and communication thereof to others without express authorization are prohibited. Offenders will be held liable for payment of damages. All rights created by patent grant or registration of a utility model or design patent are reserved. Copyright 2012, Cinterion Wireless Modules GmbH Trademark Notice Microsoft and Windows are either registered trademarks or trademarks of Microsoft Corporation in the United States and/or other countries. All other registered trademarks or trademarks mentioned in this document are property of their respective owners. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 2 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview Contents 40 Contents 1 Introduction ................................................................................................................. 6 Related Documents ........................................................................................... 6 1.1 Terms and Abbreviations ................................................................................... 6 1.2 Regulatory and Type Approval Information ..................................................... 10 1.3 1.3.1 Directives and Standards.................................................................... 10 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles .................................. 12 1.3.2 SELV Requirements ........................................................................... 13 1.3.3 1.3.4 Safety Precautions.............................................................................. 13 Product Concept ....................................................................................................... 15 2.1 Key Features at a Glance ................................................................................ 15 2.2 PHS8-US System Overview ............................................................................ 18 Application Interface................................................................................................. 19 Operating Modes ............................................................................................. 20 3.1 3.2 Power Supply................................................................................................... 21 USB Interface................................................................................................... 22 3.3 Serial Interface ASC0 ...................................................................................... 23 3.4 3.5 UICC/SIM/USIM Interface................................................................................ 25 Analog Audio Interface..................................................................................... 27 3.6 3.7 Digital Audio Interface...................................................................................... 27 GPS Receiver............................................................................................................. 28 Antenna Interfaces.................................................................................................... 29 GSM/UMTS Antenna Interface ........................................................................ 29 5.1 5.1.1 Antenna Installation ............................................................................ 30 5.2 GPS Antenna Interface .................................................................................... 31 Mechanics.................................................................................................................. 33 6.1 Mechanical Dimensions of PHS8-US .............................................................. 33 Sample Application................................................................................................... 35 Reference Approval .................................................................................................. 37 8.1 Reference Equipment for Type Approval......................................................... 37 8.2 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations ..................................... 38 Appendix.................................................................................................................... 39 9.1 List of Parts and Accessories........................................................................... 39 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 3 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview Tables 40 Tables Table 1:
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Table 11:
Table 12:
Directives ....................................................................................................... 10 Standards of North American type approval .................................................. 10 Requirements of quality ................................................................................. 10 Standards of the Ministry of Information Industry of the Peoples Republic of China............................................................................ 11 Toxic or hazardous substances or elements with defined concentration limits............................................................................................................... 11 Overview of operating modes ........................................................................ 20 DCE-DTE wiring of ASC0 .............................................................................. 24 Signals of the SIM interface (SMT application interface) ............................... 25 Return loss in the active band........................................................................ 29 List of parts and accessories.......................................................................... 39 Molex sales contacts (subject to change) ...................................................... 40 Hirose sales contacts (subject to change) ..................................................... 40 PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 4 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview Figures 40 Figures Figure 1:
Figure 2:
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Figure 10:
Figure 11:
PHS8-US system overview............................................................................ 18 Decoupling capacitor(s) for BATT+................................................................ 21 USB circuit ..................................................................................................... 22 Serial interface ASC0..................................................................................... 23 UICC/SIM/USIM interface .............................................................................. 26 Supply voltage for active GPS antenna ......................................................... 31 ESD protection for passive GPS antenna...................................................... 32 PHS8-US top view ...................................................................................... 33 Dimensions of PHS8-US (all dimensions in mm)........................................... 34 PHS8-US sample application......................................................................... 36 Reference equipment for type approval......................................................... 37 PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 5 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1 Introduction 14 1 Introduction The document1 describes the hardware of the PHS8-US module, designed to connect to a cel-
lular device application and the air interface. It helps you quickly retrieve interface specifica-
tions, electrical and mechanical details and information on the requirements to be considered for integrating further components. 1.1 Related Documents
[1] PHS8-US AT Command Set
[2] PHS8-US Release Notes
[3] DSB75 Support Box - Evaluation Kit for Cinterion Wireless Modules
[4] Application Note 48: SMT Module Integration 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations Abbreviation AGPS ANSI AMR ARP BB BEP BTS CB or CBM CE CS CS CSD CTM DAC DCS DL DRX DSB DSP DTMF Description Assisted GPS American National Standards Institute Adaptive Multirate Antenna Reference Point Baseband Bit Error Probability Base Transceiver Station Cell Broadcast Message Conformit Europene (European Conformity) Coding Scheme Circuit Switched Circuit Switched Data Cellular Text Modem Digital-to-Analog Converter Digital Cellular System Download Discontinuous Reception Development Support Board Digital Signal Processor Dual Tone Multi Frequency 1. The document is effective only if listed in the appropriate Release Notes as part of the technical documentation delivered with your Cinterion Wireless Modules product. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 6 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations 14 Abbreviation DTX EDGE EFR EGSM EMC ERP ESD ETS ETSI FCC FDD FDMA FR GPRS GPS GSM HiZ HSDPA HR I/O IF IMEI ISO ITU kbps LED LGA MBB Mbps MCS MO MS MSL MT NMEA NTC Description Discontinuous Transmission Enhanced Data rates for GSM Evolution Enhanced Full Rate Extended GSM Electromagnetic Compatibility Effective Radiated Power Electrostatic Discharge European Telecommunication Standard European Telecommunications Standards Institute Federal Communications Commission (U.S.) Frequency Division Duplex Frequency Division Multiple Access Full Rate General Packet Radio Service Global Positioning System Global Standard for Mobile Communications High Impedance High Speed Downlink Packet Access Half Rate Input/Output Intermediate Frequency International Mobile Equipment Identity International Standards Organization International Telecommunications Union kbits per second Light Emitting Diode Land Grid Array Moisture barrier bag Mbits per second Modulation and Coding Scheme Mobile Originated Mobile Station, also referred to as TE Moisture Sensitivity Level Mobile Terminated National Marine Electronics Association Negative Temperature Coefficient PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 7 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations 14 Abbreviation PBCCH PCB PCL PCM PCS PD PDU PS PSK PU QAM R&TTE RF ROPR RTC Rx SAR SELV SIM SLIC SMPL SMD SMS SMT SNR SRAM SRB SUPL TDMA TE TPC TS TTFF Tx UL UMTS Description Packet Switched Broadcast Control Channel Printed Circuit Board Power Control Level Pulse Code Modulation Personal Communication System, also referred to as GSM 1900 Pull Down resistor (appr. 100k) Protocol Data Unit Packet Switched Phase Shift Keying Pull Up resistor (appr. 100k) Quadrature Amplitude Modulation Radio and Telecommunication Terminal Equipment Radio Frequency Radio Output Power Reduction Real Time Clock Receive Direction Specific Absorption Rate Safety Extra Low Voltage Subscriber Identification Module Subscriber Line Interface Circuit Sudden Momentary Power Loss Surface Mount Device Short Message Service Surface Mount Technology Signal-to-Noise Ratio Static Random Access Memory Signalling Radio Bearer Secure User Plane Location Time Division Multiple Access Terminal Equipment Transmit Power Control Technical Specification Time To First Fix Transmit Direction Upload Universal Mobile Telecommunications System PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 8 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.2 Terms and Abbreviations 14 Abbreviation URC USB UICC USIM WCDMA Description Unsolicited Result Code Universal Serial Bus USIM Integrated Circuit Card UMTS Subscriber Identification Module Wideband Code Division Multiple Access PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 9 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 14 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 1.3.1 Directives and Standards PHS8-US has been designed to comply with the directives and standards listed below. It is the responsibility of the application manufacturer to ensure compliance of the final product with all provisions of the applicable directives and standards as well as with the technical spec-
ifications provided in the "PHS8-US Hardware Interface Description".1 Table 1: Directives 2002/95/EC Directive of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 January 2003 on the restriction of the use of certain haz-
ardous substances in electrical and electronic equipment
(RoHS) Table 2: Standards of North American type approval CFR Title 47 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 22, Part 24 and Part 27; US Equipment Authorization FCC Evaluating Compliance with FCC Guidelines for Human Exposure to Radio-
frequency Electromagnetic Fields Product Safety Certification (Safety requirements) Overview of PCS Type certification review board Mobile Equipment Type Certification and IMEI control PCS Type Certification Review board (PTCRB) Canadian Standard OET Bulletin 65
(Edition 97-01) UL 60 950-1 NAPRD.03 V5.8 RSS132, RSS133, RSS139 Table 3: Requirements of quality IEC 60068 DIN EN 60529 Environmental testing IP codes 1. Manufacturers of applications which can be used in the US shall ensure that their applications have a PTCRB approval. For this purpose they can refer to the PTCRB approval of the respective module. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 10 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 14 Table 4: Standards of the Ministry of Information Industry of the Peoples Republic of China SJ/T 11363-2006 Requirements for Concentration Limits for Certain Hazardous Substances in Electronic Information Products (2006-06). Marking for Control of Pollution Caused by Electronic Information Products (2006-06). SJ/T 11364-2006 According to the Chinese Administration on the Control of Pollution caused by Electronic Information Products
(ACPEIP) the EPUP, i.e., Environmental Protection Use Period, of this product is 20 years as per the symbol shown here, unless otherwise marked. The EPUP is valid only as long as the product is operated within the operating limits described in the Cinterion Hardware Interface Description. Please see Table 5 for an overview of toxic or hazardous substances or ele-
ments that might be contained in product parts in concentrations above the limits defined by SJ/T 11363-2006. Table 5: Toxic or hazardous substances or elements with defined concentration limits PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 11 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 14 1.3.2 SAR requirements specific to portable mobiles Mobile phones, PDAs or other portable transmitters and receivers incorporating a GSM module must be in accordance with the guidelines for human exposure to radio frequency energy. This requires the Specific Absorption Rate (SAR) of portable PHS8-US based applications to be evaluated and approved for compliance with national and/or international regulations. Since the SAR value varies significantly with the individual product design manufacturers are advised to submit their product for approval if designed for portable use. For USmarkets the relevant directives are mentioned below. It is the responsibility of the manufacturer of the final product to verify whether or not further standards, recommendations or directives are in force outside these areas. Products intended for sale on US markets ES 59005/ANSI C95.1 Considerations for evaluation of human exposure to electromagnetic fields (EMFs) from mobile telecommunication equipment (MTE) in the frequency range 30MHz - 6GHz IMPORTANT:
Manufacturers of portable applications based on PHS8-US modules are required to have their final product certified and apply for their own FCC Grant and Industry Canada Certificate relat-
ed to the specific portable mobile. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 12 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 14 1.3.3 SELV Requirements The power supply connected to the PHS8-US module shall be in compliance with the SELV requirements defined in EN 60950-1. 1.3.4 Safety Precautions The following safety precautions must be observed during all phases of the operation, usage, service or repair of any cellular terminal or mobile incorporating PHS8-US. Manufacturers of the cellular terminal are advised to convey the following safety information to users and oper-
ating personnel and to incorporate these guidelines into all manuals supplied with the product. Failure to comply with these precautions violates safety standards of design, manufacture and intended use of the product. Cinterion Wireless Modules assumes no liability for customers failure to comply with these precautions. When in a hospital or other health care facility, observe the restrictions on the use of mobiles. Switch the cellular terminal or mobile off, if instructed to do so by the guide-
lines posted in sensitive areas. Medical equipment may be sensitive to RF energy. The operation of cardiac pacemakers, other implanted medical equipment and hearing aids can be affected by interference from cellular terminals or mobiles placed close to the device. If in doubt about potential danger, contact the physician or the manufac-
turer of the device to verify that the equipment is properly shielded. Pacemaker patients are advised to keep their hand-held mobile away from the pacemaker, while it is on. Switch off the cellular terminal or mobile before boarding an aircraft. Make sure it can-
not be switched on inadvertently. The operation of wireless appliances in an aircraft is forbidden to prevent interference with communications systems. Failure to observe these instructions may lead to the suspension or denial of cellular services to the offender, legal action, or both. Do not operate the cellular terminal or mobile in the presence of flammable gases or fumes. Switch off the cellular terminal when you are near petrol stations, fuel depots, chemical plants or where blasting operations are in progress. Operation of any electri-
cal equipment in potentially explosive atmospheres can constitute a safety hazard. Your cellular terminal or mobile receives and transmits radio frequency energy while switched on. Remember that interference can occur if it is used close to TV sets, radios, computers or inadequately shielded equipment. Follow any special regulations and always switch off the cellular terminal or mobile wherever forbidden, or when you suspect that it may cause interference or danger. Road safety comes first! Do not use a hand-held cellular terminal or mobile when driv-
ing a vehicle, unless it is securely mounted in a holder for speakerphone operation. Before making a call with a hand-held terminal or mobile, park the vehicle. Speakerphones must be installed by qualified personnel. Faulty installation or opera-
tion can constitute a safety hazard. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 13 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 1.3 Regulatory and Type Approval Information 14 IMPORTANT!
Cellular terminals or mobiles operate using radio signals and cellular networks. Because of this, connection cannot be guaranteed at all times under all conditions. Therefore, you should never rely solely upon any wireless device for essential com-
munications, for example emergency calls. Remember, in order to make or receive calls, the cellular terminal or mobile must be switched on and in a service area with adequate cellular signal strength. Some networks do not allow for emergency calls if certain network services or phone features are in use (e.g. lock functions, fixed dialing etc.). You may need to deactivate those features before you can make an emergency call. Some networks require that a valid SIM card be properly inserted in the cellular termi-
nal or mobile. Bear in mind that exposure to excessive levels of noise can cause physical damage to users! With regard to acoustic shock, the cellular application must be designed to avoid unintentional increase of amplification, e.g. for a highly sensitive earpiece. A pro-
tection circuit should be implemented in the cellular application. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 14 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 2 Product Concept 18 2 2.1 Product Concept Key Features at a Glance Feature General Frequency bands Implementation GSM/GPRS/EDGE: Dual band, 850/1900MHz UMTS/HSPA+: Dual band, 850/1900MHz GSM class Small MS Output power (according to Release 99) Class 4 (+33dBm 2dB) for EGSM850 Class 1 (+30dBm 2dB) for GSM1900 Class E2 (+27dBm 3dB) for GSM 850 8-PSK Class E2 (+26dBm +3 /-4dB) for GSM 1900 8-PSK Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 1900,WCDMA FDD BdII Class 3 (+24dBm +1/-3dB) for UMTS 850, WCDMA FDD BdV Power supply 3.3V < VBATT+ < 4.2V Operating temperature
(board temperature) Normal operation: -30C to +85C Restricted operation: -40C to +95C Physical RoHS HSPA features 3GPP Release 6, 7 UMTS features 3GPP Release 4 Dimensions: 33mm x 29mm x 2mm Weight: approx. 5g All hardware components fully compliant with EU RoHS Directive DL 14.4Mbps, UL 5.7Mbps UE CAT. 1-12 supported Compressed mode (CM) supported according to 3GPP TS25.212 PS data rate 384 kbps DL / 384 kbps UL CS data rate 64 kbps DL / 64 kbps UL PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 15 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 2.1 Key Features at a Glance 18 Feature GSM / GPRS / EGPRS features Data transfer Implementation Full PBCCH support EDGE E2 power class for 8 PSK GPRS:
Multislot Class 12 Mobile Station Class B Coding Scheme 1 4 EGPRS:
Multislot Class 12 Downlink coding schemes CS 1-4, MCS 1-9 Uplink coding schemes CS 1-4, MCS 1-9 NACC, extended UL TBF Mobile Station Class B CSD:
USSD Point-to-point MT and MO Cell broadcast Text and PDU mode SRB loopback and test mode B 8-bit, 11-bit RACH PBCCH support 1 phase/2 phase access procedures Link adaptation and IR V.110, RLP, non-transparent 14.4kbps NMEA Standalone GPS Assisted GPS
- Control plane - E911
- User plane - gpsOneXTRA SMS GPS Features Protocol Modes General Power saving modes Software AT commands SIM Application Toolkit Audio1 Firmware update Hayes, 3GPP TS 27.007 and 27.005, and proprietary Cinterion Wireless Modules commands SAT Release 99 Audio speech codecs GSM: AMR, EFR, FR, HR 3GPP: AMR Speakerphone operation, echo cancellation, noise suppression, 9 ringing tones, TTY support Generic update from host application over ASC0 or USB PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 16 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 2.1 Key Features at a Glance 18 Feature Interfaces Module interface Antenna USB Serial interface UICC interface Status Audio Power on/off, Reset Power on/off Reset Emergency-off Special Features Phonebook TTY/CTM support Antenna Evaluation kit Evaluation module DSB75 Implementation Surface mount device with solderable connection pads (SMT application interface). Land grid array (LGA) technology ensures high solder joint reliability and provides the possibility to use an optional module mounting socket. For more information on how to integrate SMT modules see also [4]. This application note comprises chapters on module mounting and application layout issues as well as on additional SMT application development equipment. 50Ohms. Main GSM/UMTS antenna, UMTS diversity antenna, GPS antenna (active/passive) USB 2.0 High Speed (480Mbit/s) device interface, Full Speed (12Mbit/s) compliant ASC0:
8-wire modem interface with status and control lines, unbalanced, asynchronous Adjustable baud rates from 9,600bps up to 921,600bps Supports RTS0/CTS0 hardware flow control Multiplex ability according to GSM 07.10 Multiplexer Protocol Supported chip cards: UICC/SIM/USIM 3V, 1.8V Signal line to indicate network connectivity state 1 analog interface with microphone feeding1 1 digital interface: PCM or I2S Switch-on by hardware signal IGT Switch-off by AT command (AT^SMSO) Automatic switch-off in case of critical temperature or voltage conditions Orderly shutdown and reset by AT command Emergency-off by hardware signal EMERG_OFF if IGT is not active SIM and phone Integrated CTM modem SAIC (Single Antenna Interference Cancellation) / DARP (Downlink Advanced Receiver Performance) Rx diversity (receiver type 3i - 16-QAM) PHS8-US module soldered onto a dedicated PCB that can be connected to an adapter in order to be mounted onto the DSB75. DSB75 Development Support Board designed to test and type approve Cinterion Wireless Modules and provide a sample configuration for appli-
cation engineering. A special adapter is required to connect the PHS8-US evaluation module to the DSB75. 1. The analog audio interface is an option for a product variant of PHS8-US. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 17 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 2.2 PHS8-US System Overview 18 2.2 PHS8-US System Overview GPS antenna GSM/UMTS-
antenna UMTS diversity antenna GPS active antenna supply, current limiter Power Supply GPS GSM/UMTS Module Application SIM Card UICC USB Serial ASC0 Wake-
up Analog audio Digital audio Power supply LCI RTC IGT, Emergency Off Net state/
status e c a f r e n t I m e d o M p u e k a W t s o H
) T X E V
n o i t a c i l p p A Host Application Controller r o f r e w o P PCM or I2S Codec
) I D N _ R W P
n o i t i a c d n I r e w o P t n e r r u c w o L n o i t i a c d n i PSU Application or On/Off Figure 1: PHS8-US system overview PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 18 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3 Application Interface 28 3 Application Interface PHS8-US is equipped with an SMT application interface that connects to the external applica-
tion. The host interface incorporates several sub-interfaces described in the following sections:
Operating modes - see Section 3.1 Power supply - see Section 3.2 Serial interface USB - see Section 3.3 Serial interface ASC0 - Section 3.4 UICC/SIM/USIM interface - see Section 3.5 Analog audio interface - see Section 3.6 Digital audio interface (PCM or I2S) - see Section 3.7 PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 19 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.1 Operating Modes 28 3.1 Operating Modes The table below briefly summarizes the various operating modes referred to in the following chapters. Table 6: Overview of operating modes Mode Normal operation Function GSM /
GPRS / UMTS /
HSPA SLEEP GSM /
GPRS / UMTS /
HSPA IDLE GSM TALK/
GSM DATA Power saving set automatically when no call is in progress and the USB connection is suspended by host or not present and no active commu-
nication via ASC0. Power saving disabled (see [1]: AT^SCFG "MEopMode/
PwrSave",<PwrSaveMode>) or an USB connection not suspended, but no call in progress. Connection between two subscribers is in progress. Power consump-
tion depends on the GSM network coverage and several connection settings (e.g. DTX off/on, FR/EFR/HR, hopping sequences and antenna connection). The following applies when power is to be mea-
sured in TALK_GSM mode: DTX off, FR and no frequency hopping. GPRS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. power control level), uplink / downlink data rates and GPRS configuration (e.g. used multislot settings). EGPRS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. power control level), uplink / downlink data rates and EGPRS configuration (e.g. used multislot settings). UMTS data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. HSPA data transfer in progress. Power consumption depends on net-
work settings (e.g. TPC Pattern) and data transfer rate. GPRS DATA EGPRS DATA UMTS TALK/
UMTS DATA HSPA DATA Power Down Airplane mode Normal shutdown after sending the AT^SMSO command. Only a voltage regulator is active for powering the RTC. Software is not active. Interfaces are not accessible. Operating volt-
age (connected to BATT+) remains applied. Airplane mode shuts down the radio part of the module, causes the module to log off from the GSM/GPRS network and disables all AT commands whose execution requires a radio connection. Airplane mode can be controlled by AT command (see [1]). PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 20 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.2 Power Supply 28 3.2 Power Supply PHS8-US needs to be connected to a power supply at the SMT application interface - 6 lines each BATT+ and GND. There are three separate voltage domains for BATT+:
BATT+_WCDMA with 2 lines for the WCDMA power amplifier supply BATT+_GSM with 2 lines for the GSM power amplifier supply BATT+ with 2 lines for the general power management. The main power supply from an external application has to be a single voltage source and has to be expanded to three sub paths (star structure). Capacitors should be placed as close as possible to the BATT+ pads. Figure 2 shows two sample circuits (minimum requirement and recommended alternative) for decoupling capacitors for BATT+. Module SMT interface BATT+
BATT+_GSM BATT+_WCDMA 2 2 2 Minimum requirement Module SMT interface BATT+
BATT+_GSM BATT+_WCDMA 2 2 2 Recommended alternative
Decoupling capacitor e.g. 100220F Ultra-low ESR 3x Decoupling capacitors e.g. 47F X5R MLCC Figure 2: Decoupling capacitor(s) for BATT+
BATT+
GND BATT+
GND The power supply of PHS8-US must be able to provide the peak current during the uplink trans-
mission. All key functions for supplying power to the device are handled by the power management IC. It provides the following features:
Stabilizes the supply voltages for the baseband using switching regulators and low drop lin-
ear voltage regulators. Switches the module's power voltages for the power-up and -down procedures. Delivers, across the VEXT line, a regulated voltage for an external application. This voltage is not available in Power-down mode and can be reduced via AT command to save power. SIM switch to provide SIM power supply. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 21 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.3 USB Interface 28 3.3 USB Interface PHS8-US supports a USB 2.0 High Speed (480Mbit/s) device interface that is Full Speed
(12Mbit/s) compliant. The USB interface is primarily intended for use as command and data interface and for downloading firmware. The USB host is responsible for supplying the VUSB_IN line. This line is for voltage detection only. The USB part (driver and transceiver) is supplied by means of BATT+. This is because PHS8-US is designed as a self-powered device compliant with the Universal Serial Bus Spec-
ification Revision 2.01. Module VREG (3V075) lin. reg. SMT USB part1) VBUS DP DN Detection only Host wakeup BATT+
GND VUSB_IN USB_DP2) USB_DN2) RING0 WAKEUP 1) All serial and pull-up resistors for data lines are implemented. 2) If the USB interface is operated in High Speed mode (480MHz), it is recommended to take special care routing the data lines USB_DP and USB_DN. Application layout should in this case implement a differential impedance of 90Ohm for proper signal integrity. Figure 3: USB circuit To properly connect the module's USB interface to the host a USB 2.0 compatible connector is required. Furthermore, the USB modem driver distributed with PHS8-US needs to be installed. While the USB connection is active, the module will not change into SLEEP Mode. To enable switching into SLEEP mode the USB host must bring its USB interface into Suspend state. Al-
so, VUSB_IN should always be kept enabled for this functionality. See Universal Serial Bus Specification Revision 2.01 for a description of the Suspend state. On incoming calls PHS8-
US will then generate a remote wake up request to resume the USB connection (active low). As an alternative to the regular USB remote wakeup mechanism it is possible to employ the RING0 or WAKEUP line to wake up the host application. The benefit is that the RING0 or WAKEUP lines can wake up the host application in case of incoming calls or other events sig-
nalized by URCs while the USB interface is suspended or shut down. 1. The specification is ready for download on http://www.usb.org/developers/docs/
PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 22 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.4 Serial Interface ASC0 28 3.4 Serial Interface ASC0 PHS8-US offers an 8-wire unbalanced, asynchronous modem interface ASC0 conforming to ITU-T V.24 protocol DCE signalling. The electrical characteristics do not comply with ITU-T V.28. The significant levels are 0V (for low data bit or active state) and 1.8V (for high data bit or inactive state). PHS8-US is designed for use as a DCE. Based on the conventions for DCE-DTE connections it communicates with the customer application (DTE) using the following signals:
Port TXD @ application sends data to the modules TXD0 signal line Port RXD @ application receives data from the modules RXD0 signal line Figure 4: Serial interface ASC0 Features:
Includes the data lines TXD0 and RXD0, the status lines RTS0 and CTS0 and, in addition, the modem control lines DTR0, DSR0, DCD0 and RING0. ASC0 is designed for controlling GSM/UMTS voice calls, transferring data and for control-
ling the module with AT commands. Full multiplexing capability allows the interface to be partitioned into virtual channels. The RING0 signal serves to indicate incoming calls and other types of URCs (Unsolicited Result Code). It can also be used to send pulses to the host application, for example to wake up the application from power saving state. See for details on how to configure the RING0 line by AT^SCFG. Configured for 8 data bits, no parity and 1 stop bit. ASC0 can be operated at fixed bit rates from 9600bps up to 921600bps. Supports RTS0/CTS0 hardware flow control. Wake up from SLEEP mode by RTS0 activation (high to low transition). Note. If the ASC0 serial interface is the applications only interface, it is suggested to connect test points on the USB signal lines as a potential tracing possibility. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 23 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.4 Serial Interface ASC0 28 Table 7: DCE-DTE wiring of ASC0 V.24 circuit DCE 103 104 105 106 108/2 107 109 125 Line function TXD0 RXD0 RTS0 CTS0 DTR0 DSR0 DCD0 RING0 Signal direction Input Output Input Output Input Output Output Output DTE Line function TXD RXD RTS CTS DTR DSR DCD RING Signal direction Output Input Output Input Output Input Input Input PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 24 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.5 UICC/SIM/USIM Interface 28 3.5 UICC/SIM/USIM Interface PHS8-US has an integrated UICC/SIM/USIM interface compatible with the 3GPP 31.102 and ETSI 102 221. This is wired to the host interface in order to be connected to an external SIM card holder. Five pads on the SMT application interface are reserved for the SIM interface. The UICC/SIM/USIM interface supports 3V and 1.8V SIM cards. The CCIN signal serves to detect whether a tray (with SIM card) is present in the card holder. Using the CCIN signal is mandatory for compliance with the GSM 11.11 recommendation if the mechanical design of the host application allows the user to remove the SIM card during oper-
ation. To take advantage of this feature, an appropriate SIM card detect switch is required on the card holder. For example, this is true for the model supplied by Molex, which has been test-
ed to operate with PHS8-US and is part of the Cinterion reference equipment submitted for type approval. See Chapter 9 for Molex ordering numbers. Table 8: Signals of the SIM interface (SMT application interface) Signal GND Description Separate ground connection for SIM card to improve EMC. Chipcard clock CCCLK CCVCC SIM supply voltage. CCIO CCRST CCIN Serial data line, input and output. Chipcard reset Input on the baseband processor for detecting a SIM card tray in the holder. If the SIM is removed during operation the SIM interface is shut down immediately to prevent destruc-
tion of the SIM. The CCIN signal is active low. The CCIN signal is mandatory for applications that allow the user to remove the SIM card during operation. The CCIN signal is solely intended for use with a SIM card. It must not be used for any other purposes. Failure to comply with this requirement may invalidate the type approval of PHS8-US. Note: No guarantee can be given, nor any liability accepted, if loss of data is encountered after removing the SIM card during operation. Also, no guarantee can be given for properly initializ-
ing any SIM card that the user inserts after having removed the SIM card during operation. In this case, the application must restart PHS8-US. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 25 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.5 UICC/SIM/USIM Interface 28 open: Card removed closed: Card inserted 1n SIM /
UICC CCIN CCRST CCCLK GND CCIO e c a f r e t n i n o i t a c i l p p a T M S Module CCVCC 220n Figure 5: UICC/SIM/USIM interface The total cable length between the SMT application interface pads on PHS8-US and the pads of the external SIM card holder must not exceed 100mm in order to meet the specifications of 3GPP TS 51.010-1 and to satisfy the requirements of EMC compliance. To avoid possible cross-talk from the CCCLK signal to the CCIO signal be careful that both lines are not placed closely next to each other. A useful approach is using the GND line to shield the CCIO line from the CCCLK line. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 26 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 3.6 Analog Audio Interface 28 Analog Audio Interface 3.6 PHS8-US has an analog audio interface1 with a balanced analog microphone input and a bal-
anced analog earpiece output. A supply voltage and an analog ground connection are provided at dedicated lines. PHS8-US offers eight audio modes which can be selected with the AT^SNFS command. The electrical characteristics of the voiceband part vary with the audio mode. For example, sending and receiving amplification, sidetone paths, noise suppression etc. depend on the selected mode and can in parts be altered with AT commands (except for mode 1). When shipped from factory, all audio parameters of PHS8-US are set to audio mode 1. This is the default configuration optimised for the Votronic HH-SI-30.3/V1.1/0 handset and used for type approving the Cinterion Wireless Modules reference configuration. Audio mode 1 has fix parameters which cannot be modified. To adjust the settings of the Votronic handset simply change to another audio mode. 3.7 Digital Audio Interface PHS8-US supports a digital audio interface that can be employed either as pulse code modu-
lation or as inter IC sound interface. Operation of these interface variants is mutually exclusive. 1. The analog audio interface is an option for a product variant of PHS8-US. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 27 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 4 GPS Receiver 28 4 GPS Receiver PHS8-US integrates a GPS receiver that offers the full performance of GPS technology. The GPS receiver is able to continuously track all satellites in view, thus providing accurate satellite position data. The integrated GPS receiver supports the NMEA protocol via USB or ASC0 interface. NMEA is a combined electrical and data specification for communication between various (marine) electronic devices including GPS receivers. It has been defined and controlled by the US-
based National Marine Electronics Association. For more information on the NMEA Standard please refer to http://www.nmea.org. Depending on the receivers knowledge of last position, current time and ephemeris data, the receivers startup time (i.e., TTFF = Time-To-First-Fix) may vary: If the receiver has no knowl-
edge of its last position or time, a startup takes considerably longer than if the receiver has still knowledge of its last position, time and almanac or has still access to valid ephimeris data and the precise time. By default, the GPS receiver is switched off. It has to be switched on and configured using AT commands. For more information on how to control the GPS interface via the AT command AT^SGPSC see . PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 28 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 5 Antenna Interfaces 32 5 5.1 Antenna Interfaces GSM/UMTS Antenna Interface The PHS8-US GSM/UMTS antenna interface comprises a main GSM/UMTS antenna as well as an optional UMTS Rx diversity antenna to improve signal reliability and quality1. The inter-
face has an impedance of 50. PHS8-US is capable of sustaining a total mismatch at the an-
tenna interface without any damage, even when transmitting at maximum RF power. The external antenna must be matched properly to achieve best performance regarding radi-
ated power, modulation accuracy and harmonic suppression. Matching networks are not in-
cluded on the PHS8-US PCB and should be placed in the host application, if the antenna does not have an impendance of 50. Regarding the return loss PHS8-US provides the following values in the active band:
Table 9: Return loss in the active band State of module Receive Transmit Idle Return loss of module
> 8dB not applicable
< 5dB Recommended return loss of application
> 12dB
> 12dB not applicable 1. By delivery default the optional UMTS Rx diversity antenna is configured as available for the module. To avoid negative side effects and performance degradation it is recommended to disable the diversity an-
tenna path if
- the host application does not support a diversity antenna
- the host application includes a diversity antenna - but a 3G network simulator is used for development and performance tests. Please refer to [1] for details on how to configure antenna settings. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 29 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 5.1 GSM/UMTS Antenna Interface 32 5.1.1 Antenna Installation The antenna is connected by soldering the antenna pads and their neighboring ground pads directly to the applications PCB. The distance between the antenna pads and their neighboring GND pads has been optimized for best possible impedance. To prevent mismatch, special attention should be paid to these pads on the application PCB. The wiring of the antenna connection, starting from the antenna pad to the applications anten-
na should result in a 50 line impedance. Line width and distance to the GND plane need to be optimized with regard to the PCBs layer stack. To prevent receiver desensitization due to interferences generated by fast transients like high speed clocks on the external application PCB, it is recommended to realize the antenna con-
nection line using embedded Stripline rather than Micro-Stripline technology. For type approval purposes, the use of a 50 coaxial antenna connector (U.FL-R-SMT) might be necessary. In this case the U.FL-R-SMT connector should be placed as close as possible to PHS8-USs antenna pad. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 30 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 5.2 GPS Antenna Interface 32 5.2 GPS Antenna Interface In addition to the RF antenna interface PHS8-US also has a GPS antenna interface. The GPS antenna installation and connector are the same as for the RF antenna interface (see Section 5.1.1). It is possible to connect active or passive GPS antennas. In either case they must have 50 Ohm impedance. The simultaneous operation of GSM and GPS has been implemented. PHS8-US provides the supply voltage VGPS for the GPS active antenna (3.05V). It has to be enabled by software when the GPS-receiver shall becomes active, otherwise VGPS should be off (power saving). VGPS is not short circuit protected. This will have to be provided for by an external application. The DC voltage should be fed back via ANT_GPS_DC for coupling into the GPS antenna path. Figure 6 shows the flexibility in realizing the power supply for an active GPS antenna by giving two sample circuits realizing the supply voltage for an active GPS an-
tenna - one with short circuit protection and one with an external LDO employed. Module SMT interface VGPS 47pF ANT_GPS_DC 10nH ANT_GPS 2p2 Module SMT interface VGPS 47pF ANT_GPS_DC 10nH ANT_GPS 2p2 typ 3.05V max. 300mA Not short circuit protected!
Short circuit protection
(Imax=50mA) 10k 1uF
(Optional) ESD protection Active GPS antenna Supply with short circuit protection External voltage Active GPS antenna Enable LDO 10k 1uF
(Optional) ESD protection Supply with external LDO employed Figure 6: Supply voltage for active GPS antenna PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 31 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 5.2 GPS Antenna Interface 32 Figure 7 shows sample circuits realizing ESD protection for a passive GPS antenna. Module SMT interface VGPS Not used 47pF ANT_GPS_DC 10nH ANT_GPS 2p2
(Optional) ESD protection 0R Passive GPS antenna Figure 7: ESD protection for passive GPS antenna PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 32 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 6 Mechanics 34 6 6.1 Mechanics Mechanical Dimensions of PHS8-US Figure 8 shows the top view of PHS8-US and provides an overview of the board's mechanical dimensions. For further details see Figure 9. Length:
Width:
Height:
33mm 29mm 2mm Top view Bottom view Figure 8: PHS8-US top view PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 33 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 6.1 Mechanical Dimensions of PHS8-US 34 Position marker Figure 9: Dimensions of PHS8-US (all dimensions in mm) Internal use;
Not to be soldered PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 34 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 7 Sample Application 36 7 Sample Application Figure 10 shows a typical example of how to integrate an PHS8-US module with an application. The audio interface demonstrates the balanced connection of microphone and earpiece. This solution is particularly well suited for internal transducers. The PWR_IND line is an open collector that needs an external pull-up resistor which connects to the voltage supply VCC C of the microcontroller. Low state of the open collector pulls the PWR_IND signal low and indicates that the PHS8-US module is active, high level notifies the Power-down mode. If the module is in Power-down mode avoid current flowing from any other source into the mod-
ule circuit, for example reverse current from high state external control lines. Therefore, the controlling application must be designed to prevent reverse flow. If an external level controller is required, this can be done by using for example a 5V I/O tolerant buffer/driver like a
"74AVC4T245" with OE (Output Enable) controlled by PWR_IND. While developing SMT applications it is strongly recommended to provide test points for certain signals resp. lines to and from the module - for debug and/or test purposes. The SMT application should allow for an easy access to these signals. For details on how to implement test points see [4]. The EMC measures are best practice recommendations. In fact, an adequate EMC strategy for an individual application is very much determined by the overall layout and, especially, the po-
sition of components. Disclaimer:
No warranty, either stated or implied, is provided on the sample schematic diagram shown in Figure 10 and the information detailed in this section. As functionality and compliance with na-
tional regulations depend to a great amount on the used electronic components and the indi-
vidual application layout manufacturers are required to ensure adequate design and operating safeguards for their products using PHS8-US modules. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 35 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 7 Sample Application 36 PHS8 Sample Application 47k 47k 100k VCC C VDD
(1.8V) VCC C VCCA OE VCCB 8 Level Controller Current limiter
<60mA ANT_GSM VGPS ANT_DRX ANT_GPS BC847 BC847 EMERG_RST PWR_IND VEXT (1.8V) 2 2 2 100F
...220F ultra low ESR 1F 1F 8 2 CCIN CCVCC CCRST CCCLK EPP AGND 220nF 1nF Figure 10: PHS8-US sample application PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 36 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 8 Reference Approval 38 8 8.1 Reference Approval Reference Equipment for Type Approval The Cinterion Wireless Modules reference setup submitted to type approve PHS8-US is shown in the following figure1. The module (i.e., the evaluation module) is connected to the DSB75 via a special adapter and either mounted directly onto the adapter or connected using a flex cable:
Detail:
Hirose U.FL RF connector manually soldered to Pogo pads PHS8 evaluation module Audio test equipm ent Votronic handset PHS8 evaluation m odule Uranus If using analog audio Standard 80 polig Flex Hirose U.FL cable GPS test equipment GPS GSM/UMTS test equipment UM TS DRX GSM/UM TS USB SIM card holder ANT3 ANT2 ANT1 Audio Audio DSB75 adapter DSB75 COM 1
(ASC0) Power GND USB cable PC Power supply RS232 cable Figure 11: Reference equipment for type approval 1. For RF performance tests a mini-SMT/U.FL to SMA adapter with attached 6dB coaxial attenuator is cho-
sen to connect the module directly to the GSM/UMTS/GPS test equipment instead of employing the SMA antenna connectors on the PHS8-US-DSB75 adapter as shown in Figure 11. The following products are recommended:
Hirose SMA-Jack/U.FL-Plug conversion adapter HRMJ-U.FLP(40)
(for details see see http://www.hirose-connectors.com/ or http://www.farnell.com/
Aeroflex Weinschel Fixed Coaxial Attenuator Model 3T/4T
(for details see http://www.aeroflex.com/ams/weinschel/pdfiles/wmod3&4T.pdf) PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 37 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 8.2 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations 38 8.2 Compliance with FCC and IC Rules and Regulations The Equipment Authorization Certification for the Cinterion Wireless Modules reference appli-
cation described in Section 8.1 will be registered under the following identifiers:
FCC Identifier QIPPHS8-US Industry Canada Certification Number: 7830A-PHS8US Granted to Cinterion Wireless Modules GmbH Manufacturers of mobile or fixed devices incorporating PHS8-US modules are authorized to use the FCC Grants and Industry Canada Certificates of the PHS8-US modules for their own final products according to the conditions referenced in these documents. In this case, the FCC label of the module shall be visible from the outside, or the host device shall bear a second label stating "Contains FCC ID QIPPHS8-US", and accordingly Contains IC 7830A-PHS8US. The integration is limited to fixed or mobile categorised host devices, where a separation distance between the antenna and any person of min. 20cm can be assured during normal operating conditions. For mobile and fixed operation configurations the antenna gain, including cable loss, must not exceed the limits that are stated on the FCC Grant. IMPORTANT:
Manufacturers of portable applications incorporating PHS8-US modules are required to have their final product certified and apply for their own FCC Grant and Industry Canada Certificate related to the specific portable mobile. This is mandatory to meet the SAR requirements for por-
table mobiles. Changes or modifications not expressly approved by the party responsible for compliance could void the user's authority to operate the equipment. Note: This equipment has been tested and found to comply with the limits for a Class B digital device, pursuant to part 15 of the FCC Rules. These limits are designed to provide reasonable protection against harmful interference in a residential installation. This equipment generates, uses and can radiate radio frequency energy and, if not installed and used in accordance with the instructions, may cause harmful interference to radio communications. However, there is no guarantee that interference will not occur in a particular installation. If this equipment does cause harmful interference to radio or television reception, which can be determined by turning the equipment off and on, the user is encouraged to try to correct the interference by one or more of the following measures:
Reorient or relocate the receiving antenna. Connect the equipment into an outlet on a circuit different from that to which the receiver Increase the separation between the equipment and receiver. is connected. Consult the dealer or an experienced radio/TV technician for help. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 38 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 9 Appendix 40 9 Appendix List of Parts and Accessories 9.1 Table 10: List of parts and accessories Description PHS8-US Supplier Cinterion DSB75 Support Box DSB75 adapter for mounting the PHS8-US evaluation module Votronic Handset Cinterion Cinterion VOTRONIC Ordering information Standard module Cinterion Wireless Modules IMEI:
Ordering number: L30960-N2400-A100 Customer IMEI:
Ordering number: L30960-N2405-A100 Ordering number: L36880-N8811-A100 Ordering number: L30960-N1802-A100 Votronic HH-SI-30.3/V1.1/0 VOTRONIC Entwicklungs- und Produktionsgesellschaft fr elek-
tronische Gerte mbH Saarbrcker Str. 8 66386 St. Ingbert Germany Phone: +49-(0)6 89 4 / 92 55-0 Fax: +49-(0)6 89 4 / 92 55-88 Email: contact@votronic.com Ordering numbers: 91228 91236 Molex SIM card holder incl. push button ejector and slide-in tray Board-to-board connector U.FL antenna connector Sales contacts are listed in Table 11. Sales contacts are listed in Table 11. Molex Hirose or Molex Sales contacts are listed in Table 11 and Table 12. PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 39 of 40 2012-01-06 PHS8-US Hardware Interface Overview 9.1 List of Parts and Accessories 40 Table 11: Molex sales contacts (subject to change) Molex For further information please click:
http://www.molex.com Molex China Distributors Beijing, Room 1311, Tower B, COFCO Plaza No. 8, Jian Guo Men Nei Street, 100005 Beijing P.R. China Phone: +86-10-6526-9628 Fax: +86-10-6526-9730 American Headquarters Lisle, Illinois 60532 U.S.A. Phone: +1-800-78MOLEX Fax: +1-630-969-1352 Molex Japan Co. Ltd. 1-5-4 Fukami-Higashi, Yamato-City, Kanagawa, 242-8585 Japan Molex Deutschland GmbH Otto-Hahn-Str. 1b 69190 Walldorf Germany Phone: +49-6227-3091-0 Fax: +49-6227-3091-8100 Email: mxgermany@molex.com Molex Singapore Pte. Ltd. 110, International Road Jurong Town, Singapore 629174 Phone: +65-6-268-6868 Fax: +65-6-265-6044 Phone: +81-46-265-2325 Fax: +81-46-265-2365 Table 12: Hirose sales contacts (subject to change) Hirose Ltd. For further information please click:
http://www.hirose.com Hirose Electric (U.S.A.) Inc 2688 Westhills Court Simi Valley, CA 93065 U.S.A. Phone: +1-805-522-7958 Fax: +1-805-522-3217 Hirose Electric Co., Ltd. 5-23, Osaki 5 Chome, Shinagawa-Ku Tokyo 141 Japan Hirose Electric Europe B.V. UK Branch:
First Floor, St. Andrews House, Caldecotte Lake Business Park, Milton Keynes MK7 8LE Great Britain Hirose Electric Europe B.V. German Branch:
Herzog-Carl-Strasse 4 73760 Ostfildern Germany Phone: +49-711-456002-1 Fax: +49-711-456002-299 Email: info@hirose.de Hirose Electric Europe B.V. Hogehillweg 8 1101 CC Amsterdam Z-O Netherlands Phone: +44-1908-369060 Fax: +44-1908-369078 Phone: +81-03-3491-9741 Fax: +81-03-3493-2933 Phone: +31-20-6557-460 Fax: +31-20-6557-469 PHS8-US_HIO_v01.000 Confidential / Released Page 40 of 40 2012-01-06
frequency | equipment class | purpose | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 2011-12-14 | 1852.4 ~ 1907.6 | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | Original Equipment |
2 | JBP - Part 15 Class B Computing Device Peripheral |
app s | Applicant Information | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 2 | Effective |
2011-12-14
|
||||
1 2 | Applicant's complete, legal business name |
Gemalto M2M GmbH
|
||||
1 2 | FCC Registration Number (FRN) |
0007412448
|
||||
1 2 | Physical Address |
Siemensdamm 50
|
||||
1 2 |
Berlin, N/A 13629
|
|||||
1 2 |
Germany
|
|||||
app s | TCB Information | |||||
1 2 | TCB Application Email Address |
B******@phoenix-testlab.de
|
||||
1 2 | TCB Scope |
B1: Commercial mobile radio services equipment in the following 47 CFR Parts 20, 22 (cellular), 24,25 (below 3 GHz) & 27
|
||||
1 2 |
A1: Low Power Transmitters below 1 GHz (except Spread Spectrum), Unintentional Radiators, EAS (Part 11) & Consumer ISM devices
|
|||||
app s | FCC ID | |||||
1 2 | Grantee Code |
QIP
|
||||
1 2 | Equipment Product Code |
PHS8-US
|
||||
app s | Person at the applicant's address to receive grant or for contact | |||||
1 2 | Name |
A**** H****
|
||||
1 2 | Title |
Manager Certifications
|
||||
1 2 | Telephone Number |
00493********
|
||||
1 2 | Fax Number |
00493********
|
||||
1 2 |
a******@gemalto.com
|
|||||
app s | Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Non Technical Contact | |||||
n/a | ||||||
app s | Confidentiality (long or short term) | |||||
1 2 | Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | Yes | ||||
1 2 | Long-Term Confidentiality Does this application include a request for confidentiality for any portion(s) of the data contained in this application pursuant to 47 CFR § 0.459 of the Commission Rules?: | Yes | ||||
1 2 | If so, specify the short-term confidentiality release date (MM/DD/YYYY format) | 01/31/2012 | ||||
if no date is supplied, the release date will be set to 45 calendar days past the date of grant. | ||||||
app s | Cognitive Radio & Software Defined Radio, Class, etc | |||||
1 2 | Is this application for software defined/cognitive radio authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 | Equipment Class | PCB - PCS Licensed Transmitter | ||||
1 2 | JBP - Part 15 Class B Computing Device Peripheral | |||||
1 2 | Description of product as it is marketed: (NOTE: This text will appear below the equipment class on the grant) | GSM/GPRS/UMTS/HSPA Module | ||||
1 2 | Related OET KnowledgeDataBase Inquiry: Is there a KDB inquiry associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 | Modular Equipment Type | Single Modular Approval | ||||
1 2 | Purpose / Application is for | Original Equipment | ||||
1 2 | Composite Equipment: Is the equipment in this application a composite device subject to an additional equipment authorization? | Yes | ||||
1 2 | Related Equipment: Is the equipment in this application part of a system that operates with, or is marketed with, another device that requires an equipment authorization? | No | ||||
1 2 | Grant Comments | Output power listed is peak conducted. This device contains functions that are not operational in U.S Territories. This filing is only applicable for US operations. This OEM module is approved for use in products operating as fixed or portable transmitting device. The antenna(s) used for this transmitter must be installed to provide a separation distance of at least 20 cm from all persons and must not be co-located or operating in conjunction with any other antenna or transmitter. A separate approval is required for portable operating configurations, as defined in 2.1093 of the rules. The final product operating with this transmitter must include operating instructions and applicable warnings for endusers and installers to satisfy RF exposure compliance requirements. Antenna gain must meet RF exposure and max radiated output power limits of the applicable rule section. This Grant is valid only when the device is sold to OEM integrators and the OEM integrators are instructed to ensure that the end user has no manual instructions to remove or install the device. The max. antenna gain for this device as reported to the FCC is: 3.92 dBi (850MHz) and 2.5 dBi (1900MHz). | ||||
1 2 | Is there an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application? | No | ||||
1 2 | If there is an equipment authorization waiver associated with this application, has the associated waiver been approved and all information uploaded? | No | ||||
app s | Test Firm Name and Contact Information | |||||
1 2 | Firm Name |
7layers AG
|
||||
1 2 | Name |
R******** M********
|
||||
1 2 | Telephone Number |
49-21********
|
||||
1 2 | Fax Number |
49-21********
|
||||
1 2 |
r******@7layers.de
|
|||||
Equipment Specifications | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 1 | 22H | 824.2 | 848.8 | 2.399 | 2.5 ppm | 249KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 2 | 22H | 824.2 | 848.8 | 1.072 | 2.5 ppm | 235KG7W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 3 | 22H | 826.4 | 846.6 | 0.692 | 2.5 ppm | 4M17F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 4 | 24E | 1850.2 | 1909.8 | 1.122 | 2.5 ppm | 247KGXW | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 5 | 24E | 1850.2 | 1909.8 | 0.871 | 2.5 ppm | 241KG7W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1 | 6 | 24E | 1852.4 | 1907.6 | 0.676 | 2.5 ppm | 4M17F9W | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Line | Rule Parts | Grant Notes | Lower Frequency | Upper Frequency | Power Output | Tolerance | Emission Designator | Microprocessor Number | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
2 | 1 | 15B |
some individual PII (Personally Identifiable Information) available on the public forms may be redacted, original source may include additional details
This product uses the FCC Data API but is not endorsed or certified by the FCC