• Join
  • Sign In with my.TI Login
Texas Instruments
  • Products
  • Applications
  • Tools & Software
  • Support & Community
  • Sample & Buy
  • About TI
Sample & Purchase Cart Sample & Purchase Cart
  • Search
  • Advanced
TI E2E™ Community
  • Support Forums
  • Blogs
  • Groups
  • Videos
  • 简体中文
  • More ...
TI Home » TI E2E Community » Support Forums » Low Power RF & Wireless Connectivity » Low Power RF ZigBee® Software & IEEE 802.15.4 Forum » how to made the enddevice get into sleep mode?
Share
Low Power RF & Wireless Connectivity
  • Forums
  • Announcements
  • Files
  • E2E Wiki
Options
  • Subscribe via RSS

Forums

how to made the enddevice get into sleep mode?

This question has suggested answer(s)
xiaoqiang wang
Posted by xiaoqiang wang
on Apr 21 2012 07:45 AM
Intellectual525 points

hi,

i saw some materials say that we can get the enddevice to the sleep mode to achieve the low-cost.

however, when i enable the POWER_SAVING options,i make the enddevice to send data to the coordinator every 5 seconds,and i detect the current consumption during the period,i found the current  consumption is 3,6mA, and i want to know does the enddevice really goes into the sleep mode?

i found the led blink quickly,does anyone give me some help to make the enddevice to work in the sleep mode?

thanks

zigbee ZigBee 2007 z_stack Z-Stack 2.3.0 CC2530 СС2530
Report Abuse
  • Reply
You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
All Replies
  • YiKai Chen
    Posted by YiKai Chen
    on Apr 22 2012 21:07 PM
    Guru11670 points

    Hi Xiaoquiang,

    If you end device is not under sleep mode, the power consumption will be more than 3.6 mA. I think you need to check all your IO pin to see if there is any leaking current.

    Regards!

    YK Chen

    Report Abuse
    • Reply
    You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
  • YiKai Chen
    Posted by YiKai Chen
    on Apr 22 2012 21:12 PM
    Guru11670 points

    Hi Xiaoquiang,

    If your end device is not under sleep mode, the current consumption will be more than 3.6 mA. I suggest you to check all your IO PINs to see if any one is leaking current.

    Regards!

    YK Chen

    Report Abuse
    • Reply
    You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
  • Salvatore Zagarella
    Posted by Salvatore Zagarella
    on Apr 23 2012 08:11 AM
    Intellectual425 points

    I have the same problem..

    I set the POWER_SAVING compila option, set thevarialbles

    uint16 zgPollRate = 0;
    uint16 zgQueuedPollRate = 0;
    uint16 zgResponsePollRate = 0;

    but the behavior of the device is very strange: if I don't click the button S1, the variable halPwrMgtMode is set to 0x03 and it's correct. When I click the button, halPwrMgtMode is set to 0xFF and is outOfRange...

    What can I do to obtaing a real sleepMode function?

    Thanks in advise

     

    Report Abuse
    • Reply
    You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
  • Dirty Harry
    Posted by Dirty Harry
    on Apr 23 2012 11:19 AM
    Suggested Answer
    Mastermind19350 points

    You cannot stop the debugger when the part is in PM3 or all memory shows up as 0xFF

    Report Abuse
    • Reply
    You have posted to a forum that requires a moderator to approve posts before they are publicly available.
TI E2E™ Community
  • Support Forums
  • Blogs
  • Videos
  • Groups
  • Site Support & Feedback
  • Settings
TI E2E™ Community Groups
  • TI University Program
  • Make the Switch
  • Microcontroller Projects
  • Motor Drive & Control
Other Communities
  • Deyisupport
  • Designsomething.org
  • beagleboard.org
  • TI on Element 14
  • TI on TechXchangeSM
Other Technical & Support Resources
  • WEBENCH® Design Center
  • Product Information Centers
  • Technical Documents
  • TI Design Network
  • TI Technical Articles
  • TI Training

All content and materials on this site are provided "as is". TI and its respective suppliers and providers of content make no representations about the suitability of these materials for any purpose and disclaim all warranties and conditions with regard to these materials, including but not limited to all implied warranties and conditions of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, title and non-infringement of any third party intellectual property right. TI and its respective suppliers and providers of content make no representations about the suitability of these materials for any purpose and disclaim all warranties and conditions with respect to these materials. No license, either express or implied, by estoppel or otherwise, is granted by TI. Use of the information on this site may require a license from a third party, or a license from TI.

Content on this site may contain or be subject to specific guidelines or limitations on use. All postings and use of the content on this site are subject to the Terms of Use of the site; third parties using this content agree to abide by any limitations or guidelines and to comply with the Terms of Use of this site. TI, its suppliers and providers of content reserve the right to make corrections, deletions, modifications, enhancements, improvements and other changes to the content and materials, its products, programs and services at any time or to move or discontinue any content, products, programs, or services without notice.

Follow Us Texas Instruments on Facebook Texas Instruments on Twitter Texas Instruments on LinkedIn Texas Instruments on Google+
TI Worldwide | Contact Us | my.TI Login | Site Map | Corporate Citizenship | mobile m.ti.com (Mobile Version)

TI is a global semiconductor design and manufacturing company. Innovate with 100,000+ analog ICs and
embedded processors, along with software, tools and the industry’s largest sales/support staff.

© Copyright 1995-2013 Texas Instruments Incorporated. All rights reserved.
Trademarks | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use