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Project Notes

#127 SleepMode

Test sleep mode with an ATtiny85 processor on a breadboard.

Here’s a quick video of the circuit in action:

SleepMode

Notes

This is a little test of sleep mode with an ATtiny85 microcontroller (8-pin DIP).

I’m using an Arduino Uno as an in-system programmer, using the technique described in the ProgrammingWithArduinoISP project.

Once the ATtiny is programmed, the Arduino Uno ISP is detached, and it will run independently. The ATtiny85 requires 1.8-5.5V to operate. I successfully tested with 3.3V and 5V supplies.

A push-button is attached to normally pull D2 high (pin 7 of the chip) and a hardware interrupt service routine activates on LOW signal. The interrupt acts as a “wake-up” call to the CPU.

The standard loop simply runs an LED sequence (for demo purposes) and then sends the processor to sleep.

The AVR library set_sleep_mode function and sleep_mode macro are use to put the processor to sleep.

Using SLEEP_MODE_PWR_DOWN .. apparently the most power-efficient, I measure power consumption falling to about 238µA at 3.3V when asleep. Not bad, but definitly not as low as you’d like for long periods of inactivity.

Lately I’ve been reading Sparkfun’s Adventures in Low Power Land, with some excellent coverage of how to get power consumption down to 1µA! The main extra change is to disable brownout detection, which requires a change to the chip fuses. A test for another day!

Construction

Breadboard

The Schematic

The Build

Credits and References

About LEAP#127 ArduinoAVR
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This page is a web-friendly rendering of my project notes shared in the LEAP GitHub repository.

LEAP is just my personal collection of projects. Two main themes have emerged in recent years, sometimes combined:

  • electronics - usually involving an Arduino or other microprocessor in one way or another. Some are full-blown projects, while many are trivial breadboard experiments, intended to learn and explore something interesting
  • scale modelling - I caught the bug after deciding to build a Harrier during covid to demonstrate an electronic jet engine simulation. Let the fun begin..
To be honest, I haven't quite figured out if these two interests belong in the same GitHub repo or not. But for now - they are all here!

Projects are often inspired by things found wild on the net, or ideas from the many great electronics and scale modelling podcasts and YouTube channels. Feel free to borrow liberally, and if you spot any issues do let me know (or send a PR!). See the individual projects for credits where due.