The GL3523-OTY30 supports USB 3.1 Gen 1 operation (up to 5 Gbps) and integrates a 4-port hub controller with low-power modes — key metrics designers check first when choosing a hub IC. This article walks through the datasheet with a practical, data-first focus: the specs engineers need, the complete pinout grouping, electrical limits, and board-design guidance for reliable bring-up.
Readers will get an actionable checklist for power sizing, signal-integrity checkpoints for SuperSpeed pairs, recommended layout do’s and don’ts, and a concise troubleshooting and validation plan. Wherever numeric limits or timing matter, the article points to the datasheet tables and figures designers should verify before layout.
Functionally, the device is a 4-downstream-port USB hub controller compatible with USB 3.1 Gen 1 (SuperSpeed, 5 Gbps) and legacy USB 2.0 host/device signaling. It is supplied in a compact QFN package optimized for desktop hubs, docking stations, and embedded hub applications. Designers should quote the device’s stated max link rate, port count, and package identifier directly from the datasheet when documenting requirements for PCB vendors and assembly.
| Parameter | Key Metrics & Guidance |
|---|---|
| USB Speed | SuperSpeed 5 Gbps (USB 3.1 Gen 1) |
| Port Count | 4 Downstream Ports |
| Voltage Rails | Check VDD_IO, Internal Core/LDO descriptions |
| Power Profile | Typical and Standby currents; VBUS sourcing limits |
| Thermal/Pkg | QFN-76; Operating temperature range |
Highlight the numbers that affect power-rail choices and thermal design and cross-check table and figure numbers in the datasheet when quoting values.
Group the pins by function: power pins (VCC/VDD_IO, VDD_CORE if exposed), ground returns including exposed pad, SuperSpeed PHY differential pairs for upstream and downstream, USB 2.0 D+/D- lines, reset and interrupt pins, GPIO/config pins, and VBUS sense or switch-control pins. Call out critical nets explicitly (VBUS, VDD_CORE, VDD_IO, GND and each PHY pair) and prepare a pin list mapping pin number → name → short function to include in board documentation and the BOM.
Pay attention to package dimensions and the exposed pad (EP) recommendations. The datasheet’s mechanical drawing and land-pattern recommendation are authoritative: follow the recommended exposed-pad solder mask opening, stencil aperture guidance and thermal-via placement. Common PCB pitfalls are too few thermal vias under the EP, incorrect pad sizing, or a missing solder mask between high-speed pins and the EP; these cause poor solder fillets and thermal relief issues during reflow.
Key power items are supply voltage ranges for I/O rails, any listed internal LDO behavior or required sequencing, and active versus standby current figures. Verify recommended decoupling capacitor values and placement in the datasheet’s electrical tables. Use the datasheet’s VBUS sourcing/sinking limits when sizing fuses and power switches, and follow any sequencing or derating rules to avoid latch-up or overcurrent during connect events.
For SuperSpeed pairs, confirm I/O voltage levels and termination requirements in the datasheet and follow recommended trace impedance (typically 90 Ω differential) and length-matching guidelines. Observe listed rise/fall times and SS timing constraints. Checklist items for SI: differential-pair controlled impedance, pair-to-pair skew within spec, short stub minimization, and avoiding crossing splits in ground planes under SS routing.
The datasheet reference schematic exposes the required passive network: decoupling capacitors per supply rail, suggested VBUS decoupling and bulk capacitance, ESD diodes on USB lines, and any clock source or crystal options if applicable. During bring-up, verify the presence and values of recommended passives and protection components; the schematic highlights the nodes to measure first, such as VDD_IO, VBUS sense, and upstream PHY pair shields.
First-power-up sequence: visual inspection, continuity test of ground and power nets, apply power and measure rails against datasheet tolerances, assert reset and observe device ID/VID if available, then verify USB enumeration on a host. Recommended instruments: DMM for DC rails, oscilloscope for SS eye/timing checks, and protocol analyzer for enumeration traces. Define pass/fail based on datasheet electrical limits and link training status.
Verify power rails (names and voltage ranges), the exposed pad connection and its thermal via recommendation, upstream and downstream PHY pair assignments, and any VBUS sense or switch-control pins. Prepare a definitive pin-number → function table from the datasheet and cross-check it with the PCB vendor’s footprint before finalizing the layout.
Start with the datasheet’s active and standby current figures and add margin for inrush and downstream device attach scenarios. Choose regulators and USB power switches rated above peak expected current, add appropriate decoupling per datasheet guidance, and include fusing or current-limiting that accommodates USB attach inrush while protecting the board.
Ensure differential pair controlled impedance and length matching, minimize stubs, keep pair-to-pair spacing consistent, maintain uninterrupted return planes beneath SS traces, and place ESD/protection components close to connectors. Validate with an oscilloscope and eye-diagram measurements during bring-up to confirm compliance.