Analog Devices' layout considerations when adding energy monitoring to a system using the ADE9153A.
Analog Devices' gamma sterilization-resistant memory for single-use medical device sensors and consumables.
Analog Devices' 1-Wire® devices add electronic capabilities to many medical consumables.
Analog Devices offers this application note about the effect of long-term drift on voltage references.
Analog Devices' application note on how to bring your high-current sensors to the IO-Link Revolution.
The MAX9860 audio voice codec provides an ideal solution for Skype® long-range audio-capture applications and enables high-quality voice transmission. Target applications include Skype for TV, set-top boxes, and speakerphones.
This application note discusses the ways of performing harmonic analysis and the gain compensation analysis using the EVAL- ADE9000EBZ evaluation board.
This application note from Analog Devices discusses how to gain some of that space back by using a switching regulator based on a single-inductor multiple-output (SIMO) power converter architecture.
ADI RF signal sources are used to create test waveforms at radio frequencies. Some of their common applications are to test if a new radio platform works or if the handsets coming off a production line are performing as they should.
This application note provides a recommended procedure for removing a plastic ball grid array package (PBGA) from a printed circuit board (PCB).
State-of-the-art motor drives use a 3-phase, insulated gate bipolar transistor (IGBT)-based inverter that is powered by a dc link voltage typically in the region of 400 V dc to 800 V dc.
iCoupler® digital isolators with integrated isolated power (isoPower®) employ isolated dc-to-dc converters that switch currents of ~700 mA at frequencies as high as 300 MHz.
One common method for determining the tilt or inclination of a system is to integrate the output of a gyroscope.
The battery-powered temperature logger in Figure 1 was built to demonstrate some features of the ADuC824 MicroConverter.
Connecting a PC to your MicroConverter chip for downloading or debugging code requires an RS-232 line driver/receiver chip to step the UART’s CMOS logic levels up RS-232 levels.
This technical note describes the use of the Keil uVision2 Integrated Development Environment in the development of a ‘C’ based, MicroConverter application.
The application note outlines the implementation of an IEEE 1451.2 compatible interface on the Analog Devices ADuC812 MicroConverter.
The ADuC832 is an upgrade to the ADuC812. Its additional features include 62kB program flash, 2kB on chip RAM and 4kB data flash.
This application note describes the serial download protocol for the ADuC8xx family of products.
Functions are the basic building blocks of the C programming language.