Semiconductor Products Insight

Semiconductor Products Insight

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New MCUs families blooming, is this a late spring?

10

Aug

2017

It was a little longer time than usual since our last post, but just perfectly in time to catch great action at Microchip, Silicon Labs and NXP. From low to high end, they are delighting us with a full rainbow of products. Oh, and don’t forget your nice summer read on ST while you might still be on the beach or vacationing in your favorite spot. Happy summer.


Atmel/Microchip
Both families sport a Cortex-M4F running at 120 MHz with up to 1 MB Flash/256kB SRAM, a QSPI, SDHC, and a touch controller. The SAME51/54 add 2x CAN-FD ports, while the SAME53/54 10/100 Ethernet with IEEE1588. All include crypto-accelerators with ECC, RSA, AES, and SHA.
The SAMD5/E5 series are available starting at $2.43@10k. 26 SAMD5x parts and 32 SAME5x were released.
The SAMD51 is close to a SAM4S4B while the SAME51 looks like a SAM4S8B however with crypto and more RAM for the newly announced parts. Briefly looking at the pricing, it is interesting to see the newer parts being similarly priced to their SAM4S siblings while having more features…
On the competition front, the NXP MK22FN/X512 seems to fit the bill. The E53 will find the NXP MK64FN1M0 as well as the Infineon XMC4500F100 and Renesas RX65N. Finally, the E54 is right down the alley of the Ti Tiva TM4C129, the NXP LPC1778/4078 or MK64FX512.

Microchip also beefed up their SAMDA1 (AEC-Q100 qualified) with 12 more devices. Finally, the SAML21 got 105C parts.
Dialog
No change.
Infineon
No change.
Microchip
Microchip enriched its PIC18 portfolio of “High Performance and Large Memory 8-bit MCUs” with 72 new parts, focusing on the K42 family specifically the PIC18F26/45/46/55/56K42 respectively carrying 64/4, 32/2, 64/4, 32/2 and 64/4 kB of Flash/RAM.
Nordic
No change.
Nuvoton
No change this month apart from the re-addition of the NUC123ZC2AN1.
NXP
It looks like the Web team has been (over-)active this month. We are noticing a much simpler URL schema where parts information is simply located at e.g. http://www.nxp.com/part/MKE14F256VLH16 vs. a 208-character long one (yes, we counted).

Product changes look heavy and we are not sure yet whether they were casualties of the web shuffle or a conscious portfolio decision.
The KE0x family is still there but there is no products accessible anymore for the KE02_40, KE04, KE06 while there is a new KE02 20 MHz that was created after we completed our indexing. As of 9/9, the KE02-20 page has both (10) 20 MHz and (3) 40 MHz parts.
Gone seem to be the R suffixes (reel packing). On a separate note, it is interesting to see that NXP has shifted from 10k to unit price for the EA Series (Automotive). Absolute prices have hence increased.

NXP also announced the LPC84x, and “introduces breakthrough innovation”. The trick is based on so-called fast access initialization memory (FAIM) “that allows the clocks of the LPC84x microcontroller to be started in a low frequency mode, keeping startup current consumption to a minimum. Additionally, its I/O ports can come up immediately and in its desired configuration, eliminating any potential termination issues with attached devices, such as MOSFETs”. FAIM aside, the LPC84x is a 30 MHz Cortex-M0+ MCU with 64/8 or 16 kB of Flash/RAM, and 12-bit DAC and ADC.
The segment is pretty crowded with competition coming from ST’s STM32L051/2, SiliconLabs EFM32G232, TI’s MSP430F5237, Microchip’s PIC32MM0064GPM064 roughly in the same price range. For reference, here is the roadmap presented by the end of 2016.

Renesas
No significant changes this month at Renesas RX and RL78.
SiliconLabs
The fireworks continues at SLAB this month with the announcement of the new Giant Gecko GG1 Series 1. 2 parts are sampling likely from the same die with a BGA192 or QFP100 package. The GG11 shows an impressive roaster of peripherals including a low energy USB Device/Host/OTG, 2x CAN, 1x QSPI, an SD/MMC/SDIO controller, crypto-acceleration (AES, ECC, SHA), LCD controller, 2x DAC, 2x ADC, 4x comparators and a 10/100 MAC with 1588 and 802.3az support. All of this served on a Cortex-M4 @ 72MH with 2MB/512kB RAM.
The closest competitors are the XMC4700 and XMC4800 from Infineon although they do not have LCD support but run at 2x the frequency and Cypress FM4 S6E2C2 with 2 USB ports.
No news for the Wireless and EFM8 portfolios.
Spansion/Cypress
115 products likely got new silicon revisions moving from -GE1 to -GK7E1 or -GK7E2. Likely since Cypress is pretty mum about its product nomenclature.
ST Microelectronics
ST released 105C and 125C versions of parts in the F3 and F4 families. The F429, F746 are getting single letter suffixes, maybe a sign of programmed parts, the nomenclature is unclear (xxx suffix are programmed parts). We also noticed a P suffix (with dedicated pinout for an external Switch Mode Power Supply that bypasses the internal regulator) for the L496. For these parts, power in run mode goes from 91uA/MHz to 37uA/MHz.
STM8 was quiet.
We encourage our reader to devour the thorough piece of Junko Yoshida on STMicroelectronics. It’s still summer time after all.
Texas Instruments
Texas Instruments added 3 parts in the SimpleLink portfolio, the CC2640R2F-Q1. These are the automotive-qualified versions of the CC2640R2F.
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What a RAM feat at Microchip!

30

Jun

2017

What a feat for a microcontroller: 32 MB of DDR2 SDRAM were integrated in to the latest Microchip PIC32MZ DA. With rich UI as a target, we can bet they will collide with lower end application processors. NXP showed some goodness when releasing the MKV with bundled motor control. We also had a few sad news with the disappearance of a few families… Happy 4th of July for our US readers!


Atmel
Only a few changes at Atmel this month, around tray versions of existing parts.
Dialog
No change.
Infineon
Infineon is retiring 31 products, all revision 1 in the XMC4xxx family.
Microchip
Microchip enriched its PIC32MM portfolio with 47 parts, pushing the flash size up to 128 and 256kB of Flash. The PIC32MZ DA grew too, by 80 parts adding to the existing 1 and 2 MB of Flash. The PIC32MZ DA series integrates a graphics controller (up to SXGA support), a graphic processor to accelerate 2D rendering and surprise, 32MB of DDR2 DRAM, on 28 select parts. Target is clearly user interfaces and will fight against low end application processors. Prices range roughly from $10 to $15 at 5k volume.
29 DSPIC33EP and FJ left our world this month, together with 18 PIC24 and 3 PIC32MX.
Nordic
The nRF52810 is a smaller memory version of the nRF52832 with only 192kB/24kB of Flash/RAM, no 4 dBm boost and fewer peripherals.
Nuvoton
No Change this month apart from the removal of the NUC123ZC2AN1.
NXP
7 MKV parts got their P suffixes i.e. the KMS-PMSM and BLDC software stacks. Buddling software with semiconductor has been a growing trend, allowing semi-conductor companies to provide more value to their customers.
Renesas
No significant changes this month at Renesas RX and RL78.
SiliconLabs
Well, ain’t no more the summer at SLAB this month with 4 new parts in the Blue Gecko family (EFR32BG13), a 512 kB Flash version with a -30 to 19 dBm output compared to 1,024 kB/-30 to 0 dBm for the EFR32BG12. Same treatment for the Flex Gecko and Mighty Gecko, respectively serving the proprietary and ZigBee protocols. With very similar specs they are likely to be using the same die but different software and factory settings.
No news for the EFM32 and EFM8.
Spansion/Cypress
The S6E1B is now completely gone from the portfolio. It was a 40MHz Cortex-M0+ with 24 parts in the FM0 family. RIP.
ST Microelectronics
STMicroelectronics removed the STM32H753 in the higher temperature grade from the site. On the other side, higher temperature parts are appearing for the F302, F412, F746, and L486. STM8 was quiet.
Texas Instruments
Texas Instruments added 8 FRAM parts while removing entirely the MSP430A.
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