I have had an arduino Uno before and the max frequency of the pwm and digital channel have been default below 1kHz. Does the artemis board have pwm channels have higher rep rate frequencies?
The datasheet doesn’t present that figure readily (in a way I can comprehend!), but perhaps you may be able to decipher it more easily https://cdn.sparkfun.com/assets/6/3/9/3 … v0_9_1.pdf
Hope this helps!
The short answer is that yes, the PWM can go a lot faster.It depends on two things: how fast you clock the CTIMER that is generating the PWM, and how many total counts you want in a PWM period. For example, if you clock the CTIMER at 12 MHZ (as fast as it can go), and you set up the PWM to have a 10-bit count, then you will get a 10-bit PWM period of (12,000,000/2**10) or about 11.7 KHz.
Here is some sample code to configure a timer to generate 12-bit PWM on the CLKOUT7 GPIO at nearly 3 KHz:
// Configuring the output is done by specifying the pad number, not which CTn you want.
// This seems less intuitive than specifying a CTn, but that's how it goes.
// Since each CTn maps to a specific pad, there can be no pad confusion.
// We want to drive pad 7 (CLKOUT7) which corresponds to timer output CT19.
// CT19 can be generated via any of the following timer outputs: B4OUT2 A2OUT B4OUT B1OUT2 A6OUT2 A7OUT2
// We will use timer 2A (A2OUT from the list, above):
#define PWMTEST_PAD 7
#define PWMTEST_TIMER_NUM 2
#define PWMTEST_TIMER_SEG AM_HAL_CTIMER_TIMERA
// The PWM period for our 16-bit timer can be anything less than 65536.
// It does not have to be a power of two, either.
// For our test here, we will use a super-smooth 12-bit PWM using a 12 MHz clock
// which yields a PWM rate of 2929 Hz, or nearly 3 KHz.
#define PWM_PERIOD 4096
void test_PWM()
{
// Configure the timer to generate a repeating pulse on the chosen timer output (PWM mode)
am_hal_ctimer_config_single(PWMTEST_TIMER_NUM,
PWMTEST_TIMER_SEG,
AM_HAL_CTIMER_HFRC_12MHZ | AM_HAL_CTIMER_FN_PWM_REPEAT | AM_HAL_CTIMER_PIN_INVERT
);
am_hal_ctimer_output_config(PWMTEST_TIMER_NUM,
PWMTEST_TIMER_SEG,
PWMTEST_PAD,
AM_HAL_CTIMER_OUTPUT_NORMAL,
AM_HAL_GPIO_PIN_DRIVESTRENGTH_4MA
);
// This simple test will drive the PWM signal at 75% high (the first 25% is LOW, then HIGH for the remaining 75%)
am_hal_ctimer_period_set(
PWMTEST_TIMER_NUM, // Which timer to use
PWMTEST_TIMER_SEG, // Which part of the timer to use (A, B, or both)
(PWM_PERIOD)-1, // PWM period length minus 1 (in clocks)
(PWM_PERIOD)/4 // The output will be driven LOW for this many clocks, then HIGH for the remainder of the PWM period
);
// Start generating PWM:
am_hal_ctimer_start(PWMTEST_TIMER_NUM, PWMTEST_TIMER_SEG);
}
Here is a scope shot showing the PWM output from the test, above. The scope measures the period at 2.924 KHz with a 75% duty cycle, as expected.