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The initial versions of the USB standard specified connectors that were easy to use and that would have high life spans; revisions of the standard added smaller connectors useful for compact portable devices. Higher-speed development of the USB standard gave rise to another family of connectors to permit additional data links. All versions of USB specify cable properties. Version 3.x cables, marketed as SuperSpeed, added a data link; namely, in 2008, USB 3.0 added a full-duplex lane, and in 2014, the USB-C specification added a second full-duplex lane.

Connectors
Unlike other data buses (such as Ethernet), USB connections are directed; a host device has downstream-facing ports (DFP) that connect to the upstream-facing port (UFP) of hubs or peripheral devices. USB implements a tiered star-like network topology. Only downstream-facing ports originally provided power by default; this topology was chosen to easily prevent electrical overloads and damaged equipment. Every legacy USB cable has two distinct ends with mechanically distinct plugs, one Type-A plug (connecting to a downstream-facing port of a host or hub) and one Type-B plug (connecting to the upstream-facing port of a hub or peripheral device). Each format has a plug and receptacle defined for each of the A and B ends. A USB cable, must have one Type-A plug and one Type-B plug, the exception to this is Micro-A plug to Standard-A receptacle cables which are allowed, In Standard‑A receptacles with support for the 10 Gbit/s (Gen 2) signaling rate introduced in USB 3.1, some makers instead use a teal blue color, but the standards recommend the same blue for all SuperSpeed-capable Standard‑A receptacles, including those capable of the higher rate. Properties , and the connectors would be used more frequently, and perhaps with less care, than previous connectors. Standard USB connectors have a minimum rated lifetime of 1,500 cycles of insertion and removal, and the same applies to USB-C. To accomplish this, a locking device was added and a leaf spring was moved from the jack to the plug, so that the most-stressed part is on the cable side of the connection. This change was made so that the connector on the less expensive cable would bear the most wear. Mini and Micro connectors have five contacts each, rather than the four of Standard connectors, with the additional contact, designated ID, electrically differentiating A and B plugs when connecting to the AB receptacles of On-The-Go devices. The Type‑C plug of a Type‑C-to-legacy cable or adapter is similarly electronically marked as A or B: In a cable, it is marked as the complement of the connector on the opposite end because every legacy cable by definition has an A and a B end, and in an adapter the Type‑C plug is marked to match the plug the adapter accepts. USB 3.0 added a (bi-directional) lane (two additional differential pairs with a total of four wires, SSTx+, SSTx−, SSRx+ and SSRx−), providing full-duplex data transfers at SuperSpeed, making it similar to Serial ATA or single-lane PCI Express. File:USB 2.0 connectors.svg|thumb|left|USB 2 Standard, Mini-, and Micro-USB plugs shown end-on, not to scale. Light areas represent cavities. The plug itself is 12mm wide and 4.5mm thick.* Standard‑B connectors: This plug has a near square cross-section with the top exterior corners beveled. As part of a removable cable, it inserts into a single upstream facing port (UFP) on a device, such as a printer. On some devices, the Standard‑B receptacle has no data connections, being used solely for accepting power from the upstream device. This two-connector-type scheme (A–B) prevents a user from accidentally creating a loop. The maximum allowed cross-section of the overmold boot (which is part of the connector used for its handling) is for the Standard-A plug type, while for the Standard‑B it is . The more common Mini-B connectors are still permitted, but they are not On-The-Go–compliant and cannot be certified; the Mini-B connector was common for transferring data to and from early smartphones and PDAs, and it appears on devices including the PlayStation Portable and the Motorola Razr V3, where it also acts as a charger on the latter. The Mini-AB receptacle accepts either the Mini-A or the Mini-B plug, causing the On-The-Go device to behave as a host (A) or peripheral (B) accordingly. Micro connectors Micro-USB connectors, which were announced by the USB-IF on January 4, 2007, have a similar width to Mini-USB but approximately half the thickness, enabling their integration into thinner portable devices. The Micro-A plug is with a maximum plug body size of , while the Micro-B plug has the same height and width with a slightly smaller maximum plug body size of . The thinner Micro-USB connectors were intended to replace the Mini connectors in devices manufactured from May 2007 through late 2014, including smartphones, personal digital assistants, and cameras. plug] The Micro plug design is rated for at least 10,000 connect–disconnect cycles, which is more than the Mini plug design. The Micro connector is also designed to reduce the mechanical wear on the device; instead, the easier-to-replace cable is designed to bear more of the mechanical wear of connection and disconnection. The Universal Serial Bus Micro-USB Cables and Connectors Specification details the mechanical characteristics of Micro-A plugs, Micro-AB receptacles (which accept both Micro-A and Micro-B plugs), and Micro-B plugs and receptacles, OMTP standard Micro-USB was endorsed as the standard connector for data and power on mobile devices by the cellular phone carrier group Open Mobile Terminal Platform (OMTP) in 2007. Micro-USB was embraced as the "Universal Charging Solution" by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in October 2009. In Europe, micro-USB became the defined common external power supply (EPS) for use with smartphones sold in the EU, and 14 of the world's largest mobile phone manufacturers signed the EU's common EPS Memorandum of Understanding (MoU). Apple, one of the original MoU signers, makes Micro-USB adapters available—as permitted in the Common EPS MoU—for its iPhones equipped with Apple's proprietary 30-pin dock connector and, later, Lightning connector. according to the CEN, CENELEC, and ETSI. USB 3.x connectors and backward compatibility USB 3.0 introduced SuperSpeed plugs and receptacles, both Standard and Micro. All 3.0 SuperSpeed receptacles (Standard-A, Standard-B, Micro-B, and Micro-AB) are backward-compatible with the corresponding pre-3.0 plugs; additionally, the Standard-A SuperSpeed plug fits the pre-SuperSpeed Standard-A receptacle. (All other SuperSpeed plugs cannot be attached to pre-SuperSpeed receptacles.) For any devices to have a SuperSpeed link, all the connectors between them must be Type‑C or SuperSpeed. Every USB cable predating USB‑C had an A plug at one end and a B plug at the other (with the rare exception of one special AA configuration with certain conductors omitted, for operating system debugging and other host-to-host connection applications). In a USB‑C-to-legacy cable, the Type‑C plug is electrically marked to take the role complementary to the connector at the opposite end, A for B and B for A. When a modern C–C cable is used, the two connected devices communicate to determine which takes which role. USB On-The-Go connectors Before USB‑C, USB On-The-Go (OTG) introduced the concept of a device that could switch roles, performing either the host role or peripheral device role, as needed, depending simply on which type of plug was attached. An OTG device was required to have one, and only one, USB connector: a Micro-AB receptacle or, before Micro-USB, a Mini-AB receptacle. The Micro-AB receptacle is capable of accepting the Micro-A or Micro-B plug of any of the allowed cables and adapters as defined in revision 1.01 of the Micro-USB specification. Since a Type-AB receptacle allows either an A or an B plug to be attached, each corresponding A and B plug design has an ID contact to indicate electrically whether the plug is the A or the B end of its cable: In an A plug the ID contact is connected to GND, and in a B plug it is not. Typically, a pull-up resistor in the device is used to detect the presence or absence of the GND connection. An OTG device with an A plug inserted is called the A-device and is responsible for powering the USB interface when required, and by default assumes the role of host. An OTG device with a B plug inserted is called the B-device and by default assumes the role of peripheral. If an application on the On-The-Go device requires the role of host, then the Host Negotiation Protocol (HNP) is used to temporarily transfer the host role to the OTG device. USB-C plug The USB-C connector supersedes all earlier USB connectors, the Mini DisplayPort connector and the Lightning connector since 2025. It is used for all USB protocols and for Thunderbolt (3 and later), DisplayPort (1.2 and later), and others. Developed at roughly the same time as the USB 3.1 specification, but distinct from it, the USB-C Specification 1.0 was finalized in August 2014 The USB-C plug connects both to hosts and to peripheral devices, as well as to chargers and power supplies, replacing all of the preceding USB connectors with a standard meant to be future-proof. The 24-pin double-sided connector provides four power–ground pairs, two differential pairs for USB 2.0 data (though only one pair is implemented in a USB-C cable), four pairs for SuperSpeed data bus (only two pairs are used in USB 3.1 mode), two "sideband use" pins, VCONN +5 V power for active cables, and a configuration pin for cable orientation detection and dedicated biphase mark code (BMC) configuration data channel (CC). Type-A and Type-B adaptors and cables are required for older hosts and devices to plug into USB-C hosts and devices. Adapters and cables with a USB-C receptacle are not allowed. A Full-Featured USB cable is a Type‑C-to-Type‑C cable that supports USB 2.0, USB 3.2 and USB4 data operation, and a Full-Featured Type‑C receptacle likewise supports the same full set of protocols. It contains a full set of wires and is electronically marked (E-marked): It contains an E-marker chip that responds to the USB Power Delivery Discover Identity command, a kind of vendor-defined message (VDM) sent over the configuration data channel (CC). Using this command, the cable reports its current capacity, maximum speed, and other parameters. Full-Featured USB Type-C devices are a mechanic prerequisite for multi-lane operation (USB 3.2 Gen 1×2, USB 3.2 Gen 2×2, USB4 2×2, USB4 3×2, USB Gen 4 Asymmetric). In addition to the above cable assemblies comprising two plugs, receptacles are allowed in three adapter assemblies: • Two legacy adapter assemblies for compatibility with equipment that predates USB‑C: • USB 3.1 Standard‑A receptacle to Type‑C plug, to connect a legacy Standard‑A plug to a modern Type‑C receptacle • USB 2.0 Micro‑B receptacle to Type‑C plug, to connect a legacy Micro‑B plug to a modern Type‑C receptacle • 9-pin header for two USB 1.1/2.0 Type-A ports. There is also a 5-pin variant for a single port. Motherboards made before 2000 may have other layouts. • 19-pin header for a two USB 3.0 (also known as 3.1/3.2 Gen 1) Type-A ports. This is not backwards compatible with the 9-pin header, There is no standard for running a newer signal (e.g. Gen 2) over this header, but there is enough signal integrity to do so in practice. • "Type-E" ports, which are not pin headers with an array of pins, but a port to plug into: • 20-pin Key-A for a single full-featured Type-C, providing up to 80 Gbps in the case of USB4 2.0. (As the original definition is for USB 3.1 Gen 2 [aka USB 3.2 Gen 2, ×2 for two lanes in USB-C], the electrical connection between the case-port and the header may not be of high enough quality for 80 Gbps. USB4 40 Gbps should be achievable as it requires the same cable quality as USB 3.1 Gen 2.) It can also be used to provide one Type-A port up to USB 3.1/3.2 Gen 2. There is officially no provision for providing two Type-A ports from this header as it only provides one pair of legacy (USB 1.1/2.0) D+ and D-. Proprietary connectors and formats Manufacturers of personal electronic devices might not include a USB standard connector on their product for technical or marketing reasons. For example, Olympus has been using a special cable called CB-USB8, one end of which has a special contact. Some manufacturers provide proprietary cables, such as Apple with the Lightning cable, that permit their devices to physically connect to a USB standard port. Full functionality of proprietary ports and cables with USB standard ports is not assured; for example, some devices only use the USB connection for battery charging and do not implement any data transfer functions. == Cabling ==
Cabling
. The wires are enclosed in a further layer of shielding. The D± signals used by low, full, and high speed are carried over a twisted pair (typically unshielded) to reduce noise and crosstalk. SuperSpeed uses separate transmit and receive differential pairs, which additionally require shielding (typically, shielded twisted pair but twinax is also mentioned by the specification). Thus, to support SuperSpeed data transmission, cables contain twice as many wires and are larger in diameter. The USB 1.1 standard specifies that a standard cable can have a maximum length of with devices operating at full speed (12 Mbit/s), and a maximum length of with devices operating at low speed (1.5 Mbit/s). USB 2.0 provides for a maximum cable length of for devices running at high speed (480 Mbit/s). The primary reason for this limit is the maximum allowed round-trip delay of about 1.5 μs. If USB host commands are unanswered by the USB device within the allowed time, the host considers the command lost. When adding USB device response time, delays from the maximum number of hubs added to the delays from connecting cables, the maximum acceptable delay per cable amounts to 26 ns. == Power ==
Power
Downstream USB connectors supply power at a nominal via the V_BUS pin to upstream USB devices. Voltage tolerance and limits The tolerance on V_BUS at an upstream (or host) connector was originally ±5% (i.e. could lie anywhere in the range 4.75 V to 5.25 V). With the release of the USB Type-C specification in 2014 and its 3 A power capability, the USB-IF elected to increase the upper voltage limit to 5.5 V to combat voltage drop at higher currents. The USB 2.0 specification (and therefore implicitly also the USB 3.x specifications) was also updated to reflect this change at that time. A number of extensions to the USB Specifications have progressively further increased the maximum allowable V_BUS voltage: starting with 6.0 V with USB BC 1.2, to 21.5 V with USB PD 2.0 and 50.9 V with USB PD 3.1, A bus-powered hub is a high-power device providing low-power ports. It draws one unit load for itself and one unit load for each of at most four ports. The hub may also have some non-removable devices in place of ports, a common example being a keyboard with two low-power A ports included, sufficient for pointing devices such as mice. (Such a keyboard is, in USB terms, one hub and one peripheral device.) A self-powered hub is a device that provides high-power ports by supplementing the power supply from the host with its own external supply. Optionally, the hub controller may draw power for its operation as a low-power device, but all high-power ports must draw from the hub's self-power. Where devices (for example, high-speed disk drives) require more power than a high-power device can draw, they function erratically, if at all, from bus power of a single port. USB provides for these devices as being self-powered. However, such devices may come with a Y-shaped cable that has two USB plugs (one for power and data, the other for only power), so as to draw power as two devices. Such a cable is non-standard, with the specification stating that "use of a 'Y' cable (a cable with two A-plugs) is prohibited on any USB peripheral", meaning that "if a USB peripheral requires more power than allowed by the USB specification to which it is designed, then it must be self-powered." Since USB 2.0, USB standardized overcurrent protection mechanisms for USB hosts and USB devices. USB battery charging USB Battery Charging (BC) defines a charging port, which may be a charging downstream port (CDP), with data, or a dedicated charging port (DCP), without data. Dedicated charging ports can be found on USB power adapters to run and charge attached devices and charge battery packs. Charging ports on a host with both kinds will be labeled. The charging device identifies a charging port by non-data signaling on the D+ and D− terminals. A dedicated charging port places a resistance not exceeding 200 Ω across the D+ and D− terminals. Per the base specification, any device attached to a standard downstream port (SDP) must initially be a low-power device, with high-power mode contingent on later USB configuration by the host. Charging ports, however, can immediately supply between 0.5 and 1.5 A of current. The charging port must not apply current limiting below 0.5 A, and must not shut down below 1.5 A or before the voltage drops to 2 V. 1.2 specifies that charging devices and ports must be designed to tolerate the higher ground voltage difference in High Speed signaling. Revision 1.2 of the specification was released in 2010. It made several changes and increased limits, including allowing 1.5 A on charging downstream ports for unconfigured devices—allowing High Speed communication while having a current up to 1.5 A. Also, support was removed for charging-port detection via resistive mechanisms. Before the Battery Charging Specification was defined, there was no standardized way for the portable device to inquire how much current was available. For example, Apple's iPod and iPhone chargers indicate the available current by voltages on the D− and D+ lines (sometimes also called "Apple Brick ID"). When D+ = D− = 2.0 V, the device may pull up to 900 mA. When D+ = 2.0 V and D− = 2.8 V, the device may pull up to 1 A of current. When D+ = 2.8 V and D− = 2.0 V, the device may pull up to 2 A of current. The maximum power delivered with this method was 12.48 W (5.2 V, 2.4 A), with D+ = D- = 2.7 V. Accessory Charger Adapter A USB On-The-Go (OTG) device has a single Micro-AB port (or, formerly, a Mini-AB port) for charging as well as for connecting either to a host or to peripheral devices. An Accessory Charger Adapter (ACA) allows simultaneous connection to a charger and either to a host or to peripheral devices, with the charger providing power to both the OTG device and any connected peripheral devices. For example, a keyboard can connect to a smartphone, or a printer, a keyboard, and a flash drive can connect to a smartphone through a USB hub, with the ACA capable of charging the smartphone and powering the keyboard, flash drive, and hub; or the smartphone can connect to a computer (host) that does not provide full power for charging, while the ACA provides full charging power. An Accessory Charger Adapter has three ports: OTG, Charger, and Accessory. The OTG port connects to the On-The-Go device through a permanently-attached (captive) cable with a (mechanically) Micro-A plug. The Charger port is visibly marked Charger Only and does not support USB communication with the OTG device. It is either a Micro-B receptacle or a captive cable; such a captive cable either has a Standard-A plug or is permanently attached to a charger. The Accessory port is either a Micro-AB or Standard-A receptacle. An A receptacle by definition can only connect to peripheral devices; the Micro-AB receptacle can be used to connect either a host or peripheral devices. The captive plug of the OTG port is unusual in that, unlike a normal Micro-A plug, which is not only mechanically identifiable as an A plug but also electrically marked as such (causing an OTG device to behave as a host), the Micro-A plug of the Accessory Charger Adapter electrically becomes B when a Micro-B plug is connected to the (Micro-AB) Accessory port, causing the OTG device to behave as a peripheral. USB Power Delivery 20 Gbps port) In July 2012, the USB Promoters Group announced the finalization of the USB Power Delivery (USB-PD) specification (USB PD rev. 1), an extension that specifies using certified PD aware USB cables with standard USB Type-A and Type-B connectors to deliver increased power (more than the 7.5 W maximum allowed by the previous USB Battery Charging specification) to devices with greater power demands. (USB-PD A and B plugs have a mechanical mark while Micro plugs have a resistor or capacitor attached to the ID pin indicating the cable capability.) USB-PD Devices can request higher currents and supply voltages from compliant hosts—up to 2 A at 5 V (for a power consumption of up to 10 W), and optionally up to 3 A or 5 A at either 12 V (36 W or 60 W) or 20 V (60 W or 100 W). In all cases, both host-to-device and device-to-host configurations are supported. The intent is to permit uniformly charging laptops, tablets, USB-powered disks and similarly higher-power consumer electronics, as a natural extension of existing European and Chinese mobile telephone charging standards. This may also affect the way electric power used for small devices is transmitted and used in both residential and public buildings. The standard is designed to coexist with the previous USB Battery Charging specification. The first Power Delivery specification (Rev. 1.0) defined six fixed power profiles for the power sources. PD-aware devices implement a flexible power management scheme by interfacing with the power source through a bidirectional data channel and requesting a certain level of electrical power, variable up to 5 A and 20 V depending on supported profile. The power configuration protocol can use BMC coding over the configuration channel (CC) wire if one is present, or a 24 MHz BFSK-coded transmission channel on the VBUS line. It covers the USB-C cable and connector with a separate configuration channel, which now hosts a DC coupled low-frequency BMC-coded data channel that reduces the possibilities for RF interference. Power Delivery protocols have been updated to facilitate USB-C features such as cable ID function, Alternate Mode negotiation, increased VBUS currents, and VCONN-powered accessories. As of specification revision 2.0, version 1.2, the six fixed power profiles for power sources have been deprecated. USB PD Power Rules replace power profiles, defining four normative voltage levels at 5, 9, 15, and 20 V. Instead of six fixed profiles, power supplies may support any maximum source output power from 0.5 W to 100 W. The USB Power Delivery specification revision 3.0 defines an optional Programmable Power Supply (PPS) protocol that allows granular control over VBUS output, allowing a voltage range of 3.3 to 21 V in 20 mV steps, and a current specified in 50 mA steps, to facilitate constant-voltage and constant-current charging. Revision 3.0 also adds extended configuration messages and fast role swap and deprecates the BFSK protocol. On January 8, 2018, USB-IF announced the Certified USB Fast Charger logo for chargers that use the Programmable Power Supply (PPS) protocol from the USB Power Delivery 3.0 specification. In May 2021, the USB PD promoter group launched revision 3.1 of the specification. Revision 3.1 adds Extended Power Range (EPR) mode which allows higher voltages of 28, 36, and 48 V, providing up to 240 W of power (48 V at 5 A), and the "Adjustable Voltage Supply" (AVS) protocol which allows specifying the voltage from a range of 15 to 48 V in 100 mV steps. Higher voltages require electronically marked EPR cables that support 5 A operation and incorporate mechanical improvements required by the USB Type-C standard revision 2.1; existing power modes are retroactively renamed Standard Power Range (SPR). In October 2021 Apple introduced a 140 W (28 V 5 A) GaN USB PD charger with new MacBooks, and in June 2023 Framework introduced a 180 W (36 V 5 A) GaN USB PD charger with the Framework 16. In October 2023, the USB PD promoter group launched revision 3.2 of the specification. The AVS protocol now works with the old standard power range (SPR), down to a minimum of 9 V. Prior to Power Delivery, mobile phone vendors used custom protocols to exceed the 7.5 W cap on the USB Battery Charging Specification (BCS). For example, Qualcomm's Quick Charge 2.0 is able to deliver 18 W at a higher voltage, and VOOC delivers 20 W at the normal 5 V. Some of these technologies, such as Quick Charge 4, eventually became compatible with USB PD again. Charge controllers mainstream USB PD charging controllers support up to 100 W through a single port, with a few up to 140 W and custom built up to 180 W. However the maximal power values are barely used in practice, especially for charging of mobile phones: The used standard or used USB-C chargers still remains at 1,5A@5V (=7.5W), which is the same as for USB-A. Only few chargers (sources) and charged devices (phones, clients) can really communicate, and fit the supply/demand combinations, so charging often remains just slow, at the USB-A standard. Some do comply together to use some negotiated PDO (power delivery objects), but their values are static. And because there can be at most only seven PPSs (preprogrammed power supply), only a few devices can really use the effectiveness of APDOs (Augmented Power Data Object, intervals of values, dynamic by increments of 20/50 mV/mA), usually only two these dynamic offered, leaving five options for some static ones. And even if overheating is prevented, e.g. with 4.1V@2.8A (11.48W), the charging is mostly not even close to the upper power limits of the devices, mostly 27W (9V@3A). That is because the voltages supported by phones are usually 5V or luckily also 9V (3.3-11V on APDO), and 3A at most, often 2.22A only, for voltages over 9V, so 20W is even lower upper limit for power delivery in practice, and still as a peak optimal value. Another reason for differences in speed of charging, the power delivered to mobile phones, are different approachs of producers: E.g. Samsung prefers max charging speed, accepting power even out of USB-C/PPS specifications, so 5A @4.2V (21W) are measurable. On the other hand Sony Xperia shows the very opposite extreme, following strictly the PPS specifications, so when the charging status is out of the official, it quickly defaults down to the basic 1.5A (7W) charging, the "classical slow", effectively protecting the phone from overheating and prolonging lifetime of its battery. Higher powers than 27W/33W are then accomplished by higher current (5A), and higher voltage (20V), which render the upper limit 100W (or 60W @3A). But such high power is not commonly possible for mobile phones, and for currents over 3A special protocols and cables (with electronics inside connectors) are usually needed, e.g. E-marker. Sleep-and-charge ports Sleep-and-charge USB ports can be used to charge electronic devices even when the computer that hosts the ports is switched off. Normally, when a computer is powered off the USB ports are powered down. This feature has also been implemented on some laptop docking stations allowing device charging even when no laptop is present. On laptops, charging devices from the USB port when it is not being powered from AC drains the laptop battery; most laptops have a facility to stop charging if their own battery charge level gets too low. On Dell, HP and Toshiba laptops, sleep-and-charge USB ports are marked with the standard USB symbol with an added lightning bolt or battery icon on the right side. Dell calls this feature PowerShare, and it needs to be enabled in the BIOS. Toshiba calls it USB Sleep-and-Charge. On Acer Inc. and Packard Bell laptops, sleep-and-charge USB ports are marked with a non-standard symbol (the letters USB over a drawing of a battery); the feature is called Power-off USB. Lenovo calls this feature Always On USB. Mobile device charger standards In China Starting in 2007, all new mobile phones applying for a license in China are required to use a USB port as a power port for battery charging. This was the first standard to use the convention of shorting D+ and D− in the charger. OMTP/GSMA Universal Charging Solution In September 2007, the Open Mobile Terminal Platform group (a forum of mobile network operators and manufacturers such as Nokia, Samsung, Motorola, Sony Ericsson, and LG) announced that its members had agreed on Micro-USB as the future common connector for mobile devices. The GSM Association (GSMA) followed suit on February 17, 2009, and on April 22, 2009, this was further endorsed by the CTIA – The Wireless Association, with the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) announcing on October 22, 2009, that it had also embraced the Universal Charging Solution as its "energy-efficient one-charger-fits-all new mobile phone solution", and added: "Based on the Micro-USB interface, UCS chargers will also include a 4-star or higher efficiency rating—up to three times more energy-efficient than an unrated charger." EU smartphone power supply standard In June 2009, the European Commission organized a voluntary Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) to adopt micro-USB as a common standard for charging smartphones marketed in the European Union. The specification was called the common external power supply. The MoU lasted until 2014. The common EPS specification (EN 62684:2010) references the USB Battery Charging Specification and is similar to the GSMA/OMTP and Chinese charging solutions. In January 2011, the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC) released its version of the (EU's) common EPS standard as IEC 62684:2011. In 2022, the Radio Equipment Directive 2022/2380 made USB-C compulsory as a mobile phone charging standard from 2024, and for laptops from 2026. Faster-charging standards A variety of (non-USB) standards support charging devices faster than the USB Battery Charging standard. When a device doesn't recognize the faster-charging standard, generally the device and the charger fall back to the USB battery-charging standard of 5 V at 1.5 A (7.5 W). When a device detects it is plugged into a charger with a compatible faster-charging standard, the device pulls more current or the device tells the charger to increase the voltage or both to increase power (the details vary between standards). Such standards include: • Apple "Brick ID" 2 A and 2.4 A charging (described above, does not use BC negotiaion) • Google fast charging • Huawei SuperCharge • MediaTek Pump ExpressMotorola TurboPower • Oppo Super VOOC Flash Charge, are also known as Dash Charge or Warp Charge on OnePlus devices and Dart Charge on Realme devices • Qualcomm Quick Charge (QC) • Samsung Adaptive Fast Charging Non-standard devices Some USB devices require more power than is permitted by the specifications for a single port. This is common for external hard and optical disc drives, and generally for devices with motors or lamps. Such devices can use an external power supply, which is allowed by the standard, or use a dual-input USB cable, one input of which is for power and data transfer, the other solely for power, which makes the device a non-standard USB device. Some USB ports and external hubs can, in practice, supply more power to USB devices than required by the specification but a standard-compliant device may not depend on this. In addition to limiting the total average power used by the device, the USB specification limits the inrush current (i.e., the current used to charge decoupling and filter capacitors) when the device is first connected. Otherwise, connecting a device could cause problems with the host's internal power. USB devices are also required to automatically enter ultra low-power suspend mode when the USB host is suspended. Nevertheless, many USB host interfaces do not cut off the power supply to USB devices when they are suspended. Some non-standard devices use the USB 5 V power supply without participating in a proper USB network, which negotiates power draw with the host interface; these devices typically violate the standards by drawing more power than is allowed without negotiation. Examples include USB-powered keyboard lights, fans, mug coolers and heaters, battery chargers, miniature vacuum cleaners, and even miniature lava lamps. In most cases, these items contain no digital circuitry, and thus are not standard-compliant USB devices. This may cause problems with some computers, such as drawing too much current and damaging circuitry. Prior to the USB Battery Charging Specification, the USB specification required that devices connect in a low-power mode (100 mA maximum) and communicate their current requirements to the host, which then permits the device to switch into high-power mode. Some devices predating USB Power Delivery, when plugged into charging ports, draw even more power (10 watts) than the Battery Charging Specification allows, using proprietary methods but without violating USB standards, maintaining full compatibility—the iPad is one such device; it negotiates the current pull with data pin voltages. Barnes & Noble Nook Color devices also require a special charger that can provide 1.9 A. PoweredUSB PoweredUSB is a proprietary extension, from long before USB Power Delivery, that adds four pins supplying up to 6 A at 5 V, 12 V, or 24 V. It is commonly used in point-of-sale systems to power peripherals such as barcode readers, credit card terminals, and printers. ==See also==
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