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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 Altera  





2 Analog Devices  





3 ARM  





4 Atmel  





5 Cypress Semiconductor  





6 ELAN Microelectronics Corp.  





7 EPSON Semiconductor  





8 Espressif Systems  





9 Freescale Semiconductor  





10 Fujitsu  





11 Holtek  





12 Hyperstone  





13 Infineon  





14 Intel  





15 Lattice Semiconductor  





16 Maxim Integrated  





17 Microchip Technology  





18 National Semiconductor  





19 NEC  





20 Nordic Semiconductor  





21 NXP Semiconductors  





22 Nuvoton Technology  





23 Panasonic  





24 Parallax  





25 Rabbit Semiconductor  





26 Raspberry Pi Foundation  





27 Renesas Electronics  





28 Redpine Signals  





29 Rockwell  





30 Silicon Laboratories  





31 Silicon Motion  





32 Sony  





33 Spansion  





34 STMicroelectronics  





35 Synopsys  





36 Texas Instruments  





37 Toshiba  





38 Ubicom  





39 WCH  





40 Western Design Center  





41 Xemics  





42 Xilinx  





43 XMOS  





44 ZiLOG  





45 Sortable table  





46 References  














List of common microcontrollers






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Espressif Systems)

This is a list of common microcontrollers listed by brand.

Altera[edit]

In 2015, Altera was acquired by Intel, and then spun back out on it's own in 2024.

Analog Devices[edit]

ARM[edit]

While Arm is a fabless semiconductor company (it does not manufacture or sell its own chips), it licenses the ARM architecture family design to a variety of companies. Those companies in turn sell billions of ARM-based chips per year—12 billion ARM-based chips shipped in 2014,[1] about 24 billion ARM-based chips shipped in 2020,[2] some of those are popular chips in their own right.

Atmel[edit]

Atmel ATmega169 (64-pin MLF)

In 2016, Atmel was sold to Microchip Technology.

Cypress Semiconductor[edit]

Cypress PSoC chips

In 2020, Cypress Semiconductor was acquired by Infineon Technologies.

ELAN Microelectronics Corp.[edit]

ELAN Microelectronics Corporation is an IC designer and provider of 8-bit microcontrollers and PC Peripheral ICs. Headquartered in Hsinchu Science Park, the Silicon Valley of Taiwan, ELAN's microcontroller product range includes the following:

These are clones of the 12- and 14-bit Microchip PIC line of processors, but with a 13-bit instruction word.

EPSON Semiconductor[edit]

Espressif Systems[edit]

Espressif Systems, a company with headquarters in Shanghai, China made its debut in the microcontroller scene with their range of inexpensive and feature-packed WiFi microcontrollers such as ESP8266.

Freescale Semiconductor[edit]

Motorola MC68HC11

Until 2004, these μCs were developed and marketed by Motorola, whose semiconductor division was spun off to establish Freescale. In 2015, Freescale was acquired by NXP.

Fujitsu[edit]

Holtek[edit]

Holtek Semiconductor is a major Taiwan-based designer of 32-bit microcontrollers, 8-bit microcontrollers and peripheral products. Microcontroller products are centred around an ARM core in the case of 32-bit products and 8051 based core and Holtek's own core in the case of 8-bit products. Located in the Hsinchu Science Park ([1]), the company's product range includes the following microcontroller device series:

Hyperstone[edit]

Infineon[edit]

Infineon offers microcontrollers for the automotive, industrial and multimarket industry. DAVE3, a component based auto code generation free tool, provides faster development of complex embedded projects.

Intel[edit]

X On-chip code memory
0 No on-chip memory
3 OTP
7 EEPROM
9 Flash

Lattice Semiconductor[edit]

Maxim Integrated[edit]

In 2021, Maxim Integrated was acquired by Analog Devices.

Microchip Technology[edit]

PIC microcontrollers
PIC24 microcontroller

Since 2013, Microchip has shipped over 1 billion PIC microcontrollers per year, growing every year.[5]

Microchip produces microcontrollers with three very different architectures:

8-bit (8-bit data bus) PICmicro, with a single accumulator (8 bits):

16-bit (16-bit data bus) microcontrollers, with 16 general-purpose registers (each 16-bit)

32-bit (32-bit data bus) microcontrollers:

National Semiconductor[edit]

National Semiconductor COP410L die image

NEC[edit]

Nordic Semiconductor[edit]

Nordic Semiconductor is a company with headquarters in Trondheim, Norway offering low power Bluetooth Low Energy SoCs as well as cellular network connectivity solutions for IoT devices.

NXP Semiconductors[edit]

NXP LPC1114 and LPC1343
NXP LPC2387

Nuvoton Technology[edit]

Panasonic[edit]

Panasonic MN101, used in an electronic glucose meter
Panasonic MN103SH5GRA

Parallax[edit]

Rabbit Semiconductor[edit]

Raspberry Pi Foundation[edit]

Renesas Electronics[edit]

Renesas is a joint venture comprising the semiconductor businesses of Hitachi, Mitsubishi Electric and NEC Electronics, creating the largest microcontroller manufacturer in the world.

Redpine Signals[edit]

Rockwell[edit]

Rockwell semiconductors (now called Conexant) created a line of 6502 based microcontrollers that were used with their telecom (modem) chips. Most of their microcontrollers were packaged in a QIP package.

Silicon Laboratories[edit]

Manufactures a line of 8-bit 8051-compatible microcontrollers, notable for high speeds (50–100 MIPS) and large memories in relatively small package sizes. A free IDE is available that supports the USB-connected ToolStick line of modular prototyping boards. These microcontrollers were originally developed by Cygnal. In 2012, the company introduced ARM-based mixed-signal MCUs with very low power and USB options, supported by free Eclipse-based tools. The company acquired Energy Micro in 2013 and now offers a number of ARM-based 32-bit microcontrollers.

Silicon Motion[edit]

Sony[edit]

Spansion[edit]

Microcontrollers acquired from Fujitsu:

STMicroelectronics[edit]

STM32F103VGT6 die
STM32F100C4T6B die

Synopsys[edit]

While Synopsys does not manufacture or sell chips directly, Synopsys licenses the ARC Processor design to a variety of companies that, as of 2020, ship about 1.5 billion products based on ARC processors per year.[2]

Texas Instruments[edit]

The Stellaris and Tiva families, in particular, provide a high level of community-based, open source support through the TI e2e forums.[9][10]

Toshiba[edit]

Ubicom[edit]

WCH[edit]

Manufactures a line of full-stack MCUs.

Western Design Center[edit]

The Western Design Center licenses the 65C02 and 65816 designs to a variety of companies. Those companies produce the 6502 (typically as part of a larger chip) in quantities over a hundred million units per year.[11]

Xemics[edit]

Xilinx[edit]

XMOS[edit]

ZiLOG[edit]

Zilog's (primary) microcontroller families, in chronological order:

Sortable table[edit]

Company name Name CPU Bits Status Max. MHz Flash KB RAM KB Price @1K USD Active power Sleep power External mem. UARTs SPI I2C CAN Ethernet USB ADCs DACs Features
Energy Micro EFM32TG110 ARM Cortex-M3 32 Production 32 32 4 $2.47 157 μA/MHz @ 32 MHz 1 μA 2 2 1 0 0 1 1 2× 16-bit timers. 12-bit 1 Msps ADC. 12-bit 500 ksps DAC.
Zilog eZ80 Fast Z80 8/16 Production 50 256 16 $7.79 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 Linear addressing up to 16 MB. 3–4× faster than traditional Z80.
Texas Instruments MSP430FR2632 RISC 16 16 8 2 $0.924 126 μA/MHz <5 μA 2 1 1 0 0 8 0 Capacitive touch MCU with 8 touch IO (16 sensors), 8KB FRAM, 2KB SRAM, 15 IO, 10-bit ADC

References[edit]

  • ^ Weiss, Ray; Schofield, Julie Anne (26 November 1992). "EDN's 19th Annual μP/μC Chip Directory". EDN. pp. 74–79, 81–82, 86, 90–92, 94–95, 97–100, 102–104, 108, 113–116, 119–122, 127–129, 132, 135–136, 139–140, 143–144, 147–148, 151–152, 155–158, 161. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
  • ^ "Hyperstone : 32-Bit MCU suits cost-sensitive applications". EETimes. 20 February 2009. Retrieved 16 April 2024.
  • ^ "Microchip Technology Delivers 12 Billionth PIC Microcontroller to Leading Motor Manufacturer, Nidec Corporation". Microchip press release. 2013.
  • ^ "Dynamic Product Page | Microchip Technology".
  • ^ "PIC32MX Family Architecture Overview". Architecture - 32-bit PIC Microcontrollers | Microchip Technology Inc. - Architecture | 32-Bit PIC- MCUs | Microchip Technology Inc. Microchip. Retrieved 2016-05-18.
  • ^ "PIC32MZ Family Architecture Overview". Architecture - 32-bit PIC Microcontrollers | Microchip Technology Inc. - Architecture | 32-Bit PIC- MCUs | Microchip Technology Inc. Microchip. Retrieved 2016-05-18.
  • ^ "TI introduces simple-to-use OpenLink™ Bluetooth® and Wi-Fi® connectivity inside the WiLink™ 6.0 solution for AM18x Sitara™ ARM® Microprocessors" (Press release). PRNewswire. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  • ^ "BeagleBone, $89 Open Source Hardware Platform Features TI Sitara™ AM335x ARM Cortex™-A8 MPU". Avnet. Retrieved 23 May 2012.
  • ^ Garth Wilson. "6502 PRIMER: Building your own 6502 computer".

  • Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=List_of_common_microcontrollers&oldid=1229397229#Espressif_Systems"

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    This page was last edited on 16 June 2024, at 15:49 (UTC).

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