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555 Timer IC
Colin Mitchell
Colin Mitchell
June 20, 2004
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Table Of Contents

01
THE 555 TIMER IC
02
THE FUNCTION OF EACH PIN
03
USING THE 555
04
THE 7555
05
USING THE 7555
06
555 Vs 7555
07
DRAWING 555 "BLOCKS"
08
THE 555 AS AN OSCILLATOR
09
HOW THE 555 OSCILLATES
10
THE ACTION OF PIN 4
11
THE 555 AS A MONOSTABLE
12
HOW THE 555 WORKS
13
NORMALLY CLOSED TRIGGER
14
ONE-SHOT USING A NEGATIVE-GOING TRIGGER
15
ONE-SHOT USING A POSITIVE-GOING TRIGGER
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CHIP PRICES

Contents:

  • Amplifier (555) - Page 3
  • Bicycle Light - Page 3
  • Dark Detector - Page 3
  • Driving high currents - Page 3
  • 555 timer IC - Page 1
  • Inside the 555 chip - Page 1
  • Flashing Indicators - Page 3
  • Flip Flop - Page 3
  • Function of each pin - Page 1
  • Gating the Oscillator - Page 2 & 3
  • How the 555 oscillates - Page 1
  • IR Transmitter - Page 3
  • Knight Rider - Page 3
  • Light Detector - Page 3
  • Mark-Space ratio - Page 2
  • Negative Supply - Page 3
  • One-shot negative trigger - Page 1
  • One-shot positive trigger - Page 1 & 3
  • Police Siren - Page 3
  • Pulse Generator - Page 2
  • Schmitt Trigger - Page 3
  • Substituting a 555 - Page 2
  • Touch Switch - Page 3
  • Using the 555 - Page 1
  • 1.5v LED Flasher - Page 3
  • 555 Vs 7555 - Page 1
  • 555 as a monostable - Page 1
  • 555 as an oscillator - Page 1
  • 555 Calculator (oscillator) - Page2
  • 555 Oscillator - Page 2
  • 555 as a Delay - Page 3
  • 556 - Page 2
  • 7555 - Page 1

The 555 IC is one of the simplest and most rugged IC’s on the market. It has been used in thousands of applications and is extremely popular. This discussion will cover its numerous modes of operation and present a number of circuits for these applications.
However I must point out one thing.
The 555 is not suited for battery applications and it is not really suited for combining with some types of CMOS circuitry. The 555 is a very noisy chip and has a very nasty internal feature called “crow-bar effect” that can put a lot of noise on the power rails of a circuit.
Its operation as an oscillator can be done by other chips and we have provided some alternatives in the notes. The 555 has a number of derivatives that offer improvements (such as low-power, low voltage, high speed operation) and these will also be covered.
This is the first time a number of comparisons and alternatives have been provided in a discussion and this is needed for you to get a complete picture of its suitability for a particular project. There are cheaper and better chips to carry out identical operations to a 555 and we will leave it to you to decide.

THE 555 TIMER IC

The 555 is commonly called a TIMER IC. It is an 8-pin chip and has a number of different identifications: LM555CN from National and SE555/NE555 from Signetics are just two manufacturers. These numbers all refer to the most common and cheapest version, we will call the 555.
The 555 contains more than 28 transistors and it is basically a chip containing a number of building blocks that end up very similar to an oscillator without the TIMING COMPONENTS. It needs two or three external components to produce an oscillator capable of operating at a frequency from 1Hz to 500kHz. When it oscillates at a frequency less than 1Hz, the circuit is called a Timer or Delay. The chip also has a pin (pin 2) that prevents the chip from starting the Timing cycle until it is taken LOW. Another pin (pin 4) stops the chip from oscillating (or continuing with a delay-time) when it is taken LOW and a pin (pin 5) that can adjust the mark-space ratio of the waveform.
The diagrams below show the names of each pin and a simplified block diagram of the internal workings.

555
The 555

The 555


THE FUNCTION OF EACH PIN

Pin 1 Ground

The ground (or common) pin is connected to the 0v rail - commonly called the negative rail or EARTH rail.

Pin 2 Trigger

This pin connects to the lower comparator and is used to set the control flip flop. When it is taken LOW, it causes the output to go HIGH. This is the beginning of the timing sequence for a monostable operation. Triggering is accomplished by taking the pin below 1/3 of rail voltage - in digital terms, this is called a LOW. The action of the trigger input is level-sensitive, allowing slow rate-of-change waveforms, (as well as pulses), to be used as trigger sources. The trigger pulse must be of shorter duration than the time interval determined by external R and C. If this pin is held low for a longer period of time, the output will remain high until the trigger input is high again.
If the trigger input remains lower than 1/3 rail voltage for longer than the timing cycle, the timer will re-trigger upon termination of the first output pulse. When the timer is used in monostable mode with trigger pulses longer than the output pulse, the trigger duration must be shortened by external circuitry.
The minimum pulse-width for reliable triggering is about 10uS.
If this pin is kept LOW, the output remains HIGH and a high on pin 6 (Threshold) will not force the output LOW. In other words the trigger pin is the dominant pin.

Pin 3 Output

The output of the 555 comes from a high-current totem-pole stage. This provides both sinking and sourcing current. The high-state output voltage is about 1.7 volts less than the supply.
At 15 volt supply, the chip can sink 200mA with an output-low voltage level of 2 volts. High-state level is 13.3 volts. Both rise and fall times of the output waveform are quite fast, typical switching being 100nS.
To make the output HIGH, the TRIGGER PIN (pin 2) is momentarily taken from a HIGH to a LOW. This causes the output to go HIGH. This is the only way the output can be made to go high.
The output can be returned to a LOW by making the THRESHOLD PIN (Pin 6) go from a LOW to a HIGH.
The output can also be made to go LOW by taking the RESET PIN to a LOW state.

Pin 4 Reset

This pin is used to make the OUTPUT PIN (Pin 3) LOW. The reset pin must go below 0.7 volt and it needs 0.1mA to reset the chip.
The RESET PIN is an overriding function. It will force the OUTPUT PIN to go LOW regardless of the state of the TRIGGER PIN (Pin 2). It can be used to terminate an output pulse prematurely, to gate oscillations from “on” to “off.” The pin is active when a voltage level between 0v and 0.4 volt is applied to it. When not used, it is recommended that the RESET PIN be tied to the positive rail to avoid the possibility of false resetting.

Pin 5 Control Voltage

This pin allows direct access to the 2/3 voltage-divider point. This is the reference level for the upper comparator.
When the 555 timer is used in a voltage-controlled mode, the voltage-controlled operation ranges from about 1 volt below rail-voltage to 2 volts above ground (0v). Voltages can be safely applied outside these limits, but they should be confined to between 0v and rail voltage.
By applying a voltage to this pin, it is possible to vary the timing of the chip independently of the RC network. The control voltage may be varied from 45 to 90% of the Vcc in the monostable mode, making it possible to control the width of the output pulse independently of RC. When used in the astable mode, the control voltage can be varied from 1.7v to the full Vcc. Varying the voltage in the astable mode will produce a frequency modulated (FM) output.
If the control-voltage pin is not used, it should be bypassed to ground, with a 10n capacitor to prevent noise entering the chip.

Pin 6 Threshold

Pin 6 is one input to the upper comparator (the other is pin 5). It makes the OUTPUT PIN go LOW.
To make the output go LOW, the Threshold pin is taken from a LOW to a level above 2/3 of rail voltage. This pin is level-sensitive, allowing slow rate-of-change waveforms to be detected.
A dc current, termed the threshold current, must also flow into this pin from the external circuit. This current is typically 0.1°A, and will determine the upper limit of total resistance allowable from pin 6 to rail. For 5v operation the resistance is 16M. For 15v operation, the maximum resistance is 20M.

Pin 7 Discharge

This pin is connected to the open collector of an NPN transistor. The emitter goes to ground. When the transistor is turned “on,’” pin 7 is effectively shorted to ground. The timing capacitor is connected between pin 7 and ground and is discharged when the transistor turns “on”. The conduction state of this transistor is identical in timing to that of the output stage. It is “on” (low resistance to ground) when the output is LOW and “off” (high resistance to ground) when the output is HIGH.
Maximum collector current is internally limited by design, so that any size capacitor can be used without damage to the chip. In certain applications, this open collector output can be used as an auxiliary output terminal, with current-sinking capability similar to the OUTPUT (pin 3).

Pin 8 Rail

This pin (also referred to as Vcc) is the positive supply voltage pin for the 555. Supply-voltage operating range is +4.5 volts to +16 volts. The chip will operate over this voltage range without change in timing period. The only change is the output drive capability, which increases in current as the supply voltage is increased.

USING THE 555

A 555 can be wired:

  1. As a TIMER (monostable operation - also called a DELAY),
  2. As an OSCILLATOR (also called a MULTIVIBRATOR - or astable operation)
  3. As a ONE-SHOT (also called monostable operation).
    The 555 IC is an extremely popular IC. It is simple to use and very rugged.
    It comes in a single, dual or quad package with part numbers such as LM555, NE555, LM556, NE556. It is ideal for astable (free-running) oscillators as well as the one-shot monostable mode.
    The 555 can be triggered and reset on falling waveforms and the output can source or sink up to 200mA. The HIGH output is about 1.7v less than supply. The NE555 operates 3v - 16v DC.
    Maximum operating frequency is 500kHz.

THE 7555

7555 is a CMOS version of the 555. It is exactly the same as the 555 but consumes less power. The 555 consumes 10mA, while the 7555 consumes 80uA (1/120th). The CMOS version comes with different identifications according to the manufacturer.

LMC555 or LM555CN is made by National Semiconductors, TLC555 is made by Texas Instruments, ICM7555 is supplied by Philips, ZSCT1555 comes from Zetex and **ICM7555

is made by Maxim. The main feature to note is the inclusion of the number “7” or the letter “C” to identify the CMOS version.
They use less power than the older (555, NE555, LM555) versions and don’t require a capacitor on the control pin. Although pin and functionally compatible, the component values differ between the low-power CMOS and older versions.
The Exar XR-L555 timer is a micro-power version of the standard 555 offering a direct, pin-for-pin substitute with the advantage of lower power operation. It is capable of operation from 2.7v to 18v. At 5v, the L555 will consume about 900 microwatts, making it ideally suitable for battery operated circuits. The internal schematic of the L555 is similar to the standard 555 but with current-spiking filtering, lower output drive capability, higher nodal impedances, and better noise reduction system.

USING THE 7555

The ICM7555 is a CMOS timer providing significantly improved performance over the standard NE/SE555 timer, while at the same time being a direct replacement in most applications.
Improved parameters include low supply current, wide operating supply voltage range, low THRESHOLD, TRIGGER, and RESET currents, no crow-barring of the supply current during output transitions, higher frequency performance and no requirement to decouple CONTROL VOLTAGE for stable operation.
The ICM7555 is a stable controller capable of producing accurate time delays or frequencies.
In the one-shot mode, the pulse width of each duration is precisely controlled by one external resistor and capacitor.
For astable operation as an oscillator, the free-running frequency and the duty cycle are both accurately controlled by two external resistors and one capacitor. Unlike the bipolar 555 device, the CONTROL VOLTAGE pin does not have to be decoupled with a capacitor.
The output can source or sink currents large enough to drive TTL loads or provide minimal offsets to drive CMOS loads. Maximum output current 50 - 80mA.

  • Exact equivalent in most applications for NE/SE555
  • Low supply current: 80°A (typical)
  • Extremely low trigger, threshold, and reset currents: 20pA (typical)
  • High-speed operation: 500kHz guaranteed
  • Wide operating supply voltage: 3v to 16v
  • Normal reset function. No crow-barring of supply during output transition
  • Can be used with higher-impedance timing elements than the bipolar 555 for longer time constants
  • Timing from microseconds to hours
  • Operates in both astable and monostable modes
  • Adjustable duty cycle
  • Output source/sink driver can drive TTL/CMOS. Maximum output current 50 - 80mA.
  • Typical temperature stability of 0.005%/°C at 25°C
  • Rail-to-rail outputs

An improvement on the CMOS 7555 is the ZSCT1555 from Zetex. It is guaranteed to work down to to 0.9 volts with bipolar technology. It has been designed for portable applications, by offering single battery cell operation. (See end of P3 for a technician’s difficulty with getting this chip to oscillate.)
It provides the same precision timing capabilities as its predecessors, (the 555 and 7555) it has the same 8 legged pin-out. With the simple adjustment of external passive components to set the frequency, the device’s function is just the same, whether it be generating accurate time delays or oscillations.
Assuming a 5v supply, a typical CMOS part draws 170uA while the new timer pulls 140uA, and at 1.5v just 75uA.

555 Vs 7555

The choice between the standard 555 and CMOS version (7555) or ZSCT1555 will depend on cost, availability, load current required and frequency of operation. It will mainly come down to battery or mains operation for the project.
Normally, when we change from a TTL chip to a CMOS chip, the component values change by a factor of 10x or 100x. This is because the TTL chips are very low impedance and CMOS is very high impedance.
But if a 555 is substituted for a CMOS version, the timing components remain the SAME!
This is very convenient. Chips can be substituted without having to alter the surrounding circuitry. The only change will be the current consumption of the chip. In general, the consumption will reduce from about 10mA to approx 0.5mA. (A LED Voltmeter circuit made the following circuit-current comparison: using 555 = 7mA, using 7555 = 0.35mA). This is typical of the current-saving of a CMOS version.
This article covers most types and provides a number of comparisons and substitutions.
A typical 7555 circuit is shown below:

Note the need for the driver transistor in the circuit above, as the 7555 has an output capability of about 50mA.

DRAWING 555 “BLOCKS”

One of the most important points when drawing a 555 “block” is maintaining a standard layout. Diagrammatic blocks on a circuit diagram are not supposed to show the pins in the same order as the legs on a chip. The wiring to the chip should be placed in positions to represent their function. The power is placed at the top, ground at he bottom, input at the left and output at the right. The other lines are also placed in appropriate positions.
The layout should be positioned to aid in the interpretation of a diagram. The end result should be to provide the maximum information and make it easy to interpret the symbol.
Many of the 555 circuit diagrams place the lines to the 555 block so you have to interpret every diagram individually. This makes reading a circuit diagram very slow.

The first thing you need to know is the function of each pin. See the animation below:

The 555 can be used for a number of applications.
It can be wired as an OSCILLATOR or a MONOSTABLE or DELAY and many different circuits can be produced with these modes of operation.

THE 555 AS AN OSCILLATOR

The 555 can be wired as an OSCILLATOR. It needs 2 external components - a resistor R and a capacitor C. These are called TIMING COMPONENTS. The diagram below shows these two components:

The capacitor charges via R and when it reaches 2/3 of rail voltage, pin 7 shorts the capacitor to ground. This means the capacitor charges slowly but discharges very quickly. An improved layout is shown below:

The capacitor charges via R (plus the top resistor) and discharges via R (only). If the top resistor is small compared with R, we can neglect it, so that C charges via R and discharges via R at about the same rate.
The top resistor simply separates pin 7 from the positive rail as pin 7 shorts to ground to discharge the capacitor during part of the cycle.

HOW THE 555 OSCILLATES

The capacitor charges via the timing resistor R and when the voltage across it reaches 2/3 of the supply voltage, the output of the 555 goes LOW. The timing resistor is taken to the 0v rail via pin 7 and the capacitor discharges. When the voltage across the capacitor reaches 1/3 of rail voltage the output of the 555 goes HIGH. The **timing resistor is taken to the positive rail via the top resistor (pin7 effectively comes out of circuit) and the cycle repeats. Don’t worry about pins 4 or 5 at the moment.
The animation below shows how the 555 oscillates:

These are the three points to note:

  1. Pin 2 detect the low voltage on the capacitor, and makes pin 7 and the output go HIGH
  2. Pin 6 detects the high voltage on the capacitor and makes pin 7 and the output go LOW
  3. Pin 7 is “in-phase” with the output. (both are low at the same time)

An improved oscillator is shown in the diagram below. It uses only one resistor to charge and discharge the capacitor and the circuit does not have the wasteful top resistor. The circuit draws less current than the circuit above but the only difference is the frequency of operation will be lower for the same value of components because the voltage delivered by the output line is 1.7v less than the supply rail. The output can deliver up to 200mA but if it is delivering a high current, the output voltage may be reduced and this will affect the frequency of operation. If a reliable frequency is needed, this is not the circuit to choose.

THE ACTION OF PIN 4

Pin 4 is called the RESET PIN. It is called an ACTIVE LOW pin. When pin 4 is HIGH, the chip operates normally. When pin 4 is taken LOW, the output of the chip is INHIBITED - it remains LOW. Pin 7 is also taken low and the chip is prevented from oscillating.
Mouseover the following animation to see the action of pin 4:

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Mouse-over to INHIBIT the 555

THE 555 AS A MONOSTABLE

The 555 can be wired as a monostable. A monostable has one stable state and that is the OFF state. The unstable state is called the ON or HIGH state.
When it is triggered by an input pulse, the monostable switches to its temporary or ON state. It remains in that state for a period of time determined by an RC network and returns to its stable state. In other words, the monostable circuit generates a single pulse of a fixed time duration each time it receives and input trigger pulse.
The monostable circuit can also be called a ONE-SHOT due to the single-pulse it creates. This type of circuit can be used for activating an external device for a specific length of time. They can also be used to generate delays.
Another use for this type of circuit is to take the brief pulse of a push-button and activate a device. This is called a PULSE-EXTENDER.
It can also be used to clean-up the noisy output of a push-button and this is called SWITCH DEBOUNCING.
The diagram below shows a push-button connected to a 555. When the button is pressed, the relay operates for 5 seconds. The button must be released before the time-interval has expired otherwise the time is extended. This is the only limitation of this circuit.

The next circuit is an improved design. The switch can be pressed for any length of time and the circuit will only produce a 5 second output. The circuit is prevented from re-triggering by the addition of a 470k and 100n capacitor. When the switch is pressed, the uncharged capacitor takes pin 2 low and triggers the circuit. If the button is kept pressed the 100n charges and takes pin 2 high. The potential across the voltage divider formed by the 47k and 470k resistors is insufficient to re-trigger the monostable. The circuit “times-out” and the output goes low. When the button is released, the 100n discharges through the 470k and is ready for the next press.

A monostable (one-shot) can be connected to an astable (free-running oscillator) so that it gates (or inhibits) the oscillator to produce an output tone for a short duration. The circuit below can be used for an application such as doorbell. It is not suitable for battery operation as the 555 IC’s are connected to the supply and draw current at all times.


This circuit can be used for a doorbell.

Pin 2 of the first 555 is HIGH and thus it is “non-operational” as it detects a LOW. Pin 6 is detecting a HIGH and thus the output of the IC is LOW. The output of the first 555 goes to the INHIBIT pin of the second 555. When pin 4 is LOW, the output of the chip is kept LOW.

HOW THE 555 WORKS

Here’s a circuit to help you understand how the 555 works.

In the circuit above, the trigger input is HIGH and a 22u and 2k2 are connected to the chip.
When the power is connected, the trigger input will be high and the threshold line will be low. The internal circuitry of the chip will cause it to produce a HIGH and the Discharge pin will be effectively not connected.
The 22u will charge via the 2k2 and when pin 6 (threshold) sees 2/3 rail voltage, the output goes LOW and the discharge pin goes LOW and discharges the 22u.
This is how the chip sits.
If the trigger input goes low for a short period of time, the output pin goes HIGH and the discharge pin goes high and the22u charges. When the threshold pin sees 2/3 rail voltage the output pin goes LOW and the chip remains in this state.
If the trigger line remains LOW, the output pin remains HIGH as the trigger pin controls the state of the output. The 22u will be fully charged and the chip will change state immediately the trigger line goes high.

NORMALLY CLOSED TRIGGER

Here is a circuit that uses the features we have just discussed:


Normally-closed trigger

Here is the circuit rearranged so that the function of the pins are obvious. A circuit diagram does not follow the pin-out of the chip, (that’s the function of a wiring diagram). A circuit diagram conforms to the functions of the chip.


ONE-SHOT USING A NORMALLY-CLOSED SWITCH

In the circuit above, the trigger input (pin 2) is HIGH and a 22u and 100k are connected to the threshold pin (pin 6) of the chip.
When the power is connected, the trigger input will be high and the threshold line will be low. The internal circuitry of the chip will cause it to produce a HIGH and the Discharge pin will be effectively not connected.
The 22u will charge via the 100k and when pin 6 (threshold) sees 2/3 rail voltage, the output goes LOW and the discharge pin goes LOW and discharges the 22u.
This is how the chip sits - with the 22u discharged.
If the n.c. switch opens, the trigger input goes low. The output pin goes HIGH, the discharge pin goes high (it actually goes to a condition of high-impedance - or more accurately it goes to a state where it disconnects from the 100k and 22u) and the 22u charges via the 100k. When the threshold pin sees 2/3 rail voltage the output pin goes LOW and the chip remains in this state.
If the trigger line remains LOW, the output pin remains HIGH as the trigger pin controls the state of the output. This is most important to remember. But in our case the trigger line is connected via a 1u capacitor and it does not remain low. It has a short low period as determined by the timing of the 10k, 1u and 100k and ideally this low period is shorter than the timing on pin 6.

If the switch is kept open, the 1u will charge and it will take a short period of time for pin 2 to see a voltage 2/3 of rail voltage. Providing this time is shorter than the time-delay created by the 22u and 100k (it is), the timing will depend on the 22u and 100k, otherwise the 10k, 1u and 100k will create the time-delay.
To explain the trigger-line again:
When the switch is opened, the 1u will have no voltage across it (as it is discharged by the 100k when the switch is closed) and the 100k and 10k will form a voltage divider of approx 10:1 so that pin 2 will see a voltage less than 1v. This will start the time-delay of the chip and the 1u will charge via the 10k and 100k so that the voltage on pin 2 will rise at a rate allowed by these resistors. This means pin 2 (which is the CONTROLLER of the chip!!) will be at its high value VERY QUICKLY and will no longer control the chip. The chip will now be looking for a HIGH on the threshold line to perform the next part of the sequence.

If we keep pin 2 LOW for an extended period of time, the output will immediately go HIGH. Pin 7 will immediately go open (it was previously LOW and drawing current through the resistor connected between pin 7 and rail) and the cap will charge. When pin 6 sees 2/3Vcc it will try to make the output go LOW but pin 2 will keep it HIGH.
If pin 2 is taken HIGH, the output will go LOW immediately.

ONE-SHOT USING A NEGATIVE-GOING TRIGGER


ONE-SHOT USING A NEGATIVE-GOING TRIGGER

The circuit above shows the 555 with a discharged 22u. The discharge pin will be connected to 0v and the output will be LOW. When the negative-going trigger pulse is detected by pin 2, the discharge pin (pin7) “opens” and the 22u is charged via the 100k. At the same time pin 3 goes HIGH. The threshold pin (pin 6) detects when the voltage on the 22u is 2/3Vcc and makes the output pin 3 LOW. The trigger pulse must be shorter than the delay-time for this sequence to work.

ONE-SHOT USING A POSITIVE-GOING TRIGGER


ONE-SHOT USING A POSITIVE-GOING TRIGGER

If a positive-going trigger pulse is available, the above circuit can be used.

Page 2



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Colin Mitchell

Colin Mitchell

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